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tv   CNN This Morning  CNN  February 22, 2024 4:00am-5:00am PST

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>> of course, isn't there some rome was telling me about some way or a kit that you can test for fentanyl and other pills just for parents out there worried there are fentanyl test strips and so a lot of people are trying to make those more accessible to folks. of course, along with naloxone, which is the opioid overdose drug. yeah. >> thank you. may cnn this morning continues now publican scrambling >> to contain the fallout after the former fbi informant at the center of their impeachment investigation was indicted for lying to promotion of a bribery scheme was false. >> not at all. >> if republicans have good evidence, we would've seen that long ago >> the alabama supreme court says that frozen embryos for children and destroying them to land you in prison. >> the largest hospital in the state, pausing all ivf treatments. >> i've been reading over two years to be pregnant. there is no world for i can see stopping this process right now
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>> us attempting its first moon landing in more than 50 years but dcs is now barreling towards the moon. now, hours away from the most perilous test. >> yet some people have likened it to hitting a golf ball, york and having it go into a particular hole. one in la. >> that's what this is a beginning of an emerging economy around the moon good thursday morning, everyone. i'm phil mattingly with poppy harlow in new york, and we begin with that breaking news are reports of outages that continue to pour in for tens of thousands of mobile phone customers this morning, up people in various states have the reporting, trouble making calls on their phones is impacting several carrier here's right now it appears at&t is having the most trouble. >> so according to downdetector.com, 31,000 at&t customers reported problems with their service overnight peaked around the problems i should say peaked around for 30 am eastern time this morning, some reporting no signal at all, unable to receive or
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answer calls we have reached out to at&t and the other cell providers. we're waiting to hear back seen in law enforcement analyst john miller joins us now. john, i think everybody is trying to figure out what exactly this is. the companies haven't said anything yet, and we're continuing to report out in terms of from an emergency services perspective or just kind of the basic functioning of society with a big concern turns right now that people are looking into, well, number one is just the the the infrastructure of the united states, the way it's built this so many people have given up hard lines, land lines, so when you have a cellular system that is cracking with a major carrier especially the major carriers for that has the contract with the government to supply emergency communications to law enforcement, fire, critical infrastructure that's a big concern. now that's the bad news. the good news is, when something like that unfolds in the wee hours of the morning when traffic is way down you see that particular
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tracking outfit sees 31,000 complaints. have that happen at 04:30 in the afternoon as opposed to 430 in the morning? i think we'd be say we'd be seeing massive numbers and greater concern right now, we're in triage. at&t is wondering what's happening. how do you go about that? they're going into their own systems and they're reading their logs and they're doing audits through their computers and system saying, let's go backwards. where does this glitch enter the system? did it enter the system? or we can juliette kayyem was on earlier talking about there are atmospherics here. i can remember times when we had what we refer to as sunspots that were interfering with police radio communication remember what a cell phone is? a cell phone is nothing more than a two-way radio it bounces a low signal to a series of repeaters, cell towers that then give that signal more power and distributed that
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network is controlled by computers that measure the volume uncertain towers and then read we distributed to other towers. so it's complicated, which means when it works, it works great. but when there's a domino effect when something breaks or cascades, you can see something like this. let's just switch to the dark side for a second. russia, china, south, north korea, around everybody, in terms of hostile foreign powers, has been looking at us critical infrastructure as part of the nypd's see csi, our critical infrastructure protection group we brought all the elements, including the big cell phone companies in and told them these are the indicators of compromise. these are the ip addresses, these are the signals that they're trying to get into your system. and this was updated literally daily so that's some of what they'd be looking for today,
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is it an insight problem? is it? outside problem? let's say, now we're just going far afield here with nothing to back this up, but we're talking theory. if there was a russian attack on critical infrastructure first you would try it out to see if it worked. if we were trying to attract not too much attention you might try it out at 04:30 in the morning, us time to see if you it affect the system. and then pull out. so people didn't go hunting for what you used. this was a little clangy. it's probably a technical glitch. it's probably not sinister but those are all the things that jen easterly and other people at the white house and the dhs and the critical infrastructure directorate. and at the fbi and their cyber teams are going to be thinking about as they roll into work today, i can people do this morning who are still being impacted by this? i my phone didn't go up, but i was asking one of our colleagues can sometimes when it's not worry working, you can sell call 911. >> yeah. >> apparently that was down for a lot of folks are is down for a lot of folks too. i suppose they can use wi-fi.
