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tv   CNN This Morning  CNN  February 13, 2024 4:00am-5:00am PST

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download the app we're here to get your side of the store. a fares library, prostitution. why do we keep ending up? >> you can't write this stuff. >> united states scandal with jake tapper, back-to-back premieres sunday at nine on cnn >> close captioning brought to you by in vet help call 180071. oh, oh, to o. do you have an invention idea but >> don't know what to do next convent have today, they can help you get started with your idea called now 807100020 right now, hundreds of us flights canceled as a heavy winter storm intensifies in the northeast, please stay off the roads. >> it looking like it will come down pretty heavily, pretty fast. >> this nor'easter will be quick, but it will pack a punch. >> this is not alcohol, is mother nature's call trump taking his case to the supreme court to press his claim of total immunity as president told me to further delay his federal >> trial on election interference they're rehashing
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arguments that had been rejected by for federal judges. >> will they even agree to take the case? and well, the trump strategy work? >> negative strikes back out the door, says he would encourage russia to attack alliance members who haven't paid up. >> frankly, i think this is exactly what putin loves to hear. >> it's what happens when he gets off the teleprompter after for two minutes, he becomes unhinged, he becomes undiscipline. >> whether you're a trusted port or a trump proponent, don't think he's kidding about this one. >> good morning, everyone. i'm phil mattingly with poppy harlow in new york. it's the top of the hour and right now, we are tracking a monster winter storm pummels the northeast with heavy snow, powerful wind, and coastal flooding. more than 30 million people people are in its path. >> this is a live >> look right now here in manhattan, new york city, bracing for the most snow, we've seen in years. we're expecting up to eight inches here parts of new england could see a foot of snow. this
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nor'easter is colliding head-on with the morning rush hour and really creating just treacherous conditions more than 1,000 flights have already been canceled well, let's start this hour with meteorologist derek van dam in central park, new york city schools closed today. that's for sure. what are we going to see in the next couple of hours? >> yeah. good morning, poppy. well, the landscape here in manhattan in new york city is being transformed right before our eyes. so winter snow globe we are at columbus circle and i want to just have my cameramen look down. this is normally a very busy exit and entrance to columbus circle and the subway underground. and that is just not the case, assuming that people here just listening to the advice of the mayor, stay at home, perhaps work remotely if they can get the sense that people are almost yearning for a snowstorm because it has been so long since new york city and many of the east coast cities have had had a significant
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storm we're contending with one of the warmest winters on record. and you have to go back to january 2022 since the last time that a winter storm warning was issued here, where i'm located in new york city. this is extremely heavy, wet snow. you don't have to look hard. >> you can just squeeze out the available water. we call this a one to eight inch liquid to snow ratio. basically what that means, this is very, very heavy, difficult to plow exhausting to shovel. so be very careful. there have been 700 salt trucks deployed across the city already before that first snowflake you didn't fell this morning. i want to get straight to the graphics. talk about what has happened and what's to come. we believe that the snow actually came a little earlier than anticipated. we expected a little bit of rain to start off this forecast this morning, but that was not the case, stepped outside my hotel this morning and it was already snowing those big chunky chunky west
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snowflakes. and i as we zoom in a little closer that i95 corridor from new york all the way down to philadelphia, seeing that transition already take place. so that could increase our snowfall totals. and we could see more snow today alone that we have seen in the past couple of years on any given day here in new york city? five to eight inches. that's the official forecast for the new york city area, central new jersey and into long island as well. this storm will enter and during rush hour, as you can see directly behind me here in columbus circle, but it will exit just as quickly as it entered into the equation. so, you know, a lot of the public schools here i've already canceled actually changed over to remote learning. i guess poppy and phil, if i was a child, i think i'd feel a little bit cheated this morning. because you don't, you still have to learn today. you don't >> have feel like as a 50, 50, this is one of those split-screen jubilation. jubilation for the kids? and parents are just a higher
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higher. >> all very dire. derek van dam. thank you, my friend and we do have breaking news from capitol hill this morning after a marathon vote that ended just last hour, the senate has passed the $95.3 billion foreign aid package is money for israel and ukraine the vote was 72, 29. we have team coverage starting soft. cnn's eva mckend joins us from washington for a pleitgen is joining us from london, even want to start with you. the senate has cleared this bill. it was a big lift. they got it across the finish line, big bipartisan vote. >> do we have any idea what's gonna happen in the house at this point? >> you know, feel it, it faces an uncertain future in the house. this vote, it really highlights the wide foreign policy divide in the republican party right now, if you look in the senate and who supported this, they fundamentally believe that in terms of america's national security, what happens in ukraine matters to the united states people like senator joni ernst, for instance, of iowa with a
