down with corps for her first television interview. and she draft dropped a whole lot of hints. did the grand jury recommend indictments of multiple people? yes. i will tell you, it is not a short list. we saw 75 people. and there are six pages of the report cut out. so, we are talking about more than a dozen people? i would say that, yes. are these recognizable names? names that people would know? there are certainly names that you would recognize, yes. there definitely are something that you would expect. the grand jury forewoman telling nbc today that the grand jury panel recommended that over a dozen people be indicted. doesn t is a lot. and on the one question that we are all wondering about did the special grand jury recommended an indictment against the former president? take a listen. did the grand jury recommend an indictment of former president trump? i am not going to speak on exact indictments. would we be surprised? are there bombshells of w
thanks for staying up late with me. i will say you at the end of tomorrow. check out that shot of kagan! awesome! thanks for all of you at home for being here with us tonight. we are starting in the state of georgia. fulton county district attorney fani willis has yet to say whether or not she will seek indictments in her sprawling criminal investigation into former president donald trump and his allies efforts to subvert the 2020 election. but today, one of the grand jurors in that, emily core, the juries forewoman, she is speaking out. nbc news blaine alexander sat down with corps for her first television interview. and she draft dropped a whole lot of hints. did the grand jury recommend indictments of multiple people? [silence] yes. i will tell you, it is not a short list. we saw 75 people. and there are six pages of the report cut out. so, we are talking about more than a dozen people? i would say that, yes. are these recognizable names? names that peopl
the room to testify with immunity deals already in place? maybe a dozen? in a series of interview today, kohrs also told the atlanta journal-constitution that the panel heard more recordings of trump phone calls. that, is in addition to his infamous call to georgia secretary of state brad raffensperger, asking him to, find 11,000 votes. this is what kohrs said about those calls. we heard a lot of recordings of president trump on the phone, declining to give specifics. it is amazing how many hours of footage you can find that mine man on the phone. some of these that were privately recorded by people or recorded by a staffer now, this is a person who volunteered to be the four women of the special grand jury but did not vote in 2016. she did not vote in 2020. in fact, she told the atlanta journal-constitution that she has never voted before, period. and until the grand jury proceedings, i ve kohrs never heard the infamous call between
trump s claim that the grand jury s report totally exonerated him. in response, kohrs rolled her eyes and burst out laughing. did he really say that, she asked. oh, that s fantastic. that s phenomenal. i love it. so, make of that what you will. we also learned in kohrs s nbc news interview that trump s former chief of staff, mark meadows, did in fact testify to the special grand jury for an hour and a half. this is information we did not know previously. kohrs further revealed that many witnesses who came to testify before the grand jury did so having already been granted immunity. how many people came into the room to testify with immunity deals already in place? maybe a dozen? in a series of interview today, kohrs also told the atlanta journal-constitution that the panel heard more recordings of trump phone calls. that is in addition to his infamous call to georgia secretary of state, brad
capitol. the new york times is reporting that the january six committee is quote, finding few records of calls by president donald j trump from critical hours when investigators know that he was making them. investigators have not uncovered evidence that any official records where tampered with or deleted, and it is well known that mr. trump used his personal cell phone, and those of his aides, routinely, to talk with aids, congressional allies, and outside confidence. joining us now, democratic congressman jamie raskin of maryland. he s a member the january six committee, and served as the lead impeachment manager in the second impeachment trial of donald trump. he is the author of the new best selling book, unthinkable. raskin, thank you very much for joining us tonight. what can you tell us about this gap, or what s happening and what s your finding in the records of the trump phone calls on january 6th? well, not much, other than