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>> so the audio, so the 911 feature. yeah, it's just it's just a jump in the phone that says if you didn't pay your bill, if we switched up your service yeah. if you were an unhoused person or domestic abuse victim, where they've given you a phone that only calls for emergencies that function will still work if it's the phone service that's not working that's going to go with it. yeah. yeah. >> we are continuing to report this out. we don't have specific details are still awaiting word from the companies as well. john, stay with us. we got a lot more to get to with you because this morning the impeachment case against president biden. well, it appears to, at least on his face, be falling apart. house republicans. >> they're >> scrambling to salvage it after an fbi informant at the heart, the allegations admitted it was russian spies. reclaims, gave him dirt on the bidens. congressman ken buck now telling cnn as fellow republicans who are leading the charge on impeachment, were warned about this informants credibility we were warned at the time that we received the document outlining this witness's testimony, we were
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warned that >> the credibility of this statement was not known, and yet, people, my colleagues went out and talk to the public about how this was credible and how it was damning and how oh it proved president biden's at the time vice president biden's complicity in receiving bribes >> it appears to >> absolutely be false. >> so james comer and jim jordan, they knew that this was not corroborated information yet they still went public with it, talked on now on television, used it to fuel these investigations regardless >> that's what it appears. >> also the president's brother, james biden, delivering a pretty significant blow to this impeachment probe yesterday, he testified that president biden did not have any involvement in his foreign business dealings. democrats are now calling on house republicans to end this inquiry
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>> wild goose chase built on conspiracy theory in lies from the beginning. and now we know that russian intelligence operatives were behind creating the propaganda and disinformation at the very foundation of this investigation. so i think it's time for chairman comer and the republicans to fold up the circus tent. and we to get back to work from american people. >> republicans have made clear they don't plan on doing that, but the fbi is also coming under scrutiny for its handling of that informant, john miller is back with us now and gentlemen, i'm the question i asked several times yesterday to other people and then we talked about it after the show and you had a very enlightening things to say about it, which is this informant, this individual who was indicted, was a confidential informant for a decade. the indictment makes it appear that he is a serial fabulist at the highest level how can a confidential informant be operating for a decade that lies as alleged in the indictment so this confidential informant has been operating for those years, but
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has been making cases a significant cases in the area of >> public corruption and other criminal matters, not in the world of espionage or international intrigue. although there has been a shift in the kind of information he's been supplying. so when you have an informant who hasn't had to testify in court, that means they were able to give you enough accurate information so that you could go out and prove that case and then bring a prosecution and then get convictions. so in the world of fbi informants, there's the top echelon informant let's think whitey bulger running a crime family in boston at the same time being an fbi informant. complicated because the top echelon informant has to be giving you information that you can't get anywhere else. but they also have to be committing crimes at the same time. that's awkward, but it's a decision they make. this would be the second rung down, which is a long-term informing anybody who's been on the books for more than six years. but there's still a process, there's an informant validation
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procedure. there's a way to test informants, and there's a way to get that steady stream of raw elegance. the things you put an attempt 23 and vet that into finished intelligence, which is we've been able to verify much of this. where does this one make the turn? it makes the turn at once. he starts supplying this information about joe biden. they're looking at this and it doesn't make sense. they're giving him $5 million and his son $5 million at 20:17 when he's leaving office and we'll have no power to help them. and that deal was made in some earlier meetings, but the informant talked about it in 2017, but didn't mention the bribe and then suddenly mentioned surprised later. so they're looking at this raw data and they're saying it's all out of order and it doesn't make sense. when congress starts asking for this, then they have to go backwards through it and say, well, we didn't give we didn't give this much credibility now, but now we're investigating so you can't take warrant there so this was