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military background. >> that is >> some of whom supported this bill. and then also at play is the trump factor. many of these lawmakers, they're weighing how much they want to distance themselves from trump. we know that trump has been a vocal opponent for a long time of foreign aid so here's what's in the bill 60 billion to ukraine, 14 billion to israel, 9 billion in humanitarian assistance. over 4 billion to the indo pacific. now, speaker mike johnson, he already said that this is dead on arrival in the senate. he said he won't put this foreign aid supplemental on the floor because is silent. those are his words silent on provisions on the southern border. but as you all well know there was a bipartisan border deal on the table that house republicans could have adopted. they rejected that >> and so >> we are really now in unchartered territory. story here. he argues that america has to secure its own border before sending additional
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foreign aid around the world. he rejected democrats significant concessions. so all that to say right now, $95 billion in foreign aid, we don't know what the state of that will be. we do know of course that at their disposal, republicans could band together with democrats in the house in a procedural fashion in order to advance this bill but that could take quite a deal of time in really these israel, ukraine, they would argue they don't have time at this stage. phil and poppy. >> eva, thank you for that. and fred, i want to go to you because president zelenskyy already expressing gratitude to the senate, didn't minutes after we saw this pass yeah, you're absolutely right, poppy, he's certainly isn't of course, one of the things that we know is that ukrainians obviously have been watching all of this meticulously because for them, they say >> that all this is obviously about survival. i want to read you some of what president
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zelenskyy just tweeted a little. are you a couple of minutes ago after this news came out, he says for us in ukraine, continued us assistance, helps to save human lives he's from russian terror as he puts it. it means that life will continue in our cities and will triumphed over war is what he says. so obviously the ukrainians very happy with this. they of course also understand that there is still a long way to go and a mouse or representatives, there could be some serious issues i've been traveling the frontlines in ukraine over the past month, month-and-a-half or so. the thing is that us assistance is absolutely key and so many of those places, it's about weapons. of course, we did a lot of reporting about the bradley infantry fighting vehicle playing a huge role in defending some of those ukrainian cities where the russians are pushing. but the other thing of of course is also ammunition as well for the ukrainians, they face a big deficit and of course now that's already become even worse with some of that us aid being delayed. i was actually a yesterday able to speak to both the german chancellor and the prime minister of denmark about this issue, about us assistance
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and the german chancellor, he told me, look, there's absolute no two ways about us assistance to ukraine is indispensable. the europeans are saying that they are ramping up, for instance, their ammo production. they're looking to get the ukrainians more tanks and other weapons as well. but of course they also say that assistance from the us has been so key so far, and they hope will be in the future of course, a lot of them also still reeling from some of those marx that former president trump made about possibly not helping nato allies. and in fact possibly encouraging russia to take it to nato allies. and olaf scholz, i can tell you, was not very happy with those comments. he said that nato is absolutely indispensable for europe, but they also say that europe in nato is also indispensable for the the united states as well, guys. you realize in frigid knows better day by talking to european leaders, it's not a game. it's not, it's not a negotiation. it's very real evil. we just got the statement from senate republican leader mitch mcconnell says, quote, history settles every account and today on the value of american leadership and strength history will record
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that the senate did not blink think this has been a cornerstone focus for minority leader mcconnell for the last several months, moving against, obviously the likely republican presidential nominee. also some of his party, in his party which have gone a different direction. and there's no better example than of that than lindsey graham and i just want to make i want to get your sense of this because i was stunned last night, lindsey graham, one of the foremost hawks in the republican conference has been to ukraine so many times goes to the munich security conference was always the wing man of john mccain talks about the importance of all of these alliances and now echoing completely the former president says that he will oppose any aid to ukraine unless it's alone. and also making a play about the southern border. as we've very clear of the $60 billion go into ukraine here, the vast majority of it actually goes to us manufacturers. it's not money that goes in. why is lindsey graham doing a complete one? and ad just to mimic donald trump eva? >> well, it shows you the significant hold that trump has
