recovered from mar-a-lago last month, and it includes empty folders marked as classified. we re live in moscow as the nation bids farewell to the leading soviet who brought the cold war to a peaceful end. announcer: live from cnn center, this is cnn newsroom with kim brunhuber. well, if at first you don t succeed, try again. it s 5:00 a.m. on florida s space coast and after last monday s scrubbed launch, nasa s artemis i rocket is ready for liftoff once more. have a look, this is the scene live right now from the kennedy space center. things go to plan, the unmanned mission will be able to launch this afternoon going beyond the moon and kicking off a new stage in space exploration. the artemis program could see humans return to the lunar surface and set their sights on mars and beyond. the vibe around the kennedy space center is electric right now. as nasa chief bill nelson explains, that could be one of the challenges. here he is. the launch team is very confiden
played a key role in bringing the cold war to a peaceful end. gorbachev died tuesday after a long illness. you re seeing live pictures now of a public ceremony held at the hall of columns atmos cow s historic house of the unions. russian president vladimir putin isn t in attendance. after the service, gorbachev will be buried next to his wife. so for more on all this, senior international correspondent fred pleitgen live from moscow. fred, so you were inside at that ceremony. tell us more about what you saw there, the atmosphere, what kind of people were coming there to pay their respects. reporter: hi there, kim. it was a lot of ordinary russians to pay their respectings. just to give you an idea of how many people actually coming, you can see behind me, there are just scores, lines of people lining up here outside of the house of unions to try to come in and pay their final respects to mikhail gorbachev. in fact, what s going on is that the police is having to sort of
life, has begun. his new life in confinement. momentarily, we expect to speak to an attorney for at least one of the victims who testified in this trial. there were 10 alleged victims, eight of whom we heard the testimony of in this relatively short trial. also relatively short deliberations. 21 hours for some 48 counts in all. we had a jury of 7 women, 5 men. we are not going to be hearing from any of the jurors tonight. the jurors were, while all of this has been going on outside the courthouse, the jurors have been receiving instructions from the judge not to speak to any reporters tonight. do we have justine? joining me now is justine. thank you very much for being with us. first of all, have you talked to your clients tonight? and if so, what did they feel about these this conviction? absolutely. the very first calls i made were to clients who did testify in the trial. they were greatly relieved. almost in disbelief. one of them said thank god he s in jail. and the o
concrete ceiling along with the fire that ensued after. it is a miracle they re saying that the store s owner survived. of course you heard that one witness saying just how bad off this gentleman is. paul franks is the some of the founder of william c. franks, a furniture store by the way that has been there more than three decades in the town of wayne, outside of detroit by 15 miles. people have come out today to pay their respectings and give their support. as we learn more witnesses said it sounded like a bomb went off. one woman said her electricity was cut for a couple moments right after the explosion. now we know they have had to go in with four or five at a time firemen just to go in and try to pick through to make sure they get all the information they can to see how exactly that natural gas leak, because that is what they re suspecting triggered this, how exactly it started. we do know, jamie, there was a worker in the area trying to investigate leaks. somebody had already