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tv   Chris Jansing Reports  MSNBC  May 24, 2024 11:00am-12:00pm PDT

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lifestyle. also ahead, the star-studded event with an obama cameo. how a state dinner for kenya became a showcase for the allies who president biden is keeping close during the heat of the campaign season. plus, they were bitter rivals, but is donald trump warming to the thought of nikki haley on his team? also could he be reading too much into her comment that she would vote for him. and the memorial day rush is on. what you need to know if you're planning to skip town for the weekend. our nbc news reporters are following all of the latest developments. we begin with nbc news justice and intelligence correspondent ken dilanian on that hearing for hunter biden. just got a slew of rulings from the judge about what can and cannot be referenced at trial. what can you tell us as this wraps up? >> reporter: that's right, chris. the hearing does appear to be over now, and the judge worked through a series of motions by the prosecution and the defense to admit or deny certain evidence. this is a way of hashing this
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stuff out so that it doesn't have to be argued in front of the jury. for example, she's going to allow the prosecution to cite from hunter biden's memoir. she's going to exclude the defense from arguing that -- from pointing out that this case was never prosecuted by delaware state authorities in 2015 when he bought the gun and exclude them from arguing that the prosecution was somehow defective or in any way grounded in russian disinformation or malicious intent. on this question of the laptop, the infamous hunter biden laptop, there's a chart summarizing 18 pages of evidence that will be admissible. hunter biden's defense is going to be allowed to challenge the authenticity. that is something she's reserving for trial. in terms of the defense, they have managed to exclude any reference to the other pending criminal case against hunter
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biden in california, those tax evasion charges, also his child support dispute in arkansas and the fact that he was discharged from the navy after testing positive for cocaine. so those are some of the rulings the judge that has made, and jury selection in this trial begins june 3rd, chris. >> ken dilanian, thank you. let's go to the white house now and the state dinner that had a surprise guest and we're not talking about country music star brad paisley. allie raffa is reporting from d.c. former president obama, he was reportedly going to a reception but he showed up at the dinner. obviously he's somebody that the president is going to be leaning a lot on as he runs for reelection. >> reporter: that's right, chris, and several allies of the biden campaign among those in attendance at this 500 guest, star-studded state dinner last night. you saw music and movie stars, the clintons, and as you mentioned, former president obama whose father was born in
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kenya at that event. obama meeting with the president of kenya at the white house and having a reception with him but not staying for the full state dinner. the state visit is particularly significant, chris, because it's the first visit by the leader of an african country since 2008, and of course a lot has changed since then. we're seeing russia and china have much more of an influence in africa. china investing billions and billions of dollars there. and it comes as the united states tries to strengthen its ties, not just to kenya, but all african nations, another topics discussed between president biden and rudo was the fact that kenya volunteered its military to go to haiti to stabilize peace there amid the ongoing threat of gang violence in that country, and we know that's an effort that the u.s. is largely funding but president biden, no doubt, understanding how big of
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an undertaking this is for kenya. we know a foundation was certainly laid during this trip, a foundation that the white house wants to build on. and we heard the president earlier this week try to fulfill a promise that he made to visit africa last year. he said that he will visit africa in february after he says he's reelected, chris. >> allie raffa, thank you for that. donald trump meantime is responding to nikki haley's comment that she'll be voting for them in november. nbc's dasha burns is following this story for us. what exactly did trump say? >> reporter: this was an interview with news 12 last night after his rally in the bronx. i want you to take a listen to what he said and we'll talk on the other side. >> well, i think she's going to be on our team because we have a lot of the same ideas, same thoughts, i appreciated what she said. you know, we had a nasty campaign. it was pretty nasty, but she's a very capable person, and i'm sure she's going to be on our
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team in some form. >> reporter: now, what being on our team in some form means is not entirely clear. he has already said on truth social that she's not a contender for vp. here's the thing, chris. nikki haley consistently has been winning 15 to 20% of votes in primaries months after dropping out of the race. so that means those voters, they knew that she was not a candidate anymore. she wanted to send a message by voting for her, and that is a warning sign to former president trump, can he win back those voters. those are republicans in a lot of cases that voted for her, like in pennsylvania, where that's a closed primary. you can only vote in the republican primary if you are a registered republican, and in critical swing counties like erie county, she won 20% there. and so there's going to be a battle for the haley voters. the biden campaign has doubled their spending in pennsylvania in places like erie to reach those voters.
