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tv   Anderson Cooper 360  CNN  February 22, 2024 9:00pm-10:00pm PST

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about making smarter choices. this year you control your finances, and download rocket money. >> i melanie zanona on capitol hill and this is the close captioning brought to you by in vet help call 180071, 000, 20 dealer, an invention idea, but don't know what to do next collin van help today, they can help you get started with your idea called now 807 100020 >> tonight on 316 more than 50 years since the last time in american lunar lander is once again on the moon's surface and about to send back pictures how it came to be at long last, and how it almost didn't also tonight more breaking news as the biden administration prepares to impose new sanctions on russia of the death of alexey navalny. and the former president has still
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not criticizing putin in conversation with trump's former top russia expert, fiona hill. and later, trump wanted another month to pay that massive civil penalty for the business fraud he committed. now the judge has ruled the answer is no we begin tonight, breaking news that is not happened since richard nixon was president for the first time since apollo 17 back in december of 1972, an american lunar lander has touched down on the surface of the moon. we're expecting any minute we're told the first images coming in from the odysseus lander from a spot just north of the moon when south pole, odysseus lifted off seven days ago, it is the first privately built vehicle to make the mission and likely apollo 11. its descent to the lunar surface included some last minute technical difficulties to overcome. but just like apollo 11, eagle, odysseus has landed here's what it looked and sounded like in houston >> we can confirm without a doubt, as our equipment is on the surface of moon, and we are transmitting. so graduations i
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am team we'll see how much more we can get from that >> drone. his now is cnn space and defense correspondent, kristin fisher. so what is mission control saying at this hour? >> well, so far mission control isn't saying anything beyond the fact that they have equipment on the surface of the moon and that it is transmitting signals back to the mission control in houston, texas. so anderson, at the very least, this is a partial success according to the company the big question now is what condition is this lunar lander in? and can it send back pictures? we are still waiting on those first images. one taken by the lander itself and then another one. there's a little camera that popped off called the eagle cam. it popped off of the lander shortly before landing. and so we should be getting images from that as well. that's what we're
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waiting for. but the fact that this spacecraft has even touched down on the surface of the moon and did transmit that signal is a pretty tremendous accomplishment in and of itself. the first time a private company has ever done this, the first time an american made spacecraft has done this since 1972 and anderson, it's the first time that any spacecraft has touched down on the south pole of the moon, a critical spot. they think that's where ice is, water it's where nasa wants to build a lunar base for artemis astronauts. the first astronauts to return to the moon since the apollo program. and it's where china wants to build a base as well. but anderson is real nail biting moments the nasw administrator described it as an apollo 13 moment with no humans on board, of course, because of some of the technical issues they had to troubleshoot. yeah. what happened? i mean, up until the last second, the difficulties. >> yeah. anderson, it's so wild. i mean, they were really fixing on the fly. they had an issue, you know, how radar works, raid radar. it sends out
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a radio signal which then bounces off an object which lets you tell how far our way you are from it. well, this is lidar lazar instead of radio waves, light waves bouncing off of it. and that's what the spacecraft, this robotic uncrewed spacecraft uses to find a safe landing spot because the moon has craters and boulders all over it there was a problem with intuitive machines is lidar navigation system. and so it just so happened that nasa had an experimental lidar payload on the lander as well. they were somehow able to patch it through to the lunar lander, odysseus. and that experimental hello experimental nasa navigation system lidar is what they were able to use to get this on the surface of the moon. so pretty incredible that they were able to pull it off. but now we want to see the pictures, anderson, right? yeah. kristen, stick around. i want to bring in cnn aerospace analyst miles o'brien, former
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nasa astronaut as well, leland melvin >> so leland, you flew in >> two missions to space. i'm wondering what stands out to you about this landed >> anderson, anytime that you go to space, you always find something that's not going to work. and so my spatial emissions, we have some things that we had to kind of work on the fly just like they did with nova, see where we had to switch the light radar for the lidar in a payload that wasn't meant to be used for this. and i think this shows the american ingenuity which you can do on the file when you have to make something work. and it's an incredible, incredible accomplishment for the for the team. >> yeah, i'm miles i mean, we saw that two-hour period when controllers we're troubleshooting the navigation system i mean, it was we've seen this in movies about former, about other emissions in space, how difficult is it for a team on the ground to affect what's actually happening in space. >> yeah, that's the frustrating challenging thing. and this is why engineers get in this racket. what's interesting
