friday. the committee is considering strong measures after clark claimed executive privilege and refused to answer questions. he is about to send out another round of subpoenas with 20 signed and awaiting final approval. the committee has spoken to over 150 people connected to the capitol riot. a federal judge is on the verge of releasing trump s records. republicans helping to elect at least ten people attending the january 6th rally. in dallas the latest sign of mass delusions going mainstream. hundreds of qanon followes gathering for the resurrection of john kennedy. a professor at the alabama school of law and malcolm nantz
cursing. this judge has held this office since it was created in 2000. the judge denied to be available for this report. in june they agreed to pay $11 million for part of the lawsuit, although they didn t apologize for the issue. but they paid $11 million. you are a professor at the alabama school of law and you gave a lesson about this very situation. tell me what you ve learned from this. this is an important topic that i would put under the rubric of something called the school to prison pipeline. it s the way in many ways that schools have outsourced punishment for minor infractions in school disciplinary actions into the criminal justice
carolina, and south dakota have suggested they may review or amend their states laws to mirror texas s legislation. kentucky, louisiana, oklahoma, ohio, and more are expected to follow. attorney general garland vowed to fight similar lawsuits against states that copy the texas ban. the obvious and expressly acknowledged intention of this statutory scheme is to prevent women from exercising their constitutional rights. the united states has the authority and responsibility to ensure that no state can deprive individuals of their constitutional rights through a legislative scheme specifically designed to prevent the vindication of those rights. leading off our discussion tonight, texas state representative jasmine crockett. she is a civil rights attorney, and joyce vance, a former federal prosecutor, a professor at the alabama school of law,
joyce vance, professor at the alabama school of law. she is an msnbc legal analyst and david k. johnston, founder of dcreport.org. let s begin before we delve into a point that pete williams raise you had. the flip of the justice department revising the decision from 2019 to say that there is now awe legal purpose. it doesn t have to be simply legislative purpose in terms of why the tax returns should be handed over to this committee. is that a common practice or could a krit uk say that is because there is a leadership change or a political change and the department of justice under trump. they want to protect him. now it s different. i would expect that there were some criticism of this move by olc, the office of legal counsel. in reality this one is fair and