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when you buy one unlimited line. and for a limited time, get the new samsung galaxy s24 on us. by. granger are the ones who get it done >> united states of scandal with jake tapper, sunday at nine on cnn, close captioning brought to you by rula law. i kind of brands up to 70% off retail at rula law.com, rubella
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>> you never faithful sees the deals on top before their car job without all that today. >> we are just one day away and pull republican primary voters in south carolina head to the polls. >> nikki haley is losing to me people don't like or too much. she's hurting the party. do we want more of the same or do we want something different? more of the same isn't just joe biden more of the same as donald trump? >> president biden embracing alexei navalny's widow and warning putin more sanctions are coming. >> he was a man, incredible courage amazing how his wife and daughter or me navalny's mother says that putin's thugs are blackmailing her. >> the kremlin wants to volleys body to be trapped supported to moscow on a special plane followed by a secret funeral >> and welcome to the moon. >> we are still waiting to get them very first pictures of the first american spacecraft to land on the moon in more than
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50 years. >> it is the first privately built vehicle to make the mission. this >> phi is a giant leap forward for all of humanity odysseus has found his new home >> good morning, everyone. it's friday. you made it. i'm filled i didn't even poppy harlow in new york. we begin this morning with president biden set to announce the us plans to hold russian president vladimir putin directly accountable for the death of alexey navalny. navalny is the latest and probably best known putin critic to die under mysterious circumstances. navalny's spokesperson says the medical report cites natural causes the biden is placing the blame directly on the russian leader >> state the obvious he was a man, incredible courage and it's amazing how his wife and daughter or me they were going to be announcing the sanctions against who who is responsible for his death >> and those will be directly
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against putin, a treasury official says the biden administration will impose those new sanctions on putin and more than 500 targets today, this comes nearly two years since the day that russia invaded ukraine biden says it is clear from his meeting with navalny family that his widow will continue to fight against the kremlin. let's start our coverage this hour with priscilla alvarez. she joins us from the white house. i know they haven't been unveiled yet, but what can you tell us that is a lot of sanctions all the way up to putin. what do we know this morning? >> it is, it's actually the largest set of sanctions since russia invaded ukraine. now, this is a forceful response by president biden to the death of alexey navalny. and again, ahead of that two-year mark of russia's invasion of ukraine, and especially slate of sanctions is on over 500 targets it's that includes on the military industrial complex, as well as companies that are helping russia access certain goods. the idea here being slowing down russia's
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ability to get certain goods and also their ability to build weapons. though as you heard there earlier, president biden ties these sanctions yesterday after his this meeting with the widow of alexey navalny and his daughter while in california in a fundraising swing, this morning, the president releasing a statement saying the following quote, these sanctions will target individuals connected to navalny's imprisonment, as well as russia's financial sector, defense, industrial base procurement that works and sanction evaders across multiple continents. they will ensure putin pays and even steeper price for his aggression abroad and repression at home. now, us officials had already been working on a sanctions package ahead of the two-year mark of russia's invasion of ukraine, they supplemented that after the death of alexey navalny, but all the same us officials are citing this as a consequence to russia. they're also continuing that steady drumbeat and the pressure on congress to pass the $60 to aid to ukraine without that, they
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said this is only one tool in the toolbox. they still need ukraine to get those funds, so they still have a chance in this war against russia. >> all right, priscilla alvarez whereas live for us from the north lawn and from the white house to two people who want to be in the white house right now, donald trump and nikki haley can already to blend south carolina in the final day before the state's pivotal republican primary, this could be the final nail in the coffin for haley's campaign as she faces a likely defeat in her home state. she's out of it about staying in the race until the end. >> i don't care about a political future. if i did, i would've been out by now. but if donald trump is the nominee, you can mark my words. he will not win a general election. and what i say to everybody is, don't complain about what happens in a general election. if you don't really think about that in this primary meanwhile, trump is getting more agitated over haley's refusal to drop out. listen to what he told the radio station in south carolina just yesterday well, i guess she's got an ego or something. i'm not a big fan of hers.