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this might be a bit of an olive branch from former president trump to haley. they had a brutal rivalry until the primaries, but he does need her and her voters to come around. chris. >> dasha burns, thank you. if you're headed out for the holiday weekend, you've got a little company. roughly 44 million people. nbc's antonia hylton is live for us alongside the new jersey turnpike. she's at a rest stop in saw caucus, i wonder if you have been talking to travellers. and what they're telling you. >> reporter: this is where people stop to get their better bottles, take the kids to the restroom, and already the turnpike is backed up. if you're in the office, thinking you're going to hit the road at 5:00, understand it's a little rough out here. you're going to want to have a plan, where am i going to stop, where might i need to get food as i travel. about 44 million americans are doing the same thing. the vast majority, choosing to
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drive to locations like new york, orlando is going to be popular. southern california, las vegas, travelers are looking for entertainment centers and for theme parks right now. if that's you, pack a little extra patience frankly. take a listen to some of the travelers here in new jersey who are on the road. >> i'm about to go to my brother's house in boston and visit him for a couple of days. and to just go out and have some fun with him. >> what are you seeing on the roadways. busy travel weekend. >> a lot of traffic. there's a lot of traffic, yes. >> reporter: and you should know that gas prices are at about an average of $3.61. that's about $0.07 higher than last year, so also make sure you're prepared for the costs associated with this very busy memorial day weekend, and it's the same, frankly, if you're heading to the airport. we're looking at extremely crowded airports, unlike anything seen since 2005, chris.
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that's about 20 years ago. so that means we're looking at a major summer travel rebound right now. >> antonia hylton, thank you. what goes into crafting a closing argument for the history books. with donald trump's hush money trial nearing its conclusion, we'll get insight from the litigator who stared down bill cosby to deliver a highly praised closing. ing. - so this is pickleball? - pickle! ah, these guys are intense. with e*trade from morgan stanley, we're ready for whatever gets served up. dude, you gotta work on your trash talk. i'd rather work on saving for retirement. or college, since you like to get schooled. that's a pretty good burn, right? (vo) you were diagnosed with thyroid eye disease a long time ago. and year after year, you weathered the storm and just lived with the damage that was left behind. but even after all this time your thyroid eye disease could still change. restoration is still possible.
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fulton county d.a. fani willis is appealing a decision to throw out some of the charges against donald trump and his codefendants in the georgia election case. in march, you might remember the judge scott mcafee ruled that six of the 41 could wants in the -- 41 counts lacked detail, the one probably most familiar is from trump's now infamous phone call with georgia secretary of state asking him to find 11,580 votes. the pressure is on to finish the most important argument of their lives and this this case gets turned over to the jury. someone who knows the pressure well is kristen gibbons, whose fiery closing argument in the bill cosby trial earned her widespread praise.
