world. this is early start, i m laura jarrett. good morning, i m christine romans. it is thursday, june 3rd, it is 5:00 a.m. in new york. it looks like a new era may be dawning in israel, bargaining right down to the wire israeli opposition parties struck a new deal overnight setting up the exit of israel s longest serving prime minister benjamin netanyahu. elliott gotkine is covering the developments in jerusalem. elliott, opposition leaders got to their deal just 38 minutes before the final deadline. what happens now? reporter: it certainly went down to the wire. what happens right now is that there needs to be a vote of confidence in the israeli knesset or parliament. that vote needs to be called by the speakers of the knesset who happens to be from prime minister netanyahu s likud party. what looks likely at this stage is that on monday he will follow the rules and convene the vote which will happen a week later so june 14th. what this opposition bloc, this coalitio
somebody was telling her. my sister is in my driveway and her head is bloody. so you bury your little girl and then it s a murder destination? yes. there were two people brandi feared. one in town. she thought she was being followed. one thousands of miles away. josh was still in alaska. and then there was the new man in her life. anybody close to brandi we needed to take a hard serious look at. no state fingerprints, no dna and no arrest for years. you re grieving, how do you put all of that day by day. hints emerged of somebody s dark past. you have robberies going on, homicides. one brave woman willing to talk. he told me, the same thing that happened to brandi will happen to me. the question wasn t just who murdered the young mother, it was why? there was no money. there just wasn t a reason to do it. she didn t hurt nobody. she didn t bother anybody. why did they have to kill her? hello and welcome to dateline, imagine driving
india is impacting families around the world. we re speaking to one woman managing her father s care from thousands of miles away. welcome to sunday, may 2nd, we are always so grateful you wake up with us. always great to see you, christi. we start with some out of this world breaking news this morning. watch this. and i don t know if you can hear the applause but we have visual confirmation of the crew 1 resilience capsule. that is excellent news, we are splash down. welcome back to earth. four astronauts just making a safe return to the planet after a record breaking mission in space. the spacex crew splashing down safely in the gulf of mexico. you can see there, the capsule being pulled out of the water, making its way to the recovery vessel. that s the commander of crew one stepping on to earth for the first time here. there he is. since getting to the international space station. that was back in november. it s the longest time ever in space for a u.s. crew lau
and they are not written in plain english. let s start with the most important legal phrase in this entire case, substantial causal factor. what does that mean? the jury has been told in order to find chauvin guilty, they must find his actions were, quote, a substantial causal factor in causing the death of george floyd. it s a mouthful, but substantial causal factor doesn t mean the only factor here. remember, all that testimony the jury heard about drugs in floyd s system, clogged arteries, those can all be contributing factors and chauvin can still be guilty if the knee on floyd s neck was a substantial cause of his death. now at the same time, if the jury finds that chauvin s actions as a police officer were a reasonable use of force, then there is no crime in this case at all. and we heard a lot about that throughout the entire trial. laura, can you take us through each of these charges against chauvin. this is very important for us to revisit at this point and what th
former vice president walter mondale. his touching message before his death. welcome to our viewers in the united states and around the world. this is early start, i m christine romans. i m laura jarrett. it s tuesday, april 20th, 5:00 a.m. here in new york and the most high profile criminal trial in a generation now in the hands of 12 people. the jury continues deliberations today in the case against derek chauvin for killing george floyd after roughly four hours of deliberations yesterday and for the first time during this trial the defendant sat unmasked at length yesterday during his lawyer s closing arguments. the jury finally able to see his expressions, his reactions and the prosecution and defense offering their final words to the jury as the nation prepares for a verdict. you can believe your own eyes. this case is exactly what you thought when you saw it first, when you saw that video. it is exactly that. you can believe your eyes. it s exactly what you beli