things did suddenly pick up and kick in from last thursday when the sun reported it, but when you look at the timeline, the question is partly because the bbc said the sun s report contained new allegations what was the initial complaint? in terms of the situation we ve got on our hands, i want to say one thing upfront, which is you are balancing serious allegations, duty of care, privacy issues and legitimate public interests, and how do you navigate that fairly, calmly and do due diligence? i ve given a bit of context to a few people in terms of the numbers of issues we get coming into our corporate investigations unit. over six months, that will be about 250 and you take those and they are the serious complaints that are coming through of all different types. what happens is we have an outstanding corporate investigations team, they re very experienced, they assess the complaint. i m not going to go into the absolute specifics because of privacy concerns. i understand th
weather. and this afternoon as his predecessor prepares for his day in court, president biden headed to minnesota to tout his economic agenda. he stayed quiet on trump s indictment could that change today? and later this hour, we re looking ahead to tonight s big game in houston. the university of connecticut, san diego state will face off in the final matchup of a march madness full of twists and turns. so in just about an hour from now, former president donald trump is expected to start his journey from here in florida to new york to be arraigned on charges connected to a hush money payment made to an adult film actress before the 2016 presidential election. these are live pictures coming to us. there is the airplane, the trump airplane in palm beach airport i want to bring in my colleague yasmin vossoughian, who is on the other side of this story, outside the district attorney identifies in lower manhattan where trump will appear tomorrow, yasmin yeah, a lot of actio
set off from libya. professor nando sigona is a social scientist from the university of birmingham, with more than 15 years of research and teaching experience in migration, refugee, citizenship and ethnic studies. he s given us his assessment. the fact that there s multiple attempts. it s going be lost in ways and it s also an indication of how strong the motivation and drive to do this. and where the reasons why people put their lives at risk is in terms of the journey itself, a lot of people end up in prisons or smuggler camps and in the country of origin, countries going through the pandemic and going through massive economic crisis, and among the
know when the former president is in town that s because his jet is parked rather visibly at the airport. you can see it as you re driving by from the road as for his journey itself, he s going to be bookended by supporters that bridge that he s going to be kcrossing, we ve seen about two to three dozen supporters. they ve been playing music they ve been waving flags. they ve been cheering the former president every time they see his motorcade assing we know there are a dozen or so out there today waiting for him to make that trip across the bridge, and then at the airport, on the other end, there are a handful or so of supporters there. that s when he s going to get on the plane and go wheels up to laguardia. he s going to be bookended by supporters when he makes the short drive to the airport, but this entire process he s going to kind of be bookended by a familiar site, mar-a-lago. it s certainly notable that he s going to be returning here tomorrow evening to give his prime time ad