so, there are daily depositions and now there are, i think, as many as 400 depositions that have been taken. approaching 400 witnesses, andrea. yeah, we focus only the rudy giulianis and the mark meadows and people not cooperating but they re getting a lot of information from at least mid-level and higher level people? that s exactly right. again, close to 400 interviews conducted so far. more on the calendar ahead. you know, we re sort of in touch with or reaping out to a lot of the people who we think remain on the committee s list of folks they want to talk to. and we know there s efforts going on to schedule interviews even now. so the evidence does continue. we do tend to get parked on the folks who decline to cooperate. they are the big names but the committee s efforts continue. garrett, thank you so much, tom windt and joyce vance and suzanne craig. we appreciate it. and meet the press, the president is set to hold on his
for now, there s a partial compromise between the telecom and airline industries over the launch of 5g cell service, today s take and verizon struck a late-night deal to temporarily delay or limit their 5g towers near runways. the concern is 5g signals to potentially interfere with the planes altimeters which tell pilots their precise distance from the ground. joining us all things aviation and a lot of other subjects. tom costello. tom, some are cancelling flights concerned about potential 5g interference where they and their airports, capitals have made other arrangements, they ve done the agreements even though there s little to no interference in airports, is that right? yes, this is a pandora s box right here to try to explain this. but let me give you the bottom line here. we do have several foreign airlines that have cancelled
forward here, really several years leading up to when trump got into the white house of misstatements with his financial institutions, as well as his insurance institutions. and perhaps as well in preparation of his taxes. andrea. tom, that s so great you just keyed up suzanne craig. you ve been covering this, you broke a lot of the news with your team from the new york times about the former president s finances for years and years. trump is suing both you and the times over your award-winning reporting. so, what do you think about the substance and time? off the top, it feels awfully close that the charges could be coming bringing the principals that are the subject of the conversation. that s significant. a few things jumped out at me that give a road map at potentially the charges. i ll zero one for complicity. for these sort of cases where there s valuations, you often say, well, i relied on the
james sweeting the office is seeking to compel the president and former family members as part of the civil investigation. joining me now, the nbc investigations tom windt, nbc capitol hill correspondent garrett haake. joyce vance and pulitzer prize winning investigative reporter suzanne craig. tom, you ve been working all morning on this, i know. thanks to you for keeping this all straight. we should note that leticia james has not reached a final decision that this merits legal action. with that said, take us through what you have learned from the court documents. there s a lot. dave: data in here. right, andrea, the key thing, there s 150 pages part of a supplemental filing, with the ongoing fight that president trump, his son don jr. and ivanka will have to provide testimony as part of the civil investigation the james office is leading.