DETROIT If you live in Flint, you certainly feel like we hit another Flashpoint last week in that city's long-running odyssey.
On Thursday, Michigan Attorney General Dana Nessel announced she was dropping all of the standing charges in the Flint water investigation and basically rebooting the entire case.
That the highest lead levels might actually have been from before Flint's water was switched over to the Flint river.
It's a lot to sort through -- and on Sunday morning we tried to get to the bottom of it with Dr. Marc Edwards from Virginia Tech who talked about his new findings.
Segment One:Marc Edwards of Virginia Tech discusses his new finding on the Flint Water CrisisSegment Two:Former state senate majority leader, Randy Richardville and Detroit area journalist Stephen Henderson talk about what happened this week with the Flint Water Crisis investigationSegment Three:Dan Carmody, president of the Eastern Market Corporation talks about the historic area's future.