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she's doing very bad things for the republican party. i don't care at this point if she stays that she's getting very few votes. >> we have team coverage this morning. alayna treene is in washington. let's start with our kylie atwood. she is in charleston. her messaging right now, talk about that and how he plans to try to beat trump at our home state. but regardless, she's going on >> that's right. nikki haley's message here in south carolina has been incredibly consistent over the last few weeks. she has talked about the fact that she believes americans deserve better than an 80 year-old president xi has gone after former president trump's are playing the victim card when it comes to his legal cases, she has called out the fact that he is using campaign contributions to pay for his legal bills and she's also encouraging voters here in south carolina who typically only vote in a general election they need to show up at the primary this year listened to what she said to her supporters last night in myrtle beach
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>> i need you to make sure that you let your voices be heard tell your friends, tell your family email everybody, text them, all of that. this is the time south carolina really step up. and show the direction that we want our country to go in. >> i believe in you i've always trusted you >> now, when it comes to nikki haley's goals here in south carolina, her campaign isn't saying that they expect to win her home state. what nikki haley said after new hampshire off she after she lost their to former president trump by 11 points, is that she wanted to close the gap with him, but that's certainly seems like a lofty goal right now, because recent polls have shown her behind former president trump in this state by 30 or 35 points. one thing i do want to note is that at many of her events i have talked to voters were supporting her who have recently moved to south carolina there from places like ohio, michigan massachusetts, new jersey. and that is a
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portion of the electorate here that her campaign is hoping will compel her will come boost her in the polls. we'll just have to watch and see how that plays out. but earlier this week, she was very clear in saying that come sunday, no matter what happens here in the south carolina primary, that she's still going to be campaigning for president. we'll just have to watch and see how the results here on saturday impact her path forward you know alayna, that insistence from nikki haley, from her campaign about continuing on no matter what, it kinda gets it, what we heard from the >> former president in the clip you played at the top here where his concerns about what she's doing to the republican party or she's doing damage, why she's staying and it's an ego thing. i think the concern here from republicans is not that trump is going to lose south carolina if they support him. >> it's that haley staying >> in continues to ding him up on a regular basis, continues to force them to spend money. what's the campaign saying about that? >> yeah well it's definitely a concern and you can tell that donald trump is increasingly annoyed with nikki haley. he's frustrated with nikki haley for
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refusing to drop out like the other challengers. if that were in the primary before he really does want the infrastructure of the republican party behind him. he is eager to start part this general election fight against joe biden. as soon as possible. i think that's also compounded by the fact that donald trump is facing some financial troubles right now. i mean, he has a lot of these trials coming up that are going to continue to add to the increasing mounting legal bills that he is facing and he really just wants the entire your party to unite behind him, but i will say in that speech that he gave last night, he was speaking to religious broadcasters in nashville, tennessee. he really spent little time attacking nikki haley. he spent the majority of his speech going after joe biden. and again, it just contributes to the fact that they really see joe biden as the true rival this year as they are pivoting toward a general election, donald trump argued that joe biden and democrats are persecuting
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christians again, this was a message geared toward a very christian audience. he said that the threat to the united states does not come necessarily from foreign adversaries, but from within he also notably it phil and poppy spent a lot of time talking about abortion, which i think it's just very notable given donald trump has refrained from doing so on the campaign trail, saas far and that really is because both the former president, but also his team do not see that issue as a political winner, particularly in november. take a listen to that message >> and i was able to bring this issue for the first time in 54 years back to the states where everybody agrees on both sides. everybody agrees that's where it should be back in the states so it was so important >> now phil and poppy notably, donald trump did not address the controversial ruling from the alabama supreme court that declared that frozen embryos are children and that those who
