tv Anderson Cooper 360 CNN March 1, 2024 9:00pm-10:00pm PST
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publishing, right? for a higher purpose published with us, the christian faith publishing is an author friendly publisher who understands that your labor is more than just a book color scan for your free riders guide, 800 4551827 >> tonight on 360 trump lawyers press one, judge to delay the documents case and another to disqualify the georgia da details tonight from a key day on a crowded legal calendar that could push one or both cases past election day. also tonight, president biden says us forces will start air dropping food and to gaza with fears, widespread famine growing and desperation plane to c plus the latest on the winter storm that could dump six to 12 feet of snow. that's feet not which is on parts of california. >> good evening. thanks for joining us when the trump indictments began coming down and then piling up quickly became clear that one day soon we'd have days like this, 12 sets of attorneys in two different courtrooms arguing two of his cases, one in atlanta, making final arguments for why judge gotten mcafee should disqualify fulton county
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da fani willis, who's overseeing his election, racketeering trial the other in fort pierce, florida pressing a federal judge, aileen cannon, to delay his classified documents trial until after the election. a busy day for trump lawyers and for prosecutors cnn's paula reid starts us off in florida >> former president donald trump at federal court in florida today for a high-stakes hearing to decide when you will be tried for allegedly mishandling classified documents an indictment was unsealed. >> charging donald j. trump with felony violations of our national security laws, as well as participating. in a conspiracy to obstruct justice. >> trump faces 40 felony criminal charges related to the alleged mishandling of classified information. some scene here in properly stored at mar-a-lago foggo. >> they raided my house. they did it for publicity reasons. they did it for election interference reasons. they want
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to interfere with the election. >> the case is currently scheduled for may 20, but judge aileen cannon, a trump appointee, who is overseeing the case, has signaled she may push the trial back in for today. cannon pressed prosecutors and defense attorneys about their suggested schedules, special counsel jack smith proposed a july 8 start date, but during the proceedings, cannon suggested that aspects of smith's proposal we're unrealistic. trump's lawyers insist the trial should be pushed back. a trial that it takes place before the election is a mistake and should not happen. trump attorney todd blanche stated, saying it would be unfair to the former president and the american people for trump to be in the courtroom and not on the campaign trail. that's something that former president has claimed as well. >> all of this persecution is only happening because i am running for president and leading very substantially in the polls. >> trump's attorneys did concede if the trial has to go for ford before the election,
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they would be okay with starting august 12th, but prosecutors pushed back saying, if team trump believes the trial before the election is unfair, those are fake dates. why did they even propose those dates? can and noted that trump's upcoming criminal case in new york must be considered as she's scheduled. this one on march 25th, trump's hush money trial begins in new york and is expected to last four to six weeks and already busy court schedule for the former president trump. prosecutors today did clarify a key issue. how close to the election would they be willing to try trump? attorney general merrick garland has said a speedy trial is in the public interest. >> cases were brought last year. prosecutor has urged speedy trials with which i agree and this now and hands of the traditional system, not in our hands today in court though, prosecutors said that a justice department policy
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discouraging public investigative actions 60 days before an election does not apply. two cases were charges had already been filed. prosecutor jay bratt told the court that when it comes to that policy, quote, we are in full compliance. >> and paula reid joins us now from the courthouse. is it clear if and when judge cannon will set a new trial date? >> so it's not clear when we're going to get her decision, anderson, but she strongly signaled today, but she does intend to move this case back. but she described a july by date is being quote, unreasonable. so i would expect that she will move this on the calendar to august at the earliest, but i would also expect if she does that, the trump lawyers will likely come back between now and then and try to push it back even further. that is the game they have been playing, tried to push this back until after the election, even if you have to do it. little pieces. >> all reid, stay with us, want to bring in retired federal judge nancy gertner currently a senior law lecturer at harvard, also federal prosecutor and bestselling supreme court
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biographer jeffrey toobin i mean, it's judge cannon >> is she >> fully in the trump camp? >> i mean, you know, she's been criticized even by the conservative 11th circuit court for bending over backwards too much for trump. but she's dealing now with a profound question and i don't think it is a simple question, which is is donald trump a defendant like any other defendant who has a schedule based on the convenience of the court and all full speed ahead or is the court's supposed to take into consideration this man is running for president. she is indicated she would not take into consideration his campaign schedule. he wouldn't take him his campaign schedule, but at doesn't really answer the question of when you get into the fall, is it appropriate to have one of the two major candidates for presidents sitting in a courtroom in september, in october, anyone who pretends that's an easy question, i think is blowing smoke. i think it's actually a