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carefully constructed story. the question we're stuck with right now is that he constructed or did the russian intelligence officials, he claims to have been meeting with. now feed him that story for the specific purpose of trying to dirty up joe biden helped donald trump and all the other kind of election appearance. we were talking about in 2017. >> yeah. that's the core question. right. and how do they answer that? thank you very much, john. i'm both beats. appreciate. thanks. >> so this morning, prosecutors in arizona are refusing to hand over a murder suspect charged with the brutal killing of a woman in new york police say 26 year-old rod amen, sorry, stabbed to the women in arizona and has also wanted in a new
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york hotel homicide. but maricopa county attorney rachael mitchell says she doesn't trust manhattan's da alvin bragg to keep him in prison if she's not going to extradite him here, fringing grass has all of this. this is really fascinating and pretty unprecedented. yeah, i mean, let's start by saying it is somewhat common practice for these suspects to be extradited a violent criminal like this to a state where there is a bigger offense that occurred such as this case. now we're talking about 26 world rod almost story as poppy mentioned, this is the man that the nypd says killed a woman and a manhattan hotel earlier this month, and then days late fluid, arizona, where authorities say he committed a car jackings stabbing the woman driving, and then subsequently stabbed another woman and the mcdonald's bathroom now, both victims lived. almond story was arrested in arizona. well, maricopa county attorney rachael mitchell then held a press conference saying she instructed her staff not up to work with new york authorities in extraditing almond story, and then took a swipe at the
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manhattan district attorney, alvin bragg. and here's more of what she said we will not be agreeing to extradition, having observed the treatment of >> violent criminals in new york area. my the manhattan da, they're alvin bragg. i think it's safer to keep him here and keep him in custody so that he cannot be out doing this to in the visuals either in state or county or anywhere in the united states >> yeah, pretty harsh words. she followed up by saying on the story, needs to first be adjudicated for the crime he allegedly committed in her district. and that this move was nothing against the work of the nypd. >> i can't imagine the da's office expected this. what's their response bet if they fell? >> next back to it, but there was a very quick response and a spokesperson for the district attorney's office did s this in a statement, new york's murder rate is less than half. that of phoenix, arizona because of the hard work of the nypd and all our law enforcement partners, it is a
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slap in the face to them and to the victim in our case to refuse to allow us to seek justice and full full accountability for new yorkers death. now, bragg's office, adding that mitchell is playing politics here, because important context to remember, bragg is a democrat, has been a familiar punching bag for republicans who have repeatedly criticized him from being soft on crime. he's also take a lot of heat lately on several of his cases, but particularly the one his office is about go to trial hello. on against former president donald trump. of course, brought 34 felony counts against trump for falsifying business records in his hush money case in new york. so that bigger context, of course, important here, yeah, critical. >> and i think much more to come on the story as well, virgin grass. thank you. well, it has been nearly two years since russia's war on ukraine began. next, we'll talk to the former first lady of ukraine. the next few months could look like also this ahead, nba superstar steph curry and former davidson head basketball coach bob mcilroy's stole the hearts of college basketball fans everywhere after their historic bracket-busting run,
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>> also here. >> here here, here, even here, whatever shape your home or business is, t-mobile is bringing high-speed internet and towns across america, only 15 minutes to set up and just pretty bucks a month, but no exploding bills or annual contracts >> i'm evan perez in washington. >> and this is cnn welcome back this saturday marks two years since russia's full-scale invasion of ukraine >> and russia continues to make small gains along the eastern front after taking the town of a dq over the weekend, it is still facing fierce resistance though in the south from ukrainian forces concern is growing over ukraine's ability need to sustain this level of fighting the long term without much more support from the united states and its allies joining us now former first lady of ukraine katerina, you've chienco, her husband, viktor, you've chienco, of course, is president of ukraine from 2005 to 2010. thank you for being here. >> two
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>> years in it will be two years on saturday. and let's not forget, so many people thought that kyiv would fall within days. and yet look what ukraine has done. what is your assessment? two years in and also your message for the world? >> thank you very much, poppy for having me. i do want to say that indeed are war has been going on for ten years russia invaded ukraine into 2014, and millions of ukrainians have been murdered, tortured, raped castrated, forced to flee the many children have been abducted. and every day we hear air-raid sirens, thousands of bombs falling down every day we hear about families being destroyed just in this past week to families with two parents and three children have died in the night including a newborn baby it's very sad to