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about a team like this is the approaches to just work the problem, just keep working the problem, something comes up you work at, you don't sit on your hands and wait for things to happen. you come up with alternatives to me when you think about apollo, what everybody remembers apollo 11, the first moon landing, what's the next one they remember apollo 13, that was by all intents and purposes, you could call that a failure. you could call it nasa's group greatest triumph, which is what i would ascribe to. and that was because of this very fact, you had an engineering team. the best of the brightest, coping with the situation in real time. and to the extent that this vehicle is on the surface, we're going to give it a victory. maybe it's not. we're not going to give this landing a ten from the romanian judge. they didn't quite stick it, but they're on the surface of the moon and we got to give them all watching that team do that as exciting. i think chris, this laser sensor patch that are deceased ended up using was
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improvised and then uplink. can you explain for non-space experts what exactly that means and the risk of it all yeah. so think about what neil armstrong did on apollo 11. he was able to look out the windows of the eagle lander and he saw that it was going to come down a big boulder field. right. and so he was actually able to take control of the lander and move it to a safe spot on these robotic spacecraft. he can't do that. and so 21st century modern lunar landers are using things like cameras and sensors to figure out where to land. and so this lidar was using lasers to ping the laser beams off the surface of the moon to try to figure out some of the best spots, safest spots to land and so that we don't know what the problem was, but that was the instrument that had a problem. and like i said, anderson, it just so happened that nasa had this other experimental lidar payload that
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was already on board the lunar lander. and they were able to use that to help figure out exactly where this spacecraft should land. >> leland, we know there was nasa technology on board. addition, how much oversight involvement do they actually how does it work out? how much over site involvement or they have on private emissions >> what i think this clips program where they're letting american companies build the hardware just like what we did with spacex when we had the crew cargo program to the international space station. so they're building this low cost hardware to take payloads and things. nasa payloads to them so until we can usher in the artemis program. and i think the oversight is probably, hey, let these guys build the vehicle will take are payloads, but they're going to get all the technical assistance from nasa all these years of storied knowledge of how to put things on the moon, how to have people working and living together on another surface of something. and i think this is it's a gateway to give you my friend victor glover and christina and
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the artemis. the artemis two crew going to the moon in the next year so i'm really excited, anderson and i think this is the way we're going to be living and working one day on another planet. >> miles. there was an expectation that there would be a communications outage once the unit actual land and cute walk us through why that's the case and why it took a while to confirm the land because we're all waiting for it >> there's no satellites revolving around mark, excuse me, the moon just yet, anderson, that's part of the plan, by the way, is to build that kind of infrastructure so that you can truthfully live there in a meaningful way and have communications as best you can. and so as the earth and the moon rotated, do their dance in space, you have times when you cannot communicate. we all remember the big blackout periods for the apollo days. if you around for that. so that was when they landed. it was unclear if we're in what would've been an expected blackout versus something that was perhaps more ominous. i feel like we're somewhere
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in-between ominous and the expected here. it'll be remain to be seen exactly how healthy this craft is. but again, the fact that they're on the surface, we've got to give them credit >> and kristen, as we mentioned, we're waiting for pictures for images if and when we get them, how are they actually going to show? go up what i mean? what did they look like >> well, we should be getting two different sets of images and they will come from the company intuitive machines and their mission control, which is in houston, right by the johnson space center. the two sets of pictures, one should come and we should have gotten it awhile ago to be honest, one should come from the lunar lander odysseus itself, a camera that's mounted on the lander. and then the other one should come from what's called the eagle cam. and this was a it's the camera essentially pops off odysseus right before odysseus lands, so that it can get kind of a third-person perspective of the landing and capture a shot of odysseus with the moon behind it or
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underneath it. anderson, i should note that the company that designed that eagle cam they say that the eagle cam is intact and working. so it's a good sign, but we just don't have the images yet, so it's tough to really confirmed that it worked, but they could come any minute. >> and i just want to chris and just so i can the images we're showing right now, is this like an animation? >> yeah, this is this is a rendering that you're seeing here from the company intuitive machines and you know i should just note that this is, this is a new era of space exploration where commercial, private, in this case publicly traded companies are leading the charge. this is not a nasa government run operation that is required to share certain information publicly. nasa is a sponsor. they have several payloads on this mission, but just like with all these spacex launches admissions, we are at
