at the supreme court. did not abortion decision today but still a heavy presence of demonstration. protests turn into riots and violence. slashed the price of the picture of the v.p. selling tickets for $15,000. now you can get a photo for 5,000. she would have to pay me to take a picture with her. say hello hello. are. steve: hello. it s wednesday, june 22nd, 2022. you are looking live at niagara falls, right now, 17 degrees there daytime high of 89. there s a chance of rain. but if you are at niagara falls you are probably going to get wet anyway. brian: you should not get in a barrel and go over the edge. steve: that has so been done. 3,000 tons of water go over the falls every second. it is the world s honeymoon capitol. ainsley: they were lighting it up with all different colors. they have lights under the water sometimes it s pink, sometimes it s blue. sometimes it s green. steve: there are actually three water falls, horseshoe falls also known as
of james, mccord. he is one of five persons surprised and arrested yesterday inside the headquarters of the democratic national committee in washington. mccord is a former cia employee. now he runs his own private security service. and guess what else he is? a consultant to president richard nixon s re-election campaign committee. nixon s watergate scandal began 50 years ago today. like trump, his presidency ended in crime and chaos, but there were major differences in the methods the two presidents used to cling to power. also tonight, the unholy alliance between ginni thomas and the people plotting to overturn the presidential election. a member of congress who is now calling for her husband, justice clarence thomas, to resign joins me. we begin tonight with june 17, 1972, the day five bungling burglars broke not offices of the democratic national committee located in the watergate complex in washington, d.c. two years later president nixon resigned. the 50th anniversar
from msnbc world headquarters in new york. welcome everybody to alex witt reports. welcome to breaking news from uvalde, texas. this is what it looks like outside robb elementary school today. 21 crosses, one for each person killed and the deadliest school shooting in a decade. also, growing outrage to the police response to the shooting in the heartbreaking details of children calling 9-1-1 begging them to police and the police now. grief stricken parents and state officials are angry over the decision from preventing federal tax to to from taking immediate action. you know every officer lines up, stacks, up goes and finds where the grounds are being fired, and keeps shooting until the subject is dead. joining us now from uvalde is nbc s liz also and then from houston shaquille brewster. liz, delays by police have grabbed the nations attention. what more are we learning about the timeline today? alex, after days of confusion and conflicting reports, we are hearin
in the uk says the allegations relate to incidents in london and gloucestershire between 2005 and 2013. hello and welcome to our look ahead to what the the papers will be hello and welcome to our look ahead to what the papers will be bringing us tomorrow. with me are miatta fahnbulleh, who s the chief executive from the new economics foundation, and the political reporter for the times, geri scott. tomorrow s front pages starting with the chancellor s plan to ease the cost of living dominates the front pages. the metro describes it as rishi to the rescue , with the chancellor giving every household at least four hundred pounds to help with bills. the mirror says it s about time for the measures pointing out the conservatives voted against a similar plan by labour last week. the guardian says the plan will be funded by a windfall tax on energy companies which the paper describes as a remarkable u turn by the chancellor. the i has the same story, and quotes the institu
counts of sexual assault against three men the allegations date back to when he was in the uk. life to when he was in the uk. from our studio in singapore, life from our studio in singapore, this is bbc news, it s newsday. the police in texas are facing criticism for how they responded to the mass school shooting in uvalde on tuesday. some parents say officers appeared hesitant to confront the teenage gunman after he barricaded himself inside a classroom, and that led to a delay in tackling the shooter. but at a news conference a texas police official said special equipment and negotiators were required, and officers also had to evacuate the rest of the school. the attacker killed 19 children and two teachers in the space of up to an hour before he was himself shot dead. our north america editor sarah smith sent us this report. all smith sent us this report. of the 19 inch children ar teachers all of the 19 inch children and teachers were in the same class. she had just bee