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hear what is happening. i have to say that i always thought that these kinds of things happen to other people and whether countries and recently we have found that this can happen to you. >> yeah. >> i read this interview that you gave to the national review there was actually almost exactly two years ago, four days before this russian invasion. and you described calling your father in 1991 when ukraine declared independence and he said he never thought he would see it happen again. and i wonder how worried you are if more aid especially from the united states, does not come that ukraine is on the brink of losing that. again indeed, >> you know that we are very grateful for the assistance that we have already gotten from the united states and from europe. there was a time when as you said, they thought they could take ukraine in three days. and instead now it takes
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them and the law also tens of thousands of soldiers to take tiny towns in ukraine that we have been able because of assistance and because of the resilience of our people to degrade their military and take back half of what they've taken since is since 222 and indeed, i think we have humiliated the russian army we do believe that if we had received more sooner, the war would already be over and already totally and it would be over the delay in arms is castillo's thousands of people every day. and if we had gone the aid when the the threats at first started, if we had gotten the aid when the then the new escalation at first started, it would be over, but we have been fighting with very limited capacity and i think that's
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very important for the us and europe to understand that withdrawing assistance will not make the war shorter. >> it >> only prolong it and bring in other player. and that amir ukrainian victory will mean greater security and less spending on defense for the us and for europe so to those who believe and make the argument that the longer you keep funding this, the longer it is protracted, and eventually you >> end at the bargaining table and you said some portion of ukraine chip to russia, your message to them is that is absolutely inaccurate do you know we cannot give up we will not give up because we cannot give up because we understand that if we do give up, it is the end of our country and we will cease to exist. and we understand that if we give up the war will move further and so right now, we are soldiers are fighting and dying to save the rest of europe. and we hope that the world understands
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that. i think that in the past the world understood that now it no longer does to exactly your point, we give up this moves on to the rest of europe. >> christiane >> amanpour, our beloved colleague, did a such a telling interview this week with ukraine's foreign minister in kyiv. and this is part of the exchange. listen to this europe has, is used to leaving mps just because you, country's >> allowed the peace dividend when the fault of the soviet union happened without a single drop of blood but now there is a war and the europeans have to accept the fact that the era of peace in europe is over with. someone likes it or not. it's over. >> i wonder what you make of that if you believe you're to some extent the united states have been too slow to recognize that the end of that era of peace do you know? i think that
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unfortunately people don't recognize that putin is my name, is clearly not just to take ukraine he wants to eliminate western values. yes, he wants to eliminate ukrainian completely as a nation, but his main goal is a new world order without democracy, freedom, rule of law he wants the end of american and european leadership in the world. and what i think many americans do not understand that his goal is the end of the us. and he is david. this clearly many times. and the kremlin is doing all it can. just so polarization and dysfunction in the us. and i think it's very strange that many people who call themselves american patriots don't understand that. >> to that point for people who don't know you've had such a fascinating the career in journey worked in the reagan white house. so i'm particularly interested in your response to republican
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lawmakers. like for example, republican senator jd vance, who just said this in munich over the weekend about putin. here he was i do not think that vladimir putin is in the next central threat to europe and to the extent that he is, again, that suggests that europe >> has to take a more aggressive role in its own security not an existential threat. what do you say to that >> porch? >> it has made it very clear for many, many years that his main goal is to eliminate american power in the world to create a world, a different axis where it's russia, china, north, korea, iran, the control the world, and to be it is still shocking. and i have to say, as you said, i was i grew up in america and worked in the reagan white house where republicans understood national security threats. and understood what was good for america and the fact that so many republicans now support putin is shocking to me because