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on this party. it's not only lindsey graham, but many senators making this calculation, how much do i want to distance? my cell phone crump is what they're asking themselves. but listen, senator mcconnell, he's also very far apart from many members of his own conference. they have been really vocal. senator hawley, senator vance senator lee, many others. they've been really vocally opposing him traditionally, senators that went up against mitch mcconnell, who to be clear, still holds the purse strings in terms of fundraising for republicans. they've been quiet about their disagreements. but in recent days, they've really been fully hopefully, against this foreign aid, but mcconnell and the other republicans that supported this, they say, listen, this is a matter of national security. what happens in ukraine is ultimately going to impact america. and that this investment is worth it.
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essentially, phil you and i sat in many a gaggle on capitol hill with leader mcconnell and others. this is a different republican conference in the senate. certainly than we've ever covered before. you've mccann fred pleitgen greatly appreciate you guys expertise. thank you. >> and there is no end in sight for donald trump legal battles, the former president, once again, pressing the supreme court to resolve an issue that could undermine his presidential campaign, trump asked the high court yesterday to block a unanimous decision from the dc circuit last week that rejected his claims of presidential immunity in the january 6 cases attorneys right to the high court, folk conducting a months-long criminal trial of president trump at the height of election season will radically disrupt president trump's ability to campaign against president biden. >> now the request thrust once again, the supreme court in the middle of a presidential election, this would be the second time i'm in how the justices respond. could influence whether the likely gop nominee, it will be put on trial in the midst of his campaign. let's bring in cnn, senior legal analyst, elie honig. let's ask you the most
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obvious question. first wins the supreme court going to decide what they're doing here? so phil the first thing that we're going to hear from the supreme court in this could come as soon as today. i think what they're going to say is, okay, donald trump, we've heard what you want us to do. now we need to hear from jack smith fairly quickly. then they're going to have to make the big decisions. first, do they issue a stay, meaning a pause, putting everything on hold and if so, for how long? and then the real big decision does the supreme court take the case if they reject this case, or if they summarily dismiss it, then in all likelihood we will see this case go to trial late spring, early summer. but if the supreme court takes this case, fill, all bets are off and there's a fairly good chance. we don't see this case tried until after the election so that's how high the stakes are with this particular exchange for federal judges, as paula reid rightly pointed out last night he said the same thing on this do you think it's likely that which by the way, went against trump's argument. do you think it's likely that the supreme court
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takes us up belly because it's such a big question that hasn't been answered definitively by the highest court >> so this is going to be such a close call really important that people understand. of course, you need five of the nine supreme court justices to win the case, but you only need four of them to take a case. and poppy, the argument that you said is exactly what jack smith is saying. he's going going to say while we've now heard from the trial court judge, and then three court of appeals judges, all of them agreed, all of them were very strong on the fact that donald trump does not have immunity. but donald trump says in his brief yesterday, first of all, is this is why we have u supreme court because this is a massive issue. it goes to presidential powers, it goes to the functioning the government thing that donald trump does is he actually quotes jack smith because remember two months ago, jack smith asked the supreme court to take this case directly in jack smith in that in that brief said, hey, supreme court, only you can resolve this case. you have to resolve this case. so i think this is going to be a 50, 50 call, whether the supreme court
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takes it >> elie trump's legal team also say to you in his filing what's i'd be remiss if i didn't ask you what your take was on being seeing yourself in here and why okay. first of >> all, they cited me in the brief for something i said on air, which i totally stand by the jack smith has been disingenuous in refusing to acknowledge that the reason he's trying to rush this trial is because he wants it done before the election. that is obvious to any sentience observer, but i want to say this, anything? and i say on air anything i write is fair game for anyone in the world to use for whatever purposes they want. but lawyers know the things i say are not binding on the us court. the justices are not going to feel bound by anything that i say anywhere. go ahead. have at it, but it's not going to persuade them. >> you shouldn't. she said a little defensive there, elie you know i feel like everything you say is binding except for rectors football is good. everything else though it seems very bonding to me. >> elie honig great.
