parents of one of the wounded who say their son is just not the same. and u.s. president joe biden promises to keep battling inflation as prices for everyday items continue to spiral upwards. there is a growing sense of urgency among some members of congress ahead of monday s second hearing on the january 6th investigation. the select committee has planned six more hearings this month to present its preliminary findings. they say their investigation paints a damning portrait of then president trump as the central figure behind that failed coup. one committee member previewed what s to come. well, we re going to go methodically through each of the major problem areas with the former president. for example, examining his claims of fraud. that was important because it was false. we know that he was told that it was false. and yet he continued to stir up the american people with false narratives. now the former president donald trump firing back after the panel used his own
second hearing on the january 6th insurrection. the select committee has planned six more hearings this month to present itself preliminary f findings and they say their por they insist they will present evidence this month proving the deadly riot on january 6th was the culmination of an elaborate plan to overturn the election. since the first hearing on thursday, trump and his supporters have been pushing back among the emerging narrative. we have more on it from jessica snyder. it s now effectively a riot. reporter: tonight the impact being felt from the first hearing as they set the stage for what s to come. some republicans are looking to discredit the findings. while the former president is reacting to this stunning allegation. you were aware of the rioters chants, hang mike pence, the former president said maybe the fans have the right idea. trump responded i never said hang mike pence. it s a made up story or fake news. the committee s first hearing focused o
desperately-needed crop. details how president biden is responding to this inflation and gas prices hitting a record high. announcer: live from cnn center, this is cnn newsroom with kim brunhuber. we begin in the ukrainian city of severodonetsk which is being fought over street by street. ukrainian governor said most of the city is under russian control, but he says ukrainians are still putting up resistance. russian officials say negotiations are under way about hundreds of civilians believed to be sheltering at a local chemical plant. in mariupol, russia isn t trying to give proper burials to civilians killed during its bombardment of the city. russian forces have torn down 1,300 high-rise apartment buildings even though there were dozen of bodies buried understood beneath. and ukraine is condemning what it calls a sham trial of three foreign fighters who fought in its military. they ve been sentenced to death in a pro-russian separatist. in the past hour, ukraini
waited more than an hour to confront the gunman, and why he says he intentionally left his radios behind. nearly 70 million americansarlys facing dangerous hea facing dangerous heat. the triple-digit temperatures tp setting records, from california to texas. news about the battle for ukraine russian forces are close to capturing another major city in the country s industrial heartland. a heroic rescue. tonight, after pulling a man off the electrified third rail, the much-deserved reward. and, on the road has the play- by-play of an 11-year-old girl s trip to the ballpark, and the broadcast booth. this is the cbs evening news with norah o donnell, reporting from the nation s capital. o donnell: good evening to our viewers in the west and thank you for joining us on this friday night. tonight, many americans didn t need a report to tell them what they are already feeling. prices are skyrocketing on everything from food to fuel and from rent to airfare, but the numbers ar
nor did he have any issues to order. joining me now from uvalde, texas is nbc s correspondent antonia hilton. walk us through these new details and revelations. who was actually in charge at the scene that they? good morning michael. that is really the question, right? i think one really stuck out to me about that interview with the was that he did not know that he was the incident commander. in other words he had no idea that he would be in charge. you also mentioned that he left his radio behind, he said that was because he wanted to hands free to handle his firearm. he also described praying as he tested a key, after key, and it took him a while to find one that would actually work for the right classroom. law enforcement experts when the tribune gave them all these details, they were pretty shocked. from their perspective they say that the leader of a school districts law enforcement, the chief of police should know that they would be incident commander in this kind of