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putin has one goal and that is the absolute destruction of american power. democracy freedom, and rule of law >> finally, the biden white house is considering further sanctions and talked about this last couple of days for their sanctions on putin my question has been though, it has not deterred russia at all and ukraine, it did not deter. look what just happened to alexei navalny in russian prison is there anything sanctions-wise that you believe would act as a deterrent? >> for example the >> 300 million in assets we just talked to bill browder about that yesterday >> thank you indeed, we need to get those assets confiscated. >> i think that >> there are many russian sanctions that have not been enforced. they have been able to overcome them by working through many other countries, including india, and is very important that these sanctions are more strongly enforced at
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these assets are given to ukraine for our military and our financial needs and again, i think it's very shocking that people don't understand that this is it's un america's interests to support our country. >> former, former first lady of ukraine, katerina, if chienco. thank you so much for your time this morning >> thank you. >> also new this morning, a us sailors facing court-martial after being accused of espionage and the alleged mishandling of classified documents, the us navy says, chief petty officers shared defense information with the citizen of an unnamed foreign government, at least six times while stationed in norfolk, virginia, cnn's oren liebermann joins us now, live from the pentagon, or what more do we know? well about what actually happened here? >> phil brice pedicini, what appeared to be a long and successful career in the navy, according to his navy record, he enlisted in 2008 and served on three different destroyers, including most recently, the us is higgins based in japan. he had gotten good conduct metals
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as well as the national defense service medal, according to his navy the record and an august 2022, he was promoted to chief fire control minute critical role on a us navy warship. but according to navy prosecutors, in november 2022, several months after that promotion, he began sharing classified information with a foreign government. now, the charge sheet that we have seen doesn't list the foreign government, but according to project scooters this happens several times. november, december, january, and february. then in may of 2023, as pedicini was serving on the higgins in japan prosecutors say he had took a picture of a classified screen and was attempting the transfer that to a foreign government when he was arrested and taken into pretrial confinement, he veins, they're several months later now being held in san diego awaiting his court-martial here, he has been charged with 14 counts of espionage and the attempted transfer of classified information. as we wait to see how this moves forward, phil, it's worth pointing out here that part of this, according to prosecutors
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played out at exactly the same time as jack teixeira, the massachusetts air national guardsman, who was charged with leaking classified information online on discord. teixeira was arrested in april, according to the documents hear from the navy it was pedicini who was arrested just one month later. >> yeah important context. oren liebermann. thank you well, the families of gabby petito and brian laundrie reaching a settlement and avoiding a trial. the details on how that agreement was reached. that's next. >> and overnight, thousands of americans, maybe you woke up to your phone not working what we're learning about this nationwide cell service outage >> yeah qia movement that
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plus, get the new samsung galaxy s24 on us. phone, install the free keepsake app. we would love a chance to frame it for for you. >> this >> room with wolf blitzer didn't night at six point cnn >> welcome back. the parents of murdered 20 travel blogger, gabby petito have reached a settlement with the parents of brian laundrie, gabby's fiance, who killed her during a cross-country road trip? >> and >> emotional distress lawsuit, the petito is claimed the landry knew their son killed gabby, but intentionally withheld that information. disagreement means they do avoid a civil trial that was set to begin in may. jean casarez joins us now with more than i was so sad, just rereading about that. all of this this morning after the news, remind people of what happened. >> i think we all remember right. 2021, all of a sudden we hear the name gabby petito. yeah. and she had made this travel video blog. she and her fiance is they were out west and they were camping and her
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van and i think it caught the country just to watch them because the videos that she had made were just riveting to watch. but she was missing. and nobody could find her. and so a year later in 2022, the petitos filed a lawsuit and we then realized that when she was missing and didn't know where she was, they had called texted, phoned, emailed, facebook messenger, the laundries saying, do you know anything about our daughter? they were they blocked them on facebook. they didn't return any calls. they wouldn't speak to them. they made a public statement, please, to the laundries. let us know about our daughter. they then filed suit and under florida law, intention so infliction of emotional distress, the test is outrageous behavior, was it outrageous that the laundries never responded to them? they said we never had a duty to respond to you. but yesterday there was a mediation conference because this case was proceeding to trial fast. it was going to happen in may. >> and here's the resolution.