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>> i'm happy to have people use my words >> thanks, allie. >> well, new reporting on how the biden administration feels about the israeli operation that rescue to hostages from hamas, but also led to the death more than hundred palestinians, also the theater future of the united states and nato could hanging the balance if donald trump wins the presidency in november, we're going to talk about all this. is former white house community occasions director anthony scaramucci united states of scans with jake tapper sunday at nine on cnn. >> this is a tempur-pedic mattress and it's designed to help make aches and pains a thing of the past by relieving pressure points and supporting you no body in a way, no other mattress can for limited time save up to $500 on select tempur-pedic adjustable mattress sets. >> feeling from a backed up god mere lax works naturally with the water in your body to help you go for your gut and your mood will follow for eight
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with safelite auto glass. >> their >> experts replaced by windshield and recalibrated my cards vance safety system safelite is the one i trust. they focused on safety. so i can focus on this view we pay your safe place more than liebermann at the pentagon. >> and this cnn >> this morning, there are growing concerns about the future of nato. if donald trump wins and other presidential term, this is how he responded when asked about defending a nato ally they asked me that question. one of the presidents of a big country who stood up said, well, sir, if we don't pay and were attacked by russia, will you protect us? i said you didn't pay. you're delinquent he said, yes, let's say that happened. no, i would not protect you. in fact, i would encourage them to do whatever the hell they want. you got to paying got to pay your bills with us, now, former
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white house communications director under trump, anthony, anthony scaramucci is also the author of a new book, by the way, from wall street to the >> white house and back the scaramucci guide to unbreakable resilience. it comes out april 16th, congrats on the book >> way to dark comedy, babadilla, it's a little bit like vip, but worse. >> yeah what do, i, see tv show on the making, we shall be a tv show, but it was a phone book to look forward to that. so john bowen was pretty clear with kaitlan last night or jim sciutto has a new book coming out where he's got some reporting also were bolton talks about who is former trump national security adviser, saying nato would be in real jeopardy. i think he would try to get out. what do you think having ben so close to the president? >> well, he wanted out in 2016. he didn't like the treaty in 2016. and so he told everybody during the term that if he got reelected, he would do everything he could to pull the us out of nato, you know, and remember his whole thing with the, you got to pay sort of
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thing. he doesn't really understand the treaty. no one's actually sat down with them to explain the treaty. >> reading fills mind. he really >> wants to what drives me insane, like how, how i remember when this happened in 20 it was there before the convention in 2016 where he first weighed in on this and it was like a bomb dropped right. and i assumed at some point over the course of the next eight years, someone would have sat down on them and let me explain to you how percent of gdp means x, y, and z. but to really understand them, you can't explain something to them because he doesn't want to appear that he doesn't know something. so let's say like hr mcmaster's in the oval office trying playing the difference between the shia and sunni. he doesn't want to cure it. and he certainly doesn't want to be lectured by anybody. we were on the campaign plane wants and the sykes pico street, he came up, which was obviously the treaty that led to the footprint of the middle east today and he got distracted and then i turn to him and say, well, what about the movie lawrence of arabia. do you remember that?