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the mercy of these private companies to give us pictures and give us the state. and i will say intuitive machines. and the previous us landing attempt last month asked her biotic, they were both very transparent, but all of us journalists following this really want some more information right now about the status. >> yeah, we're we're not yet kristin fisher. thank you. miles o'brien, leland melvin as well well, of course. bring you the lunar surface images if and when they come in, we should also mention that leland is executive producer of the national geographic film the space race, which tells the story of america is pioneering black astronauts check that out, coming up next more. breaking news is president biden prepares to announce new sanctions on russia in the wake of alexey navalny's death also tonight, a report on the state of the war in ukraine from a hard-hit city, kherson on the front lines and how people there with no place else to go or somehow hanging on every day under heavy show >> last month, massive solar flare added a 25th hour to the
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forcing americans to foot the bill. their new plan will make loans more expensive praising the cost of mortgages and car payments. then it will hurt small businesses, making it harder for them to access credit, meet payroll, and run their operations. ball woke budgets are old ready, stretched. why inflation and an uncertain economy? washington needs to know this capital regulation is another bill americans can't afford >> i'm elizabeth wagmeister in los angeles. >> in this is cnn the biden administration is set to announce new sanctions against russia tomorrow. and other treasury department is saying that they will target what they call >> russia, its enablers and its war machine. they follow the arrest in russia a russian american dual national, the murder of a russian defector in spain. and of course, the death of alexey navalny late today we learned that russian authorities put yet more conditions on navalny's mother in exchange for releasing his body to her? navalny's widow and daughter. meantime, at
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today in san francisco with president biden. according to the white house, he expressed his condolences as well as admiration for navalny and characterized tomorrow's new sanctions is major gentler words and the president used at a fundraiser last night quoting him. now, we have a crazy sob. the president said that guy putin and others, and we always have to be worried about nuclear conflict. he added that the existential threat to humanity is climate responded today, the kremlin spokesman said, quote, clearly mr. biden is demonstrating behavior in the style but hollywood cowboy to cater to domestic political interests, which is really the thing anyone familiar with a cold war will recognize that sort of language. what is unrecognizable, whoever in cold war terms is an american presidential candidate or republican, no less refusing to criticize russian leader. donald trump is still not even mentioned. vladimir putin's name in connection with navalny's death. and steady says things like this >> we are turning into a communist country in many ways. and if you look at it, i'm the leading candidate. i guess. i
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never heard of being indicted before i was i got indicted four times. forum of navalny. it is a form of communism or fascism, while the other is me, fails dimension is his own narcissism. more on these new conditions. alexei navalny's moms says, russian officials have set to release her son's body, seen as matthew chance's in moscow for us. so i know she put out a video message today. what did she say >> well, she was very upset. i mean, you remember she's been a couple of thousand miles north of moscow in that arctic region where alexey navalny died in his isolated prison camp, trying to the body of her son and she's not been successful so far, but she has now it's been revealed, managed to see that the corpse of alexey navalny, his remains and she's also signed the the the death certificate. we know from an avowedly spokesperson, his team, headquarters, saying
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that the official reason for his death has been put down as natural causes. and that's something obviously that they dispute that they accused the kremlin of killing alexey navalny, something we should say, the kremlin have, have denied and she said, most worryingly that before the body is released to hers is election of others. mom, they've set conditions on it on the funeral. they want they want to dictate where and when and how the funeral is held. they've said it could be held in moscow and the body will be flown back on a special aircraft. to moscow. but it's basically going to be under tight control. they don't want it to be a public funeral. they want it to be a secret, one, a private one and that's something that the valleys mother and the balconies team are at the moment resisting what's the kremlin's response to all of this >> well, i spoke to dmitry peskov, who's vladimir putin spokesman earlier tonight about
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this. and he's not in moscow that they're elsewhere in the country. he said, look, i haven't even seen these comments so these allegations, so i can't comment on it where we're dealing with business that's important to russia. he said to me as if ziff, this isn't important to russia, but i think it's pretty clear that the kremlin is worried about what a funeral for alexey navalny, a public funeral for alexei navalny might mean this is a guy who could rally tens of thousands, if not hundreds of thousands of people on the streets of russians, russian towns and cities when he was alive. and the concern i think for the authorities who don't like dissent and have tried to crack down is is that his funeral? a public funeral could be a focal point for anti-government protests that's and that's particularly, they're particularly sensitive about that in just a few weeks now before presidential elections in this country. so is it clear what >> exactly needs to happen? and when it might happen? i mean, whether navalny's body could be released to his mom well, i