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we did get a comment from the laundries attorney steven bertolino. he said, quote, christopher and roberta laundrie and i participated in a mediation with the petito family and the civil lawsuit has now been resolved. the terms of the resolution are confidential, and we will look forward to putting this matter behind us. but the question remained what did brian laundrie tell his parents about what happened to gabby? will depositions were released, right before this mediation conference began, and we now know that on august 20, brian initially called his mother and she thought something was wrong and she told her husband called brian he did call brian and here is from that deposition what brian's father asked his son, bryan. i asked him, you know, how is he doing and he, you know, he was not calm and he got very excited and he told me things had you know, gabby is gone and he got very frantic. everything was frantic
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and quick. >> he said he did didn't know what to do. he said, you know, can you help me, you know, any might need a lawyer and they retained a lawyer. and the reason they said they never spoke to the petitos at all was that their attorney told them just don't talk to anybody, just don't talk. keep brian safe. don't talk to anybody. and then he committed suicide. and in his backpack, he admitted he murdered her. >> jean casarez. >> appreciate it. thank you. >> well alabama supreme court has ruled that frozen embryos are children. that ruling already affecting in vitro fertilization patients ahead, cnn speaks to a woman who's currently undergoing ivf treatment and alabama stay with us so would you get to nashville hot tenders and three mandarin orange tenders? >> what about you? three classic tenders for butterfly? shrimp full of baby. i live. >> it looks like somebody needs a new hand. >> things for sure. >> i'm not the buffet with so many choices on booking.com there are so many tina fey's, i
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a huge relief. >> meet your estate plan, that trust and we'll dot com. >> i more human at the pentagon. and >> this cnn >> walk back this morning, women in alabama undergoing ivf fertility treatments are facing uncertainty after one of just a handful of fertility clinics in the state decided to pause ivf treatments. the decision was made to give the university of alabama birmingham time to review the state supreme court's ruling from last week that declared embryos. our children, our isabel rosales speaks to one woman in alabama who is currently undergoing ivf on what the future of her treatment looks like, and the
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emotional and financial tools it takes on her family fallout intensifies in alabama after the state supreme court ruled that frozen embryos are children. one of the fertility clinics in the state, pausing ivf treatments, mullen evaluates the high court's decision. the university of alabama at birmingham rights. we're signing that this will impact our patients attempt to have a baby thriving the f but we must evaluate the potential that our patients and our physicians could be prosecuted criminally or face punitive damages for following the standard of care for ivf treatments is already leading to fewer babies and fewer grandbabies that are desperately wanted for their parents and grandparents. i alabama. so i think this is the first uav is the first system to stop. i don't think it's going to be the last this decision leaves alabamians struggling with him scared. >> i've been waiting over two years to be pregnant. >> so i there's no world where i could see me stopping this process right now. all we want
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is to just have the american dream and have a family. and i've never felt that this would be something that would be conceived immoral. >> gabriel godel just started the shots necessary with ivf one day before alabama supreme court ruling and is worried her clinic could also pause treatments right now. >> i probably 15 shots in my body is bruised and hurt. it's not been great physically. i don't feel the greatest financially we've invested over $20,000 into this process. we paid that again on thursday, the day before the ruling came out, gabrielle and her husband have been trying for two years to get pregnant and suffered three miscarriages. they were turning to ivf to secure a genetically viable embryo that it's just feels like it's been months long and then to be told that there was a possibility that we would have to stop this in the middle o of one of the most important parts of it is really terrifying
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>> gabrielle, let's just stays away from her egg retrieval and is worried what she will do with her non-viable embryos. >> do i have to keep those on frozen forever? and do i good to let the ones that are genetically abnormal pass naturally as my dr. would be in any sort of danger by doing this procedure to me, it just there's so many questions in there right now. we love it here. but it definitely has made us think about whether or not we'll stay here at hong term. and it wanted for sure we're going to try to transfer embryos out of alabama as soon as possible. >> isabel rosales, cnn, atlanta. >> or thanks isabel for that piece so important to hear from the humans affected by this and people on both sides of this debate, we'll keep following it very closely. also this ahead, bob mkela racked up over 600 wins as a college basketball head coach. you don't get that kind of milestone without being a strong leader on and off the court just ahead, our one-on-one with a david it's a
