good morning, 10:00 a.m. eastern, 7:00 a.m. pacific. i m josé diaz-balart reporting live from monterey park, california. it is a community here now reeling from tragedy as it becomes the scene of the nation s latest deadly mass shooting. it s a story that s become far too familiar here in the united states where a night of celebration turns into horror and heartbreak after a gunman opens fire at this dance hall, the star ballroom dance hall right here. this is the entrance. there s a small memorial that s just come up in the last couple of hours. this is where this tragedy, this massacre occurs. people were marking the lunar new year on saturday night, ten people were killed here. five men and five women. ten others were injured. the attack happening in one of the country s largest asian american communities. it is the deadliest shooting since the massacre at robb elementary school in uvalde, texas, last year that took the lives of 21 people. the suspect has been identified
showing again that it has the ability and the determination to keep pushing russia back. but president zelenskyy says he still needs help to keep it up. yesterday, he asked the g-7 for more military might and today, germany sent over an ultra modern air defense system so new it s never been used on the battlefield. crediting this type of help with saving lives across ukraine. saying the barrage of missile attacks would have been even worse had the ukrainians not been able to shoot down some of them. still though, the damage is bad. at least 28 more russian missile strikes hit critical infrastructure throughout the country today. the mayor of lviv says a third of his city is without power. and zaporizhzhia, ukrainian emergency services released footage of a family being pulled from the rubble of a rocket attack that hit their home. they were hiding in the cellar. many others have not been so lucky. at least 26 people killed since monday. and yet, the ukrainian people are stayi
else might still be missing. the government says it found more than 40 folders with classified markings that were empty and roughly as many folders labeled return to staff. secretary slash military aid that were also empty. now, it could just be the contentf those folders were found elsewhere, and it could be those folders were packed up in the mad dash to move last year. we don t know. we do know that the justice department says it is still engaged in an active criminal investigation, so maybe we ll find out. and as we wait for the judge to decide on a special master let us understand what we can from this new inventory list. joining me now is nbc news justice reporter ryan riley and clint watts who s personally executed search warrants, collected evidence on the scene. and former u.s. attorney and msnbc legal analyst barbara mcquade. all right, we re still waiting on judge canon and i want to get your sense where court went yesterday and how she might be leaning. first le
i was so struck seeing jimmy carter wheeled in and seeing him there to say good-bye to the love of his life. well, and jimmy carter s been trying to stay alive to take care of her. to be a caretaker. when you have dementia, you forget things and he s been fighting for his own life, really trying to outlive her trying to take care of her. he s greatly diminished. i always hoped he would make it to his 100th birthday, which would be october 21st, 2024. it s going to be hard living without her. he can barely remember his life when she wasn t at his side. what did you make of the tributes pouring in today and just the memories from her loved ones? you know, they used to have the nickname, the steel magnolia. i got to know her quite well and didn t know the steely side. she was very protective of their family and legacy, but she was a real community spirited person. it does come out of her christian faith. she was the ultimate good samaritan. but her love of people and life