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difficult question, judge gertner, the former president's attorneys, arguing that the case it shouldn't move forward because before the election, they've also floated in august 12th start date. why do you think they floated that august 12th start date >> they want to make sure that the florida case jumps ahead of the line of the january 6 case. if the january 6 cases ever restarted because they are there she's more comfortable in florida where the jury pool is much more favorable to the former president then in dc so i mean, i agree with jeff about the what'll it feel like in september, but i mean, one of the things that is the case here as that this was the play in other words, trump's lawyers have delayed everything, everything that should have been a routine motion turned into a big brouhaha. and unfortunately, the judge has enabled it to be a brouhaha. so we're in the situation now, really because of choices that
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trump's lawyers made and choices that she really ratified. so that's the problem. and the one judge >> who has been pushing this case is judge chutkan and washington, but she's now shut down because the supreme court has put everything on hold and judge cannon has been proceeding at a leisurely pace at best and yes, they were talking about august, but you can be sure as paula said earlier, that the trump people will continue pushing that date back as much as polar right now. >> i mean, the only one of the former president's >> criminal cases with a trial date is the new york hush money case, which the da on that case is now trying to make it a election interference case is what are the odds that the rest all end up delayed until after the election? i mean, that seems increasingly likely know. >> it does seem increasingly likely. let's go through the three other for outstanding criminal cases. first, let's deal with georgia, these efforts to disqualify fani willis in that case have likely pushed this back until after november. she had initially
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said she wanted to start that trial in august. it's to last over four months. >> so at this >> point, it's safe to say that case is unlikely to be resolved before the presidential election. as i said before, the classified documents case, i do expect the judge will push it back and we'll certainly be asked to push it back again, whether she does that. there are some legitimate questions. there are some legitimate issues here in terms of the breadth and depth of discovery. the issues at play that would give her the opportunity student aid to also push this back until after november. so the big question is what happens with that january 6 case that is now of course, in the hands of the supreme court, not only for what they did died on the merits, look even sources in the trump camp say they don't expect to win on the merits, but also for how long it takes them to decide. we widely expect we won't get a decision there until late june then, is there space on the calendar, judge, tanya chutkan has been bullish about bringing that case to trial. the justice department today opened the possibility of that they would be willing to try him, even in september or october with judge chutkan be open to that or this
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go back to the the supreme court. >> judge gertner. i mean, there are legitimate questions about the classified material at the heart of this case. that is a complicating factor in the florida case. >> it is a complicating factor, but one of the things that is clear, usually a new judge facing a classified documents case, usually seeds to the prosecution. i don't think that that's necessarily a good thing, but, uh, but that's what happens, will usually defer to the prosecution's view of what should be classified after all what judges schooled and national security issues. the irony of this case is that this is a judge who's doing just the opposite, whose tilting to the defense, rather than tilting to the prosecution. there are complicated issues, but this is in one sense the easiest of all the cases. so these are case, these there are issues that could have been resolved, but she's really inviting briefing and hearings on things that frankly, i don't think any other judge would have done. >> there's a law called the
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classified information procedures act, sipa, which dictates how classified information can be used in criminal trials. there have to be pretrial proceedings if judge cannon wanted to move this case along, she could have gotten going on the secret proceedings already. she has sent and there are lots of motion stacking up that will give the defense. but jeff delay, one of the prosecutors and the special counsel's office to argue that this doj policy, which is discourages a public investigation 60 days before an election doesn't apply here. well, technically it doesn't apply because it applies to investigative steps, indictments, search warrants. it doesn't speak of trials because judges decide on the scheduling of trials. but the spirit of that policy is on, is at issue and the judges are going to have to struggle with that if proven. >> thank you. paula reid, nancy gertner as well, coming up next the georgia case and closing arguments not in the trial itself, but the remarkable court proceedings about whether the district attorney, fani willis, should still be on the case, also trying to live
