Developments in Donald Trumps ongoing legal battles. In a newly unsealed brief in response to the supreme Courts President ial Immunity Ruling, special Counsel Jack Smith gives us the clearest view yet of his 2020 Election Interference Case against the former president. Smith asserts trump acted as a private candidate and not as president , when he tried to overturn the Election Results and resorted to crimes to stay in office. It also provides new evidence about Trumps Phone Usage and the conversations he had on the 6th Of January, as the riots were unfolding at the capitol. Quote, beginning at about 150. 30 p. M. the defendant settled in the Dining Room off of the oval office. He spent the afternoon there reviewing twitter on his phone, while the Dining Room television played Fox News contemporaneous coverage of events at the capitol. Citing testimony, the filing says that when trump was informed his Vice President had to be rushed to a secure location after trump attacked pence in h
still very fresh in people s minds. cnn s martin savidge joins us now. good morning to you. how did this happen? it is absolutely stunning to hear of such a security breach that would have taken place inside of a school district where just seven months ago you had 21 people, 19 students and two teachers killed by a gunman that was able to get into robb elementary school. so here s what we know. first i should stress students and staff were never in any danger. this was a test. it was only a test, but what they did was they went to three different schools. they won t say what schools in the uvalde school system, and there was a person who was posing as an intruder, an auditor who tried the doors. two of the schools passed were not able to get in. but at a third school at a cafeteria, at a loading dock area there was a door that was supposedly locked, but when this intruder yanked on the door, he was able to get in, and when he got in, he was quickly
walked into an office building in cincinnati and opened fire. several dead. tonight, his arsenal now revealed. abc s alex perez in cincinnati. reporter: the chaos unfolding in busy downtown cincinnati just as many were starting the day at work. multiple shooting victims. we have an active shooter. reporter: just after 9:00 a.m., authorities say the gunman, 29-year-old omar perez, opened fire in the loading dock area of the fifth-third bank building, striking several people. complete panic. everybody come running out of the bank, people in suits diving on the ground and stuff. shots fired. reporter: the gunman armed, investigators say, with a .9 millimeter semiautomatic pistol, multiple magazines and about 200 rounds of ammunition, then moved inside the building. there were gunshots exchanged. at this point, the shooter is deceased. reporter: three victims struck by the gunman killed. two others hospitalized. bullet holes and shell casings
sandra: this coming into our newsroom, there is an active shooter situation being reported by the cincinnati police right now. what they have tweeted out is that there is an active shooter, an officer involved in a shooting incident come at fifth third bank. in the lobby and loading dock area. more decent details to follow, they say the police will be clog it to foot traffic. for the report say that the atf is on the scene, and the scene has been secured. we are only going off of reports there. other than that, we have that tweet from cincinnati police. we will keep following this. bill: another alert, day three of the brett kavanaugh confirmation hearings about to get underway. it could be another grueling session. they went 13 hours yesterday. democratic senators pressing him on everything from executive power to the mueller matter late last night. shannon bream was there for all of it. she is back lives, shannon, good morning to you. what is your expectation as we
it s a long and difficult day for the people that go to that office. the special counsel set up shop at an anonymous building in southwest washington. it s a different building than the headquarters of the department of justice. witnesses come in through a loading dock area and then ushered into a garage so they can go in without being spotted by the press or public. and then they sit in a window conference room while groups of fbi agents, two or three at a time cycle in and out of the room asking questions about different topics. we re told that robert mueller himself often greets the witnesses and sits in sometimes but generally sitting against the back wall silently watching as staff methodly ask questions hours after hours. is this standard operating procedure? we re talking about almost an unprecedented situation right now. it s hard to characterize this