new york. thank you for being with us. felony charges and federal charges could come for the man suspected of attacking house speaker nancy pelosi s husband paul. 40-year-old 42-year-olds david depape is accused of breaking into the pelosi home very early friday morning, and sources say he had zip ties, ducts tape, and i hammer when he allegedly entered the bedroom where paul pelosi was sleeping and assaulted him. let s go to the san francisco police chief bill scott for an update. first, what can you tell us about what s happening now at this stage in the investigation? first, good morning. thanks for having me on. we are working around the clock literally to get all of the evidence to our prosecuting agencies, that includes our district attorney of san francisco, d.a. brook jenkins. we are working with the fbi, capitol police, and u.s. attorney s office in san francisco. and everybody is working well together. we re staying in our lanes, being methodical. at the end of
premiums all up. the cost of food consumed at home rose nearly 12%, food away from home, 7.4%. the gasoline index has increased 48.7%. the average national price of a gallon of gas this week, is at $5, highest in california at $6.42. trying to stem inflation, the fed said it will raise interest rates by three quarters of a percentage point, the biggest hike since 1994. new projections show interest rates may hit 3.4% by the end of the year, but because inflation is rising far faster than any of those rates, any money in savings is still being eroded. there s also a spade of layoffs adding to investor fears. cnn reports two u.s. real estate companies that had flourished in the pandemic announced layoffs of 8 and 10%. coin base laid off 18% of its staff. spotify plans to reduce hiring by 25%. elon musk, who already said he wants to lay off 10% of the tesla staff, is now intimating that if he acquires twitter, job cuts could follow. meanwhile, meanwhile, you ve got the january 6
colleagues who have been covering the trial from the beginning. msnbc s legal analyst lisa rubin, new york times investigative reporter susanne craig, and former federal prosecutor and former sdny criminal division deputy chief, kristy greenberg. katy, let s set the stage for what s going on at trump tower where we anticipate him speaking in about an hour, right? the assembled press is here. this is the first time i believe everyone has been back in this lobby since the donald trump transition. donald trump is going to come town his golden elevators behind me as a man running for president again, as a former president, yes, but also as a man who has now been convicted on 34 felony counts. the first former president to ever be convicted of a crime and certainly the first one, former president to be running again now that they are convicted on all of those felony counts. and he s doing it, guys, at the literal scene of the crime here in trump tower. this is where david pe
to investigators? we will make some attempts to talk to him. we have interviewed him at least once. the investigation is ongoing. there s a lot left to do in this case. we re moving along and doing the best we can to get the tlaefd we can get to our prosecutors. the interviews are one thing. there s also a slew of other evidence. i know you are collecting and investigating. have you landed on a motive yet? well, there again, working with our prosecutors at the appropriate time, they have to prove motive. we don t want to jump out of the gate with so many things left to investigate. we don t want to jump out of the gate too early, make premature statements and learn something that may be different to what we know now. yeah, we have some ideas. we definitely have our beliefs of what the motives are. again, working with our prosecutorial offices, they ve been specific about let s not get ahead of natural resources terms of getting out of ourselves in terms of getting out with stat
states can t respond. state legislatures want to set up special prosecutorial offices to go after the abortion issue, they have the right to do that. and they would be full time prosecutors. it s kind of something out of les mis. inherently abortions are time sensitive, these prosecutions would happen months, maybe even years after the alleged abortion took place. now, remember we re talking clinical abortions here. over half the abortions in this country are in the first ten weeks, 11 weeks and done by medication. so, does this mean prosecutors would be opening up fedex packages and walking down the aisles of pharmacies? i mean, we really don t know. it is potential of chaos in some areas. in other areas, no change of the