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report from moscow and the funeral of dissident alexey navalny, and exclusive reaction from fellow dissonant and former chess world champion garry kasparov cnn saturday mornings starting tomorrow at eight on cnn >> dot com's >> bad dad holding back all you envision, all in one low fixed rates borrow up to 100 thank no fees required. so phi, get your money, right >> see idp disrupts cid p derails. >> let's be honest. >> he sucks but living to see idp doesn't have to. >> when you sign up at shining through cid p.com, you'll find
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>> a few, notice that when you take a picture, you don't look nearly as good as you deal. you look in the because of the year is how you see yourself in the photo, is how you're seeing. yeah. >> i gotta i don't even know who i'm looking at right? and now >> what did you just say? >> i did the best on the circumstances of a person who hates people and yet had to be amongst them curb your enthusiasm. >> the final will seize extremely exclusively on max >> the fate of georgia's rico case against the former president and others is now in the judge's hands after a pretrial proceedings which lasted longer than some trials do judge scott mcafee now must decide whether fulton county district attorney fani willis is former relationship with the prosecutor, nathan wade and their testimony about it disqualifies her from the case more now, from cnn's jessica schneider >> these people, your honor, is a systematic misconduct and they need to go sparks
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continued to fly today as lawyers for donald trump and others charged in the case, are you that da fani willis hired nathan wade, special prosecutor >> when they were romantically involved, and then she benefited financially from the trips they took and the dinners they shared. >> she put her boyfriend in the spot, paid him, and then reap the benefits from from it that she created the system and then didn't tell anybody about it. >> willis testified last month insisting the relationship began after wade was appointed to lead the trump case and argued she paid him back for any expenses in cash when i started dating mr. wade, april 2020 22 around the i don't know growing up, my daddy had three safes are now though my father bought me a lockbox and i always keep cash in the house you've on a date should have cash your pocket. >> judge. scott mcafee did have some tough questions for the attorneys pushing to remove willis and her team
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>> if someone buys their boss a stick of gum, is that per say, disqualify? >> it may not muted materiality requirement, but it's a personal benefits to the judge >> also asked if disqualification would really be the right remedy. or if any wrongdoing would just require reprimand from the legal bar. >> the proposition you're putting forward now is that if a representative, the state lead prosecutor, the district attorney, themselves says something that's untruthful on the record. that is something that immediately has to be proactively policed by the trial court. basically, what i'm getting at is where in the law that we find the remedy to an untruthful statement generally we send you down the street to the bar. >> lawyers for the district attorney's office insists there is absolutely no conflict of interest. >> it's absurd. we have absolutely no evidence that ms willis received any financial gain or benefit. the testimony was that ms willis paid all of the money back in cash. you can one judge mcafee says he will make decision about disqualification within two
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weeks. jessica schneider, cnn, washington perspective now from cnn, legal analyst joey jackson and atlanta former georgia state senator jen jordan joint i mean, in these closing argument, just kind of a shift from trying to prove a conflict of interest to a perceived conflict yeah, it wasn't only that, but i was surprised at the way the bar really was extended by the defense. it was about well, is it an actual conflict to your point, is at a perceived conflict. is it about her church speech as they mentioned, and the extra judicial statements and what impact that had is it about the fact that she hired her boyfriend? is it that she benefit fitted? that is her boyfriend benefit. >> did she passing a wide net? it was a very wide net and i think they were doing that right to point to deception, point to fraud point to an undermining and distrust of the system. i think edison going back to really what the inquiries of the judge war, who i think has conducted themselves tremendously throughout this process, is what really is the remedy? so let's just say, for example, that you do establish that the prosecutor misrepresented the
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nature of the relationship, the timeframe, of the relationship, and mr. wade, the two special prosecutor and prosecutor, let's just say, for example, there was some financial i mean, i don't know. it seems to me when someone earns money, it's their money they could do what they want, but be that as it may just say, for example, they did all of that to me, the integrity of the process is about the underlying indictment. was it presented to a grand jury properly when presented, was the wire the facts that were presented that the grand jury, can they be legally sustained? does it make out a case and a claim against the now 14 defendants plus the president, former president of the united states. and so in essence, what you're left with it this is this appropriate. i mean, it's been very entertaining in terms of reality tv, but doesn't really reflect the core issues that we're grappling with and whether an indictment should be dismissed predicated upon some conduct that they were engaged, some dalliance that was engaged in jen, i want to play something else from trump's lawyer today. let's you asked her, you know, what's personal
