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>> start it just 799 a month golf 10d 775383882, or visit home served.com >> this is cnn the world's news network >> out of service or phone outage, hitting the at&t network? no calls, no texts no access to the absence services that we've all come to depend on. >> the latest on what caused it and why it worries experts. plus another alabama clinic presses pause on ivf at least for now, but fall off from the controversial so court ruling that could dramatically change family planning for millions >> and historic mission. we're now just hours away from what
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could be the first move landing by an american spacecraft in 50 years. following these major developing stories and many more all coming in right here to cnn news central >> welcome to cnn news central pleasure to have you this afternoon. i'm boris sanchez alongside jessica dean in the nation's capital. and we got a serious wakeup call today for people across the country after a massive the outage at at&t, it meant that customers couldn't make calls and text messages or in some cases even access the internet and even 911 calls were affected in some regions at&t says that three quarters of its network is up and running again, but it's still hasn't specifically said how this happened. >> joining us now is chief law enforcement and intelligence analyst, john miller and lance ulanoff. he's the us editor in
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chief of tech radar. it's great to see both of you. a lot of people scream hambling today. john, let's just start first with you. the potential causes. what do we know about what could have caused this and where do things currently stand? >> well, what we don't know is it caused from at&t and they've been very slow off the mark to engage with their customers. it took them many hours to get a a banner up on their website, acknowledging what their customers already knew, which is that they were suffering from from technical problems and they were trying to resolve it and when they spoke to our brian fung, they didn't give him any cause, but they did say that three quarters of the system was back up and running at&t is not just another provider. they provide the first net to emergency responders. so potential causes environmental, particularly with 5g weather can affect the system other potential causes technical sometimes when they
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do an upgrade or a switch overnight, they can offset the system and of course the third one is cyber attack. now, we don't have anything to suggest that, but it has been in the conversation since early this morning. >> land one specific issue at play here seems to be how cellular services handoff calls from one network to the next. does that tell you anything about why this could have happened? what could have gone wrong? >> not, necessarily but it is really interesting because we first looked at down detector, which looks at all sort of customer complaints regarding some of these networks. all of the major networks appeared to be down, but the reality was that at&t, such a big network that went other networks tried to contact people on the at&t network. well, they thought their network was down, so they reported that so that's what we had reports of t mobile and verizon being down and not working because they couldn't work with major network. that was apparently offline for major parts of the us big chunk
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of texas and virginia, ohio, mitch, i mean, i had so many reports from so many places where people could not get on the at&t network it's really i said this was obvious, but it is startling had happened to me and you really realize just how much you rely on your phone to do. >> so many things. john, you mentioned the possibility of a cyberattack. there's no indication at this point that that's what happened but in knowing how pivotal they are, two americans lives, it makes you think that would really be a weak place for an adversary to hit us? >> well, you wonder how did that come into the conversation so early, but it's front and center when you consider potential causes of unexplained events, because just think back back to february 7th, couple of weeks ago, the fbi director, the head of the nsa, the head of cseh, the security infrastructure group talked about a chinese program called volt typhoon. and this is a program that's been in place
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since 2021. it's a cyber espionage i urge program and volt typhoons job is to get into critical infrastructure systems. let me quote that report for a minute. this is a joint cyber bulletin, but it says volt typhoon has compromised the it environment of multiple critical infrastructure organizations primarily in communications, energy, and transportation systems. this is the federal government telling us that there has been a persistent threat actor from a hostile foreign power that uses their cyber capabilities to get into water power communications, cellular technology. and the way they do it is they get inside, they hide tools within the network. they tried to disguise them within the normal windows operating systems. so for people in their cybersecurity who are hunting
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for anomalies, it's very hard to identify it because it's it's acting like the normal systems that fix, update and change things within their network. and this is a real challenge, which is why they went public with it. >> land speaking to that challenge, what's the process like the sort of internal investigation that a provider goes through to figure out how this happened? >> right? obviously, they have to look at all their systems. they have to look at did they did they run that code update overnight? did they do something that could have triggered this, which was basically started about 04:00 a.m. i think here's the thing that what at&t has to do as quickly as possible is reveal what they believe the cause was because the problem is that you know, conspiracy theories run rampant. and when it appeared that it was all these networks going out down at once, i can understand how people thought that way, but it really this is at&ts problem. it's their problem to solve, but also their problem to communicate about. so people have the assurance that this was not a cyber attack this was just a
