all of the political fallout to come. also this hour, florida federal judge aileen cannon sets a file date for the president s documents case as mr. trump gives his most detailed answer yet since last week s indictment about his handling of america s secrets in response to tough questions from fox news anchor bret baier. why not just hand them over then? because i had the boxes. i wanted to go through the boxes and get all of my personal things out. i didn t want to hand it over yet, and i was very busy as you ve sort of seen. yeah, you tell the aide to move to other locations after telling your lawyers you had fully complied with the subpoena when you hadn t? but i had to take all of my thing out. these boxes were interspersed with all sorts of things. and john durham to the house intelligence committee on the 206-page report that s highly critical of the fbi s investigation into the russian interference in 2016, to the republican intelligence committee chairman,
that is expected to start any minute now. we ll bring you that as soon as it begins. plus, the polarizing plea deal for the president s son. republicans blasting the agreement that lets hunter biden avoid jail time as a slap on the wrist. but some legal experts suggest that if his last name wasn t biden, he might never have faced charges in the first place. and this deal was announced just about half an hour after we learned donald trump s court date. now less than eight weeks away. does judge aileen cannon s accelerated timeline suggest this trial could be over before the primaries even begin? but, we start with the extraordinary developments developing the current and former president on the same okay that donald trump s trial date is set, president biden s son hunter has reached a deal with federal prosecutors to avoid a trial and jail time. and we will get to that momentarily. but, first, let s take you to the coast guard briefing, the latest on the sub and the five p
1.5, 2 million people displaced inside sudan. the great lie, of course, is that refugees are fleeing their countries for any reason other than absolute fear, and the second lie is that they don t contribute to the countries that they arrive in. maria can tell you about the job she s doing in wichita. we know that refugees are great contributors, they re changemakers, innovators in the countries that they come to. and refugee status is born of desperate straits around the world. but it is also that something that brings out humanity and that s something we want to emphasize on world refugee day. that sets the stage. you re now in kansas. tell me about what how you made the decision for you and your family to leave ukraine. what was that moment forcing you to flee? we lived in ukraine all our lives. in the eastern part of ukraine. we didn t want to go somewhere, leave our lives.
to get out, they do not have the services that they need to help them get jobs and sustain themselves. that s a very good point. we work at the ifd in 29 u.s. cities to help people make a new start. but with housing costs, the employment market the way it is, it is tough situation for people when they arrive. david miliband, thank you for what you re doing. and maria matia, welcome to the u.s. let me be the last, the most recent to say welcome to the united states. and that does it for this edition of andrea mitchell reports. remember to follow the show online, on facebook and on twitter at mitchell reports. chris jansing reports starts right now. good day. i m chris jansing live at msnbc headquarters in new york city. the race to find a titan sub and five people on board is growing more desperate and more dire with each passing hour. we re going to find out where the search stands right now with an update from the coast guard
from sudan, the picture is far more bleak. it is both bleak in terms of refugee resettlement, which the biden administration is trying to build up having been decimated program having been decimated in the trump years and it is bleak also in terms of the support given to refugee hosting states. it is a myth that most refugees are in rich countries. most refugees are in poor or middle income countries, countries like jordan, countries like uganda, bangladesh. these are the countries like turkey, these are countries with millions of refugees each, lebanon, quarter of its population are refugees, and there is very little international support for those countries. refugees are often in poverty, host communities are in poverty. there is tension that arises from that. if we can translate the refugee experience with ukrainians like maria and see that for refugees at other places, the world would be a much better place. and my experience with people who worked for the u.s. government in af