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destroy them could be liable for wrongful death. it's something that the former president and his campaign have really fused to way and so far i think which just further emphasizes the point that they view this issue as a loser political loser, i should say, heading into november? >> yeah, not sure how long they're gonna be able to hold onto that position of not saying anything voters voting. we liked that kylie atwood, i'm going to treene. thanks, guys. well, at&t says the massive outage that affected tens of thousands of people in the us for about 12 hours yesterday was not caused by a cyber attack. the company saying in a statement late thursday, based on our initial review, we believe that today's outage was caused by the application and execution of an incorrect process used as we were expanding our network, not a cyber attack we're continuing our assessment to ensure we keep delivering the service that our customers deserve, regardless of the cause. this outage cause problems for thousands of people, including law enforcement, also first responders with us. now cnn chief law enforcement and intelligence analyst john miller, you were so helpful
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yesterday, helping us to understand all the things that could be good news. preliminary assessment, it's not nefarious, but also how do we know so i'm going to have it again with a different carrier. >> well, we learned big lessons yesterday, but we also got big surprises. i mean, we have seen outages before. we've seen regional outages, short outages we haven't seen a major carrier crash for more than half a day almost 12 hours with this kind of interruption of service? yeah. >> and so the two things we have to look at here are one, the size of the failure and to how long it took them to fix it. and i'll throw in three, which is their complete failure to communicate clearly during the crisis it was if you went to their website at some point, they put up a banner saying we're experiencing technical difficulties if you went to their twitter site, it was all
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kinds of videos about ways to have fun with your phone. you know, their company motto is live true. do the right thing. no compromise. not run silent, run deep so at&t has gotta be tacking back today to say hey, how did we suffer a system-wide technical failure be, how can we better communicate about that the next time and see? how, do we fix this faster? >> yeah. >> i mean, the ways that phone the phone was honestly probably a good tip because you couldn't make any calls on it. so you needed to keep yourself busy, so i appreciate that. it's great i think the question and we got to this yesterday. i think this is one of the concerns, especially at the very beginning yesterday critical infrastructure. >> everybody in cyber but every corporate leader knows that this is a huge risk, a huge problem, a huge issue that they've been trying to figure out a public, private way to get some assurances on. does this underscore that risk? does this have provide any lessons
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for that risk? >> i mean, it really does on a number of levels. first of all, let's talk about contexts. yesterday, we were here talking about we haven't seen a failure like this is this a cyber attack? why was that front of message yesterday? because two weeks before the top us intelligence officials released a very unusual document talking about volt typhoon vanguard panda, cozy bear once a russian program tour, a chinese program. apparently they have a thing with bears that are meant to infiltrate critical infrastructure in including cell phone companies, water, power, everything to hide at the bottom of their windows operating systems, disguised as normal tools for an endpoint user to discover something that is moving through its system that an executing commands that looks like part of the machinery is different from having some rogue elements come in through an open port and start to make commands that sets off alarms. so they're really going to have to go back
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through all the logs and see what caused this to go sideways. experts, i talked to yesterday said this is probably a bgp issue which is basically internet speak for how routes are set for data to travel in the most efficient, fastest way billions of commands that come over accompany this size that pick the cheapest, fastest, most efficient route. and that when they did there reconfiguration, the bgp was often all the roots weren't working. and imagine if we went to sleep and somebody changed all the highway signs and then rush hour started so they're still sorting through that as they say in their statement. but our adversaries looked at this yesterday. yeah, russia looked at it, china looked at it, others looked at it and they said that's what happens in a catastrophic failure of a cell phone company that just went into their intelligence files about critical infrastructure during potential failure. that's a great point. i hadn't thought about john
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miller. thank you for getting us through it yesterday and for all the answers this morning. >> thanks >> the former fbi informant accused of lying about the biden family. >> he's been >> arrested again, our elie honig here in studio to explain it all united states of scans with jake tapper. sunday a nine on cnn, luma phi, it's kind of amazing. wow, my go-to is lima via eye drops, lula phi dramatically reduces redness in one minute and look at the difference. my eyes, the brighter and wider for up to eight hours limb, if i really works, see for yourself, i love shopping the real, real gucci, louis vuitton yard >> february's and we're on luxury brands to 90% off retail. >> thousands of new arrivals daily. >> the real, real shock now and get 20% off at the realreal.com terms of high the first time you take a step back i made that with your very own online store. i sold that.