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tech glitch or that it was actually a solar flare, which has been one of the things that have been floated. what we need is communication from a communications company >> communication from a communications company, it seems seems simple, but it has been challenging, right? john miller and lance oh, and off. thank you both. we really appreciate it. >> and we have a big development out of russia now to tell you about the mother of alexei navalny says she has viewed her sons body in a new video. she says she was secretly taken to the morgue yesterday. that's roughly five days after the jailed opposition figure died. she says she made the video after russian officials threatened her and tried to quote blackmail her over navalny's burial conditions >> cnn's matthew chance is live for us in moscow. matthew, what else did she say? how is the kremlin responding to this >> well, in terms of the medulla navalny, alexei navalny's mom said, well,
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she's made this video message. you can see there she's obviously very distressed, but she has managed to get access to her son's remains in the morgue in the far north of russia, close to the penal colony and the russian arctic, where he died on friday. she said that the authorities who showed the body secretly yesterday say that they know what caused his death. she says she signed the birth certificate, but he said there are certain conditions, unacceptable conditions that they're placing on her about the funeral arrangements before they will release the body. take a listen to what ludmilla navalnaya had to say do you naturally each of them yesterday evening, they secretly took me to the morgue where they shoved me oleksiy the investigators claim they know the cause of the death, which they have all the medical and legal documents ready, which i saw and i signed the medical death certificate >> its merits yet but peaceful
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>> right. so i mean, she was repeating what i just told you there, but what she also said later on is that basically the conditions, what was something that they wanted to say where and when and how alexey navalny would be buried. they she said that they wanted a secret burial as well. they didn't want this to be a mass public event. and that makes sense because even though this is obviously very difficult time for the families, family and for his for his mother. it's also an intensely political moment for the russian authorities alexei navalny is a man who in life was able to attract tens of thousands of people onto the streets due to his anti-corruption campaign. >> and i >> think the big fear in the authorities right now and then the kremlin is that if there's a public funeral, the same may happen and that's something that the authorities here in russia desperately wants to avoid especially only a few weeks out from the elections there in russia. matthew chance live from moscow. thanks so much. matthew >> there's a new round of
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name-calling between the world's two biggest nuclear powers. and it's threatening to inflame an already explosive global face off last night, president biden once again, spoke out against vladimir putin bloodly, calling him a crazy sob. in response, the kremlin called biden's comments rude and shameful. >> of course, this latest for tat comes amid stunning new signs of russian meddling in us politics. and as america's allies and adversaries wonder how or if the us will confront the putin regime beyond 2024 cnn, senior white house reporter kevin liptak has been traveling with the president on the west coast kevin talk us through these comments from biden >> yeah, certainly a striking thing to see the president of the united states say in prison it's a new biden has been very critical of putin in the past. he's called him a murderous dictator. he's called him a thug, but it is remarkable to hear just how critical the president was at this private
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fundraiser in san francisco last night. and it's remarkable against this highly fraught backdrop of us russia relations and the president almost slipped this into his remarks. it was something of an aside when he was talking about the existential threat of climate change, the president said, we have a crazy, so it'll be like that guy putin, and others, and we always have to worry about nuclear conflict. but the substantial threat to humanity is climate. and so you see the presence making that comment about putin into his remarks. now this is not necessarily a controversial view among american officials and probably among european officials as well. but it is striking when you think about how russia has really been thrust into the center of the political conversation in the united states, whether it's the debate over provide finding more funding for ukraine, whether it's this back-and-forth between president biden and former president trump over the death of alexey navalny, we will see president biden announced new sanctions there's on russia tomorrow for the death of the