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it's good to see you again. in channelling your own experience, how intensive are the preparations, final preparations that are going on. what are lawyers doing right now? >> yeah, so, you know, when you look at a trial as if the closing argument is the grand finale and your only opportunity to weave the evidence into a compelling narrative that truly aims to leave the jury with that lasting impression, you fully understand how important a closing argument is, and how important it is to really prepare for it. so, you know, what i think the prosecutors and the defense attorneys are really doing right now is they're putting together all of their evidence. they're coming up with the most compelling and captivating clear narrative that truly is going to tie all of the evidence together, and kind of stitch it into that compelling story that's supported by the evidence. i think one of the things they really need to focus on, too, chris, is to outline pillars of
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credibility, particularly in this case, you have cohen, and you have so many different varying narratives so they really do need to focus on those pillars of credibility. >> so court adjourned last tuesday, and of course closings in many cases would have happened on wednesday or thursday. but the holiday weekend, other promises that were made about having court be dark. do you think having a week to prepare is a benefit or can you over think a closing argument given too much time? >> you can absolutely over think it, chris, you're so right. i think that when you have that much time, it is so easy to over think it, but i think it is important in this case to remember, you know, this case has been going on for weeks. so, yeah, you have the opportunity to over think it, but this has so much evidence and so many documentary evidence as well. not just testimonial evidence. so the week is probably, in this particular case, because it is so complex, i think it is going to be useful for both attorneys
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to have that much time. >> you have talked about how in the cosby case you wrote out your closing argument word for word, and you were, you thought, super mechanical until you saw bill cosby laugh, and then you saw red. you threw out the script. you went from an analytical closing to an emotional one. when do you think that works and is there a lesson in that for trump's prosecutors? >> you know, when you're trying a case of this magnitude, and keep in mind, this is historic. for the cosby trial, for example, myself, that was a celebrity. i had never tried a celebrity before. and so when you're dealing with that type of pressure, you want to get it right. you do not want to create appellate issues. in the minds of the attorneys, that's what's really kind of being challenged. that's the impairment that they have, the obstacle they have in terms of being the best lawyer that they can you know, but i think in this particular case, it's complex. they have to be super an lit
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-- an clear, focused, particularly the prosecutors, they need to lay out the elements of the crime, lay out the elements but then also show how each piece of evidence they elicited showed that evidence. from here, you know, prosecutors have to show that trump caused the false entries to be made in the business records. they have to highlight all of the evidence. they have to highlight the invoices. they have to highlight the testimony. they have to show that reimbursement of the $420,000 which was the double up to cover taxes. then they have to show that trump did so, created those false entries with the intelligent to defraud. then they have to go through those compelling pieces of evidence. go through hope hicks' testimony where trump made very clear he wanted to quash stormy daniels'
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story before the election, and then they have to show was trump's intent was to commit or conceal another crime, and then they're going to highlight that particular everyday. so it is so important to make sure that the prosecutor stay clear, stay focused, show that their case is not simply just resting on michael cohen. and show that they have so much corroborative evidence to support their case and they need to highlight that they have proven their case beyond a reasonable doubt. >> you know, this jury is highly educated. it includes two lawyers, a lot of professionals. how much does the makeup of the jury impact how that closing argument is shaped? >> i think that is the most important thing. you know, as a lawyer, when i craft my closing arguments, i take into account every single juror. you know, when you pick a jury, you're going to get the jury statements that outlines what they do, where they live, and so you're able to make some assumptions about that particular jury.
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you know if they have kids, and if so, how many. you know their age, and so all of those factors will go into it. for example, when i would be giving any closing argument, particularly the one in cosby, i would look at specific jurors. it's interesting, chris, it's not just the demographics that dictate the closing arguments, i make sure throughout the entirety of the trial that i look at and am mindful and conscious of the jury's demeanor during specific portions so when, for example, in cosby, when one of the young ladies who was a prior witness was testifying, i saw, you know, one of the jurors kind of emote in a very sad way almost giving me the thought that that particular juror was being empathetic to that person. when i was talking about that particular witness's testimony, i made sure to zero in on that juror because i know that juror emoted in a certain way. the makeup of the jury is
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important, not just because of the their demographics but because of their entire demeanor throughout the trial. >> kristen gibbons fedden, thank you. the oscar winning actor lending his voice to a biden campaign ad that depicts donald trump as totally unhinged, how it plays into a bigger strategy before next month's big debate. plus, four years after george floyd's death, a look at his family's ongoing fight for national police reform. keep it right here. think about it. boring is the unsung catalyst for bold. what straps bold to a rocket and hurtles it into space? boring does. boring makes vacations happen, early retirements possible, and startups start up. because it's smart, dependable, and steady. all words you want from your bank. for nearly 160 years, pnc bank has been brilliantly boring so you can be happily fulfilled... which is pretty un-boring if you think about it. wanna know a secret? more than just my armpits stink.
