Coverage of national and international news, including breaking stories. Attorney for the Southern District of new york elly honing. Julia, start with you. Did somebody tell the president he could take over this investigation . Where is it coming from . Seems to just be coming out of his adlib interview as he frequently does. Sort of spins from the cuff here. Seems that this is coming from a place of increased rhetoric from President Trump. He wants to show that he has control over the situation. In fact a lot of times likes bringing up the russia investigation. Perhaps that plays to his base who thinks this is part of the witchhunt he describes treating him and others like Paul Manafort unfairly. It could be that hes watching what the coverage of the Manafort Trial, thats getting to him. Could be he sees people like don mcgahn, his white house Special Counsel speaking to Robert Mueller and heard a lot about the fact Robert Mueller could be preparing a slew of indictments to give himse
any? how does the judge work it out jp call them in? send in the bay iliff? judges like to reduce everything to writing. a clean record. the right move, for the judge respond in writing say, are you saying this or are you saying that? and the jury like passing notes in high school. the most reliable way. the jury responds with a note. in terms how this plays out down either road. if it s 17 out of 18 counts they have a verdict and don t know what to do with the last one because they can t, the judge gives them a partial verdict instruction. tells the jury, you can come back and give us the verdict on the 17 you have, and keep working on the 18th, once do you that, you can t take back the first 17. or you can keep working until you have all 18. a jury does not necessarily have to return verdicts on every count and indictment. a verd on one count. that s the judge, they can take that. what happens to whatever is unsettled? the jury will continue to deliberating.
50% believe he s a victim of conspiracy. they say how for tu tis for those that were his political rivals for allegedly assaulting a maid at a new york hotel. but then, again, 70% of the readers of the french newspaper that is writing say, we believe the u.s. justice system has treated dominique strauss-kahn fairly. that s interesting. second item, we have the al gentleman engineer ra journalist saying that she is safe. when he didn t know whether she was held in syria or in iran. today she was released after several weeks in custody. she flew to damascus, held on april 29th, syrian authorities say that she was deported to
what happened in this raid, but they seemed very, very concerned about the next raid and the one after that and that those kind of raids are going to be much riskier with how much information is now out there. we have from my perspective gotten to a point where we are close to jeopardizing this precious capability that we h e have, and we can t afford to o do that. captions by vitac www.vitac.com this this fight isn t over. when you extend that to the military and their families, from my perspective, it is time to stop talking, and we have talked far too much about this. we need to move on. it s a story that if we don t stop talking, it will never end, and it needs to. remember, a lost what s come out is not just tactics but a lot of what we ve talked about is technology as well, from the steltd helicopter to other things that the team used. chris, is there any source of these leaks that the pentagon is concerned about, like the white house for example? nobody t