a very full night, there is a lot more ahead of the landmark verdict. tonight, straight the source, the scattering cost staggering cost. $83 million for years of defaming the writer even after a jury found he sexually abused her. is this enough to make him? trump is raging tonight, not even sticking around to hear the verdict. tonight, we have two insiders. someone who was in the courtroom along with the person who told her to sue him. i am kaitlin collins and this is the source. an astounding $83.3 million. that is on top of the $5 million he was already ordered by a jury to pay after he was found liable for sexual abuse in the 1990s today s number is four defaming her in 2019. here she is with her legal team today after the decision made by nine jurors. they deliberated for less than three hours. as you might imagine, trump is livid, not even staying to hear the verdict read. the first time he stormed out as e. jean carroll s attorney was making a closing statement. ear
very full night. $83.3 million for the former president. tonight straight from the source, the staggering cost of donald trump s own words. $83 million for years of defaming the writer e. jean carroll even after a jury found that he sexually abused her. is this enough to make it stop? we ll see. trump is raging tonight. not even sticking around in court to hear the verdict as it was read. we have two insiders with their takes here. someone who was in the courtroom, along with the person who first told e. jean carroll to consider suing donald trump. the chance run-in at a party that got this case going. i m kaitlan collins and this is the source. an astounding $83.3 million. that s a top of the $5 million that trump was already ordered by a jury to pay e. jean carroll after he was found liable for sexually abusing her in the 1990s. today s eye-popping number is for defaming carroll in 2019. there she is with her legal team today after the decision made by nine jurors. seve
which is straight after this programme. welcome to hardtalk. i m stephen sackur. one of the key drivers of human thought and behaviour throughout history has been knowledge of our own mortality. from childhood each of us knows we will die. religion, philosophy and science all wrestle with that fact and have in different ways embraced the quest for immortality. my guess today, stephen cave, director of the cambridge institute for technology and humanity is at the centre of a growing debate about the merits of extending human longevity. is it wise to seek to live forever? stephen cave, welcome to hardtalk. thank you for having me. it is a great pleasure. you believe that our human awareness of our own mortality is absolutely central to the human story. why? well, all creatures strive to live on, to keep going. they would not be around us any more if they did not. the mouse that did not care about surviving would not pass on its genes. so we come for from a long line of creature
executive action on the border crisis as shocking scenes like on the screen become too often. you are watching fox and friends, i m todd piro. carley: i m carley shimkus. the numbers are staggering, 200,000 crossings just this year. todd: the biden admin strigz just closed both crossings this week while illegal activity reign supreme. carley: alexandria hoff has more from washington. alexandria: timing of the letter coincides with influx you were just talking about. in appeal to the president yesterday, speaker johnson wrote southern border of our nation is being overrun and border protection is at a breaking point. i urge you to take executive action to stem the record tide of illegal immigration. speaker johnson called on the president to end catch and release and see a grant parole on case-by-case basis, instead of a sweeping role and see president reinstate the stay in mexico program. the white house says they are doing all they can. it is not unusual, this im
this is ridiculous. it s so steep. yeah. [ bleep ], [ bleep ], [ bleep ]. oh! doing something that nobody s ever done before, there s no guarantee that your plan s going to work. once you commit, there is no turning around. we re entirely removed from civilization. look at this one! we know once we get there, we re on our own. climbing. we ve chosen to live a life that does have risks. oh, my god. one mistake, and you re dead. come on now. if you harness that fear, you can do something that you never thought possible. is the pursuit worth the risk? to be able to make a journey through a place so few other people have experienced is like maybe being the first person that goes to the moon or the first person that goes to the top of mt. everest. this is a place that doesn t exist almost anywhere else on our planet. the llanganates mountains is a wild place in that it is completely roadless. it s vast, impenetrable jungle with 14,000-foot r