yesterday. that is according to the sheriff s office at a news conference. as we know, the suspect was on the run for four days after he alleged by stormed into his neighbor s home with an ar-15 and killed five people, including a child, after they complained about him shooting his gun outside. the fbi says it was a tip that led them to a house miles away from the murder scene where he was hiding in a closet under a pile of laundry. anybody that helps anybody that helped this maniac has definitely got some kind of issues as far as i am concerned. as the chief deputy there speaking, ed lavandera was asking questions. they said there have been several arrests. do we know how many or who could have been arrested here? reporter: yeah, those are the details we are still trying to unravel. i think it s going to take some time as investigators, as you just heard from the cheap deputy of the san jacinto county sheriff s department say that they could only really say and confi
after major concerns over the bank s finances. its shares fell by almost a third on wednesday at one point, forcing the swiss central bank to take action. it issued a statement saying credit suisse can borrow up to $54 billion us to boost its bottom line. today the shares have rebounded and are currently up just over 20%. the selling has continued in asia today, with japan s topix banks index falling more than 4%, after recording its worst day in three years earlier this week. we re nowjoined by craig erlam, who s senior market analyst at oanda. for the story to come out was unfortunate timing. it has the backing of the central bank. covering short positions? it keeps investors that they are holding onto something that is not going to become more innocuous. we will see more volatility over the coming days and now investors are going to be looking at more financial institutions to see if there are material weaknesses there as well. i don t think this is over at this point, i t
sean has a keg. but don t worry, it s light beer so y all will be fine. all right. great to see everybody, sean. great. love you too. anyway, have a great weekend. all right. i m laura ingraham. and this is the ingraham angle from washington tonight. thanks for being with us. the tock party, that s the focus of tonight s angle. well, mr. china came to washington today and it was quite a spectacle. we have heard important concerns about the potential for unwanted foreign excess to u.s. data and potential manipulation of the tick tock u.s. ecosystem. our approach has never been to dismiss or trivialize any of these concerns. we will firewall, protect us data from unwanted foreign access. can you do surveillance of other americans ? we will protect the u.s. user data and file it all from all our foreign access is a commitment that we ve given to the committee. i want to hear you say with 100 percent certainty that neither vytenis nor tiktok employees can target other america
factory in china will significantly affect production of the phones and increase wait times ahead of the busy christmas holiday season. hello and welcome to our look ahead to what the the papers will be bringing us tomorrow. with me are rachel cunliffe, the senior associate editor at the new statesman, and ali miraj, who s a columnist for the article. the metro leads on rishi sunak s debut on the world stage at the climate conference in egypt where he made a short speech, and features a photo of a warm embrace between the prime minister and french president, emmanuel macron. the guardian has a powerful lead story from cop with the prime minister of barbados mia mottley condemning richer countries for failing the developing world. also leading on cop, the i reports on the un and exploitation of resources, now, and refusing to cough up the money or helping those poor countries who feel the effects most or helping those poor countries who feel the effects most directly. also l
arrangements in northern ireland to try to help restore power sharing at stormont. and a triumphant ukraine wins the eurovision song contest after claiming the popular vote. good afternoon and welcome to bbc news. first, sweden and finland have confirmed they will apply for nato membership ending decades of military non alignment. the finnish president, sauli niinisto, called his country s decision historic. however, sweden s governing social democrats, said that as members they would not accept nuclear weapons or alliance bases on swedish territory. reports say both countries are planning to hand their membership applications to nato on wednesday. nato foreign ministers, who are meeting in berlin, say they want a rapid accession because of the crisis in ukraine. from berlin, our europe correspondent, nick beake, reports. a fresh aerial attack lights the sky above the besieged mariupol steelworks. this is where the last of the city s defenders have been holed up, a final