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mean, the nevada his mom says that basically she was she was threatened. they said, look, you've got to decide now what you want to do. because if you don't, then we'll do something to the body that's the word she used i mean, i assume they mean they'll they'll vary the body themselves or something like that >> but >> look, the body is in the morgue in this arctic region to the north of moscow. >> i >> think everybody is agreed on one thing which is the body is going to come back to this area to moscow to be buried. and so look, where we're expecting that decision to be made very shortly. the authority said a couple of days ago they needed two weeks to conduct medical tests autopsies post-mortems on the valleys corpus to find out the cause of death. but it seems that that situation, as they've been resolved, at least officially and so it could be any day now that the body is handed over to the faculty and that funeral takes
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place and it could be a private, secret funeral that we won't hear about until it's actually finished. i mean, that was the situation you remember last year with your guinea prigozhin? when he was sort of secretly buried in the city of st. petersburg we didn't know about it until the funeral was already over and that could be what the authorities want to achieve this time too. >> and that he chance in moscow, matthew, thank you. between imprisoning and possibly murdering election involuntary arresting another american the killing of that russian defector in spain. and revelations of russian intelligence may again be meddling in american politics and the biden impeachment inquiry certainly feels like a lot the add to that this new war of words, new sanctions tomorrow. and of course the war in ukraine. and it's hard not to wonder how much more strain the us russia relationship can get with all of that as the backdrop want to get perspective time from fiona hill. she's a senior fellow at the brookings institution, the former senior director for europe and russia at the national security council >> do you think >> the us is new sanctions on russia, which as we mentioned,
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are expected to be announced tomorrow. we'll have much of an impact well, they won't have much of an impact in the short to medium term. most likely. i mean, there's obviously quite a lot of symbolism associated with these, especially as they're being applied after the death of alexei navalny but over the longer term, sanctions are having an impact i'm telling the russian economy they're also having an impact on russia's ability to rearm itself. it's just that we don't always see the results right away are used to >> i mean, given your knowledge of the former president, are you surprised at all that he has not condemned vladimir putin for alexey navalny's death. and in fact has compared his own legal problems navalny endured. >> well, i am a little bit surprised that he went so far as to compare himself to aleksei navalny. i mean, that's pretty brazen to be frank >> heard of self minute to mandela in the past. so it seems right, yes, >> i said, i suppose that if you put it into that comparison, this is already a pattern here, but in terms of the fact that he hasn't criticized putin, i'm not
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surprised at all. i mean, for former president trump, putin is to him the epitome of the strong man he's the kind of person that he likes to style himself on. so there's no way that he would criticize in front of things. so that's just really par for the course. they're >> navalny's mother has talked about pressure that she said she's receiving from russian authorities in regards to release of her son's body and his burial do you can you four-seed the kremlin actually giving her the body, allowing for her to have a public funeral for her son now that's something that they're trying to avoid. i mean, actually what's surprising about this is the fact that navalny's mother has decided to speak out. she's obviously showing that she has a great deal of bravery and integrity herself, that this wasn't just a characteristic of her son i mean, the fact that she's gone out on youtube today telling everybody what's happening i mean, it's very clear that the kremlin wants to avoid making navalny a martyr. they don't
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want any kind of risk of larger public demonstrations around his death. and that the funeral itself becomes an event. >> you know, we've been reporting on this former fbi informant who according to federal prosecutors, falsely accused the biden family of alyssa business dealings involving ukraine. now, telling investigators that some of the lies were passed to him by russian intelligence. we don't know if that's true, if that's also ally as well. i'm wondering what you make of that development what okay, we've been played by russian intelligence through our town electoral campaigns, going back to definitely to 2016, we've got plenty of >> evidence of this. this is hardly a surprise. i myself, when i was asked to testify in the first impeachment trial of president trump pointed out that so much of the information that was circulating around was either being amplified, are being put up there in the first instant by russian intelligence was part of a russian pressure and influence operation so that's hardly a surprise there.