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>> and he said sure, if you tell >> mr. trump a >> story, then you can get the information into him that way that that was a lot of what went on on the economic stuff related to trade. you can ask somebody like robert light eyes or that but he doesn't understand the treaty. he thinks it plays well for him for some reason, he has a love affair with vladimir putin. and so i don't think anybody in the west, western leadership understands that love affair. i don't think anybody intelligence agencies understands that love affair because vladimir putin has called for objectively the reattaching republics to the former soviet union. he's doing something right now, is a direct violation of international law the united states had an obligation to the ukrainians. let's just remind everybody, they gave up the nuke. so president clinton signed a treaty with them to provide security support for those of you listening at home that was called operation porcupine, where we were going to fill them with anti-tank missiles. all types of support
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to prevent a russian invasion. >> the offensives >> defensive support. okay. we allowed for russia to take crimea. i think the obama administration thought, okay, they want that warm water port they will stop okay. they didn't stop. they went into ukraine. now people are saying, well, once they get whatever they wanted the ukraine, they will stop. but they're not going to stop. right. okay. and so when mr. trump is talking like that, okay he's going after the interests of the united states and he's going after the footprint of global peace and global prosperity. so why people are not explaining that the american people, i don't understand the current mlu of candidates. the president, president biden's got to get out there and explain what a disaster this guy would be if he returned to the presidency. this would be this would harm the every day citizen in the united states and it would raise the cost of capital for people here in the united states because we'd have more wars going on connecting
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that to voters has been a huge missing piece from 2015 on and trump's been able to take advantage of that. the personal attacks on nikki haley's husband bringing that up and we heard haley clapback and people have been pretty furious about it, except for republicans who support the former president, like the motivation behind trump doing that? >> what is it? >> it's narcissism. he believes that the people that support him or actually pro military, he believes that their pro patriotic. and he's slapping his supporters in the face. he wants to see how hard he can push his supporters to support him. remember he's talked about killing people on fifth avenue and these people still support him. and so he loves the fact that he's got this great support in south carolina, which there's a military culture in south carolina, pro patriotism culture in south carolina. and then he could malign our veterans. you could ask general kelly about that or any of the other for people that have
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heard them talk this nonsense about. he doesn't want to go to the cemetery because it will upset the hairspray and his hair or he doesn't understand why somebody would want to give up their life and service for the country. he likes doing that because he he can push the goalposts always good to have you. it's look it's good to be here. thank you. thank you, guys. >> later today, house gop members bring articles of impeachment again on homeland security secretary mayorkas. this is the second time they'll attempt to do this. key member who could make their voters success this time that's ahead. >> and after 128 days in captivity, two israeli hostages have now been reunited with their families more on their rescue. that's next laterally underwear has one job. >> i just want to feel protected, especially for those sudden gush moments. >> always discreet protects like no other with a rather drag for that lacks in your heaviest gosh quickly for up to zero leads. always discreet. >> the protection we dissent i'm a guy lost the bet my
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go to sweats, we have what you need to stay warm all what's your mom go to fabletics.com gets 70%. every single thing united states of scandal with jake tapper, sunday at nine on cnn >> i pulled it off operation. perfect execution, and i wanted to tell you how proud i am i'm proud of of this shin bet. the idf. you were together like an oiled machine. >> i was prime minister benjamin netanyahu praising israel elie special forces who rescued two hostages on monday in gaza. cnn has also obtained this video and it shows those forces meeting with the hostages inside a vehicle. this is moments before they boarded a helicopter and they were flown to a hospital inside of israel after being held captive for 128 days, the two men fernando simon marman and louis har, were finally reunited with
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their loved ones. an emotional. look at that very heartfelt moment. nic robertson spoke with one of the family members about how they're doing physically how are they both how would you describe i can say very thin, walking, at least so i can say that they're walking. but i believe that there's still hone high adrenaline, then we will see how physically good ovadia or how mentally good obaida only when that days will come turning us now is dr. hagai levine. here's the head of the medical team for the hostages and missing families forum. he has been monitoring the hostages condition really since the beginning and helping the families, dr.. levine, it's it's really good to have you back on the program this morning. could you update us on how they are doing? >> sure. good morning. poppy >> so there are now examine in the sheba medical center in israel. obviously, we are very