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opposition leader. and you also think about this idea of russia potentially developing nuclear weapons in space, or the idea that this fbi informant was talking to russian intelligence officers. love 40, providing false information about the bidens to the fbi. it is sort of this conflict fluence of events that you really see this remark, a sticking out. now, as he does often, president biden is being a little more unvarnished in these behind the scenes. fine racers, there were reporters there, but it's not on camera. and certainly president biden, a feeling a little bit more willing to talk more candidly about some of his foreign counterparts on the global stage. now, in the end, us russia relations are already at an all-time low. they have really soured. but i don't think president biden's remark is necessarily going to cause them to the sour more of it certainly making clear where he stands guys unvarnished, quite a way to describe it. kevin liptak, appreciate the reporting. thank you so much. >> still ahead this
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>> hour on cnn news central, the dominos are falling to more clinics in alabama are pausing ivf treatment following a controversial ruling by the states supreme court for the first time in more than 50 years, we are headed back to the moon. everything we know about the lunar landing that scheduled to happen in just a few short hours. next while america, sunday at eight on cnn >> crepe, >> now we got to get france something >> we could use, these new gift mode. >> all right? >> done not to do former companion >> would give new i'm >> tap possibilities and relentlessly work with you to make them read everyone sees
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specialist, which posted on their facebook page this morning that they've quote, made the impossibly difficult decision to hold hold new ivf treatments due to the legal risk to our clinic and to our embryologist. they say they're contacting patients now and they say, quote, we're working as hard as we can to alert our legislators as to the far-reaching negative impact of this ruling on the women of alabama, they say at a time when we feel so powerless, advocacy and awareness are our strongest tools. they say the clinic will not close. they say quote, we will continue to fight for our patients and the families of alabama. now, just now, we just heard from the third clinic in the state also to pause ivf services. the president or the chief executive officer of infirmary health in mobile on this is a statement also from the center for reproductive medicine the recent alabama supreme court decision has sadly left us with no choice but to pause ivf treatments for for patients. we understand the burden this places on deserving families who want to bring babies into this world knew have no alternative options for
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conceiving because we've reached out to all the clinics in alabama. these represent a large portion of the services being provided in the state yeah, there's 5 million people in alabama, 1.6 people suffer from infertility or deal with it. there's only eight clinics and meg by that math, we're now down to five with potentially more to come. so broadening this out, are there any implications for reproductive rights, nation? and wide? >> that is the fear that a reproductive rights activists and people who work in fertility medicine have. we got a statement from the american college of obstetricians and gynecologists who are worried about this sort of broader fallout. they note that this sets an incredibly concerning precedent for ivf access across the us. they say we have seen state legislatures replicate one another's reproductive health care policies in an ill-advised attempt to compete for the most restrictive and harmful laws. they say the outcome of this case will certainly affect access to fertility treatment across the country as more and more state legislatures advanced policies that are based on an
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ideological and unscientific death phoenician of personhood. so we are on the lookout to see other states potentially making moves in this direction and also seeking more clarity about the legal next steps in alabama where there's so much uncertainty for patients right now my tirrell. thanks so much for the reporting so as we are broadcasting, there is an american made phone booth sized object zooming through space, trying to do something that more often than not fails, touched on the moon and when they go in one and the lunar lander that is >> odysseus er, odie for short, lifting off a week ago. but in a few hours from now, the lunar lander is scheduled to execute its controlled or what's known as a soft landing. and if it succeeds, it'll be the first time the us is landed on the moon since 1972, kind of
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amazing. >> it also i loved that we've given it a nicknamed odie. odie is true trying to reach the south pole of the moon. and experts say getting there is like hitting a golf ball in new york and having it land in a hole in los angeles that's about and the south pole is particularly hard because it is pockmarked >> with all of these craters. >> and >> remember that the south pole, if this is the bottom of the moon and the sunlight is coming in like this. you've got these deep, deep shadows >> it is so complicated. >> joining us now is >> retired nasa astronaut air force colonel ron garan. he's also the ceo of ispace technology geez, it's a direct competitor of intuitive machines, which made odysseus >> yeah, he's the author of floating in darkness, a journey of evolution colonel. thank you so much for being with us this afternoon. what does it mean to you that this mission is being
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conducted by a private company? not too different from yours >> this is great >> this is a new era. this is part of nasa's clips program. >> we're >> stands for commercial lunar payload services and it's a really brilliant idea it's basically leveraging the commercial industry to do things that, you know, large government space agencies did in the past and colonel, i was talking to our colleague, kristin fisher, who is our space correspondent and begging her to explain all of this to me so i can understand it, but she was saying that >> they were their land trying to land on the south pole. that's where there's ice or hope for ice water. we also know that places like countries like china and russia also want to land. there is there a sense that this is kind of a new space race or anything like that. >> no, not in the sense that it was back in the '60s. i don't think but yes. i think there is