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legend >> power must always be in harmony with truth and you take those principles you apply them. to leadership today and i believe we'd have a different world to be a headline, wars vegas. >> that's what i want to do. >> they had the biggest entertainers in america >> vegas is always marketed itself on its naughtiness. >> and the only way you find out and what you can't do is if you do it it's unlike anywhere else in the world. >> vegas, the story of sin city sunday at ten for on cnn. >> i feel refreshed because i'm not struggling with cdpap anymore. she looks great. i got inspire great sleep. >> at the click of a button. you can >> yeah, i got an implant, sheila, it's inspire, learn more and do you important safety information? measuring
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retailers sunday. could there be an even wider conflict in the middle east? fareed zakaria goes inside the store between the us and iran. and the history of the divide i think he's having a midlife crisis i'm not. you got us t-mobile home internet lite. after a week of streaming they knocked us down... ...to dial up speeds. like from the 90s. great times. all i can do say is that my life is pre-- i like watching the puddles gather rain.
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-hey, your mom and i procreated to that song. oh, ew! i think you've said enough. why don't we just switch to xfinity like everyone else? then you would know what year it was. i know what year it is. things in the people that you care about are taking care of create your state plan that trust and we'll dot com the south carolina republican presidential primary saturday had six on cnn >> nba superstar steph curry and legendary coach bob mcilroy's legacies are forever linked when others doubted caries potential, it was mkela unwavering belief in him as a high school or that made all the difference. he recruited the future four time nba a champion to davidson college. you'll remember 2008, they would lead davidson on a magical nc doubly tournament run, reaching the elite eight. hurry credits when kill up for helping him overcome self-doubt
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during his basketball career and instilling a trust the curry didn't need to be anything other than himself to succeed >> you built the total human being as an athlete, as a citizen. and i know i can speak for every party that's played for you none of this as possible without you. so thank you so much for your leadership and example >> the killer fled a winning program for over three decades, a program built on character. now after leaving the court, he reflects on what he calls life's too greatest gifts time and love. i sat down with him for the latest in our coaching life series >> thank you. remember steph curry making a play in that corner going down and shooting the lay of coming down still on the ball and and going down and shooting a three-pointer the nice standing down at other end as the defenders running back down court meet, turning to the bench and saying, don't they know that steph curry never
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surprise me what he did because matt, as an assistant and i as a head coach saw this every day in living color. and now to see what he has done in the nba you can't step on his coat without thinking of him i had the great fortune of being at madison square garden when he set the record for three-pointers in need fan its will up on their feet shearing, how many opposing players can walk into an opposing amina and create joy for the fans who work for him to lose. >> yeah that's the power that he has >> basketball is life in the mkela family for more than three decades. bob mkela was the head coach of davidsons men's basketball, winning more than 600 games and leading his team to ten nc double tournaments we built a program with capta that was a foundation for everything we did. >> do you think character is the single most important trait in a liter, without doubt, a
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leader has the first coach himself and until you coach yourself, you cannot coach anyone else. and that's the same way leadership is until you leave yourself i don't believe that you can need anyone else. >> it takes a lot of humility to coach yourself. >> well, that's one of the first traits that a leader must have, is your melody. >> when i learned only arise port to my knees with failure, that, that confidence at to be balanced with humility. when those two things are in harmony. that's when you truly lead it >> commitment, care, a motto that coach mkela has passed on to his son, matt, who is now following in his dad's footsteps as head coach >> why? >> i'm still learning today, who i am as a coat and how i can best be the coach that i need to be for this team. and i add an idea. this is i am how i got to be myself, but more and more, i'm like i got to be moral of this guy. >> i carry these cards around with me. these are cards on it