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happy that they survived, but they do have mental and physical implications, especially for lewis who need it hello, i'm medications unfortunately, it seems like it did not receive is needed medications including the shipment that we throw the french and then cutaway was supposed to receive. there's the kathoey promised their families and trans that they will receive the medications that we don't have indication for that they will have a very long recovery process. and obviously, we are very concerned about the other 134 hostages that are still in captivity and lives are in danger every moment, every day no question about medication. is such a crucial one. because if that's the case for him, who else is out the case for other captives? cnn, we as a team did reach out to qatar, the qatari government, the international red cross, with a lot of questions about this. we
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haven't heard back yet >> how >> about mentally? i mean, we saw the reunion. thank goodness with their loved ones. >> but after being held for 100 >> days, can you speak to what that journey is like that they're facing ahead? >> it's complex as you know, things in life. on the one hand, we see this outstanding resilience of some of the people and, you know, i'm in close contact with the released hostages and with families and we see people that are able to recover to some extent and then but we do see also the trouble sleeping at night, the field the field of things and something can trigger the fear that we don't know. the lack of it's trust in other humans after the conditions they were in captivity and you know, today there are the talks in
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cairo and we really hope that they will be successful. we need the help of the united states on france to make sure that there is an agreement and all the hostages returned and tomorrow, the families one other family members will go to to the international criminal court to submit a file against the kudamon, the crimes of the hamas and we need to understand the fact that they receive food and we're not i'll see out of thing. they came back and the fact is they were tortured at least mentally. >> yeah. >> and dr. just to that point, can i ask you because people just to remind people you, your organization treated and has been working with more than 100 hostages that were released back in that deal in november what is their condition both physically and mentally? tell you if anything, about how conditions may have changed in gaza, what hamas is doing with them now, since the other
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hostages that you've helped so i'm not sure. i got to a question. we know that for those who were released and i can tell you, i went to paris last week with some of the families and we slept in the same apartment that i could see that also from the outside as they function well. but you know, at night, as they have there deep and very complicated mentors situation because of the captivity for for the lewis and fernando for now been released. we will have to fall over the next days to see obviously one other 28 days is worse and 50 days. but i must say at least for them because it seems like zai work together the all time that's very stressing and we know that some of those just including formally or less children, they were kept alone for many days. and this is very traumatizing
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so again, i'm very worried about the remaining hostages. some of them are enjoyed, some of them are sick and some of them were sexually tortured and physically tortured, as we know from previous testimony, is that i received directly from the released hostages. so i really hope that the talks in cairo what will be now successful then we will able to innocent people into this crisis. >> yeah, and crucial talks today in cairo, including the head of the cia here in the us, hoping for the best dr.. levine. thank you. >> well, the polls are open in new york to replace the disgrace congressman george santos and the house how this race could be a bellwether for the election in november. >> also, very disturbing body camera footage from houston two, deputies shooting into an apartment window tell you what happened ahead
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you get your competence back reset your style, learn more at reset smile.com. >> rahel solomon in new york. and this is cnn >> this morning, new police body camera video shows harris county deputies in houston shooting a woman inside her friend's apartment after mistaking her for an intruder. deputies it's knocked on the door and announced themselves after a neighbor flag that the screen had been removed in a window was broken. here's what happened next >> as you can see, the deputies who it's important to note have edited the video that you're playing for you, say an individual approach the front door with what they say was a gun and fired attorney benjamin crump says this video is evidence of unnecessary and excessive force. jason carroll has reporting he's with us this morning. what do you know? >> we'll look what what exactly happened here and who ultimately is at fault if anyone is at fault is an all it's all in likelihood going