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interests. i think frankly, as i was trying to figure this out, i think you know what, when you see it, i think you know what when you see it. i think there's enough facts in front of you that you know it when you see it and so i think that the governing principle helps enlighten some of the facts here. >> jim, do you think there was a convincing argument that the note when you see that kind of line of reasoning no i think that shows you that they knew that they don't have enough that they haven't actually been able >> to present the case that but they said that they were going to be able to put up for the judge when they made their initial proffer and to go back what joe was saying, they were talking about is it this is it that so really trying to do this broad brush, trying to make it look like that, that everything that the district attorney's office touched somehow was painted in some way. but the reality is by doing that and kind of just, you know, just throwing it all together it really shows that
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they can't point to specific evidence with respect to the disqualification, and they really can't meet the legal bar and at the end of the day, that's what the judge is worried about, right? that's what the judge's concerned about. and they just have not been able to bring the evidence that was promised initially by ashleigh merchant enjoy you hear the judge saying that suggesting that the georgia bar might be >> the more appropriate venue for any questions about fani willis is behavior >> i mean, i don't think that's an unreasonable suggestion by the judge. the reality is is that we have a case here involving these four 14, 15 defendants. again, including the president, three laurie is already being pled guilty and someone else >> did they do what was >> alleged? did does that indictment stan to the scrutiny remember this a process? the process before you actually can be indicted, there are people who hear this. is there probable cause to believe a
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crime was committed in that to committed it. that's an essential core of our system. then you have a trial where there's 12 people that sit in judgment to determine did you do it beyond a reasonable doubt? is that impaired in any way by all of this salacious activity? and if it's not, then perhaps if you made mis-rep misrepresentations, if you had an undo our relationship that you jordan if you reported less than $100 or whatever that you're supposed to in a financial form, maybe that's the bar association and creon not an inquiry for him. >> and the judge suggested earlier that he could decide the case as soon as today after today's hearing. is that aid rule within two weeks. do you read anything into it? >> no, i think he's just being incredibly careful. look, he was trying to make sure even when you would listen to him today in terms of his questions one of the attorneys would make a statement about some piece of evidence and he would back up and said, well, wait a second, i don't think that was actually admitted and so i think for his purpose it says he wants to be very, very careful that in terms of what order that he
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issues, that he is only talking about evidence that was admitted, that he's not just listening to argument or whatever people are kind of pushing over the line in terms of innuendo in innuendo or gossip >> he's been being incredibly careful and he's doing exactly what he needs to do to make sure that whichever way he goes on this is that his order actually will be defensible because of the end of the day. he is there to make a decision with respect to the integrity of the judicial system and the court. and i think he's he's going to make i think he's going to make the right decision and right now, looking at the evidence that's come in, i don't think that there is any evidence that actually would justify the disqualification at the da's office injured. >> and thanks very much joe jackson as well, coming up. >> really >> remarkable sight, thousands lining streets in moscow to pay their last respects to alexey navalny, the russian dissident. one mourner compared to nelson mandela or martin luther king junior. our matthew chance was there. he joins us next from
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from russia. and russian pro-democracy leader garry kasparov okay, joins us in his first television interview since navalny's death >> transform your skin in one simple step, introducing polish choice men delicate lactic acid ha, liquid exfoliate resurface texture and tone without irritation. 100% saw smoother, softer, brighter skin available at polish choice and sephora meet the >> jennifer's gen x gen y, and gen-z, each planning their future for the chase mobile app gen x is planning a summer in portugal with some help from jpmorgan, welchlin. >> let's go whiskers. >> and why is working with the banker to budget for her birthday? >> you only turn 31 and gen z, he credits go then, hello, new apartment three, jens getting a head with chase solutions that grow with you. one bank for now, for later, for life hey make more of what's yours >> everybody wants super straight super white teeth. they want that hollywood white
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christian faith publishing, right? for a higher purpose, published with us christian faith publishing is an author friendly publisher who understands it. your labor is more than just a book color scan for your free riders guide, 8045518 2-7 >> exactly two weeks after a still unexplained death in a siberian penal colony and fears his family would never see his body. thousands of mourners showed up in moscow today for the funeral of russian opposition leader alexey navalny shouts of no to war can be heard in a country where dissent was effectively outlawed since the full-scale invasion of ukraine began. matthew chance was in moscow for the funeral and he has this report >> they came in their thousands to pay their last respects. supporters of the late russian opposition leader alexey navalny lining up outside the moscow church ahead of his funeral. an act of bravery and defiance in a country where dissent we didn't grief for a kremlin critic is rarely