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again. >> this it might depend as a.com to find a ted is specialist and to see bridget's before and after photos >> i'm arlette saenz at the white house. and this is cnn >> but welcome back. the former fbi informant charged with lying about the bidens has been rearrested out and share it off, was arrested last week in nevada on charges of lying to the fbi, but it was released despite objections from the justice department. well, he was taken back into custody yesterday on the same charges according to his lawyers prosecutors claim it's wearing off, made the false allegation in both joe biden and his son hunter excepted $5 million bribes from the owner of ukrainian energy company the neighbor that false accusation forms the basis of the house republicans ongoing efforts to impeach the president for more. let's bring in our senior legal analyst, elie honig, warning to >> this is rare >> i'm not sure if it's unprecedented, but super rare to go and re-arrest when a
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court has already said no doj, you can't keep them. >> here's how unprecedented it is, poppy, i've never seen it happen this way and i just asked john miller, who's seen everything. have you ever seen this? he said no, he hasn't. so here's here's the deal. ordinarily, when you get a restaurant, a case like this, you have to bring the defendant to the closest judge or in this case, magistrate, which has low for level of federal judge, that's what they did. they brought this, judge excuse me, this defendant to a magistrate in nevada. prosecutor said you have to lock about pending trial. he's too much of a flight risk, and the magistrate disagree, said, i'm going to release him with conditions, but i'm okay. releasing him. take his passports, put them on lottery, ordinarily. next step, then as a prosecutor is, you wait for the the person to arrive at their assigned district judge in this case in california, that usually takes a week or so. prosecutors were not willing to wait that long. instead, they went to the judge. they said, we need a new warrant. they rearrested him on the same charge and now he's in custody. this tells me that prosecutors are absolutely terrified that this guy may take off. this is a very extreme in measure designed to
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try to get him in custody there has been so much talk about and rightfully so the politics and impeachment and what the moment, what kind of legal liabilities he have, right? what's now facing so technically the max sentence, he's facing adds up to 25 years based on a series of false statements and creation of false documents but nobody gets anything near 2025 years. but this is very serious. i mean, look, it happens sometimes not making an excuse. i mean, it's a reality of life that confidential informants like this guy go off the rails. it's fbi's responsibility to try to make sure that doesn't happen. but when it happens you have to make a decision. are we charging this guy and the fact that they're charging this guy shows me that they believe a he lied be in a clear proof by away and see about an event of enormous consequence. >> can i ask you about some of the republicans that are skeptical of this arrest of this indictment. all of it, this is republican congressman william timmins. here's what he said. >> i think it's interesting that the fbi didn't
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investigate the allegations made years ago, and now they've indicted the confidential source of the truck that's it for years and made paid him a hundreds of thousands of dollars. so there's a lot of questions i have regarding that. >> are those questions worth asking. >> there are questions worth asking about how the fbi got burned so badly for sure. but i mean, the allegations are are pretty clear cod they'll have to prove in court now. but if you look at the documents around the case, it's clear that this guy lied to the fbi about he said he was in meetings with people at times in places when he could not have possibly been in meetings with those people, they disapproved what he said by looking at documentary evidence, but yes, it's a blackeye for the fbi. again, it happens but it's an embarrassment and especially when you have a high profile, not high profile, but a ci who's giving you very add profile information like this, you have to be extra careful, so i do think it's fair to ask the fbi, how did you let this go so far off the rails? >> the former president's legal team had several filings last night yeah. related to the
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classified documents case, one of them i think at least one of them citing federal immunity, which is also another case that people are paying attention to right now, what did you make of this? so this is the sort of ordinary time when the defendant would file motions. a lot of these are motions that were expected. the immunity motion i share your sort of quizzical approach to this, like, how could he be immune in the documents case? because the document since case, if you look in the indictment, that starts at 12:01 p.m. on january 20 2021, because it's not a crime for donald trump to have those documents until he leaves office. so how can he possibly be immune for crimes that happened after he left office? now, trump's team tries to thread a needle here, they get a little creative. they say well the whole decision-making process about whether to document air that happened while he was there. that is i mean, look, i think the immunity argument on the january 6 case is already a stretch and likely doomed. we may learn today, if the supreme court's taking that or not, but at least there's a colorable argument there. this one is a stretch beyond stretches and has no chance of success.