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to be decided by a grand jury. but here's what happened here. it was early saturday morning harris county sheriff's got a call of a possible break-in at an apartment building in the clover leaf area of houston when they got their attendant directed them to the apartment in question, and they noticed that it had a broken window. harris county sheriff says that the two deputies announced themselves knocked on the door when they looked through the window, they allegedly saw a woman holding a gun walking towards the door. the deputies opened fire striking ivana ponzi. a second woman, then came down the stairs with their hands up, begging the deputies not to shoot. take a listen >> incredible footage there investigators learned later that ebony ponzi was actually staying there with the other resident and that window was broken because the two had forgotten or keys they broke through the window so they
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could let themselves in. famed civil rights attorney ben crump, who has worked a number of cases involving police, involved shootings, including the one involving breonna taylor, who i'm sure you guys both remember who was mistakenly shot inside her apartment by police in louisville back in 2020? crump said the following. this newly released body cam footage is evidenced of the unnecessary and excessive force used against her. that video shows the deputies that responded to e bonnie's friends house shot first and ask questions later. we demand that the deputies involved be immediately held accountable. the investigation clearly now is being conducted by the sheriff's department and we'll eventually be turned over to the district attorney's office is really disturbing video when you when you see that there were a lot of questions, so many questions, jason, keep us posted. thank you. >> well, nearly 15,000 nepalese men fighting on the front lines for the russians. our matthew chance went to katmandu to learn more about the impact of putin's war to, be your
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the promise of money and a passport and then deploy the front lines with just a gun. it's a very basic training now, hundreds, but nepali families say their relatives are missing and they fear the worst as some haven't been in contact for weeks, even months, cnn's matthew chance has more it should be a welder from the battlefields of ukraine. but this himalayan state has become an unlikely casualty. >> of russia's brutal nepalis like ramchandra, who escaped the russian army with his life praying for his comrade, still fighting on the front line to cut bullets and shrapnel in ukraine, he told me. and so many in the police killed. >> just today, i would demand that some complained. they were sent forward while russian troops held back. >> he tells me >> the main problem was the language which barrier in the value or sometimes you
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couldn't even understand where you're supposed to be going. he says, which way to point your gang gives the you but that chaos videos on social media of their military training in russia, where they're meant to be prepared for the hardships of the ukraine here >> it is in use and >> reality, several former nepali recruits tell cnn and they were sent into battle after barely two weeks to fight for the kremlin, armed with a rifle and a contract for a few thousand dollars a month of fortune in the pile when unemployment is high. well, the vast majority of nepalis fighting for russia in ukraine are doing it for the money and they come from these down at hill published areas across the country. we've actually come to one of them now on the outskirts of kathmandu to meet
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a woman who in the past few days has learned her husband has been killed fighting in that busan war. >> hello. >> hi namaste. namaste i'm so he was with a unit of nepalis battling ukrainians. she tells me when he was gunned down welcome and manipulate. >> it was my husband's friend, his nepali commander in ukraine, who called me in the middle of the night and told me he'd been killed. she tells me still shocked at the news. >> if you >> has been no notification from the russians. she adds, nothing when william is a growing frustration with russia's tree and took nepalis as cannon fodder in the ukraine war shared with these protesters near the russian embassy in kathmandu. i, melissa, hi, and the nepali foreign minister who told me he's pressed moscow to curb recruitment to no avail >> they have told me that they
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will sorted out the concern of nepal. >> so they've they've told you they will sort it out, but they haven't done anything yet >> yet. didn't have we don't have any important let me sum up. doing anything >> there's not much information either on how many nepalis or even fighting for russia about 200 according to nepali officials but multiple sources, including campaigners, lawmakers, and returning fighters, tells cnn as many as 15,000 the police could be fighting in ukraine >> what we've asked >> the russia and how many nepalis they've recruited heavily have been killed. what the kremlin calls its special military operation. so far there's been no response or there are concerns here in the pile, the casualty figures maybe. hi, cnn has learned that hundreds of joined the rushing in a tree out of contact and it's uncertain if they're dead or alive jan occur a
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>> young nepali mother is assuming the worst husband hasn't called for more than two months now that was already someone didn't babolat >> children asked me when their dad is coming home, she sobs even if he doesn't love us anymore. we just want to see his face >> barbara gusto >> but another nepali recruit to russia's war may never be seen again. matthew chance, cnn, katmandu, in the past >> but i story our thanks to matthew and his team for that also ahead, elon musk facing calls to testify for a third time before federal regulators about his takeover of twitter. we've got reporting on that ahead. >> united states of scans with jake tapper sunday at nine on cnn, t-mobile build a 5g networks so powerful, it goes beyond do you and now team 5g
