Tonight on 360 a cnn exclusive, our kfile has uncovered startling comments on a porn site made by the man now governor of north carolina, mark robinson. He denies the charges, vows to stay in the race. The latest tonight, also, just a few moments from now, oprah winfrey is scheduled to appear with vice president kamala harris just outside of detroit and swing state, michigan. Will bring you some of that live and breaking news in kentucky, a judge shot dead in his own chambers. Authorities say a preliminary investigation indicates it was a sheriff who killed him, were expecting a news conference with more details. We begin tonight with our cnn exclusive 47 days before the election, a bombshell report from cnn s kate files about north carolina s republican lieutenant governor mark robinson, who s also his party s nominee for governor. Newly discovered comments that he made on the message of the message board of a porn website between the years 2008 in 2012 comments that follow an already
Good evening. I m kaitlan collins and sources across the political spectrum tonight say the republican party has a major problem on its hands with potential implications for the presidential race. And donald trump, cnn s kfile has uncovered a slew of posts made by the republican nominee for governor of north carolina, mark robinson. You see him here in just 48 hours before trump is scheduled to return to that critical battleground, he and the rest so bus or finding out that the candidate that he endures posted dozens of disturbing comments on a porn forum between the year 2008 and 2012. Mark robinson calling himself and his own words, a perv writing that many things that are two to sexual in nature and friends great to explicit for me to even read on tv. But i will say this about what robinson wrote. He said that he enjoyed transgender pornography, despite the antitrans rhetoric that he s been using lately, and there were also racist and antisemitic statements included in that like whe
"Capital prosecutions have not and will not deter acts of terror, acts of mental illness and acts of hatred," Robert Dunham, director of the Death Penalty Policy Project at Phillips