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a race to establish a permanent human presence on the moon, right? and so in order to do that, we have to establish the infrastructure that's going to enable them and there's a lot of benefit for all of humanity for us to do that. so it's a peaceful space race. and i hope it stays that way. and it has the ability to really propel us into this new let's new era of civil civilization expanding out and making the moon that the earth's eighth continent, it's really exciting times. >> that is quite a way to put the earth's continent as you well know this is a very difficult feat to accomplish. the hakuto our it was a lunar lander made by your company. it attempted this last year. it didn't work out as so many of these missions let's do we heard the comparison of trying to hit a hole in one from new york to los angeles, walk us
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through some of the challenges of executing something as complex as this yeah, i mean, it's an autonomous spacecraft. i mean, you can control it from the ground of course. but intuitive machines, you know, odie, as we called it, you know, it's going to be on the far side of the moon out of radio contact with the earth. and have to go through all of those firing in the engines make sure that it's at the right attitude and doing the dissent all autonomously and it's doing it from 250,000 miles away. so it's not an easy task. >> it's a science is amazing. >> it is wild. >> but i just, i hear your excitement just then when you were talking about this could be the eighth continent and how exciting of a time this is. and i think for casual observers of space can you help them understand like it gets give us a little more explanation about what it makes this so exciting and unique
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>> well, there's a lot of science that's going to come from. this is gonna be a lot of increased knowledge our closest neighbor, the moon, like i said, there's a lot of benefits that exist on the moon that we can use here on earth. odysseus has six nasa bonded scientific experiments on board additionally there's commercial experiments on board and it's going to just increase human knowledge >> it's incredible well, we will see what, how it unfolds. we're all going to watching colonel ron garan. thanks so much. it's good to see you so, as my pleasure, thank you. >> well, coming up time is running out to secure a pause in the fighting between israel and hamas before ramadan president biden's mideast coordinator is meeting with the prime minister benjamin netanyahu today. and israeli officials have been hinting at progress. and a lot it's angeles woman is facing 20 years in a russian prison for allegedly sending $50 to a
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before the start of ramadan on march 10, which would include a weeks-long pause in the fight, >> but israel is warning if an agreement is not reached by that date, the military terry will move forward with its plan for a ground offensive in the city of rafah, where more than 1.5 million palestinians are currently taking shelter. much of southern gaza has already been reduced to rubble following intense fighting and israeli bombardments in khan yunis and aid groups warn that a military operation in rafah would cause what they call a catastrophe. cnn's nic robertson is joining us live from tel-aviv and nic, rayleigh officials we'll says military leaders are hoping to have direct influence in these negotiations. has there been any progress on the surface? >> it sounds like the mood music. i think probably bubbly changed yesterday. brett mcgurk president biden's national security council coordinator for the middle east was in cairo yesterday. i'm with her
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yesterday as well. that is smile haniah, the leader of what political one of the political leaders of hamas was also in cairo's absolutely no indication that the pair met. but the fact that hamas had sent representative back to cairo because the egyptians have been an intermediary, seem to indicate that hamas was beginning to come round to perhaps some of the pressure that is israel has been putting on it to given more to israel's terms of what a temporary cease-fire might look like and what hostages might be released as part of that deal. so that was one indicator. and then today, brett mcgurk was meeting both with the defense minister and with the prime minister. the other indicator that came yesterday i think was from a member of the war cabinet here for benny gantz, saying that he was just a little bit more optimistic that there was an indication that perhaps things perhaps things can happen. and then the
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defense minister today after that meeting were brett mcgurk saying that he thought that negotiators could be more engaged or more empowered or, or do more at the next meeting, these these are words, if you will, this is not the ground shifting and a seismic jump to a positive conclusion here but it does seem to indicate from where we were a few days ago, which was an impasse, which was really this threat of ground i'm forces will go in if there's no hostages handed over, i go into rafah, no hostages handed over by ramadan. of course, the defense ministers still saying, we're preparing for the talks were the for the torques to progress, but at the same time, we're also preparing for the idf to go into rafah if necessary. >> yeah. nex, they've already been striking it's reported in rafah ahead of this sort of announced ground incursion, imminent ground incursion. what is the situation looked like there now?
