call or go online today. tonight on the reidout. when true democracy goes away, people get hurt. it has real life consequences. it s not some abstract political science question. we are all affected. and we take this for granted and we can t. and he s not kidding around. after 240 years after peacefully transferring power, every presidency since george washington ended his term after the second one, we re reminded our democracy really is a fragile construct. and taking a look at some. overlooked races this cycle, a reminder that anyone can win if enough people vote for them. and later rob reiner and michael moore join us to give us their takes on this tumultuous mid term and who they think won the week. we begin four days from an election with massive consequences for our democracy. the stakes in this election could not be higher for so many reasons. in her first public remarks, speaker of the house nancy pelosi thanked supporters for their good wishes for paul pe
rupert developed a machiavellian approach to the business. mr. maxwell has lost. rupert discovered if you start turning the doyleial down markets go up. sex and blood and murder and mayhem. this is his moment to expand. murdoch put his stamp on the city of new york. here i am. you better pay some attention. i m gonna have one hell of an impact. as usual, we were drinking one night. the producers, the reporters and me. we always gathered. it is the first concrete blook removed by east german workers. we hear the berlin wall is coming down. what? we ve got to go. what? a current affairs got to go to the wall? yeah. we made a few calls. and we commandeered the gulfstream jet. and about eight or nine of us got on that jet at midnight and flew to better minute. a current affair was rupert s baby. to the point where i believe rupert wrote a check out of his own checking account every single week for the show. this show is rampant. rupert liked it because it
family. jesse: that s in addition to the federal charges that came down earlier today for kidnapping and assault. depape could see maximum sentences of up to 50 years in prison just on the federal charges alone. fbi special agent stephanie minor is the one leading the investigation. and exactly what happened on the early morning night of that attack. today she released a criminal complaint. that s really left us with a lot of questions. according to that complaint, police received a call at 2:23 a.m. paul pelosi was allegedly speaking in code. saying there was a male inside his home. police scanners show that paul referred to depape and his friend was david. stated there is a male in the home and that he is going to wait for his wife. he doesn t know who the male is but he advises that his name is david. he is his friend. sounded somewhat confused. jesse: was that paul speaking in code? perhaps. 8 minutes later police show up to the pelosi s house. police know pelosi s
and catastrophic wildfires, a climate state of emergency in the united states. live from cnn center, this is cnn newsroom with rosemary church. we begin in ukraine, where there is more fallout from thursday s brutal attack on a detention facility in russian held territory in the east. on sunday, the u.s. ambassador to you range said russia must be held accountable for the attack, and dozens of ukrainian prisoners of war and civilians were killed in the strike, kyiv says, moscow claims russia ukraine is responsible, and they are waiting for access to the site, ukraine says russian forces unleashed a barrage of schelling on the southern city of nikolaev, 2 does seven reported, killed while sheltering in their basement. the ukrainian president condemning the strikes in his nightly address. take a listen. ukrainians, in the region, the most brutal schelling during the entire period of the full-scale war, dozens of missiles and rockets, the occupiers and residential build
the only survivor behind the gun and bomb attacks that killed 130 people in the biggest trial in modern french history following the country s worst peacetime attack. it shook paris to its core in november 2015. as well as those killed, hundreds were injured during horrendous attacks on bars, restaurants, the national football stadium and the bataclan music venue. arrested in brussels four months after the attacks, salah abdeslam said he was a soldier of the so called islamic state group, but later apologised to victims and claimed he decided not to detonate his suicide vest on the night of the attack. but the court accepted evidence that the suicide vest was, infact, defective and there was no last minute change of heart. their full life sentence now leaves him only a small chance of parole after 30 years. the court convicted all 20 men put on trial, 19 of them on terrorism charges. the rulings can be appealed. translation: i m satisfied with the sentence and i think that