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>> welcome back right now, x owner elon musk is facing calls to testify before federal regulators about his 44 billion takeover of twitter in 2022, a federal judge has ordered musk to schedule a third interview with the securities and exchange commission by next week. and this comes as part of an investigation into whether musk broke securities law by failing to disclose his purchase of twitter stock in a timely manner. musk has fought the sec's efforts to interview him again, he is accused at regulator of harassment. >> investors have ten days to tell the sec anytime they buy 5% or more of a company's stock, most quietly bought up, up to nearly 10% of twitter stock in early april of 2022 then waited 21 days to make those legal disclosures. experts say the delay saved him millions of dollars. our next guest just published a book today that sheds fresh light on the questions that musk's purchase raised inside twitter at the time, writing quote, the steak elon musk acquired suggested he might try to take over the company with the paperwork you filed with the sec suggested otherwise adding
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with moscow was hard to tell what was part of a strategy and what was simply sloppy paperwork joining us now, is there a shift for the managing editor of the investigative techniques later, letter platform? there's also the author of said brand new book, extremely hardcore inside elon musk's twitter thanks so much for joining us. i want to start with the news so the moment because your book does shed light on this and it's kind of this split-screen of is there some really smart secret, savvy strategy going on or is he just kind of flying by the seat of his pants? twitter. the owners of the time we're trying to figure this out, the top executives were trying to figure it out. what did you learn as you can look back at that moment >> the treatments if you mask we still don't know the answer. like you said, it's very hard to tell what is the strategy, what is simply an oversight because he isn't busy, he's running for many companies. but as you said, because he failed to disclose in the typewriter he was supposed to if he was able to continue the biden stopped at a lower price, the
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situation wasn't fair for other investors and shareholders and elon musk has said that he doesn't respect the sec, likely because in 2018, it binds him about $20 million for a tweet where he claimed that get funding secured to take tesla private phil and i agree best title of a book ever for sure, talk about the genesis of it. it's an email and just how it reflects company culture. now, at x yeah, absolutely. so this email came shortly after elon musk acquired the company. he was really giving employees an ultimatum. he had already fired the company, and now he was telling remaining employees sign up to be extremely hardcore work, really long hours, get fewer benefits or get out and it, was kind of the fork of the road. and what's interesting is we've heard so many stories of the employees that left or the employees that are suing for severance are trying to get money back then, you also have many profiles of
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people who took advantage of it, pitch their own ideas and must signed off on them. and they were able to move forward. and i think that's fascinating to have the kind of the full picture of it. but can i ask from a broader sense? i feel like we've heard for two years at x is about to collapse. x is falling apart. x has no money excess, huge problems. the infrastructure, the brains behind the day to plumbing of the place. all left. what is the state of x right now? >> yeah. >> i want to say first that no one who had worked on this technology thought that x is going to go down overnight over the media, did kind of print six at the time. the company has spent so many years trying to make the platform as stable as possible in the event that there was a massive influx of users or a data center went out work disasters and disaster did kind of strike in the form of elon musk. but the platform is robust and if it declines, it will be steady and slow decline, which is largely what we've seen, not a big thing where it goes offline
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overnight. what we know right now is that x is still really hurting financially last year the company was on trial i can make about $2.5 billion from advertising which is a significant slump from prior years. and elon musk continues to scare away on the geysers. >> can i ask you do though, acknowledge that there are some positive things you think have come from musk's takeover of twitter. now, x, what are those? >> yeah, so it's worth pointing out that prior to elon musk, twitter did have enormous problems from 2006 to 2016, the company failed to turn a profit dorsey was largely an absentee landlord. and what employees told me time and again is that the company was very slow. it was very inefficient, it was hard to ship product and get things done. elon musk has come in. he's made the company extremely top-down, extremely hierarchical, and it's also faster and more efficient congrats on the book, extremely hardcore inside elon musk's twitter is a way. appreciate it. we just want to let you know, we did reach out to elon

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