top of the hour this friday. i m jim sciutto. i m erica hill, and right now all five former police officers charged with murder and other charges in the death of tyre nichols are inside of a memphis courthouse. they are set to be arraigned on seven charges including second-degree murder and aggravated assault. this morning the shelby county district attorney said that the prosecutors are still looking into charging a sixth former officer who tased nichols in the traffic stop that night as well as others possibly. we are looking at everybody who was involved directly or indirectly in death of tyre nichols, and this is officer hemphill and those who showed up after the beating had concluded, and we will do what we can as quickly as we can, but thoroughly. now, we are still waiting for the release of 20 hours of additional footage from deadly beating and the aftermath, and it could be relevant, and cnn s shimon prokupiez is there at the courthouse, and i understand that
information with republicans in order to protect the integrity of the special counsel investigation. bill: dana, as we know there are so many questions left unanswered. one of the biggest, who removed those top secret papers from that scif. that s a secure room used to view sensitive materials on the hill by all lawmakers. documents are supposed to stay there. somehow they ended up scattered across the president s home and private office and probably there for years. dana: the white house press corps is pushing for that information. after three weeks of non-answers the frustration is boiling over. is president involved in a cover-up? he has been very clear that he takes this very seriously. you asked me the question that everybody laughed at which was interesting question to ask. but any other underlying questions that you may have i would refer you to my colleagues, the white house counsel. i will continue to be prudent and consistent and refer you to any questions y
but there is a time factor of a year and 18 months is what you are looking at. bush says that this the greatest ramp up of military production possibly going back to the korean war. early on, we realized that we had to put the foot to the floor. reporter: the goal is to produce two times of artillery rounds to 70,000, and twice as many javelin anti-tank missiles, and 30% more rocket launchers about 850 per month, and the precision weapons that ukraine is using to target ammo depots and 60 stingers aircraft ammo each month. the u.s. is not at war to russia, but it matters little to the manufacturers whose weapons are part of the fight. our industrial base is still largely geared towards a peacetime environment, and not towards a wartime or at least a quasi-wartime environment that
agents assisted the unit and processed those migrants into the united states. dana: so many different stories happening at the same time. matt, thank you. bill: in the meantime you ve got the new study suggesting u.s. military support for ukraine could hurt our own ability to fight a war. d.c. think-tank claims the drain on the pentagon s stockpile is so severe we may not be ready in case there is a war between china and taiwan. michael allen former member of the bush national security council. welcome back here. seth jones was quoted in the piece wall street journal saying the bottom line is defense industrial base is not prepared for the security environment that now exists. it is suited to a peacetime environment. on the face would you agree? i would agree with him but this is the fault of an overly bureaucratic system. the congress and pentagon neither that fight at the speed
all of that becomes extremely important, but they re doing their duty. they re serving. commanders will come around and perhaps deliver the meal to someone on a post or a guard station or they might just bring some cookies or baked goods in they re in a peacetime environment and their spouses have made that for people and they ll deliver that to the soldiers under their command and in some cases the junior leaders knowing that some of through junior soldiers might not be able to go home and have contact. they ll invite them into their homes to experience a family environment that they might not otherwise have and get them out of the barracks and dormitories and have them with the sergeants or lieutenants that have the ability to do that. let s remember, you re talking about 18, 19, 20-year-olds who may never have been away from home at christmas period, let alone in a war zone? right. you mentioned you give each other present ands is there a present you remember receiving in a war