were close to him, everyone who thought they knew he was who he was, he fooled them all. don t let him fool you too. wow. everyone is fascinated. it is on the cover of people magazine. i really need to bone up on this. i m not following. it goes to the jury maybe today. so verdict could be very soon. we re glad you re with us. we re talking about really dramatic closing arguments in the alex murdaugh double murder trial. the defense gets a chance to close fist. but first, this. terrifying moments in the sky on two different flights. a cabin filling with smoke after fire breaks out. a retired firefighter jumping in help a crew put it out and also several passengers hospitalized this morning after severe turbulence on a flight from texas to germany. reports of blood even splattered on the seats. and at the airport. an alarming discovery. a plane loaded with an explosive before loaded on to the flight. what we heard about the device hid non the luggage. and
it was quite a day on the hull yesterday. on top of questions about hunter biden, also questions about fentanyl, sale of deadly drugs and social media and, of course, the ticketing issues around taylor swift s concert. paula reid live for cnn this morning in washington. what did you take away? one of the biggest take aways from yesterday s hearing, remember this is a contentious forum. i was surprised by how much substance was covered.
out what fell from the sky. uefa has apologised to liverpool fans after an independent review found the body governing european football was mainly to blame, for chaotic scenes in paris before last summer s champions league final with real madrid. supporters were penned in and pepper sprayed outside the stade de france. the report into overcrowding, ticketing issues, and heavy handed policing was commissioned by uefa, which at one stage had blamed liverpool fans for the disorder outside the stadium. our paris correspondent lucy williamson reports. i ve bad asthma and i ve been tear gassed twice. each fan trapped at the stade de france has their own story of what went wrong that night. problems with tickets, with barriers, with transport strikes, with the actions of french police. an independent panel blamed a lack of risk assessment or operational plans and said uefa was primarily responsible for the failures.
198 hours, eight days since the earthquake. reports that some rescues are still being made, even though attention inevitably is moving beyond rescue and towards caring for those that survived the earthquake stop obviously continues. we are into day eight and the search is not stopping. 0ur correspondent caroline davies sent this report from karamanmaras near the turkish border with syria. there is a realfocus there is a real focus on the humanitarian disaster. this behind me shows quite often it is so difficult. this was part of the hospital here. this was the intensive care unit. of course completely reduced to rubble. you might be able to see bits of pink, bits of white, medical documents that were left here. we know there are about 300 people inside, rescuers have told us. they said there are still rescue efforts to
ticketing issues, and heavy handed policing was commissioned by uefa, which at one stage had blamed liverpool fans for the disorder outside the stadium. our paris correspondent lucy williamson reports. i ve bad asthma and i ve been tear gassed twice. each fan trapped at the stade de france has their own story of what went wrong that night. problems with tickets, with barriers, with transport strikes, with the actions of french police. an independent panel blamed a lack of risk assessment or operational plans and said uefa was primarily responsible for the failures. it also said that uefa, the french football federation and french authorities wrongly inflated the huge numbers of supporters without valid tickets to deflect responsibility for planning and operational failures. uefa s general secretary apologised to the supporters of liverpool fc for the experiences many of them had