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carry on the bench during games that i eventually have now carried in my life. and the first heading is leadership. so i have a group of statements written about leadership. >> can you read me? >> i am the leader. they need my help, lead them how is my face greet them, welcome them smile them to the huddle. this would a good one. >> maggie, >> why is baba so grumpy maggie's or oldest granddaughter? and schuster, we say the after again, why do you so groggy game? so i wrote that down. be happier in the heat of battle, i need to remind you we're about that. that's why i kept those cars. >> his success on the court came with failure that paints him to this day, failure at home as a father. >> i was consumed with that power >> that >> i neglected our door as she grew up because recruits to see i had games to prepare for. i
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was not there for her youth as pretty tough. >> yeah. the power of being a coach, but i couldn't represent the truth in a way i dealt with our children. >> how did things change with your daughter when you realize that sounds like you missed the most with her? >> we lost in the semifinal round. instead of me being on a ct on national tv, i'm in charlottesville, virginia at martha johnson hospital as carrying our daughter was giving birth to her first child so god said, you know, you weren't there and beginning that now you hear made it at this most important time >> so that's the way of made it up to her. today. >> coach mikela focus is bigger than the court. >> i think the biggest disease that we have in our world today is the disease me. it's cancerous. it's infectious it
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has eroded the honor and dignity and respect that was once a part of our life. >> i've never heard it put so well, i again, go back to my concept of coaching ourselves. if you sweep in front of your door the world will be a clean place the concept of leading yourself becomes such a vital component for a better future i wonder how you think about leadership now and specifically, arrogance when you observe leaders around us right now, do you have a warning for other leaders on i sure do. lead here's must have this balance between confidence and humility once the confidence doesn't have humility, it's, it becomes arrogance and power must it's always be in harmony with truth and you take those principles and you apply them to leadership today. and i believe we'd have a different world in 2018, coach mkela took his team
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overseas, not for basketball, but for less than they would never forget. at auschwitz why did you take your team leaders are supposed to educate. leaders are supposed to take people from point a to point b to point c as they share experiences in life. it's one thing to read something in a history book or watch schindler's list and see a movie. when you walk through the gas chambers in the barracks in front gate and you see the train where the jews came in. you get a different perspective on how heinous an experience. in record that is of history of our world. there are a lot of chapters you can open up a book and share with you players in a more chapters, you give them a bit of there decades of success have left coach mkela, sir? of this >> the two greatest kea of shoe
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have our time and love. you can make more money, but you can't make more time if i had to live my life over again, i would use those gifts more wisely. we use those gifts with greater emphasis i would give those gifts to our children, to our players, to our fans, time and low, you can't replace those two gifts my thanks to coach mkela. he sent me a note. i'll never take it off my office wall. any reminded me time and love. >> the most important gifts. >> also want to take a minute to thank the amazing team behind this coaching life series. they made it happen. dan moriarty brought his editorial expertise it's in his heart to every single conversation are phenomenal editor alex close brought these interviews to life and are remarkable. editorial producer david louder back, helped convince all these men and women and coaches to sit down with us and to share their
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worlds with us. it takes a village and i'm so lucky to work beside all of them. >> good to say i was very jealous of this series because of a sports not and i love listening to coaches and people are successful talking about life, but it was also, there's something in every one of these pieces that stuck with me. there was always a quote or something and none more so than kevin o'connell, the vikings coach, who said, when he comes home and he's exhausted and he feels like and do anything at all. and it looks as kids and they just want to play it to always remember that that's their super bowl. >> yeah. >> and i was i think about it constantly now that you really that's the kind of daniel. >> but >> they've been a joy to watch. >> well, it's been an honor to sharing with everyone well, also, this morning, reports about just continue to pour in for tens of thousands of mobile phone customers this morning. more coverage coming up next you, don't, know i've gotta go thanks for joining
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