the sheriff will testify monday. meantime, police in japan say, the man accused of assassinating shinzo abe had a stash of weapons in his home. a number of homemade pistols made out of pipe and adhesive tape. he had, also considered, using explosives. new details on what might have motivated the attack. and a scramble to save yosemite s ancient sequoias, as wildfires close in. i m standing right in front of the grizzly giant with a speaker system set up around it. i m pamela brown in washington. you are living the cnn newsroom. we begin this hour with the congressional investigation into the attack on the capitol and what could be a new start with this for the january 6th committee. steve bannon, former trusted advisor to donald trump now says, he will testify, and he wants to do so publicly.his offer comes as he faces trial next week on criminal contempt charges for defying a congressional subpoena. bannon had argued he wasn t allowed to cooperate because trump
if you re killing trees? because it s regenerative, you can grow trees. right. well, you can grow all sorts of things, can t you? well, you can t grow concrete. you can. see you, cameron. cheerio. well, that is the interview, but after the broadcast it got many millions of views on social media and continues to. cameron, when you hear that again, what do you think? what a shame that we have to endure such idiocy in our media spaces. it really is crazy he still has a platform, really. is that how you see it? i mean, do you think, despite the way the interview went, would that be counted as ultimately a successful media appearance for you? what is your rationale when you decide who to do an interview with? yeah, i mean, off the back of that, i think a lot of people realised what we re up against. he clearly had his agenda for how he wanted the interview
i suppose, is it difficult, do you think, for the police to tell the difference between a protester and a journalist these days? when everyone has cameras, everybody has phones, it s difficult to tell who is a journalist who is not? all they have to do is ask. which they didn t do, you say? is that right? they didn t. right, 0k. you know, let me bring in someone who actually takes part in this kind of protest. cameron ford is from insulate britain. let me just play you a clip you might have already heard of him on talk radio with mike graham from last year. what you do for living, cameron? i m a carpenter. carpenter, right. so how safe is that for the climate? well, i work with timber, which is a much more sustainable material, rather than concrete. i also. but you work with trees that have been cut down then, don t you? it s a sustainable building practice. how is it sustainable if you re killing trees? because it s regenerative, you can grow trees. right. well, you can grow all sorts
to what they are doing. i suppose, is it difficult, do you think, for the police to tell the difference between a protester and a journalist these days? when everyone has cameras, everybody has phones, it s difficult to tell who is a journalist who is not? all they have to do is ask. which they didn t do, you say? is that right? they didn t. right, 0k. you know, let me bring in someone who actually takes part in this kind of protest. cameron ford is from insulate britain. let me just play you a clip you might have already heard of him on talk radio with mike graham from last year. what you do for living, cameron? i m a carpenter. carpenter, right. so how safe is that for the climate? well, i work with timber, which is a much more sustainable material, rather than concrete. i also. but you work with trees that have been cut down then, don t you? it s a sustainable building practice. how is it sustainable if you re killing trees? because it s regenerative, you can grow trees. right. well