Journalist and also my friend, and friend of the show. So proud of, you cant wait to see the documentary. Thank you very much. And that is tonights reidout, everyone. Inside with jen psaki starts right now. Donald trump is a need of an intervention. That is what speaker emerita nancy pelosi said the last time i spoke with her on this show, just over a month ago. Well, shes back with me tonight, and i know shes not gonna hold back. She never does. Were gonna talk about everything thats happened since then. And a lot has happened since then. Including two Civil Penalties against donald trump, totaling over four and a half billion dollars with interest. Almost 90 million. 01 of those cases with her client, e. Jean carroll, also joins me tonight. And after trump referenced Carolina Speech how far can he go before they bring him back to court again . And are they watching all this . I do want to start tonight back in 2021. With the documentary that was released by Alexei Navalny in russia t
jennifer crumbley, the mother of the teenager who shot four classmates to death in 2021 and the worst school shooting in michigan s history took the stand. she is charged with involuntary manslaughter testing the limits of who might be found responsible for a mass shooting and her testimony today was shocking. i have asked myself if i would have done anything differently and i wouldn t have. if you could change what happened, would you? oh absolutely. i wish he would have killed us instead. imagine a mother saying that she wishes her own son would have killed her and his father saying if given the chance, she wouldn t have done anything differently. meanwhile, her defense attorney indicating that she and her client don t necessarily meet eye to eye or see eye to eye about how to handle the rest of the case. specifically who should testify. she told the judge, to speak more with crumbley and tonight, take an in-depth look. the question, should a parent be held responsi
happened, what? you absolutely. i wish he killed us instead. imagine a mother saying she wishes her own son would have killed her and his father, saying, if given the chance she wouldn t have done anything differently. meanwhile her defense attorney indicating she and her clients don t necessarily meet i die or see i die about how to handle the rest of the case, specifically on who ought to testify in favor of the defense. she will go to the jail tonight, she told the judge to speak more with crumbley. tonight we will take an in- depth look at the arguments and evidence so far, and the big question in all of this, should a parent be held responsible for the crimes of their child? joining me now, joey jackson and elliott williams. i m so glad you are both here today. we have been waiting for the moment she would take the stand. they announced the trial was happening she did testify. elliott, she was asked about the weapon, an important moment, about who purchased it, wha
today on inside politics, two new rulings, two 6-3 decisions, two more sweeping changes to american life. the supreme court tilts the scales to the right on speech versus gay rights and on a signature biden policy to zero out student debt. plus, the ruling sparked fury in congress and celebration on the gop campaign trail. republicans say the justices ruled correctly. democrats say they are controlled by the maga right. and justice versus justice. the final day of the term sees another pair of on-the-bench trading jabs over law and life. i m dana bash. let s go behind the headlines and inside politics. up first, it is a new world defined by new math. 6-3, the supreme court ends its session with two more decisions and two more clear reminders that elections have consequences. donald trump put three justices on the bench, neil gorsuch, brett kavanaugh, and amy coney barrett. they have all ruled in the last two days to push the country right in ways that many of you will
reporter: there s certainly more people out here today than we ve seen in days past, especially because today we know exactly what we will get decisions on because it s the last day. you mentioned those two big cases, of course at the end of pride month. that case that has to do with whether or not a web designer can refuse to design a wedding website for a gay couple. we could see some reaction to that. the biggest one we re watching for is on student loans, whether or not biden s student loan forgiveness program will stand. the biden administration was using a congressional act started after 9/11 in 2003. it was continued through the pandemic, even invoke bid betsy devoss under the trump administration. can student loans be forgiven in their entirety forever? this would affect about 43,000 people, sorry, we re starting to get some decisions just in now. so i m going to go listen for what those are, and i said 43,000, that s 43 million people, and i ll be back to you when