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tv   Laura Coates Live  CNN  March 6, 2024 8:00pm-9:00pm PST

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every day curry, they'll be gone in a flash designer sales at up to 70% or sop gilt.com today >> he addressed of a lifetime, can president biden pull it off? we'll talk about tonight. alarm codes live all right. >> super tuesday was last night was here the union is tomorrow night >> and the hits just keep on coming >> if the mother of all campaign speeches, the president of this country making his case to the nation and primetime of all places, millions of you will be watching as joe biden, who is for all intents and purposes now, in a reboot of the 2020 race, gets his message in front of what may be the biggest audience of the campaign. the speech has been in the works for months, apparent with editing, continuing until the moment biden starts to speak oh yeah
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>> one more thing >> donald trump says, he'll be doing a quote, live play by play during the state of the union address. what could possibly go wrong with the live play by play by trump, rematch stronger here, right? >> what to say? >> i'm proud to report our country string in june, then it was a year ago. >> that's a typo. >> could go either way. >> okay. then look, this is the part of the story. were my father will be thrilled to hear me say dad, you were absolutely right. every single word has meaning. >> so choose wisely. well, mr. president listened to one norman codes tomorrow because every word you say as you tell the country and the world really about this union, we call america will count. so choose very wisely and they expect the applause, expect the boos, kila, you're out the old show time at the apollo. remember that? like i give you a very long to get it right? and not in a presidential election year, not when the stakes are this high and the
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problems while they keep coming we're going to break down a few of the r state of the union problems we have here. and what you can do about it. well, there's immigration, the bipartisan bill that crashed and burned in congress also, trump could really run on the issue >> should have telling members of congress to block the certification. join me, or i'll join you in telling the congress to pass this bipartisan border security bill and as he is considering executive action to restrict asylum at the border, he risks backlash from progressives in his own party. talk about being caught between a rock and a hard place. meanwhile, margarines are streaming in from new york to chicago, to miami houston la, and there are fears that the lowell of the past several weeks, will turn into a surge in the spring. then there's the ongoing battle over reproductive rights states across the country, recruiting abortion, the alabama supreme court potentially jeopardizing ivf by ruling that frozen embryos are
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children and those who destroy them can and be held liable for wrongful death, prompting alabama's governor to sign a bill tonight to protect ivf patients and providers. the moment i'll talk to a congresswoman who was a tangled say the union about her own ivf journey. and then there's foreign policy as the president pushes for a ceasefire in gaza, he is facing an opponent he did not see coming uncommitted. >> but i'm >> committed to making its presence felt, isn't eight and places like michigan and minnesota and north carolina an effort to force the president's hand. those are some of the challenges that he is going to face in tomorrow's state of the union address but every word will count including those accentuate the positive. every single word will have meaning tomorrow, potentially and especially in a presidential election year, we're here now with me for a republican congressman charlie dent, and football commentator and senior spokesperson for hillary clinton's 2016 presidential campaign. karen finney, i'm so glad you're all with me here today. first of
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all, karen, you just came from a briefing right? at the white house about tomorrow's address. what can you tell us >> i'm nosy and hired in knew you would want to know that's what that's why i'm here. so not. surprisingly i, think you're going to hear the president layout a contrast, right? he's going to talk about kind of where we've been and where we're like what we've overcome. and the last few years. >> but also where we're going and what's the future and that's really important because elections are about the future. we're going to have more of those dual screens, split-screen moments like we did when the both the former president, the current president, were at the border. >> and so i >> think you're going to hear the president lay out that contrast. and one of the big themes i can tell you we're going to be talking about is democracy and the future of this country. and our democratic institutions i think you'll also see the guests in the gallery who, who typically sit with the first lady. they will be part of telling the story about again, where we've
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been in this country and where we're going look, nobody can predict if there'll be a moment like we had last time. but i believe the president will be ready. hughes, he is solid and firm on what he wants to talk about. >> he's going to have to really bring it as they say on a number of things. there are a number of topics as well. i want to play a little game with the two of you because you're fine and there's a game most people play and it has three choices and mary or kill or part of it not going to play with the families show on the program with o'clock at night. they told me burger and my dad is watching yes, this is going to be called sell his plan, confront or a pivot. those are the three options about they don't want to hear from both of you at what you think biden ought to do in these scenarios. start with you, charlie, on this because issue of immigration in particular should biden sell his plan, confront republicans or pivot. >> i think he needs to confront republicans on this because joe biden is actually been pretty
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weak on the border. that's been a vulnerability for him. he minimize the problem. he was late to the game, but republicans screwed up. they had a bipartisan compromise mice, they walked away from their own deal. there were right-of-center reforms, if i were biden, i go in and confront them and talk about those reforms that are right-of-center triangulate and say pass the bill. we want a solution, not an issue. so i would confront them directly on that issue. >> what do you think? >> i agree. look, i think he is going to lay out again. here's what was in the bill. here's where i was willing to go. and many of you sitting in this chamber, we're not it gets an opportunity in confronting them to actually also praise those republicans who were willing to come to the table because we know that there's a rope tension with the republican party right now around that. so i think there's a dual opportunity and then pivot to here's what comprehensive
