that s tonight s cbs evening news, i m norah o donnell. good night judge judy: you open up your pay envelope, and you say, gee, today is my lucky day. i thought, about time i started making some money. announcer: a job finally paying off. judge judy: that s a nice raise, double your salary. yeah. judge judy: what did that involve? turning off the lights, locking the doors. announcer: .but the boss says he wasn t worth that much. judge judy: how much did you overpay him? by more than double what he was supposed to get. judge judy: and then you quit. announcer: judge judy. you are about to enter the courtroom you are about to enter the courtroom of judge judith sheindlin. captions paid for by cbs television distribution greg martini is suing his former employee, 21-year-old henry plantz, for the return of money henry was overpaid. byrd: order! all rise! this is case number 68 on the calendar in the matter of martini vs. plantz. judge judy: thank you.
killed woman, alexander dugin, is seemed by some to be the architect of this war, an ultra national, someone very close to president putin, someone who has pushed for russian expansionist policy. so this really strikes at the heart of russia, something very, very close. and yes ukraine denying this again, but is this a huge accusation. essentially ukraine being accused of hitting inside russian territory, someone extremely close to president trump himself. th vladimir putin himself. there could be fallout. david, what do you make of the ukrainian denials? reporter: denials came quickly after the event happened. from the point of view of where i m standing, they are saying absolutely no, that they had nothing to do with it, even hinting it wasn t worth their time given the fact that they are fighting an ongoing conflict on the ground here in ukraine. the defense intelligence spokesman says it is fake that ukraine is involved in this, it is fake that the national guard is involved
think they are embarrassed the juice wasn t worth the squeeze on this one and that s why they are so worried about the information coming out? absolutely, todd. i think that this whole thing from the beginning, they overplayed their hand. i think they were hopeful they would get into mar-a-lago and maybe there would be a treasure trove of information from donald trump, man could they really take him down now. they didn t find anything when they rifled through through melania s class. they didn t find anything they were looking for. now they all have egg on their face. and it looks like they are trying to backtrack, clean up, do anything they can to salvage themselves at this point because you can t look at what happened and say, man, mistakes were made here, somebody messed up. it is pretty obvious to the american people that that s the case. carley: well, the former president has made it very clear that he wants this affidavit released. the doj does not. so the judge sort of split
donald trump himself. and so at this point we know that the justice department is looking to go to court to try to compel some of this testimony, and it really shows you that, again, some of that is going we expect it s going to take a little while, but they are planning to try to get to some of that testimony that gets to the center of all of this, victor and alisyn. whitney, thank you for the reporting. evan, i want you to stay with us. let s bring in cnn s legal analyst, ellie honig, former state prosecutor and author of hatchet man . the committee stayed away from this fight because of the calendar. how sensitive is the time constraint for doj? time matters quite a bit. matter of the reason robert mueller s team did not go to court and did not try to fight to get these highly sensitive conversations, they said it wasn t worth the fight, the timing. we didn t have enough time. doj, according to our new reporting, the preparing to have
that s not good. and it increased overwa time. you ll see 65% increase in homelessness in new york city. the streets, not surprisingly, bl visibly dirtier. the smell goty much stronger. been there this month. public was decriminalized, but bill de blasio and many people took advantage of their newta freedoms. and there was, ofge course, a lt more crime after localcr politicians pledged to cut law enforcement by a billionim dollars a year, many cops decided it wasn t worth enforcing the too much risk, not enough reward. soen the number of police stops decline by more than 90%. so what happened to burglars? oh,av they 40% car theft by almost 70% shootings doubled. so what would you like to live in a place like that? well, for t t many in new york e life just became w intolerable and a huge number of people simply left not at anyone infi the mayor s office seemed to notice their departure. average new yorkers noticed they understood perfectly well the city government had no interest inme