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>> yeah. there have been airstrikes >> into rather for some time and they're happening with deadly effect. for example, one of the most prominent doctors in gaza with his family was killed when an airstrike hit their temporary accommodation because they've moved from the north of gaza. he was there the dean at the university for the school of nursing and gaza, significant figure his daughter was a prominent and rising human rights lawyer. so the civilian casualties continue to mount in rather from air strikes. now the idf say that they are targeting hamas targets as they become apparent from intelligence and aerial surveillance inside rafah, a ground offensive would really look different to what we've seen so far that 1.5 million almost palestinians who are living right up against it's the border there with with egypt would really feel that they have no place to run no
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hard and good shelter as yet, that's been offered by the israeli government, play a safe place to go. that hasn't been told to them yet. so a ground and incursion could look awfully different to those, those airstrikes that we've seen so far, you would be saying ground forces going in to rafah end and a lot of heavy artillery likely an air strikes to support that >> nic robertson. thank you so much. from tel-aviv with very latest coming up. >> a texas student had been suspended for months over his locks, hairstyle, and a judge just ruled on whether his high school is breaking the law by suspending him decision next. and a michigan father has become the first-person charge under the state's new gun storage law. the details of the case, the punishment he could face after a, quick break >> backroom deals, cia secrets of fair layers bribery, corruption, prostitution
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maintenance litter is the game changer. try it today, go chu pretty litter.com. >> king charles, wednesday, it's on cnn we're following >> news just into cnn, an important what in story that we've been keeping track of a texas judge has ruled that a school can restrict the length of a student's natural hair. >> so this case centered on high school junior, and the houston area named darryl george. he'd been suspended for months over the length of his locks hairstyle. let's go straight to cnn's rosa flores, who's following this case for whereas rosa, what just happened >> well, there's a press conference is still happening behind me. this is a press conference that the darryl george family and supporters and attorney are holding. so that's happening behind me. what just happened inside the
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courtroom is what i want to talk to you about right now, because that tells you more about why and how this judge made this determination during this proceeding, during this trial, the judge really home then on the actual language of the crown act. now that is the state law that prohibits hair discrimination. and i want to give you a few examples because it'll tell you give you a sense of what happened inside. while one of the witnesses was testifying. and this is a witness who's also the co-author of the crime don't act. state representative ron reynolds. >> he was >> asked by the judge, does the act actually say length? does it talk about the link? of the hair? and he said, no. and then while there was cross-examinati on, the plaintiffs asked reynolds if it was possible where locks in still be in compliance of the school policy
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and his response was, it's possible, but it's not likely. >> and the judge >> came back to to that specific exchange and asked him later, the judge said, quote you said earlier that it might be impractical, but that you could still do to it, that you could still be in compliance. reynolds said, i said likely. the judge replied but possible. now, later in the preceding representative, reynolds went back and said, quote it's impossible to be compliant with the policy and where that hit hairstyle now, darryl, george, the 18 year-old who is has been suspended for months now because of this will policy, his attorney argued in court that this policy let's see, is unconstitutional on the basis of race and gender. take a listen >> you can feel the sense of anger. you can feel the sense of confusion you can, feel even
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with darrow, darrow made this statement and told me the straight up with tears in his eyes. all because of my hair i can't get my education because hello, my hair. i can not be around other peers and enjoy my junior year because of my hair now, during the. press conference, such you are seeing behind me, >> we also learned that that representative, the co author of the law, says that he plans to re-introduce another version of the crown act to make sure that it incorporates length so that students like darryl george are not discriminated in the classroom and his attorney also said that she plans to appeal boris, jessica rosa flores. thank you so much for the update from texas now to some of the other headlines we're watching this hour a michigan father has become the first person charged under a new safe storage gun law.
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prosecutors say that his two-year-old daughter shot herself in the face. she is alive, though in critical condition in a hospital. michael tolbert is also facing charges of child abuse, being a felon in possession of a firearm, and lying to police officer. he's pleaded not guilty to those charges. the shooting happened just a day after the state's new law took effect >> also, the boyfriend of a los angeles ballerina crested in russia on treason charges, tells cnn she had no fear before returning to russia for the first time in years. >> and i remember the last hour before all of this happened was she was so excited and relieved that nothing is wrong as you can go home. and it was a friday morning, near russia, which means it was thursday. an i went to bait and i woke up the next morning. and i never heard back from a cosine carrier, alina a dual u.s. russia, russian citizen is accused of donating $51 the end $0.80 to a ukrainian charity in
