after four years and 300 pages we end with more questions involving the clintons and the clinton foundation. top brass in the f.b.i. shut down all four investigations. now there are calls to reopen or launch newap durham s report showed in that one instance the f.b.i. was investigating claims beginning in late 2014 from a quote well-placed confidential source that not one, but two foreign governments were seeking to buy influence with hillary through illegal donations during her campaign. in the three other cases investigations launched in early 2016 by f.b.i. field offices in arkansas, new york and washington, d.c. probing possible criminal activity by the clinton foundation. durham notes the different way in which the f.b.i. approached the clinton investigations compared to the trump one dubbed crossfire hurricane. durham writes this. this manner in which the f.b.i. opened and investigated hurricane based on raw and uncorroborated intelligence also reflected a noticeable de
camerota starts right. now sara, hold on a sack. that was the best heckel i have ever heard. you are a loser in high school. that was so good. [laughter] you reclaimed your virginity. that is so funny. i mean it s a serious topic. he s really making light of it in an entertaining way. it was fantastic. thank you very much for that, sarah. good evening everyone. i m alison camp camerota. welcome cnn tonight. so remember that expected surge of migrants at the border? when title 42 ended? well it turns out the opposite happened. the number of migrants has dropped 50% in the past few days. but that does not mean the crisis has ended. it is just spread north. in new york, about 300 migrants are now living in public school gyms and parents are not happy. our panel has a lot of thoughts on this. plus, a security guard shoots and kills a suspected shoplifter at a walgreens downtown san francisco. shoplifting is obviously not a capital crime, so why is the dea not pressing charges
boss of a growing bookshop empire, is a leader of this counter revolution. he s made buying physical books cool on both sides of the atlantic. how? james daunt, welcome to hardtalk. thank you. i used to use paper cash. i pretty much don t anymore. i used to write checks in a checkbook. i certainly don t do that anymore. why are you so convinced that iwill, still, continue to use ink on paper, physical books, for years to come? books remain, i think, by far and away the most pleasurable way, and most memorable way, to read most books. you can read on an e reader, of course, and that will have some advantages, particularly for some sorts of books. and millions and millions of people across the world. and millions of people happily do. and the numbers are growing. and the numbers are not growing, actually, within developed markets. in the uk, the us, for example, i think, pretty much, it reached a peak and then came down to a level and is now steadied out. lots of people enjoy d
of mariupol has been condemned by ukraine. an aide to president zelensky called the russian president, a criminal returning to the crime scene. it was the first time mr putin had been to a newly occupied ukrainian territory. now on bbc news hardtalk. welcome to hardtalk. i m stephen sackur. in a world fixated with the unstoppable march of the digital revolution, it s kind of refreshing to look at what s happening in the old school business of selling books. ink on paper has not been eliminated by the rise of the e book, and the good old bricks and mortar bookshop hasn t been wiped out by online shopping. my guest today, james daunt, boss of a growing bookshop empire, is a leader of this counter revolution. he s made buying physical books cool on both sides of the atlantic. how? james daunt, welcome to hardtalk. thank you. i used to use paper cash. i pretty much don t anymore. i used to write cheques in a chequebook. i certainly don t do that anymore. why are you so convince
hello. i m pamela brown. welcome to cnn newsroom. the historic storm the new york governor called the blizzard of the century has now killed 25 people in the buffalo area. and a top erie county official says that number is likely to rise. he said the conditions have been so severe, their own rescuers needed rescuing. intense winds created whiteout conditions as 43 inches of snow dropped in just 24 hours. listen to what one family with four young kids faced, after they lost power and went in search of a heated hotel room. it was very intense. we tried to keep it together for as long as possible. because we didn t want to fight. it was like looking at a white piece of construction paper. you couldn t see anything at all. like absolutely nothing until you were probably about a foot away from even cars. with their bright lights on. you just couldn t see anything. not yellow traffic signs, not traffic. you couldn t see anything. you couldn t see a traffic light. you have t