done before the end of the day. what multiple sources are telling our team on the hill. and i ll get the administration s perspective from nec deputy director in just a couple of minutes. plus, the comments from former president trump caught on tape and now in the hands of the special counsel investigating his handling of classified documents. and it s a horrific case involving unspeakable crimes. an ex-cia officer accused of drugging and sexually assaulting women, the evidence seemingly overwhelming including photos and videotapes, but today a judge is being asked to throw it all out. but we start in the senate where the scramble is on to push the debt limit bill through the senate as soon as tonight, cramming what would typically be maybe a week s worth of debate and drama into hours, with lawmakers now under the threat of a catastrophic default if they don t get this done by monday. here s majority leader schumer just a few hours ago. june 5th is less than four d
congressman byron donald. plus, the gut wrenching words of the a witness who watched as a gas station owner in south carolina chased down a 14-year-old and shot him in the back, quote, everyone s getting trigger happy. the shooter says he thought the teenager was shoplifting. he wasn t. now the gas station owner is facing charges, his store is in ruins after being vandalized by protesters and another community is in mourning. we begin with one of those rare days on capitol hill where high political drama and debate collide with the critical job of governing, in this case trying to keep the u.s. economy from going off the cliff, and no one knows exactly how it s going to play out. not only could tonight s vote seal the fate of the debt limit agreement between president biden and speaker mccarthy, it may also be a defining moment for mccarthy himself. he s been engaged in open warfare with far right republicans of the freedom caucus arguing over whether the legislation is a
scientology. masterson is still a member. the verdict comes six months after a first attempt end ed in a mistrial. a federal judge is about to decide whether almost 600 photos of an ex-cia officer allegedly abusing women after drugging them should be thrown out of court because the government may have botched the warrant to obtain them. the case of brian raymond accused of abusing more than 20 women raises questions about how the digital age could further complicate assault law. nbc s ken dilanian is reporting on this. i m also joined by kristin gibbons feden an msnbc legal analyst and former prosecutor who has prosecuted many sex abuse cases including the one against bill cosby. thank you both for being here. tell us about what s going on today with the hearing. i was there this morning and this former cia officer was in an orange prison jumpsuit with his lawyers looking much older than the photos we ve seen online. he was based in mexico city for many years as a spy, and this all
brian jeffrey raymond was a cia officer based in mexico city, and back in 2020, a woman ran screaming from his apartment and claimed that she had been raped. the investigation that followed included agents going and seizing his iphones on which they found hundreds of incriminating photos, all sides agree they were incriminating of him with incapacitated women, sexually abusing them. he actually agreed to plead guilty last year to two charges in a plea deal, went to court, said he was guilty, but then his lawyers discovered some problems with the search, and he convinced a judge to allow him to withdraw that plea. and the issue was when they went to seize his phones, they didn t know how iphones worked, the agents from the state department, they actually went back to him two different times because they couldn t unlock his phone, and that s a violation under the fourth amendment according to his lawyers, and his lawyers also contend they forced him to give them his pass code, which you
were not going to shut the government down. please wear your mask when you re indoors and public settings around other people. the president and somebody who follows the recommendations and the advice of the cdc. they are criticizing science because i represent science. i think the egos expanding beyond what i saw. who is president about you? there s a point of time, that was a lot of fun. i didn t pull the trigger. it hurts to even say it. it s embarrassing, but i understand. what about the children who ran screaming, hiding under desks? the charges of terrorism reflects that. and this community stands with io. they are here for you, they are here for you. will never have to worry about gas prices again. i want to thank secretary pete buttigieg, there you are. will this institution