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tolerated. >> let, let me >> ask you about the risks because the authorities have not particularly welcomed this event people have been detained for paying their respects to alexey navalny. are you concerned about the risk you are taking? know why >> because it's my slogan not to think about but the risks. do what you should do >> you hold putin responsible for the death of alexey navalny or yes. >> definitely. no doubt no doubt kremlin denies it. >> they say the eve of the arrows, see they agree with before they have done bad. i would be the first to applaud. >> all right. well, this is the the hearse, the ban which is taking the body of alexey navalny into this church on the outskirts of moscow, where russia will finally bid farewell to one of its most prominent opposition because you can save thousands of people from all over the region of turned out to pay their
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respects clapping as his body enters for that funeral service. >> are >> you surprised that you'll forces have allowed this funeral to go ahead? >> i don't know what say about it because i thank would be a huge mistake to not allowed to do it because there's so many people and they came here to pay the last respect to aleksey and alexey for us and for me personally, was like, i don't know russian nelson mandela or brushing martin luther king so why people why last name may have silence, navalny but his name is now on everyone's lips inside the church. the funeral service was shot no political speeches. just blessings over
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his open casket later in the cemetary navalny's distraught parents kiss their 47 year-old son. goodbye his wife and children, concern for their own safety stayed away but so many came in their place. >> flowers. and as you can see, and also to file past the actual grave site, which is there. people are picking up soil and throwing it into the ground onto the casket as a final farewell. to that opposition figure a figure who
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in death, as in life, is drawing thousands of russians critical of the kremlin onto the streets i'm matthew james joins us from moscow. it's so moving. matthew, alexi, normality, daughter dosha posted this picture on instagram over dad, which he called them her role model of her hero and said, i promised you that i will live my life the way you taught me to make you proud what else did his family have to say today and the people you talked to, was there concerned about speaking to you concerned that they could be detained for being there for for his funeral >> well i'm alexia about these wife, yulia navalny made a very poignant statement which she posted on social media as the as the funeral took place basically thanking navalny for 26 years of absolute happiness. i don't know how to live without you. she said, but i'll try to do so so that you up there can be happy and proud of
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me. and of course, yulia and a vowel near has essentially taken on the mantle of her husband and has vowed to continue is opposition works is already made some very important speeches. to do that, one of the reasons why she hasn't gone back to russia because there are fears for her safety in terms of the safety of people at the funeral? yeah. i mean, there are real concerns in russia hundreds of people have been arrested over the past couple of weeks just for laying flowers that makeshift memorials. but this was it was a moment where people felt that despite their fears, they had to come out, at least on this occasion. and be brave and say goodbye to somebody who for many russians was it was a key figure, an important figure, a figure of hope. >> and to janice, thank you so much joining me now is russian pro-democracy leader garry kasparov, author of winter is coming while vladimir putin in the enemies of the free world must be stopped seeing those images today. what went through your mind? >> i don't know what was stored. it's probably i can
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say that these people in the streets, moscow, in few hours, they showed more courage than western politicians on both sides, atlantic for two years alexei could be probably a lot if, if here in washington and brussels in berlin, other capitals, there was a political will to stop putin as soon as there was a chance you claim it was already a year ago. but the delay was military aid with financial package protracted the war and you could see put, putting this happen and the fact is that aleksey's dead. it's a message from putin because he failed to kill him in secret and swiftly, we know this, the poison attempt that failed, but alexey barely made it. so he will saved by miracle and then taken to germany when they just recover. >> and >> now puts him killed him slowly and in front of the whole world. and one thing went over. sure. we don't know all the details of this murder. and of course it was a murder. >> but we know that
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>> putin wanted the world to know about it because they could have kept this news for themselves, for few days for week >> they immediately inform the world and it's happened on the first day of munich security conference. >> so that's >> that cannot be interpreted any any other way. but i did it. i want you to know that because nothing will happen to me. and of course, unfortunately, a loss, right again, president biden three years ago promised devastating consequences for russia if navalny would die in prison >> what's happened? >> they announced us sanctions. who cares >> do you think the sanctions have had any impact on russia >> they have some impact. clearly, you cannot say that sanctions are not working at at all, but fundamentally mentally, they just, you know, they they are not damaging the war machine oil. it's a guess. it's these two main items of russian budget. they are not sanctions due to damage. putin,
