Sharon Reich-Garson
π€ SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
And he says he'd pushed for these documents to be made public.
And now the fight about what's missing.
Democrats are pointing to gaps and heavy redactions in the documents that still leave major questions unanswered.
They're noting that the DOJ had identified six million potentially responsive pages, but released only three and a half million.
Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanch says this release is it, the final batch, and he stresses that redactions were made only to protect victims or ongoing investigations.
Next to a major development in a high-profile federal murder case.
Luigi Mangione will no longer face the death penalty for the killing of UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson.
A federal judge in New York has thrown out the murder charge, ruling that the federal murder count couldn't legally be paired with the stalking charges Mangione still faces.
But this doesn't mean he walks free.
Mangione could still spend the rest of his life in prison if he's convicted on those federal charges.
And he's also facing a separate state murder case.
Legal reporter Jack Queen has been covering the case.
And finally, to a Lunar New Year sensation no one saw coming.
At Yiwu International Trade City, China's biggest wholesale market, crowds are lining up for a toy that's gone viral.
A red plush horse with big blue eyes, long lashes, and a dramatically droopy mouth.
Online, people are calling it the crying horse.
The thing is, it was never meant to look sad.
Zhang Houqing runs the Happy Sister toy shop in Yiwu.
She says the crying horse was born from a simple mistake.
A worker stitched its smile upside down.