“The secret stash of sex tapes I believe Ghislaine has squirreled away could end up being her get out of jail card if the authorities are willing to trade,” her former friend said. “She has copies of everything Epstein had. They could implicate some twisted movers and shakers.”
Read MoreResearchers … reacted with shock and dismay, suggesting it could be evidence that the Gov. Ron De Santis' government was censoring information tosupport the case for re-opening Florida.
Read MoreRebekah Jones says she was fired for declining to "manually change data to drum up support for the plan to reopen"
Krystal and Saagar blast the New York Times coverage of Tara Reade's Joe Biden accusation, discuss the bias of how Reade was covered in comparison to Dr. Ford in the Kavanaugh case.
Read MoreInvestigative reporter Rich McHugh, shares exclusive information on Biden accuser Tara Reade's criminal complaint filed with D.C. police last week.
Read MoreKarla Jurvetson, a wealthy doctor in California, donated an eye-popping $14.6 million to Persist PAC, a group that sought to revive Warren’s faltering campaign in February. Jurvetson is a prominent donor among Democratic circles. Warren … spent much of her campaign denouncing super PACs and eschewing a tradition big dollar donor network. However … Warren declined to disavow Persist PAC’s support.
Read MoreShe accused Harvey Weinstein of sexual assault while working as his assistant and says she was forced to sign a non-disclosure agreement. Twenty years later, Rowena Chiu has broken her silence and her NDA to tell her story.
Read MoreThe directors of “The Great Hack,” Jehane Noujaim and Karim Amer, as well as former Cambridge Analytica employee Brittany Kaiser and propaganda researcher Emma Briant, discuss Cambridge Analytica’s parent company SCL Group’s history as a defense contractor. “We’re in a state of global information warfare now,” Briant says.
Read MoreA report from the Center for Investigative Reporting and The Atlantic reveals how Amazon warehouse employees are dealing with crippling injuries. NPR's Steve Inskeep talks to reporter Will Evans.
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Former U.S. Ambassador to Ukraine Marie Yovanovitch testified before Congress. We look back at the controversial circumstances leading to Yovanovitch's early recall from her post.
Read MoreOn Nov. 16, 1989, six Jesuit priests, their housekeeper and her teenage daughter were killed by a group of U.S.-backed soldiers in El Salvador's capital.
Read MoreThe new movie The Report — which comes out Friday and tells the true story of a U.S. Senate staffer who doggedly investigated the CIA's use of torture after the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks — is a look back on a controversial part of our country's past. But the CIA's torture program continues to have huge implications at the U.S. military court and prison in Guantánamo Bay, Cuba, where 40 accused terrorists are still being held.
Read MoreSeveral congressional Democrats are demanding that Stephen Miller resign. Miller, of course, is one of the president's top advisers on immigration. Here's what's going on. The Southern Poverty Law Center says it got a hold of hundreds of Miller's leaked emails. Miller had sent them to a former journalist at Breitbart, and in them, he talks about white nationalist ideas.
Read MoreEdward Snowden is an American whistleblower who copied and leaked highly classified information from the National Security Agency in 2013 when he was a Central Intelligence Agency employee and subcontractor. His new book "Permanent Record" is now available.
Read MoreA new book by Pulitzer Prize-nominated reporter Aaron Glantz [charges] that Harris not only allowed Steve Mnuchin’s OneWest bank to get away with foreclosing on tens of thousands of state homeowners, but then tried to bury the evidence.
Read MoreIn the most iconic form of corruption, Trump awards the 2020 G-7 to the Trump Doral resort and MSNBC’s Stephanie Ruhle joins Chris Hayes to discuss this unprecedented corruption.
Read MoreStarting early last year, the nation's most powerful consumer protection agency sent examiners into companies that run student loan call centers to try to fix a troubled loan forgiveness program. But the Department of Education blocked the bureau from getting the information it needed … The Public Service Loan Forgiveness Program is designed to help firefighters, military service members, nonprofit workers and others. But thousands of people say they were treated unfairly and rejected.
Read MoreHouse Speaker Nancy Pelosi now backs an impeachment inquiry. What does that mean and how different is it to the investigations that Democrats have been conducting into the president's activities?
Six years ago, Edward Snowden leaked a trove of secret documents about how the United States had built a massive surveillance apparatus to spy on Americans and people across the globe. As he attempted to flee to Latin America, Snowden became stranded in Russia after the U.S. revoked his passport. He has lived in Moscow ever since. Snowden just published his memoir, “Permanent Record,” in which he writes about what led him to risk his life to expose the U.S. government’s system of mass surveillance.
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