engaging in political persecution, but we know a federal judge had to sign off on this search warrant. it wasn t just the fbi acting on its own. and before it was even in front of that judge, the highest levels of the doj including the trump appointed director of the fbi, likely had to approve the action. we also know that the fbi met with trump s legal team in june about white house documents that were being stored at mar-a-lago. so the key question in this mystery now is, what changed between that june meeting and yesterday? it was big enough to compel the fbi to move. cnn s leyla santiago is live outside mar-a-lago. you re learning more about the timeline and what led up to the search. fill us in. it s important to go all the way back to the beginning of the year. january, where we start to see this timeline unfold, when we know that president trump s team was interviewed by the fbi. and that s when they really started to look into what was a lot of records believed to b
gradually arriving. overnight temperatures around 9 degrees under clear skies, 16 where we keep the showers. the showers keep going, hit and miss across central and southern england, bit of height out, the best sunshine further north and east, some of the rain heavy across western fringes of scotland and northern ireland. here eyes of 18 but we could see 26 or 27, it will be hot and humid yet again. but take a look at the weekend, low pressure sitting out to the west spiralling around that low, a series of weather fronts, bringing some heavy rain at times, pretty relentless across northern ireland and western scotland. not exclusively, there will be showers in wales and south west england and a few sharp showers elsewhere. if you keep some sunshine will still have some warmth into the weekend, 25 degrees, still 77 fahrenheit. and there are more showers and strong winds to come as well as we head into the weekend, so a little bit more of an autumnal flavour to our weather and
in the country s history. hello and welcome to our look ahead to what the papers will be bringing us tomorrow. with me are baroness ros altmann, former pensions minister in david cameron s conservative government, and the broadcaster penny smith. hi there. lovely to see you. the daily mirror leads with cctv footage of a gunman fleeing after the fatal shooting of olivia pratt korbel. merseyside police say the shooter used two guns in the attack that killed the nine year old. the daily mail suggests a leading qc, lord pinnock, will say the way mps are conducting an inquiry into borisjohnson and partygate, risks damaging democracy. the prime minister is being investigated by the commons privileges committee, over whether he misled parliament over gatherings in number ten during lockdown. the guardian says two out of three police forces in england and wales are experiencing rising gun crime, according to the home office. job vacancies in the health service make the front of the i
christine todd whitman. welcome to the programme. we start with the latest development in the search of donald trump s mar a lago estate two weeks ago. a usjudge has ordered the release by tomorrow at noon eastern time of a redacted version of the affidavit that supported its application for a search warrant. it s a document that contains a lot of detail. in it, thejustice department had to lay out for the judge why they thought there was a probable cause for a crime and that evidence existed of that crime at the florida resort. and it s a document the us media and donald trump have both wanted unsealed. let s talk with former federal judge, nancy gertner. good to have you with us. on that latest development that they are expecting a release at noon tomorrow, your reaction? i expecting a release at noon tomorrow, your reaction? i am very surprised- tomorrow, your reaction? i am very surprised- the tomorrow, your reaction? i am very surprised. the usual tomorrow, your rea