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. today, the biden campaign is out with a brand new attack ad, warning voters that former president trump has snapped with oscar winning actor, robert de niro delivering the message. >> we knew trump was out of control when he was president. then he lost the 2020 election, and snapped. desperately trying to hold on to power. now he's running again. this time threatening to be a dictator, to terminate the constitution. >> that ad is part of the campaign's $14 million push ahead of the june presidential debate and is set to be shown in battle ground states. joining me is simone townsend sanders, cohost of "the weekend," the campaign is now calling trump unhinged in pursuit of revenge and retribution. is this fighting fire with fire
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or is it lowering yourself to your opponent's level? >> well, first of all, i think the bar is in for lack of a better term, held, as far as donald trump is concerned, as far as how low do you go, chris. when they go low, sometimes you got to go toe to toe. i do not suggest democrats go as low as donald trump has gone. there has been reporting, ever since donald trump got elected president, frankly, that substantiates the belief that he does not like being talked about badly. right? donald trump we know cares a lot about his image. and so what this is from the biden campaign, i think it's two-fold, one, a play to get inside donald trump's head. he likes to call -- donald trump likes to call people names, attach what he thinks are catchy digs at folks, and so the biden campaign and the president himself has been going around
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saying donald trump is unhinged. he snaps, he can't help that he lost to me. the second problem, though, i think is to remind voters of just what donald trump was like as president and what this campaign was like the last time because i do believe there's a little bit of an amnesia where donald trump is concerned on that front. >> let me ask you about that specifically because there's a new campaign memo that, you know, the campaign is letting us see. the plan is also to organize around key anniversaries, dobbs decision. we have talked a lot about abortion and the pulse nightclub shooting when trump said it was something to get over. and when dasha burns was talking about being in the bronx last night, and talking to voters. they don't like it necessarily when he says migrants are coming and forming an army to fight against america, but it's trump being trump. in other words, so much of that, of reminding voters is stuff that's baked in. how effective can that really be, simone, do you think?
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>> well, i think it's very effective. he lost the last election he ran in. the last presidential election he lost, it was close. but he did not come out victorious. the midterm elections, the primaries, when he endorsed a slew of candidates, the senate and house was on the line. there was forecasting that the republicans were going to take the senate. it didn't happen because of candidate quality. those are folks that donald trump endorsed. the red wave that never materialized. i look at the supreme court judge's race, where janice was elected because of her pledge to protect reproductive care if anything comes before the court. i think that while, yes, voters do know donald trump, and they don't like him, and that is why, you know, it is strategic to remind the voters of who he is, but also what he has said he will do.
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and i vividly remember, you know, i worked for senator sanders in 2015, 2016, and going into that general election, donald trump was saying a host of insane things. he stood on a debate stage with secretary clinton and made what we all thought at the time were frankly wild and just not rooted in reality claims, and then he became president, and now he tried to act on many of them. now, donald trump is not, you know, shrinking around in the shadows, whispering about what he plans to do if he's reelected president. he's telling us very loudly. he himself is saying he'll be a dictator on day one. he's using the language of the project 2025 document that republican strategists have told me is a foundation for the what the next trump administration will be. you have to be clear with voters about what is on the line here so when they go to the ballot box, they are very well aware of the decision they are making. just talking about, you know, his bravado, donald trump's bravado and attitude, that's not
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enough. you have to talk about the issues and draw a contrast, and joe biden is going to have to say what he's going to do. the campaign has been clear about laying that out. they need that one on one, which is why the first debate is going to be key. >> i want to talk about another big issue for the campaign, the biden campaign, and that's police reform because this memorial day weekend marks four years since george floyd died after an officer knelt on his neck for 9 minutes and 29 seconds. his family is still fighting to get legislation passed in his name. i want to bring in msnbc's yamiche alcindor, and you had a chance to speak to floyd's brother about this. tell us about it. >> that's right. to mark the fourth anniversary of the murder of george floyd, i spoke with his family, and also looked into efforts at criminal justice reform, and how they fared in recent years. >> say his name, george floyd. >> four years ago, across the country, protests erupted after millions watched video showing the murder of george floyd.
