meeting where former president trump discusses holding secret documents he does not declassify. listen. isn t it amazing? i have a big pile of papers. look. this was him. they presented me this. this is it ooff the record. but they presented me with this. this is the defense department and him. this was him. that wasn t done by me, it was him. all sorts of stuff. pages long. let s see here. isn t that amazing? this totally wins my case, you know, except it is like highly confidential, secret. as a president i could declassify, but now i can t. yeah, now we have a problem. isn t that interesting? so cool. we hear you probably almost didn t believe me, but now you believe me. no, i believed you. incredible, right? this conversation is a critical piece of evidence in the case of trump s alleged mishandling of classified information. and paula reid explains. reporter: this recording is from the summer 2021 at bedminster, speaking to two people working on an auto
just in, security failures behind the january 6 attack on the u.s. capitol, quote, their plan was literally to kill people. that from a new report just released by democrats on the senate homeland security and governmental affairs committee, it focuses on the apparent intelligence failures in the lead up to january 6. let s bring in a former assistant secretary for the department of homeland security and harvard professor. good morning. good morning. i m sure you ve had a chance to tdigest this. and e port finds that former president trump was the primary cause of the insurrection. that is in the report. buoes on to say fact remains th the federal agencies tasked with preventing terrorism did not sound the alarm and much of the violence that follow order january of may have been prevented had they
department of state, there are 15 ports in florida. can you tell us about their stalt s and when they ll reopen and become fully operational? basically we want operations in daylight only initially. so everyone is confident. in some cases some buoes we have might have been moved off stations. for some of the other ports, for example, the port of manatee near tampa, that one is only open with daylight restriction for the moment. we re working hard to get the equipment and personnel we need and into jacksonville where we expect them to begin tomorrow. we re also working to get equipment down to key oui wrest which is little tougher for us. can you give us the situation
craig fugate this morning on wake up with al this morning and i was very impress woued wi me. he said all the supplies were on standby. thankfully we learned something from the 2005 hurricane season. stephanie abrams, thank you. bill karins, as i mentioned, tracking hurricane earl s path. what caught your eye as you continue to watch this thing. as stephanie was hinting at. new update from the hurricane center. path forecast changed every six hours. set your watch by it. once again, 5:00 this afternoon we ll get a new update. we got the new one and not a lot of changes. the path of earl getting set in stone. there s the big jinx, of course. that s what i just learned from their new path information. here s a look at the storm. the waves are incredible. we re already seeing near the storm, 20 to 30-foot waves and earlier today 49-foot wave as the center passed over one of those buoes.