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financial flow this, oil through, being traded. and you look at, look at the prophecy that russia is making more money from selling oil and gas than, than that then before, later in the program where we have a piece from nick paton walsh on the frontlines in ukraine, where in a position where ukraine artillery in the counter offensive were firing i think it was at shells a day. now now there can only fire about ten because they don't have the ammo because republicans in congress passing, you hear all, all time and again that oh, the gdp of the nato countries versus russia, iran, north korea, this, this, this coalition of maxes are evil, is 25 to one. who cares if russia again can, can fire 67 times? more shells. notice that ukrainian, north korea provided more shells to russia, that the entire europe, you tell telling me this bullishness zeros, ukrainians are bleeding defending their country, freedom, nita and also they're trying to stop this,
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this, this money and the free world is still contemplating how we can deal with that and put him look at him a couple of days ago, he delivered his his speech and he was happy. and always talks about, oh, let's wait for russian people to rise navalny tried, he tried to show that something could be done in russia. it was i'm not sure was politically smart move, but you cannot put this as acts of personal heroism. >> he >> paid was his life that again, wards, wards and wards the day it was noted, putin had to pay $300 billion of russian money. rosa, what are you waiting for president biden, europeans. worried way way, way debating. the crime must be punished. and as us today putin believes that he went ever be known exactly how he died do we care? it's the murders. murder, the moment they move kim from a colony in siberia
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into the colony beyond arctic circle in winter in his conditions in prison, who spent and hundreds and hundreds of days in solitary confinement. that was already just a clear message. exactly. so then it's was a matter of time but again, they did it in purpose just at the opening ceremony of munich security conference tell me what else again, it's, it's happened god knows where they could have seized on this news for few days and then really know they just wanted to make it so publicly and again, waiting for the response, by the way hundreds of thousands political prisoners in the world down, they are in danger because they saw what putin did and put believes he's the kind of this is a spiritual leader of all the gangsters, terrorist thugs and dictators, new world. >> i killed >> my main political opponent wealth, fame tuple mentioned nelson mandela of courses, or martin luther king. >> and what's happened to be nothing. go ahead, kill others.
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>> characters, purpose kentucky year. thank you. >> coming up next breaking news from the white house where president biden is now saying about hostage talks involving israel and hamas, also major development the us military will airdrop aid and other supplies into gaza. plus the message for lawmakers on capitol hill from a soldier on the battlefield in ukraine. >> tonight >> i'm starting to think this is bad idea find a paragraph on etsys new gift mode and you don't good. >> evening on etsy. >> honestly, i was scared when i was told age-related macular degeneration could jeopardize my vision. >> great. >> one more thing to worry about. >> it was all too hard to deal within the beginning, but making a plan with my dr. to answer present vision was easy. >> preservation. a red tube contains the exact any i recommended clinically proven nutrient formulas to help reduce the risk of moderate to
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>> i can do diabetes different with mounjaro >> ask your dr. about once weekly. mounjaro. >> selling your home realtor dot com's real choice selling lets you choose from multiple agent proposals. because when agents competing, you win, don't all have still not really trust the number one app real estate professionals trust, download the realtor.com app today hey united states of scandal with jake tapper. sunday at nine on cnn >> it's more breaking news tonight. present biden has been new comments about hostage talks between israel and hamas. he also announced that the us military will airdrop humanitarian aid and supplies into gaza. want to go to cnn's mj lee at the white house. so what more do you know about this us plan for it? hey, drops. >> well, anderson, the president offered a very dire assessment of the humanitarian crisis in gaza, saying that the amount of aid that israel is not doing enough that it needs to do a lot more to open up
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these humanitarian corridors and provide a lot more aid into the strip. and he said in the meantime, the us is going to begin air dropping food and aid and other basic necessities into the strip. and that the us has considering opening up a maritime corridor as well now, these airdrops we were told could begin in a matter of days and the white house has made clear the logistics right now, figuring out exactly how that would be executed is incredibly challenging. now, of course, the white house is view as well right now, is that attempt? burry ceasefire would be incredibly helpful in terms of surging the amount of humanitarian aid that can get into gaza. but as you know, anderson for weeks and weeks, us officials have been intimately involved in trying to mediate the ongoing negotiations between israel and hamas to get to this temporary ceasefire that has been incredibly challenging and very touch and go. and in fact, president biden told me a little bit about where these talks currently stand before he left the white house. a few minutes ago, this is what he
