courtroom we ll see alvin bragg this hour laying out evidence against migrants charged in the beating of two police officer in new york about a week ago. others throughout the country. breaking overnight a major update on the hunt for his alleged accomplices. we ll show you the picture we got. good morning. tuesday, i m bill hemmer and good morning to you. dana: good morning. great to be here with you again. dana perino and this is america s newsroom. the attack on police has fueled outrage across the country. investigators believe more than a dozen people were involved. the suspect in court this morning was the only one held on bail. bill: we got word last week some of the accused may have skipped town on a bus to california. we didn t know if it was true until ice confirms it arrested several suspects at a greyhound station, in phoenix, arizona. dana: more criticism of releasing them without bail in the first place. you hold people until you figure out exactly wha
that was part of a video posted on twitter this morning by ukrainian president volodymyr zelenskyy marking one year of war inside his country. we ll have much more coverage on this somber anniversary in just a moment. also ahead the latest on the train derailment disaster in ohio as federal investigators appear to have identified a cause for the crash. plus mike pence gives some legitmous criticism of another potential republican presidential candidate. good morning and welcome to way too early on this friday, february 24th. i m sam stein. i m in for jonathan lemire. we begin in europe where it s been exactly one year since russia launched its unjust war on ukraine. ukrainian president volodymyr zelenskyy recognized the day writing, quote, on february 24th many us made a choice, not fleeing but facing, resisting and fighting and this year we remained invisible invincible, sorry. we know that 2023 will be the year of our victory. here in the united states the biden ad
immediately themselves lisa rubin is here to make sense of the law and both new york magazine and uc law professor mary ziegler are here to discuss the consequences for health care and politics let s get right to the reporting and the law, and joining us now are msnbc legal analyst, lisa rubin as promised and uc davis law school professor, an expert on the law, will join us in a moment let s talk, lisa, about what the law currently says and what that might mean for how the justices decide on this katy, today is anyone s guess. i wish i had a magic 8 ball. right now as it stands, the supreme court issued an administrative stay, a temporary stay of the lower court s ruling that effectively means that access to mifepristone was exactly as it was before this litigation started but the supreme court has a big decision to make by midnight tonight. self-imposed deadline, unless they extend again. if they did, mary can correct me if i m wrong, i m not aware of any administratio
carts are demanding action over the same rocketing prices. so could all of that, any of that, happen here? we re all over it with alex hogan in london on truss moving out. peter doocy on the white house still digging in. shannon bream on if any party in power needs to listen up. and why jeb bush says he s fed up, not with just soaring prices, but right now falling school grades for our kids. attention, class. it s not dismissed. welcome, everybody. i m neil cavuto. happy to have you on a busy news day. let s first get the latest out of london where the shortest serving prime minister has just announced she s out of there. alex? hi, neil. a dramatic shakeup of u.k. government today. after just six weeks the prime minister announcing that she is resigning. liz truss walking out of downing street earlier today, announcing that she will resign. citing the war in ukraine and the unstable economy as major problems coming in to this role. she had hoped to grow the economy with dra