one believed to be used in the attack. another found in the vehicle after they found the suspect. thank you, tom. joining us now, casey jordan, a criminologist, a behavioral analyst and attorney. and also with us a former fbi special agent. thank you both for being here. jeff, first, what questions do you have now after listening to the press conference based on everything we ve learned in the last half hour? what your correspondent said, it s important to know who had access to the information. who may have seen his postings online. if that was reported to any law enforcement. that would be important to know. the fbi, of course, doesn t do mass scraping of that information to try to target people for investigations, but if it was reported and looked into, maybe this could be prevented. but that s an important part of the investigation, to see who had access to that as tom said, who saw that information and what could have been done with it at that time. casey, police say this
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everything we know so far what does this tell you about any of this getting close to donald trump, the former president himself, or i think of michael cohen, and how he ended up going to jail, but nothing really ended up touching donald trump. yeah, i think i would add to your sentence there, yet. i think the inclusion of allen weisselberg in this indictment signals that prosecutors are interested in flipping him in hopes of finding liability for others up to and including donald trump. allen weisselberg, as the cfo, as tom said, is someone in a key position. when you have an organization as small as the trump organization it s harder to defuse responsibility. in a small corporation like this we know that donald trump was hands on in decision making. so someone like allen weisselberg, now that he is staring down criminal charges and the possibility of prison
president trump s tax returns, it seems like this is this possibility of insurance fraud or bank fraud. michael cohen said that it was donald trump s practice to change the value of assets depending on what most suited his immediate need to lower his numbers when it came to reporting taxes and to inflate his assets when it came to seeking loans. so michael cohen said everything from his attempted purchase of the buffalo bills to purchases of art involved this process. and so we saw with paul manafort, some of these same kinds of things, bank fraud when he was playing around with assets seeking bank loans and we know his sentencing guidelines were in the neighborhood of 8 to 10 years. if donald trump followed that same pattern of practice we might expect to see similar kinds of numbers. tom, donald trump over the years has inspired loyalty but only to a point as we saw in the