process. the manhattan da had to presen evidence to a grand jury showing that there was probabl cause that a crime was committed before thi indictment could issue it s not something that he could just decide to do on his own. and i think that that hurdle and on top of that, the hurdle to prove this case beyond reasonable doubt, is what make this, you know, illegitimate - there s an actual trial tha has to come. donald trump is entitled to th protections every american citizen has. he s innocent unless and until proven guilty in a court asha, good to see you, thank you for being with us. senior lecture and assistant dean at yale jackson school of local affairs and a former fbi special agent. that does it for me. thank you for watching, come back here tomorrow morning normal time, 10 am, to noo eastern. i will be hosting specia coverage of the indictment o the former president, donald trump, tomorrow night starting at 6 pm eastern. i m joined by my colleagues, simone sanders, katie f
In a Monday message sent out to students, faculty and staff, University President Peter Salovey announced that he had consolidated years of presidential announcements about University initiatives.
barricades today outside trump tower and manhattan criminal court. political reports the capitol police are preparing for the possibility of protests ahead of a potential indictment. elevated security posture will begin tomorrow morning and we should note the capitol police are not commenting on security preps. meanwhile, the associated press reports trump s calls for protests have generated a mostly needed response so far, even some of his fiercest supporters are dismissing the idea as a waste of time, or even a law enforcement trap. with us for more on all of this, former special agent in the counterintelligence division of the fbi. she s an assistant dean at the yale jackson school of global affairs. our, sherwood kind of precautions are law enforcement officials taking? what precautions should they be taking? well, they need to be sharing information. this is a lesson that was learned from january 6th on any and all tips that they re getting. and, you know, i think the
won t be needing those anymore. digital tools so impressive, you just can t stop banking. we re learning new details about the fulton county special grand jury investigation into former president trump s efforts to overturn the 2020 election. the foreperson confirmed to nbc that they heard a conversation in which trump pressured ralston to overturn the election joining us now assistant dean at the yale jackson school of global affairs also a former special agent with the counterintelligence division at the fbi this comes after we learn that adult film actress, stormy
growing concerns about the trove of january six footage released to fox news host tucker carlson. house minority leader hakeem jeffries says that there are security risks of capitol police do not review the footage before there s. it is not clear to me that any material footage, in the news personality another network, may have how has been vetted. but it must absolutely be vetted before anything is released into the public domain. there are serious security concerns, we are releasing footage into the public domain. in an era where political violence is on the rise. let s bring in asha rangappa, former special agent for the counter intelligence division of the fbi, and senior lecturer and assistant dean at the yale jackson school of global affairs. , asha. welcome good to see you. if this footage is aired before capitol police have a chance to look at it, how much is that a concern?