We appreciate your time. Im dion lim. For all of us here, thanks so much for inviting us tonight, right here, President Trump on why he suddenly called off the attack on iran. After iran shot down that u. S. Drone, the president says the u. S. Was cocked and loaded. Saying, ten minutes before the strike, i stopped it. Tonight, the president in his own words. What changed his mind. Martha raddatz with late reporting. The massive explosions in philadelphia. The largest refinery on the east coast going up in flames. The blasts felt for miles. Families told to shelter in place. The driver who felt the heat wash over his car. Were live on the scene tonight. Authorities just a short time ago in the Dominican Republic coming before the cameras, explaining why tourists have died. Pushing back, saying there are no mysterious deaths. As tonight we now learn of another american tourist who died there. The new surveillance showing the brutal assault on tsa
agents. A man knocking down one agent, tr
purpose. but first, leading this hour, the supreme court sending shockwaves of its own today for places luke tuscaloosa and south bend and chapel hill with a unanimous decision and a major victory for college athletes that could reshape college athletics forever. the court ruling that stutd athletes in the ncaa division can receive payments for education-related expenses. supreme court justice brett kavanaugh writing, nowhere else in america can businesses get away with agreeing not to pay their workers a fair-market rate on the theory that their product is defined by not paying their workers a fair-market rate. under ordinary principles of anti-trust law, it is not evident why college sports should be any different. the ncaa is not above the law, unquote. cnn s jessica schneider joins us now. jessica, do we know how much athletes will be able to make? jake, this certainly does pave the way for college athletes to get paid. but this does not permit for
the supreme court tonight. throwing out the murder conviction of a death row inmate in missouri. curtis flowers claimed racial bias during jury selection that kept him from receiving a fair trial. a white prosecutor blocked black jurors. the supreme court agreeing, 7-2. so, what is next? a seventh trial. here s steve osunsami tonight. reporter: curtis flowers has insisted to this day that he did not murder four people in 1996 inside this mississippi furniture store where he used to work. his case is the subject of a popular series on starz. how do you put somebody on death row with a circumstantial case? he didn t do it. reporter: prosecutors never found a murder weapon or physical evidence tying him to the scene, and in today s decision it was justice brett kavanaugh writing for the 7-2 majority, accusing the state of discrimination, and allowing a seventh trial. his words were a slap to the prosecutor, saying that mississippi s relentless, determined effort to rid the jury of