okay? i m sorry i m so upset, but, please help president trump. if you can afford $5 or $10, if you can t afford $1, that s fine. just pray. progressive from south carolina. help this man, donald j. trump, they re trying to drain him dry. he s a progressive. if you got any money to give, give it. but he s got some good things, too. go tonight. give the president some money to fight this bull [ bleep ]. lindsey graham the progressive from south carolina. you know, it s like my southern mom, no good deed goes unpunished. i mean if you re a dog trainer and you can make a dog ill that quickly you re a successful dog trainer. you re a genius. he ll be back, by the way. lindsey graham will be back. you scream at him and he s still loyal. willie, i would love to show you the front of the paper of can you believe this? this is a paper of record. it s morning joe. quickly what is this? front page. come on. put that down. i guess it s sports illustrated time
getting some of our biggest clues yet about the directions special counsel jack smith is taking the politically fraught and complex and unprecedented investigations of an ex president by the justice department. there are major developments in both the january 6 investigation and the probe into the classified documents. we ll get to that in a minute. but we begin with what we know about the sprawling criminal probe into the capitol insurrection and the coup plotted by the ex president and his allies and including those in the administration and in congress. as the new york times reports, jack smith steps us the pace, sorting through a mountain of evidence from the january 6 committee and looking to interview witnesses that did not speak to the congressional panel. from that times report, quote, did former president trump consume detailed information about foreign countries wild in office? how extensively did he seek information about whether voting machines had been tampered
transportation secretary pete buttigieg will visit that ohio train derailment site one day after donald trump. the lead starts right now. big names descend on a small town, east palestine, ohio, the scene of that toxic train wreck. norfolk southern vows to help but critics know how much the company is giving victims versus company investors for stock buybacks. plus after the speeches and fanfare, ukraine left with the realities of war. do you have any idea how many bodies you have taken back to their hometowns at this stage? cnn s clarissa ward is on the front lines for us with the somber work of returning bodies of fallen ukrainian soldiers to their families as russia s brutal invasion nears one year. and a coast to coast winter storm. ice and snow and conditions not seen in some spots in 30 years. welcome to the lead. i m jake tapper and we start in east palestine, ohio, where the fallout from that toxic train wreck starts to get messier by the hour and i don t
hello everyone, it is 4:00 in new york on a big newsday, just got a rare and unique and potentially alarming look into judicial process that is typically shrouded in secrecy and one that has been characterized as potentially the most damaging to the twice impeached, disgraced ex- president right now, of course the special grand jury investigation in fulton county, georgia, yesterday in a very revealing interview with our own blaine alexander, the juries for woman spoke out about the months long investigation and confirmed that the jury recommended indictments for multiple people. while she did not disclose specific names, she gave some pretty telling hints. i will tell you it is not a shortlist. we saw 75 people, and 6 pages of the report cut out, i think, if you look at the page numbers. so it s not we are talking about more than a dozen people? bigger i would say that, yes. did the grand jury recommend an indictment of former president trump? bigger i m not goi
gonzalez. this is consuming our society. what is it? our second guest former lieutenant governor of new york, betsy mccoy, right now a few weeks ago, biden administration triggered the destruction of the suburbs and ex burbs, we need to get into this but first new york times, prosecutor seek trump lawyer testimony, suggesting evidence of crime says that justice department this i may say mark for god s sake my eyes are glazing over, no, this is a fundamental right, have you ever had a lawyer, any case, you might want day. and and are your communications with that lawyer going to be comment secret or made available on the government or other side. this is crucial. this gets to bottom of the matter, attorney-client privilege is protected under the bill of rights, it part of due process. due process, you can t have due process without having attorney-client 45 prive lang privilege, your conversations with your attorney are private. the privilege may be traced back to the ro