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>> elie honig. thank you, friend. appreciate it >> no, you're not seeing a mirage. a lake has formed at america's hottest place, death valley, why the water has many amazed and concern and overnight georgia police are investigating foul play after a nursing student was found dead on campus, the latest on that investigation that's next >> one second, grandma, this guy's going to buy my car. >> okay. you need carvana >> entering plate number no accidents, right? no. >> january at offer carbonic can pick it up tomorrow. >> that's an amazing offer. >> sell your car the easy way with why is everyone talking about no blockage and nasal irrigation? >> i was dealing with some just bad nasal congestion, postnasal drip. >> nevada is simple. your nose is the bodies air filter, but it's not perfect. nevada is a drug-free way to help flush out allergens, mucus, and germ using powered suction, join nearly 4 million device users. so you can read that are snore
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harness the power of xfinity internet and stay connected to the things you love. ah, they'll be like this for hours. hello dad, hello dad, hello da. uh-oh. good bunnies. ahh! ones who get it done >> the situation room with wolf blitzer did night at six point cnn >> well, homicide investigation
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underway this morning at the university of georgia. this morning in athens, georgia, police say a nurse pursuing student who'd gone for a jog near the university of georgia's athletic fields, was reported missing her body was found thursday in a wooded area reportedly with visible injuries. cnn's ryan young joins us live from athens, georgia, right? what more do we know about this investigation at this point? >> yeah, phil, this is quite concerning. we know three agencies are working on this all at the same time right now. and you think about this greater campus area, more than 20,000 students attend this beautiful university and this is an intramural fuels that a lot of people use a jog on a day-to-day basis. what we know is someone called 911 or friend yesterday saying their friend was missing by 12, 38 police had already found this body with visible marks on the outside. in fact, listen to the police chief talk about the early parts of this investigation. >> our officers responded to that area end immediately begin a search of the area to attempt
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to locate the individual officers, located the individuals in the area behind lake harrak at approximately 12, 38 the individual was unconscious and not breathing and had visible injuries >> as a woman attended augusta university college of nursing, that school has put out a statement that says police have said they suspect foul play, the receipt of this news this afternoon was shot talking to all of us. and as you can understand, this has sent shockwaves through this entire campus area. classes have been canceled until monday, but still today we saw students waiting for buses at night. we saw women jogging this morning on the way to this live location. this is a very active schools, so you can understand there's a lot of times these students have nowhere else let's to go, even when classes are canceled, the big question right now is do police have a suspect so far they indicated know there are surveillance
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cameras in the area. they're using that to kind of comb through the process to see if they can find any sort of clues. we've also been told the state investigation authority named as a gbi has come in to help process the scene. so you know today is gonna be very active as police were spread out in this investigation, trying to figure out exactly what happened. but shockwaves on a campus like this, where it's been some 20 years since a murder has happened on campus. >> ryan young, keep keep us updated as you learn more from athens, georgia. thank you. >> not a death valley, california this month, tourists are flocking to one of the hottest places on earth to witness something quite unusual. a temporary lake that's right, it's right in the middle of one of the driest regions in the country, or stephanie elam explains it, it's all thanks to the state. heavy record rainfall this season torres waiting in, kayakers, paddling out. this is after all california, but this is not the ocean in fact, it's
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282 feet below sea level. >> this is death valley, the lowest point in north america and the hottest place on earth now attracting visitors with its cool lake water. this group of friends drove in from las vegas garden of eden when >> should you think you can check it off your bucket list. and when it's going to happen again, like the desert oasis, it is the last time the lake appeared was 19 years ago but things are changing. >> the climate change models for this area predict warmer temperatures, which we are definitely seen. and also more intense rainstorms yet, even for park ranger abby wines, the massive lake manly is a marvel. >> normally there's a lot more evaporative potential than there is rainfall coming in meaning that this is usually just a dry salt flat >> on average, death valley gets two inches of rain a year but in the last last half year, the park has been walloped with
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nearly five inches of rain, wind says, including from tropical storm hilary last august. its rainiest day we've ever had on record. >> this is what badwater basin usually looks like. this is what it looks like now even i couldn't resist getting out there. >> it's hard to overstate just >> how incredibly special and serine it is to cardiac in death valley. right now, like manley is about six miles long and three miles wide, but it's only about a foot deep >> salty day. >> yeah, visitors are finding out just how salty the water is. >> sure >> rangers say it's more a sight to see than taste. >> haven't seen anything living in there. >> i mean, well, and also it's very salty >> salty. it's too salty to drink. so it's not going to help wildlife in the area at all. >> but no one is bitter about getting salt soaked.