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but again, we're in that kind of environment where it's very difficult as for us to so in truth, from lies and putin and the people around him like it that way. so we shouldn't also be surprised if there's an of itself is meant to muddy the waters even further. >> the indication was that he had information which might even impact the 2024 collection that he was trying to spread. how concerned are you about interference by russia in this upcoming election? >> well, i'll be frank understand that we're our own worst enemies here. we've got plenty of misinformation circulating around from american political operatives. so there's not really that much show that the russians have to do. but what is useful for them is i would discord is the ranker, is the whole back and forth among our own politicians and all they can do is amplify that were already in that kind of environment russia has been stirring the pot and they don't really have to do very much to get a reaction from us. >> i still am stunned by what the former president said about
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welcoming the invasion of nato countries. that in his bennion haven't fully paid their bills to nato i mean it got something of an uproar, although it's sort of something we come to expect from the former president, how damaging do you think that is the counter argument as well? he's saying that to try to force nato countries to spend more. but it certainly sends a message to vladimir putin, doesn't it? >> it does send a message to putin. i mean, basically what the president has done is undercut the value of article five. because when you think about a mutual defense pact you're supposed to be protecting those who may be weaker in that alliance. the countries that even if they are spending 2% of their defense, obviously that their defensive capacity doesn't match up to the stronger members of the ions that's about an lines is supposed to be about and frankly, president trump has been threatening the integrity
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of article five going right back to the beginning of his presidency, where he didn't actually want to invoke that commitment in his very first address to the nato headquarters. >> if you're hill, thanks so much. >> thank you, anderson. >> we're just now learning that images from the moon surface are about to come in that and more ahead tonight, also in the state of the war in ukraine, almost two years the day since russia invaded what it's like right now in kherson to the people live there under heavy bombardment with some with no place else to go. >> i have type two diabetes, but i'm manages its nato pill with the big story to tell. i take one it's let's daily jati >> easy jordan's works 24/7 in your body to flush out some sugar. and for adults with type two diabetes and known heart disease, jordi is can lower the risk of cardiovascular deaths
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daily harvest.com and get started today >> vegas. story of sin city, sunday at ten on cnn. >> close captioning brought to you by in vet help call 180071 000, 20. >> do you have an invention idea, but don't know what to do next, cohen van help today they can help you get started with your idea called now 807100020 >> by the end of this week, it'll be two years since russia invaded ukraine, while republicans in the house make it impossible for congress to approve funds for the defense,
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the country russia is making advances and we want to show you what it's like on the ground in a city and the front lines played by constant shelling every day soon as nick paton walsh is there >> it's night when it's loudest. kherson has seen every stage of awards two years invasion, occupation, and liberation day is when the damage is clearest or the russians may be now on the other side of the river, but you can see the force of the explosions that hit here just by these tree branches prone up here on top of a roof. and it feels like a remote occupation through russian drone strikes artillery attacks as well so many of the buildings around here devastated but russian
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positions of visible across the water. and on this side freshly dug trenches show how worried ukraine is still across the river. ukraine sent troops months ago. their hopes of a lightning dash to crimea stuck in this rubble. and this week, russia raise their flag over the tiny ukrainian foothold of krynky kyiv denied they'd taken it and said drone footage showing the russians fleeing yet just meters from the rule of thousands of daily silence story he's of survival in a city russia cannot own. only crush with seemingly inexhaustible shelling but for am we woken by three shells they landed 100 meters away saying that they were first hit
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in november i'm not blew out the glass in this slide as they move to their mother's apartment over there. that basically save their lives last night because the shrapnel from the mortar landed here. when all the way up into flat when i used to live ships, basement churches, prayers are for basics, >> clip super bowl ayisha neglected we? >> spilling out into the light part of 1,000 people still in this district of the city when before the war, there were 30 times that sophia cai has outlasted her six siblings and gets food for her adult daughter she is third away i >> wouldn't use nine good