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in the after math, widespread calls for a national reckoning on racism and police violence. for floyd's brother, the outcry for justice was touching. >> so many people felt the same pain all across the world. >> reporter: since then, some of those efforts for change, including the federal george floyd justice in policing act have stalled or been reversed. what is making you emotional as you think of this? >> it's different. it's really like, you don't have the understanding of how you can sit there and witness that, somebody murdered your brother, and four years later, it still hasn't been any change. like, what is it going to take? >> reporter: in recent years, many red states and some blue states passed tough on crime policies. when it comes to the new measures, critics say florida is ground zero. >> we want to have florida be a law and order state. we don't want abusive law and order, but we want more law and
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order. >> reporter: since 2020, republican governor ron desantis has signed several bills into law, among them, a law that may curtail protests and laws that limit the power of the police civilian review boards and mandate anyone filming first responders stay 25 feet away when asked. republican state representative, alex rizzo sponsored the halo bill. >> some critics of the bill say it's an unfair backlash to the filming of the death of george floyd and if that bill were in minnesota, we might not have seen the murder of george floyd on film, what do you make of that? >> i don't agree. you can still film. that incident probably still would have been filmed. what this does is allow for a safe space for the first responder to go ahead and perform their duty. >> reporter: the debate flared up in march when miami police shot donald armstrong after his mother called to get him health burg a mental health crisis. his lawyer says he was holding a
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small conductor baton. armstrong is paralyzed and in jail. his attorney plans to file a civil suit against the city but wants to resolve the misdemeanor charge. preston baldwin filmed the shooting on his cell phone from roughly 100 feet away. >> it's like, dude, that really could be me. like i could be this guy. it could be you. your friend, your cousin. >> reporter: for floyd and key -- >> we lost george. >> i'm going to continue to turn my pain into purpose, and this bill needs to be passed because my brother's blood is all on this bill. >> and as you can see, felonious floyd got emotional when betalked to him. they're determined to keep pushing. it's set to go into effect this
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summer. rodney jacobs, the head of miami civilian investigative panel, he told me he worries it could limit that work in holding police accountable and bridge the gap between law enforcement and communities. and i talked to richard gilmore of the dream defenders, she told me the push back on criminal justice refornls and efforts to tackle racism is a testament to the power of the vision for change, chris. >> yamiche alcindor, thank you very much for bringing us this story. simone, you were the person who told candidate joe biden about george floyd when it happened, and you went on to his criminal justice task force. why can't these reforms get across the finish line? >> you know what, chris, i think it is one of the biggest disappointments, a number of folks that i used to work within the administration have the agenda that's yet to get done. it's not for lack of trying. in absence of the george floyd
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justice in policing act being able to be passed, president biden did issue an executive order with a number of directives. this department of justice has been a surgical precision, very very good at going into and looking at pattern and practice investigations, those that take a look at police departments across the country, and if they infringing on people's rights and if they open the investigations working with the police departments to make them betterment one of the biggest barriers was the issue of qualified immunity. we talk about the filibuster in the united states senate as it relates to the senate, but when the george floyd justice in policing act was being negotiated, it came to cory booker was negotiated with senator tim scott, and senator tim scott was speaking with, to, and on behalf of the organizations remitting the -- representing the police officers, sheriffs, and they
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would not budge on qualified immunity. qualified immunity is the thing that frankly a judge in mississippi just recently ruled was a made up arbitrary rule, frankly, that that judge called unconstitutional. it's qualified immunity that has kept police officers specifically from being held accountable, when and if they have violated the constitutional rights of folks across this country. so it is something, chris, that if advocates and activists and voters want to see movement on this particular issue, i think they got to take a look at what folks are saying, candidates and the united states senate, with joe biden and donald trump are saying. there's a very clear line between folks looking to stand up for every day people's rights and protect their civil rights, and people that are looking to put barriers in the pathway to keep folks held back and locked up. >> symone sanders townsend, thank you very much.