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>> miraculous surreal crazy >> if it means enjoying the magic of a dreamy lake in the driest place in north america. now, if you do want to come time is of the essence because the evaporation rate is going to pick up as it starts to heat up. here so it's not going to last for much longer. poppy and phil >> i was fun. stephanie elam. thank you very much. >> so this supreme >> court meeting and a private conference today as a major decision looms in two cases involving former president trump, our senior supreme court analyst, joan biskupic with us next candidate, john edwards cheated on his cancer-stricken wife, had a baby with his girlfriend, and >> then tried to pass it off as a campaign staffers kid. >> we're here to get your side of the story. did your intimate relationship with him begin that night? yes. >> how did you end up with a sex tape of john edwards and reopened tabloid trash is full
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allies. >> donna was believed he could outsmart any the ones on the campaign trail is still running for president. >> what did he think was going to happen? >> because all based >> on ally, united states of scandal with jake tapper, new episodes sunday annan on see it. >> you always got your mind on the green mat. you you your business bank account with quickbooks money now or it's 5% avy >> that's how you business differently. >> intuit quickbooks t-mobile build a 5g networks. so powerful, it goes beyond the expected. >> and >> now t-mobile 5g internet for homes and businesses is here. 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 set up and just 50 bucks a month with no exploding bills for annual contracts >> there's nothing better than a subway series foot-long, except when you add on all new
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5, 2, 3, 4, 9, 8, 7, 1 day date, 5, 2, 3, 4, 9 8, 7. >> vegas. the story of sin city. sunday at ten on cnn >> welcome back to the supreme court. we go, we're waiting on to big decisions still from the high court, whether the president indeed has absolute immunity and whether the 14th amendment means that he can be kicked off the ballot just to slightly important thing, a little bit, a little bit. let's bring in joan biskupic, she joins us from washington. we've got a lot to get to with the court, but let's just start there. i mean, i suppose we could hear from the court because they have conference today on these sun today.
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>> that's right. mid morning. poppy and phil, first of all, it's great to see the both of you in mid-morning. the justices will meet in private in a conference room off the chambers of the chief justice. and they'll look at the week's business now, as you know, they heard some important cases this week to that they're going and i have to take preliminary votes on. so donald trump is not the only things on thing on their mind, but it is on jack smith's mine and jack smith and donald trump have both submitted filings. as you know, they've been up there for a week with their filings saying, are you going intervene or don't intervene in this? and i think what we if you get as soon as this afternoon, but maybe not until early next week some kind of schedule that says what kind of timetable the justices would set for filings and oral arguments in the case that we're decide whether former president trump should be immune from criminal prosecution. and the reason this is so important to everyone outside the court, at least right now, and especially jack smith, the special counsel
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representing the united states government and former president trump, is that whether the justices intervene will determine whether he is actually tried for conduct related to his protesting the 2020 election before the 2024 election. now one thing and i will add the justices could decide just to let stand a ruling by a lower appellate court, the dc circuit that said whatever protections donald trump had when he was president from any kind of criminal prosecution, have evaporated now that he's a former president. but i have to say poppy and phil, the supreme court tends to like to have the last word on questions of presidential power. and we can see right now, they're, they're looking to have potentially the last word on their own timetable. >> clearly, i mean, just to put my really a analysis, this is a huge deal for what's going to be happening the year ahead i look forward to your according based on the private gathering that happens today, and the reason i say that is because you also have great reporting
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about the frustration of liberal justices over how conservatives have really accelerated the moves to limit the power of federal agencies. and again, be very clear that you have this reporting underscores a level of access to this world that i didn't think existed but walk people through. it's a fascinating story. >> well here, as we're all watching these two donald trump cases, the supreme court is going about its regular business and businesses frankly, will really affect a lot of americans in their daily life. >> at >> they have a whole slate of cases this session that goes to the power the federal government to protect americans in ways from environmental pollution, air and water pollution can concerns consumer fraud concerns. we have a big case coming up in march that tests the food and drug administration's ability to declare abortion medication, mifepristone safe and effective for nationwide use. these kinds of cases are continuing and i
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know that the liberal justices have been so frustrated with this pattern of conservatives really reigning in federal regulatory authority and that burst through during oral arguments this week. in two important cases one involving the environment that the justices will likely vote on today today in that private conference. that has to do with president biden's plan to try to stop control pollution in upwind states to protect what would flow across borders into downwind states. something called the good neighbor plan. those kinds of issues are really front and center for the justices and frankly will have as much effect on the american public is anything they do in the donald trump cases joan biskupic. thank you so much. i am here to talk chevron deference with you any day, every day. all day. but on >> a serious note, you have been such a delight bringing your reporting to us every day and i continue to look forward