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>> was putin's war enters its third year there seems no end do. 1 million tiny unseen agonies >> shade here now >> of russia assaulting krynky >> yeah i was really voice them when you're done. >> the wall in every home, the normal the boring still targets
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today and tomorrow make them in just the resilience of people getting through each day. it's, it's i mean, it's remarkable and heartbreaking >> do any of the pupil >> you talked to, there are many of them elderly. do they plans to leave kherson? >> no and that's what so asli staggering anderson is obviously in some cases they are simply stuck here. the man whose house you saw blown up by what seemed to be a mortar strike essentially, it's a pensioner. he has nothing to fund the departure or can dream of starting a new life somewhere else. i'm standing in a building where two years ago or most of the day, we learned over the russian invasion across the bridge over there. and the people who run this building, they've barely left. remember it's not just the invasion, the occupation, the liberation. there were intense floods that ran through kherson to in the height of summer after a dam upstream and the river burst so much damage done to this city. and i think what's remarkable standing here to think about over these
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two years is quite what the russian goal is they really filling out? the population here through this persistent shelling. i mean, it's remarkable just how nonstop the blasts really is essentially a war zone, a city that was huge, vibrant, and bustling two years ago, really reduced to ghost at this point. and you got to wonder what putin's end goal is to occupy areas with nobody left in them without basic services. about any of the real building standing here. they celebrated replacing the tenth thousandth window here in the last few weeks or so, some repair workers told me it is literally barely a piece of glass remaining. and from a basic civilian level, that's the the spoils of putin's more, it seems even if he did manage to get back into her sob so much damage done to so many of these cities and towns across ukraine because of this invasion of choice by the kremlin anderson, nick paton walsh. thank you. be careful >> just moments ago we got new word from intuitive machines in
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houston. the odysseus lunar lander they say is upright and starting to send new data. and they are right now working downlink the first images from the moon surface while bringing them as soon as we get them, also ahead tonight, trump wanting to delay paying the $355 million fraud penalty, the judge has now given him his ruling details on that ahead. plus manhattan da alvin bragg accusing an arizona prosecutor playing what he calls political games. after she refused to send a murder suspect back to new york. we have details in that see idp disrupts the idp derails. >> let's be honest sucks but living to see idp doesn't have to. >> when you sign up at shining through cid p.com, you'll find information in real patients, stories, helpful tips, relax i pulled information and more >> cid p can be tough. >> but finding hope just got a little easier >> sign up and shiny through
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>> such luxury >> mattresses made affordable well >> king >> charles wednesday, at ten on cnn >> tonight, new developments in
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the form of presence, new york civil fraud case, trump requested a delay in paying the $355 million penalty and now a judge has said no, cnn's kara scannell joins us now with the latest, what was the reasoning the judge gave? >> so trump had asked for this delay because of the magnitude this $355 judgment and the judge said that he did not provide as he put it, he didn't he felt to explain much less justify any basis for delay. and this is because the new york attorney general's office had written up or proposed judgment and they were saying they wanted some time to look at it. the judge is saying this matches my order exactly. so we're going to move forward. so he indicated to the parties in an email that he was going to now finalize this judgment because as we know, the ruling came down friday, but it doesn't really become official until it's entered into the docket. so the judge noted on the docket that he was doing that, but it still has to get processed by clerk and once it is finally entered, which could be as soon as tomorrow, or it might take a couple of days, then this will become official. >> so the clock starts ticking once it's finalized. >> that's right. so from whenever it is finalized, trump