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the us that is according to the california's spot where she worked. if found guilty in russia, she could face possibly 20 years in prison. and there's a new obstacle to getting married. if you live in tennessee, republican governor bill lee has signed a bill that allows people in the state to refer if use to solve them nyse, or perform a marriage if they disagree with it, critics argue the new law equates to a robot back of progress by the lgbtq community one legal advocate telling you at the telling cnn, the bill is unconstitutional and quote, public officials don't get to assume public office and then pick and choose, which remember because of the public to serve new details on some alarming incidents involving the biden family dog commander, newly released revealed records rather described dozens of attacks resulting in ripped close to significant blood loss. we'll have more on that after the break >> via headliner las vegas
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>> brianna, do you want me? >> wow >> i defense door and online, the south carolina republican presidential primary, saturday had six on cnn closed captioning bronchi by meso book.com >> mesothelial mom. it's all we do with local offices throughout the country does help you get the compensation you deserve 800 to eight to 44, 44 series of attacks against secret service agents has forced the bidens to send their beloved dog >> commander away but newly obtained documents reviewed by cnn give a clearer picture of just how problematic the german shepherd had become. the documents describe unprovoked attacks and aggressive behavior towards secret service personnel and other white house staffers now, this photo shows a ripped shirt after the dog apparently jumped on an agent,
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causing too small lacerations. there was another instance that involved an agent who actually bled quite a bit and ultimately needed stitches. >> their report states, commander random bit the agent and he left forearm causing a severe deep open wound. the agents read to lose a significant amount of blood. a source close to the biden family says the family feels awful and is heartbroken about all of it. >> it's sad. >> let's discuss with brandon mcmillan, a dog trainer and three-time emmy-winning host of lucky dog. >> he's also the author of the story of your dog >> brandon, of course, pets are a first family tradition. the bidens have this german shepherd. they had another one major, who also left the white house. what would you recommend in this situation >> well, i mean, you have to understand german shepherds historically were bred to be one of the best working dogs on the planet. you're talking about an. animal that its mind and body is built solely for
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work. so when you put the dog in a situation, but it's not working, it's probably going to have behavioral issues. so we'll start there. the history of the dog is very important. >> yeah absolutely an end. the white house is such a strain circumstance for a dog like that too. there are a lot of strangers coming and going. many of them secret service agents who are stoic, not necessarily friendly, and also having to enforce strict rules around the grounds of the white house so if you have a dog that's kind of wandering, you can imagine a scenario where the dog maybe wants to go a certain place because it's curious and a secret service agent intervening may not be received well by the dog. what do you think about the circumstance? it's that commander was in >> well, i mean, like a status, it's the wrong environment for the dog. see in the rescue world, we have a very simple rule. you always pair the dog with his family according to their lifestyle and what the dogs personality is in this case, it sounds like it was the
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wrong situation for the dog because again, this is a working dog and it was not given a job every day. they tried to put a working dog into a family style like pet environment. it's not going to work. >> if >> they, the white house, it's chaotic. there's a hundreds of people there all day long. there's no there's no consistency. there's no structure it's the wrong place for a dog like this and the proof is in the pudding when you have 24 incidences, we have 24 bytes that right there says at all to put that, put this in perspective. any other dog in the country that the 24 times they would have been euthanized after the first two bytes, this dog was lucky was owned by the president of united states because that's why it's not euthanized, right now. so to biden's credit, yeah, they did the right thing. they rehomed the dog, but the reality is, this dog was the wrong environment from the get-go, the white house. i mean, everybody wants to have a dog, of course, but it is a chaotic environment and most dogs do not are not built that sort of environment.
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>> and it sounds like you're really seeing it and you are, you got to match the dog with the environment that they are going to be. and maybe, maybe like a lap dog or something like that at the white house? >> there was also some reports that commander was one time fight kind of fighting his leesha, the first lady struggled to keep control of him certainly they've done an enormous ms amount of training with commander, but is there a point to your point where it's just like nature over nurture, it's just kind of how these dogs are built yeah 100%. i talk about this extensively in my new book. i, what i do as i talk about the history of a breeze and what they were originally breadth and suddenly the last hundred years, we got rid of all those jobs and we turned it into pets. we said, now we're going to go to work for eight hours a day, sit there, be quiet and don't move for eight hours. it goes against the laws of nature, what the animal was originally breadth for this dog was not bred to be a pet. it was not breadth to sit there in an environment obediently for eight hours a day. it was breadth to work. there are two
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lines of a german shepherd okay, there are the working line and the companion line the working line is what you see the military and police have the companion line is what typically we have as pets. if i had to guess i haven't met this dog, but if i had to guess this was not a companion line, it was a working line german shepherd, which means it was not meant to be in the white house unless it was there strictly for security brandon mcmillan. appreciate the perspective. thanks for joining us >> thanks for having man. >> of course. >> there was a massive outage today for at&t he and it may have been a serious wakeup call for people who really loved their phones. we're going to look into what caused this meltdown that impacted tens of thousands of at&t customers? the next hour of cnn news central >> united states of scandal with jake tapper. sunday at nine on cnn at morgan stanley old school hardware meets bold
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