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we appreciate you coming on the show. a reminder, you can always catch simone saturday and sunday mornings on "the weekend" on msnbc alongside alicia menendez and michael steele, 8 to 10:00 a.m. eastern here on msnbc. an expert fda panel has endorsed the safety of a simple blood test that can help screen for the second deadliest cancer in the u.s. colon cancer. it's called shield, and while the panel cautioned it's not better than a colonoscopy, they hope it will help with the abysmally low number of people that get screened. it's the deadliest cancer for american men under 50, the second deadliest for women. 150,000 people are diagnosed annually, and 53,000 are expected to die this year alone. if approved this will be the second blood screening of its kind on the market. coming up, they call him sedition panda. the verdict just handed down for an infamous january 6th rioter.
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a january 6th rioter dubbed sedition panda by online sleuths because of the costume he wore during the attack has just been convicted. jesse james rumson seen here wearing a panda head was found guilty of eight charges including assaulting a police officer. rumson had tried to claim during
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his testimony he didn't realize the capitol building was restricted, even though evidence showed him jumping over a railing and joining the mob inside after a window on one of the doors was smashed. well, today, democrats on the senate judiciary committee are requesting a meeting with supreme court chief justice john roberts, demanding samuel alito recuse himself with cases having to do with the january 6th attack. his home, displaying an appeal to heaven flag, a symbol that has links to the stop the steal movement. he blamed his wife for the first one. republicans, though, say all of this is being blown out of proportion. >> this is just a terrible, terrible to see these politically motivated threats against the supreme court. >> i think the democrats are determined to harass members of the supreme court. people who are judges on the
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supreme court have personal lives, they have families, and i don't think they're necessarily responsible for everything their families do or say, so i know justice alito, and i have confidence in him. >> if the issue of recusal comes up as i have heard the issue being raised, the supreme court has protocol for that. >> joining me now, senator richard blumenthal. is this being blown out of proportion? are democrats just harassing supreme court justices? >> you know, i think that the sense of hypocrisy here is so high. far from harassing justice alito, we're simply pointing out these political statements which clearly indicate bias and the gifts and luxury travel and other benefit that is he and
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justice thomas have received. all of it in clear violation of any possible code of ethics. the supreme court has no code of ethics. it must have one, and the republican colleagues who have just appeared saying it's harassment or trivial, ought to be supporting a code of ethics. they also should be supporting an effort to have justice alito offer an explanation. he owes it to the congress and the american people to explain whether he had anything to do or any knowledge about these flags which are political statements in support of trump. and the insurrection and clearly require that he recuse himself. that is step aside in any judgments of the supreme court involving donald trump or the insurrection. justice alito is proving himself to be unfit for the supreme court. >> as i mentioned, senator, justice alito blamed the first
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flag on his wife, the second one, some republicans have pointed out there's no problem because it was george washington's flag. in fact, speaker mike johnson currently has that flag displayed outside of his office. so what do you say to that argument? >> i think that argument is blatantly disingenuous. any photographs of the insurrection show that flag. it has become the emblem of the stop the steal movement. it is now a symbol of a christian vision of how the united states ought to be governed and what it ought to be doing. it's no longer george washington's flag, and clearly it is a political statement. now, the speaker of the house of representatives may have that flag outside his door. but he's a politician. this supreme court is supposed to be above politics, and above
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reproach, and clearly justice alito and justice thomas are dragging the court down. you know, i am so angry because i have real respect for the supreme court. i argued four cases in front of the supreme court when i was attorney general of my state of connecticut. i was a law clerk to a supreme court justice. this kind of misconduct would have been unthinkable in that era, and it is the reason why approval and trust and credibility for the supreme court are plummeting. now, a lot of people may say, maybe my colleagues that doesn't matter, but, in fact, it matters a lot. in fact, it is critical. the supreme court has no armies, no police force. the reason why its orders are obeyed is because of its credibility and trust. and those features are being destroyed by these two justices and perhaps others in so far as they are complicit, so i think
