there s a lot in the court documents and in the fight. what else are you learning? reporter: this is the latest legal battle between tiger woods ex-girlfriend erica herman. the lawsuit lace out to the lengths to which woods went to initiate the relationship and protect his privacy through a nondisclosure agreement. according to court documents herman claimed that woods became disgruntled with the sexual relationship, tricked her into the leaving the home, took her cash, pets and personal possessions and tried to strong arm her into signing a different nda. cnn has reached out to woods representative for comment but has no heard back. herman brought two separate complaints, the first one filed last october alleging a trust owned by woods violated florida law by breaking an oral tenancy agreement that allowed her to continue living at his home. the damages are likely to be measured in excess of 30 million soond. as part of that suit a trusty of woods trust asked the court to
there in manhattan. i want to bring in former federal prosecutor and msnbc legal analyst glenn kirschner. let me tell you a couple things that jonathan dienst is reporting. he s expected to testify that michael cohen is a liar, a convicted perjurer. obviously they re trying to say that there s some sort of revenge at play here. two other points that these folks close to costello make is in a meeting february 2019 with kosz tell low, cohen blames trump for his difficulties and wants trump to pay, soond he has been embellishing his allegations. talk to me about that and how it could play into this grand jury.
it s significant they have gone out of their way to update it? i do. the reason it s low confidence is because there is no transparency about what china was actually working on. samples from the laboratory. most importantly, those early human samples. let s be realistic about this. we have learned a lot about this virus. soond we know that in order to have high numbers of hospitalizations, the virus had to be circulating in the community for long periods of time. weeks. and we have seen that over and over again in the united states even that original outbreak and that s because we didn t have tests and we needed to get to the place where we are testing for all respiratory deciseases. third, bob redfield, molecular virologists that work in the lab know if you are working on a coronavirus or towards a vaccine you are growing that virus and tissue culture, cell lines, and
efficient or you can think that it will take our jobs. i m choosing to be more optimistic. i am too. and there is some mundane work of journalism maybe quizzes for example that could be done by ai, and then you free up the high value work for journalists. from the new york times, acai ease that can spread falsehoods faster and further. so that is a must read for today. buzzfeed says it will use it to automatically generate quizzes. and the company ceo said to be clear, we see the breakthroughs in ai opening up a new era of creativity that will allow creativity in new ways. soond they are saying it i u it to be more efficient. that is the way a lot of companies are leveraging ai
but let me ask you this, isn t this more proof assuming there is another variant out there and unfortunately not enough vaccinated people around the world to prevent this, it s inevitable a fourth booster is coming? accident show you the first wasn t going to be enough? a booster is? well, the next letter of the greek alphabet in six months, how, why should we assume the fourth booster is not quite inevitable but likely? well, chuck, we re not in charge. the virus is in charge. and exactly as you say, as it multiplies around the world, all of these variants that have come here have started there. soond we need to take a global perspective in trying to curb this pandemic, not just focus at home. and, yes, we may have to get further boosters in the future. hey, you just have to roll up your sleeve in and out of the