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to watching it and cheering you on. thank you, joan well, thanks great to be with both of you. thank you. president biden says he will impose sanctions directly against vladimir putin for alexey navalny's death. what we're learning about those ahead. >> and this morning is prime minister benjamin netanyahu unveiling a plan for the future of gaza. what's in it? what's not when it comes to the plants will have it next >> mesh and moves fast >> so we partner with verizon to take our operations to the next level with a custom private 5g network, we get more control of production efficiencies and greater agility. >> that's enterprise intelligence. >> it's your vision, it's the ancien rash of moderate to severe eczema to swaps my skin night and day. despite treatment, it's still not under control. but now i have revoke run voc is a once-daily pill that reduces the itch and helps clear the rash of eczema fast. some are invoked. patients felt significant inch
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details, call now or visit send info kit.com wolf assertions michel very, sorry to hear about new father. father, mother. thank you. well, that's a little better >> so you go always have to be the center of attention. >> i have to accept that you're wired like luna they'll small your petty, you're walking virus. larry >> an authenticity involved in carrying about oneself state the obvious he was a man incredible courage. and it's
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amazing how his wife and daughter our me they >> we're going to be >> announcing the sanctions against putin, who is responsible for his death >> that was president biden after meeting with the widow and daughter of the lake kremlin critic alexey navalny, president reiterating that putin is to blame for navalny's death and make it clear that new us sanctions will hit putin directly. those sanctions are set to be announced later this morning and sources tell cnn and more than 500 russian targets are included in these sanctions as the world prepares to mark two years, this weekend since russia invaded ukraine with us now is eurasia group president ian bremmer, always good to have you so nice to have you here in person. >> 500. they go all the way up to putin. the question is, what if any deterrent effect have the sanctions up until this point had is this markedly going to be different? >> now, i mean, i'm in a few tell your kid that you're going to be grounded for the 13th time, guilty of this. the 14th
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time isn't going to work and we've been through 13 rounds of sanctions from the europeans, roughly the equivalent from the us. they are running out of important things to sanction. most important thing they did was right at the beginning of the war when they froze the western assets, the assets the russians had that were sitting in europe in the united states, in japan, hundreds of billions of dollars that didn't stop them. russia's growing at 3% this year, two-and-a-half. let's say 2024 rounding? no, because because the oil, the gas, the food, the fertilizer, they have, the world needs, the world needs the united states isn't trying to cut all of that off because that would lead to a recession. but the point is, the only thing that the west has done that has changed russian behavior has been military support for the ukrainians. there is no sanction effect, literally zero, and we all know that the white house knows that the europeans know that the point is that you can't say there will be held to pay if navalny dies in jail as by the way, biden did say as president, a couple of years ago, and then not do anything when navalny is killed by the russians in jail
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it was a very newsworthy statement. he said it in geneva after meeting. >> was there. >> yeah, we all >> remember it very closely. you mentioned the frozen assets >> there are proposals on the table. us official seem to be warming to the idea of utilizing those assets, whether for money for defense or reconstruction. this is what bill browder, obviously a very well-known putin critic, said earlier this week, listen week after the war was started, $300 billion of russian government central bank reserves that were held in the west were frozen since the war has carried on. he's done based on some estimates up to $1 trillion of damage to ukraine. and they desperately need money and it just seems so obvious that while we're digging into our own pockets to fund ukraine, we should also grab putin's money and it seems to make moral sense. it makes financial sense, and it makes political sense. >> i think your point about defense assistance being the critical necessity at this point. but the warm warming to
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the idea of from us officials trying to utilize those assets is fascinating to me because they were very opposed to the idea earlier on what effect would that have as what christine lagarde, the head of the european central bank couple of weeks ago, she told me she strongly opposed to this most of european leaders are strongly opposed and it's not because they think that there's a moral problem. it's because there'll be setting a legal precedent and that precedent would undermine the euro, would undermine the yen less. so the dollar, because the dollar is the world's reserve currency, but they're concerned that it would also believed to their assets getting seized in russia. and it would lead other countries to say, well, i mean, if you can seize our assets because you don't like what we're doing. what's going to stop you from going after us, by the way, this wouldn't be decision by the world. it wouldn't be a vote taken by the general assembly. it'd be a decision by the g7 advanced industrial democracies and what does that, what message that's sent to the global we'll south when you willing to do it, when someone attacks the europeans, fellow white people. but you're not willing to do it. like, let's say in sudan, even for small amounts of money, that there