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will have 30 days to appeal and 30 days to post $355 million plus $100 million an interests. so a lot of money he'll have to put that together either by posting the cash himself or getting a bond that can be backed by collateral. some of his properties, but he'll have about 30 days and that includes the weekends. so if you can guesstimate if this judgment does become final soon, that means he could have to foot this bill, right when he's about to go to trial on the criminal hush money, charles all right. >> kara scannell. thanks so much more legal battles now, manhattan district attorney alvin bragg, who's a democrat, is hitting back at a republican arizona prosecutor after she refused to extradite a suspect in a new york city murder case. the suspect is accused of murdering a woman in soho hotel room earlier this month, he was arrested in arizona. this week on suspicion of stabbing two women in the state, the maricopa county attorney's cited bragg's handling of other violent criminals is her reason not to send the suspect back to new york. cnn's brynn gingrass has details it, is deeply
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disturbing to me that a member of my profession, a number of law enforcement, would choose >> to play political games in a murder case. >> manhattan district attorney alvin bragg, not mincing words, responding to this over dig from maricopa county, arizona attorney rachael michel 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 >> michel refusing requests to send 20 rod alvin, sorry, back to new york where police say he killed a woman in a hotel earlier this month, thrusting to elected state attorneys on opposing political sides into world war of words. >> we will not be agreeing to extradition. >> i've been doing this now for 20 years. i've never seen anything like it, let alone in a murder investigation >> after bludgeoning 38
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year-old denise ole as oren serbia, a bloody iron found next to her body, almond, sorry, seen on surveillance video wearing the victims leggings the nypd says he hopped a plane to arizona where he allegedly stab to women and two days before being arrested and confessing to the new york murder while in the custody of arizona law enforcement, he informs them that he is wanted for homicide in new york city and tells the cops if they should google soho 54 hotel, despite mitchell having the right to keep almond sorry, in her jurisdiction. it's the way she made the call. bragg takes issue with plain and simple, old-fashioned, grandstanding in politics. >> bragg, a democrat consistently taking heat from conservatives >> let's talk about alvin bragg >> you say woke progressive district attorney who accused him of being soft on crime in the country's biggest city. and the attacks gaining traction as his office is gearing up to take former president donald trump to
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criminally a court next month on charges of falsifying business records in the hush money case >> these are felony crimes in new york state. no matter who you are we cannot and will not normalize serious criminal conduct. >> michel is a lifelong republican in 2018, she helped trump get his supreme court nominee, brett kavanaugh, across the finish line with our hardline questioning of christine blasio ford, who had accused cabinet of sexual assault. >> how were you? able to narrow down the timeframe? >> i can't give the exact date another cross-country political standoff, not over yet. >> we're saying we're going first county. >> da mitchell has i don't know how say it. >> just gotten it wrong. it every single term >> and what options does bragg have here? yeah. so this murder suspect elements already has to go in front of a judge in arizona for an extradition hearing. of course, there he can either consent to come back here to new york or he could stay there more than likely,
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he's going to stay there. so bragg said he's really not going to back down here. he's going to put together an extradition package which would then go to new york's governor, kathy hochul and i reached out to her to see how she's going to get involved in this. if she's going to get involved in this, no answer back. >> but >> again, clear, neither side here is backing now. all right. brynn gingrass. thanks so much. shade. it just had two days until the south carolina republican presidential primary. the debate over which kennedy to choose still a big topic on the airwaves the local talk radio there trump is obviously ahead by a lot in the polls. randi kaye joins us with that story next. and later, what caused that massive at&t's cellular outage today, just moments ago, the company says it has the answer, will tell you what they say ahead what impacts you every day. >> there >> is one book that influences almost every aspect of our lives. we still, that shapes the way we measure time in the fusion of bashing aren't in the strokes that have inspired masterpieces in stirred soldiers. written on the hearts
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>> they're green light is better than burj thing a family to the financial future >> vegas, the story of sin city sunday at ten on cnn >> today is until the south carolina primary impulse, just the former president is headed to a massive win over nikki haley. but despite the long odd for an upset, the race is still a hot sometimes contentious topic of local talk radio or indicate has moved we are talking nothing but politics today, particularly >> the republican primary on saturday, just days away from the south carolina republican primary. and the phone lines on the point radio and colombia are lighting up. >> yeah. yeah. to watch nikki haley, she's nothing but a trojan horse for the democratic party >> she >> is bought and sold by the
