standard and demanding the fbi address whether stone was treated more harshly than similarly charged individuals. the available facts show that stone indicted on seven counts but free on bail is not facing discrimination. across the country, law enforcement commonly use hardball tactics in raised and searches and arrests and prosecutors often use the most harsh tactic getting defendants jailed before trial, to press them into pleaing. sitting in jail before trial leads to risking losing job and extra pressure and it could literally break that. that hardball works the most on the poor. because the bail system benefits the rich. so while the indicted former trump aides have seen bonds in the millions of dollars because of the seriousness of their charges. a higher sum than many defendants with lesser charges who face $10,000 bonds. many of those poor defendants are stuck in jail before trial. 370,000 people jailed before trial. because they can t afford bail. while stone and company have
the first thing to thing about, taking a step back is what are the stakes here? the manafort revelations from yesterday, flynn, the national security advisor going to jail, or at least pleaing to a federal felony. you ve got campaign finance violations ordered by the president. all of this has come out because of the independent investigations by mueller the southern district of new york. all of that is putengszally at threat with rod rosenstein leaving. rod started out, i think, with unsure footing. but has by all accounts protected the integrity of these investigation let them proceed and now there are threats to them. what are the threats? i think that dchd depends on how one view william barr? right. so there s two different branchs of the investigation. one is the special counsel and the other are the justice department investigations and the southern district and so on. both will be controlled by the attorney general. so the mueller investigation,
the independence investigation and if he feels that things are wrapping up and he can go then that s a good sign. is that the way you feel? i don t think so. the first thing to thing about, taking a step back is what are the stakes here? the manafort revelations from yesterday, flynn, the national security advisor going to jail, or at least pleaing to a federal felony. you ve got campaign finance violations ordered by the president. all of this has come out because of the independent investigations by mueller the southern district of new york. all of that is putengszally at threat with rod rosenstein leaving. rod started out, i think, with unsure footing. but has by all accounts protected the integrity of these investigation let them proceed and now there are threats to
months under sentencing guidelines, i don t want to sound toollowal, one thing is acceptance of responsibility, quote. the flynn team file third degree pleaing the other day backtracking, there was a question was he accepting responsibility for what he pled guilty to. when a judge suggests you may want to put this off and when a judge says, discussed and disdain for what you did, you want to put it off. dana: tell me about that, adam, you were in the courtroom and take the break and came back, were you surprised they decided to delay? no, not particularly. the judge was basically, look, the judge made no promises about how this would affect the sentencing. he was warning his team, you might want to eek out every scope of the cooperation. the judge made it clear when michael flynn did was a very,
an issue they don t usually have, flooding. she is pleaing with residents to evacuate myrtle beach, but she s worried this will be a pain stakingly slow process. it is not connected to an interstate, so it causes a lot of problems here when people are hitting the road. a woman said she had two homes here and a business and she s not planning to evacuate. that s not necessarily the smartest thing. she may change her mind as the conditions change there. thank you very much. joining us now is south carolina s governor. he ordered a mandatory evacuation of his state, 187 mile coastline. governor, thank you for being with us. thank you, happy to be here. why did you go to that length of ordering a mandatory evacuation now before you know what the storm is going to look like tomorrow? well, we don t know exactly what it s going to look like. all we know is it s coming and stronger than hurricane hugo.