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we ought to summon chief justice roberts. he has a moral and institutional responsibility here. his legacy is going to be a court that is demeaned and degraded by this kind of misconduct, and i feel we ought to, if necessary, subpoena him to come before the court and take additional action, if necessary. >> he has seemed to want to push forward something in the ethical front, on the ethical front, so has, for that matter, conservative justice amy coney barrett. do you think something gets done? is it going to take congressional action, whether it's calling him to testify, whether it's the bill you have pushed but have not had success getting through? >> i pushed for enforceable code of ethics. the supreme court has a statement of principals that the chief justice has issued, they're not binding and they're very vague. i think the judicial conference has a role. there ought to be an independent
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-- inspector general to police other judges in so far as they commit misconduct. the supreme court is the only court federally in the country. maybe the only court in the entire nation that has no code of conduct. it issues decisions as part of a shadow docket without explanation, orders without any disclosure of the number of justices on either side. it has become totally non-transparent, and it is a body composed of men and women appointed for life, not elected, and unaccountable. completely unaccountable to the american people. i do think congress must step in, but, again, the responsibility rests on the colleagues that you have just shown who are so dismissive of this misconduct, it is unconscionable, and it makes them complicit in this kind of
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misconduct. >> senator richard blumenthal on a holiday weekend. we appreciate you taking the time to come in and talk about this important issue. we thank you. >> thank you. a new interview from prison comes from former president trump aide peter navarro. he tells the "wall street journal" he doesn't want a pardon if his old boss returns to the white house next year. navarro became the first ever white house official to be jailed for contempt of congress after he defied a subpoena from the january 6th committee. now in the middle of a four-month sentence, he also tells the journal he isn't interested in a pardon because he wants the supreme court to hear his appeal, saying, quote, i will not give the court any excuse to duck a landmark constitutional case regarding the separation of powers and the executive privilege. the journal reports that trump has said that navarro would be welcomed back to the white house in a new administration. and coming up, the landmark
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for the first time in its 100-plus year of college sports, the ncaa and five power conferences have agreed to allow schools to pay their division one players. both sides recognizing this is a major landmark settlement. >> a revolution in college sports, the ncaa has always viewed student athletes as amateurs, but college sports have exploded in popularity becoming a multibillion dollar business and launching superstars. >> and your new all time ncaa leading scorer, caitlin clark. >> and athletes have been speaking out for years. >> i think they should be paid some portion of money so their basic needs are taken care of. >> the ncaa announcing a historic agreement, allowing schools to pay division i players for the first time in 100 years. the organization and its five power conferences, the acc, big 10, pac-12, and the s.e.c. all agree to go pay nearly
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$3 billion in damages to current and former athletes who were prevented from earning endorsement money and a cut of broadcast revenues. it's all part of a proposed settlement in three anti-trust cases. >> this is a huge win for athlete advocates. >> in addition to back pay for former athletes, the settlement also includes a ground breaking revenue sharing plan for future stars allowing over 300 division one schools to share up to $20 million each per year with athletes. in a joint statement, the ncaa and five conferences calling the settlement an important step in the continuing reform of college sports. attorneys representing college athletes calling the settlement a major landmark victory. this is just the latest major domino to fall in college athletics with the ncaa in recent years, letting athletes receive academic bonuses, as well as allowing them to profit from their name, image and likeness, opening the way for endorsement deals for athletes in every college sport.
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>> this proposed settlement will head back to the plaintiffs in the three antitrust cases and signed off by judge claudia wilken which is expected to take several months. a moving and somber scene at the nation asset capitol as we approach memorial day. 1,600 military personnel, posting flags at arlington national cemetery to honor their service and sacrifice. more than 260,000 flags were laid in total. they will remain in place through monday's holiday. that does it for us this hour. our coverage continues with "katy tur reports" next. "katy t. we need to scale with customer demand... in real time. (jen) so we partner with verizon. their solution for us? a private 5g network. (ella) we now get more control of production, efficiencies, and greater agility. (marquis) with a custom private 5g network. our customers get what they want, when they want it. (jen) now we're even smarter
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