of representatives to impeach. i certainly think that president trump has engaged in conduct that is comparable to if not more significant than clinton s onyx son s a or nixon s. and they were both impeached. do you think there s too much of a sigma attached to the notion of the impeachment process? not removal from office. because impeachment is different than the ultimate consequence of that. but do you think there s too stu much of a stigma around the process? i think it s exactly what the congress has started doing, examining the issues for itself, not relying on robert mueller and deciding for itself whether or not the president has transgressed. and, ross, are there powers that an official impeachment process would give congress that they don t have now and also what are the risks? talking to two lawyers here and impeachment is inherently a political process. so the risks, ross, are political here but what are the biggest risks usyou see for
tonight. i am not guilty. does that include the time i stole a comic book when i was 5 years old? reporter: for years, ted bundy had killed dozens of women across the west. the former law student, charming and chatty, somehow outsmarting police again and again. no man is truly innocent. we all transgressed in some way in our life. reporter: bundy escaping twice, once from a colorado courthouse, then slipping through the ceiling of his jail cell. in 1977, on the run again, this time to florida where he would kill two sorority sisters at florida state. but his final victim, a child. kimberly leech disappeared during the middle of the school day. reporter: kimberly leach was just 12 years old. she had been placed in the little lean-to shed in the hog pen. reporter: the man who took so many young lives, finally caught during a traffic stop. he finally tells officers, i am ted bundy.
of these desperate families at our southern border. and he also said this. the actions that you now encourage president trump to take make it obvious to me that you didn t get my or our jewish message. outfront now is rab beaumont comess-daniels. thank you for coming in. a pleasure. that you know for having me. thank you so much. why did you choose to speak out on this? well, i chose to speak out on it because it s something that is kind of sticks in the craw of the jewish people, because we ve been refugees under so many conditions during so many times in history, and ultimately, what we need to make clear to anyone who s listening, certainly a senior adviser to the president, is what our values are, what our morals are, and when they re transgressed, we need to say something about it. miller s family attended your
deeply establishment to fire comey. that memo from rod rosen stein could have been written by a 40 year bureaucrat at the justice department talking about all the grand institutions that comey has transgressed. so it s an amazing mix of reform plus establishment that took place here. ainsley: so you have the democrats that are saying the timing is suspect because it looks like there might be collusion. james comey has never said there wasn t collusion. republicans saying james comey should have been fired on january 20th. what do you make of the timing? timing all has to do with rod rosen stein. he is the cog around which this machine turns. he had to be confirmed. he only had six no votes from democrats. is he comey s direct supervisor. the deputy attorney general. and he had to get in place. remember, this is a guy who had a reputation. he stayed on as a u.s. attorney under the democrats. rod rosenstein did. he had a lot of cover here.