and some elsewhere, was that should this have ended in death. and protesters say no. despite of course what may have preceded beforehand. his defense, however, penny has argued that he was doing this to protect the safety of those on the passenger car, though witnesses said neely hadn t attacked anyone yet. but again, it s what passengers were feeling prior to that that will likely play a big part in this case. for our part we have reached out to attorneys for daniel penny on this particular on these particular details about the charge and turning himself in and i haven t heard back at this point. but obviously a significant development in this case. and again, tomorrow morning is when he s expected to turn himself in. we should note that this death not only has sparked protests but it also has prompted some very serious conversations about how society deals with people with serious mental health struggles in this country. yeah, jake. this was someone who by all account
make men more responsible fathers. that s one argument made to our report, you ll want to hear the exchange for yourself. good evening, i m erin burnett, out front on this friday, deep concern, white house officials privately expressing what s described as deep concern over classified documents found at trump s mar-a-lago home. the white house has remained silent publicly, but cnn learning tonight that behind closed doors it s a very different story. concerns are mounting that the information found at mar-a-lago could put sources and methods of the u.s. intelligence committee at risk, and part of that concern is likely stemming from the new documents released by a federal judge relating to the search of mar-a-lago. these are the papers that contained specific information about what the department of justice is investigating in terms of potential offenses. the words right here in that document under the search is related to a violation of, you see this line, willful retention
Security at Ukraine s Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Power Plant remains fragile amid worrying recent staff cuts enacted by Russian authorities occupying the facility, which is one of the 10 biggest atomic power plants in the world, the United Nations nuclear watchdog chief said on Tuesday.
Ukraine and Russia have blamed each other for the shelling of Zaporizhia. Zaporizhzhia is a region in southern Ukraine that Russia tried to annex last year, but doesn't control in its entirety. Ukraine still controls the region's capital, the city of Zaporizhzhia.Ukraine's presidential
they say russian cluster shells injured eight civilians in a village nearby. three were ambulance workers who had responded to the scene. in a predictable refrain russia claims it was targeting deployment points for ukraine s military. meanwhile, northeast of zaporizhzhia ukraine says it s clawed back significant ground in bakhmut. cnn s nic robertson spoke to ukrainian commanders on the ground who want to set the record straight on which russian troops retreated first. reporter: at the vanguard of ukraine s most successful offensive in months, elite soldiers storm out of their u.s.-made m-113 troop carrier near bakhmut. over the following three days they would take back close to two miles of eastern ukrainian territory from russian troops. their commander explains, dry ground, new u.s. attack vehicles helping reverse months of losses. translator: everything was planned and calculated and we had an advantage because we used