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said do you think there will be a ceasefire deal by ramadan? >> i'm hoping so we're still working real hard at are not there yet. >> what is, what is the biggest holdup right now? >> i'm not going to start at that because that again involved when i go now the reason we are talking about ramadan as a potential deadline is because that is when anderson, israel has said that it would >> expand its military operations into rafah in southern gaza. this is a scenario that of course us officials are very much wanting to avoid. and what would happen with the deal is the beginning of six-week pause in the fighting for starters, but us officials have made very clear that that is something that they would like to build on. they would first begin with a six-week pause in the fighting and then just build that out and potentially add more weeks to the pause in the fighting. and the eye towards sort of ending the war ultimately, that of course, is the and goal for us officials here. >> mj lee. thank you. coming up next ukraine and we've seen as
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nick paton walsh saw on the front lines where ammunition is low. and one soldier has a message for washington no even tree cover means safety they're firing to defend the tiny gains of ukraine's counter offensive. but now they are outgunned by russian troops trying to surge forwards you can hear how many shells they fire back no usaid means ukrainians risk losing right here, right now now what i'm saying, well, this >> felt like they're fighting really was the one hand behind their back. such a shortage of shelter they get do that if they're lucky about ten times day they did back in the summer
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counter offensive, they would fire at a day katz >> down in the bunker. >> it is strange to hear men who live underground to avoid death, be so familiar with republican procedural dysfunctionality >> belichick are rescued, lucan's keep working didn't use it as a gila. people who in bucha model >> you have a message for people in washington. >> those are those well them to promote one grainy. once you put ribner goods scenario gypsy be kid gets better than three
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cubed machine >> nod this thermal night imagery shows their latest bleak tactic. it's a quad bike carrying three russians charging at the front lines to simply see how barak can get monotonous job bills are ambitious coalition. the question here was initially if new technique, they started the letter squad novosti or per dollar 100k plan on the cairo shop or >> more ingenious and crowdfund this, a 3d printer to make tiny components for about ten attack drones a day without more
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artillery. they say only these drones hold russia back here it is a bleak and fierce fight, which has moved the nearby town of orahiv russian airstrikes have left it looking like defeat rather than the symbol of ukrainian tenacity. it is based time we come back here, it's just worse and worse than you just don't even really imagine what people could do to survive here or what is really worth let fighting over on the road out these are stark warning. ukraine is preparing for bad news. six months ago, they were trying to surge forward with new western armor here now, they prepare to lose only one thing changed. and it was in washington, not in their hearts >> and nick joins us now, i'm it's incredible to see just
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going from 80 shells and de, that they were able to fire during the counter offensive to just ten. now, and that 3d printer, they're also very aware of what's going on in washington, dc and what the holdup is >> yeah. i mean, let's be honest. now there's no real sign of how that hold up gets cleared. right. and when we're dealing with such an infinite amount of dysfunctionality that i think many ukrainians era beginning to consider the likelihood of that usa arriving to be remote. and it leads them to an exceptionally pessimistic and bleak few weeks ahead, potentially, you saw that it there are literally running out of shells to fire. that's on the situation that is sort of indefinitely sustainable. they are fighting an affine less and less ammunition at hand to hold the russians back, the russians on their half appear to have the quite the opposite problem where they see him as you saw there, to have relentless resources to throw it assaults that village of robatina. well,
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after we were there watching the artillery unit that night, another intense assault for russia or even claimed as ministry of defense that at taken key buildings in that village were assured that simply one of the multiple nights they try and get in and they get pushed back. but across the front line and we're seeing russia willing to throw huge amounts of troops and ammunition comparatively small targets. but the cumulative effect of that is a feeling in multiple locations that ukraine isn't really able to stabilize the frontline in a way that necessarily would like they may get a chance at that in the weeks ahead, but moscow to may also keep some sense of momentum going. and i hate to say but it feels like we're entering into a different phase of the war here, where the dysfunctionality of that republican led congress is translating into real concrete territorial losses here in ukraine, closing in, frankly, on a bit of a nightmare scenario, anderson nick, thank
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>> wow. >> really news plans are personalized through your biology and psychology i launched our campaign at this union hall. let's go win this thing! then we hit the road and never stopped. you shared with me your frustration at working harder to barely get by and afford a place to live. your fears for our democracy and freedoms and your dreams for yourself, your family, and the future.