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democrats. he will, he's going to be the equivalent of joe biden in office. >> nikki haley will be who i will be loading for tomorrow. she's got that foreign policy stay on patch. she already had some contacts. >> and >> hopefully it would be a change of pace full for donald trump in the main reason is the border. the border is an absolute mess. >> nikki haley got high marks for most callers for her job as governor of the state as far as nikki, if you really drill down on, me, all the statehouse politics, she did a lot that e verify that that she >> pushed through, you know, that's real stuff. >> some callers praised donald trump. >> i'll be voting for trump. the biggest issue by far is over eight to 10 million illegal aliens sucking up billions of dollars in benefits that should be going to american citizens, not to illegal aliens. >> you are trump, no matter what, you can stomach the guy
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he's bombastic narcissistic self, you're okay with a guy? >> yes. >> to me, i want a good president. i don't care about the other stuff that flipped me >> i went someone who is going >> strong on foreign policies from for our economy, strong for this country. and i believe has settled for >> others, sounded tired of his antics the biggest problem. he just can't close his mouth. he just can't have let it go. and nikki she's not perfect. but let's younger folks out there, you know, we need we need to start doing something a little different. >> one, trump supporter called into suggests certain people won't vote for haley because she called for the removal of the confederate flag from south carolina state capitol following the shooting death of nine african-americans at mother emanuel ame church in 2015? >> i don't think that the confederate flag gun-toting pickup truck bob is going to vote for because people haven't forgiven her for taken the flag down.
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>> other callers said they hope haley stays in the race just in case do you think she has a chance? this >> weekend? >> very little >> yeah, very little. i mean with tornadoes, i just listen to allow a way out. but like can happen with well, no, no. 29 then the reason i think it's important that she stick around is because i will go on the record when it comes to the actual time to put pen to paper for the presidency. i don't believe joe biden or donald trump will be the nominee for either party. i did vote for trump before, but he's just gone off the rails among the callers, three democrats who said they are voting for haley and the primary south carolina is an open primary state. >> i'm registered democrat. and i'm like the previous color. i am voting for nikki when the general comes around,
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if it's nikki versus biden, will you vote nikki again >> you know that it's going to be close randi joins us now did a lot of the color of say how they would vote in the general >> they did anderson and that's where it got interesting because the democrats who are supporting haley in the primary, so that if she is the republican nominee, they would be really torn about supporting her versus joe biden. and these are democrats. they said that they would have a really tough decision to make. now on the flip side of that, you had one republican man who was also supporting haley and he was asked if it is not haley and it's trump biden. he said he was support biden. and that really shocked the radio hosts. that's a republican man supporting biden. but now of course trump did have plenty of support among the callers on the one person did say he would write in somebody if trump was the republican nominee. but one of the issues that really came up a lot, anderson was aged and many of these callers had a real problem. and a lot of angsty about the both donald trump and joe biden. and many
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of the haley supporters said they would like to see a fresh face and the white house, anderson, randi kaye, thanks so much coming up more breaking news and the at&t moment so issued a statement on what caused that massive cellular outage for its customers. so we have details next the south carolina republican presidential primary, saturday, it's six on cnn stan for news about new sling tv has the same news programming you love starting at $40 a month. it's the same news programming you love starting at $40 a month. that's what i just said, right? it's this less starting at $40 a month >> my name is sister monica clare because of tiktok. i've created a community where people can feel safe asking questions about spirituality. i tried to provide a really accessible way of them learning about religion spirituality. that's not intimidating somebody in the comments said, i have no idea how get on none talk, but i'm not mad about it i'm going to teach you how to pray i'm going to teach you
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