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are many reasons why this is problematic. but the reason its being discussed is because there's more desperation. there's more sense of what happens if we run out of money for the ukrainians are we just got to let them fail. the munich security conference last week. i was sitting there when navalny's wife got up widow and only an hour after she found out that he had been killed and the congressional delegation there recognized that, hey, this is a message from putin to us that he's going to do whatever he wants. i was there when zelenskyy, the ukrainian president, was talking about how he just lost a major town, a strategic town of avdiivka at the congressional delegation recognize the reason that that town was lost, wasn't because the ukrainian stopped fighting courageously. it was because they no longer had the ammunition to turn the russians back. i do you think that those messages make it more likely that for 2024, the republicans, democrats will find a way to get these guys more military support, long-term though, the ukrainians are fighting an
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uphill battle, that's very clear. >> if that's the case, if you're right. and in 2024, when will that when will it be too late? >> and >> i asked that because we had the former ukrainian first lady on katerina. you've chienco yesterday and she said this to me. if we meaning ukraine had gotten the aid when the threat did first started, if we'd gotten the aid when the escalation had begun, it would be over, meaning the war would be over. >> hey, if they've gotten the aid ten years ago when the war started when the russians illegally annex crimea and sent their little green men to occupy southeast ukraine. russia never would have invaded kyiv to begin with, if the americans had stood up when the russians invaded georgia, they wouldn't have had 2014. so we can see all of these moments when the united states and the europeans through their revealed preferences show to putin we don't care that much about ukraine. that is real, that is true. and in the first days of the invasion of ukraine, the presumption of the west of nato, of the intelligence community was that zelenskyy was going to fall,
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that they were going to get overrun. and indeed that almost happened. and it was only when the ukrainian started showing that they could fight and stand up to the much bigger russians when they were the cinderella team, the number 16 seed that was suddenly making it into the final four. americans respond to that. and we said, well, maybe we need to do more for these guys, but two years later, ukrainians are running out of gas and the americans, the european he ends are having a harder time finding it in their hearts to continue to support finding their pocketbooks, to continue to support. and that's the reality ukraine is facing in 2020, there's a reason president biden's, as long as it takes shifted over the course of the last toe, whatever we can, but whatever we can remember, we always appreciate it. thanks. premiere to be with you. thank you very much. >> well, donald trump, nikki haley, they're going to be in south carolina today ahead of tomorrow's big primary bury their final message to voters. that's next >> pops discount furniture, we're spotlighting a different choice every day of february, like nine bedroom sets with
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>> vegas, the story of sin city sunday at ten on cnn i thought we had a plan for dad. he was set to go to the senior living community, right by my house. then a friend suggested i talked to a place for mom really opened my eyes my advisor and listened and understood his needs and showed us options that we're still nearby, but a better fit for dad now, he's warm, engaging community with the big group of friends. i know we made the better choice for free senior living advice, go to a place for mom.com beyond the call of duty brought to you, buy a
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place for mom, the place for senior living advice, talk to an expert >> adviser today at no cost to your family welcome back in today's beyond the call, we need aurora torres, woman who >> had a nursing career in nicaragua before immigrating to the united states. now, thanks to an american nurse, torres is back to doing what she loves. cnn's camila bernal has the story sorry >> for nine years, i would do is walk these hospital hallways as a cleaner that she was a nurse in nicaragua. but after immigrating to the us, tried taking the nursing board exams and failed us really hard. we work really hard but at the same time i say sunday, i'm gonna be like them i was wearing different uniform. and when i when i saw nurses with this unifor i was like sunday, i'm going i say sunday, i'm
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gonna be wearing that uniform. >> rode needed help. >> are you going on night shifts? >> and it came as she cleaned the office of the hospital's executive director of nursing the to simply had a conversation i knew right there and then she had a lot of potential and we can help her out. >> oda shared her struggles and peachy heyne immediately started helping her with the process, pointing her to the right training and giving her taus to complete everything. >> i told them she was doing it and delivering the following day. it's amazing okay. >> rahel, how are we doing? >> and after months of hard work studying and gathering paperwork, she knocked on my door and to clean my room again, my office and told me she passed. i tell you i cried for joe and i'm going to cry again. i don't want to do that it's a joyful feeling. be able to see someone who was cleaning wounds, become registered nurse
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wish we could do more of that. >> peachy called recruiting. you're doing he's such a great job and the hiring process began at the end of the day. you just have this >> feeling of yea. i helped someone and i hope someone who can be someone at cedar and that is what i would rohde is grateful for today. >> sometimes you want something and sometimes you need help to reach her goal. >> she recently started working in the hospital's orthopedic department. >> i think it was meant to be for peachy that help came naturally when you're from another country, you need a few resources to >> help you to guide you and lo and behold. she made it. >> as you found it? >> yes >> my right read the >> camila bernal, cnn, los angeles cnn this morning continues right now

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