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it is not too late to realize those dreams. i'm adam schiff, and i approve this message because together we can still get big things done. business with freelance ai experts. fiber. >> i'm rosa flores in eagle pass, texas, and this is cnn these cars buried under snow in california near lake tahoe or just a sample of what >> forecasters are calling life-threatening blizzard conditions in that region of the country, up to 12 feet of snow is expected over a matter of days, 12 feet whiteout whiteout conditions are forecasted in many areas throughout tomorrow morning, the national weather service also says that the snow will pile so high so quickly, there's also an extreme danger of avalanches and backcountry areas our senior data reporter, harry enten, no stranger to backcountry areas joining us now harry i know you can't wait to put your weather camp skills to use. so how tell me about this blizzard. >> what a tremendous storm
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>> i love snow perhaps more than the average individual about you. yes, everyone says that about me, but even this is a little bit too much feet, 12 feet and you know what if that falls and it actually happens and it occurs over a three-day span, it will be the largest three-day snowfall in california history. the largest ever was about a little bit more than 11 feet. you see that there if we get more than six feet and individual de that would be the largest in one day ever. so is this actually the long-term beneficial to california because there were droughts and then there was a lot of rain and it's very confusing. yes. obviously, life-threatening conditions that's not something they want to play around with, but part of what's driving the storm as the el nino pattern. and the only new pattern brings a wetter than normal conditions to california. and if you recall, over the last few years old, even talking about is this drought in california on and on and on. and last year, the vast majority of california was under a drought, over 80% of california was under a drought today, less than 10% and of california's under drought. so and that sense, it is actually good news for california. so i've been hearing >> about it for 40 years. i
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should know what own nino is and i still it's a warming of the water in the central pacific. i don't know what that means yeah. >> what was weather camp. tell me about whether camp what was whether carry went to weather camp? how old were you when you were at whether it can i believe i was 40 teen and turning 15 or 15, turning 60, something like that. so i was a young lad at weather and weather camp was just i actually thought that was skewing a little old for weather camp. i mean, you know what, i guess maybe i was one of the older kids at weather camp, but i was always like that was always a little bit behind but what i recall most about whether camp this just gives you an idea. we visited the national weather service. we visited accuweather, and what i recall about visiting accuweather was they had all of us go up and this was the early days of the internet. we walked up ken reeves rip to him, but he was a great guy and he essentially had us record messages for home and these kids would come up and they'd give like two seconds spiels oh, i see. what is this i where i was looking at the >> microfiche machine and this article was boys call a total
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snow job. this is an article about you and your 15 years old describing it as a self-described, whether freak that you email your findings on a snow fall in riverdale, new york to the national weather service and people turned against you. people turned against me. they thought weathermen, we're calling you a liar. they thought that i was inflating snowfall totals that you would get out of going to school, which was complete garbage because of the fact is this happened over the weekend, how would this actually work? it happened on a saturday, they storm was a friday and saturday. i was going out there measuring look, i'm not going to say it was storm field measuring in the snow out there are experts at the national weather service said harry's method was thorough and base there are some snowfall total, but weathermen, the who said you idolized they were questioning gregory over on fox who still earn their chat rooms. what year was this? this was 20030. >> you were 15.2003? yeah does that make you feel old or young? my god, i'm >> i always think that i think i come across it, but you were
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