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humane immigration reform and border reform looks like. lastly, i think he'll confront the mythology of the republican talking point that says he's already got all the tools it has dispense that he could right now exactly. he doesn't need more tools which is absolutely not true. >> your response that well, no, i think he just simply has to invoke james lankford's name. might not help james lankford would say i agree with james lankford, but he's talking not just the chamber, but to the country saying i agree with this conservative republican on these immigration reform. so that's why i would confront and it muddles the issue because joe biden is losing on that issue. this muddles the issue a little bit to his advantage. >> i'll be have a camera that goes to lankford's face, starts to shrink in his seat for a second. life, really, really missed it as it really. how >> about the issue of the economy? >> sell his plan confront or pivot what he is with you, karen. >> i think he's going to sell and talk about the accomplishments of the last several years, whether it is bringing back manufacturing jobs, whether it is the increase in america i can exports, whether it is 16 million new small businesses
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launched, closing the wage, wage gaps in terms of disparities cutting child poverty in half. and there's a lot to talk about. cutting college tuition costs but also i think we're going to hear him talk about how to cut costs because he recognizes that as much as you can do as president. you, if you're not going to be able to cut costs, that's what's really still hurting people. so that's where i think he's going to do fairly i think he's going to have to pivot a little bit here because inflation is still front of mind for many voters, prices are still too high, particularly for housing and for food. big issue. i think he's gotta be careful what he sells. karen just mentioned student loans i don't think that's a very good issue because one, it's inflationary, it transfers wealth from lower-income people to people who have higher earning potentials. it really offends a lot of people paid their bills and those who never went to college, there's already a gap there. so i think he's got to be really careful
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with what he sells used to stay on the manufacturing side. i think he's safer there, but but he inflation is still a big issue and that's front of mind and didn't karen role drives and this 11 part, why >> i think, you know, look, i think there's a way to do it so that what you're doing is helping lower-income people he also so i was sort of gristle at the idea that we're not talking about helping people who come from families where you can afford and i'm talking about people who otherwise would not have had the opportunity who are literally drowning in debt. they can't start a new business, they can't buy a home, they can't start a family and we've got to address it and they were victims of corporate greed that sold them these loans with terrible interest rate. what are you going to diversity sole new loans. i mean, they got these wonderful four-year institutions that are exploiting that time corporate greed as well, where they're getting their loans. >> lot gordon gekko said greed is good. >> we're
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>> going to stay and there was a whole side of the bare. how about foreign policy? obviously ukraine and israel are tough issues right now in congress. and of course in ukraine and israel. and with president biden and of course gaza, the uncommitted vote, should he sell his plan, confront or pivot? >> well on ukraine, he should confront, you should say, speaker johnson, bring up the bill to vote on ukraine. there over 300 votes here to pass it, do it tomorrow. you should confirm there on israel, he's going to have to dance and pivot because the one hand he wants to support israel. on the other, he knows within his own party there are a lot of folks for not with him on further aid to israel. so on that issue, biden's got a tricky, tricky dance. >> i think you're going to hear him confront the reality. and this is part of why we heard the vice president get out there and talk about the need for an immediate ceasefire. that's where the president has said he wants to be. that is what is on the table in the talks. despite what we hear kind of being adjudicated in the press. so i think you're going to hear him take that head on and i would not be
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surprised if you hear some tough talk from him on you know, look, what it's going to take for us to continue to support israel, while also ensuring that more innocent children are not being killed. >> we can't leave tonight without talking about this play by play, that trump is going to be doing is on social media. it seems against what the tailoring is going to happen >> what is the >> method to that particular madness will be successful if he's going to tweet in real time. having sat on that house floor during his state of the union. when i appreciate it was a short speech that said they're gonna, they're not i don't think most members are going to be looking at donald trump. trump twitter feed while joe biden is speaking, it won't work in real time. i don't think you won't. maybe it'll play out out in any american public. but on the house floor where all the actions happening on state of the union. i don't think it'll be really that much noticed. >> well, but remember that for this state of the union, part of this strategy is also a social media strategy. the white house has planned the campaign to take different
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pieces of content or you take different parts of the story of some of the folks in the gallery and you cut that up in you're pushing that out. so it'll be interesting to see are people going to follow that or are they going to what rises and falls in? there's a popularity on social media and then say the other method to the madness, as always with donald trump is he wants more attention, more tensions. so that's probably step trying to step on the message. >> response. >> you're president biden should probably talked to some high school teachers about what it's like i teach the class and everyone's looking down like that because i bet you, it's going to happen you think they're not going to pay attention to their phones. they're looking down at the high school teachers, right now, reading the speech used to give us the speech, >> he knew where to boo, right? yeah. well, as a viewer watching that, >> that's always such an odd thing. always made me think to myself, gosh, just congress need to actually be told when to applaud or blue on certain issues. and we don't answer that. that's what torkel you've got what down your phone. >> you go everyone parents that are supposed to be like yeah. >> unity >> and jack in the box
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>> i get that. thank you so much. if karen and charlie thank you. now, here's somebody who will be at the address tomorrow. next, i'll talk to the congresswoman who has been sharing her family's story and fighting to preserve ivf access >> erin burnett front tomorrow at seven on cnn >> we're building a better postal service. all parts working in sync to move good business poleward with a streamlined shipping network and new high-speed processing and delivery centers for more value more of a liability. and more on-time deliveries. the united states postal service is built for how you business and how you business is with simple, affordable and reliable shipping usps, ground advantage,
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>> demand for energy is growing. and so as the need for american oil and natural gas, it's time to turn the lights america's resources are abundant. our nation is a global leader in reducing emissions and innovators in delivering more energy sources to secure for our future. nine in ten americans agree, american oil and natural gas are vital to our account >> lights we deserve a real king because if he cannot protect his own family, how is he supposed to protect us >> one man and the lost kingdom. now streaming exclusively on max >> breaking news tonight, alabama governor kay ivey or republican signing a bill intended to protect ivf following weeks of backlash prompted by a controversial court ruling that embryos are considered children. the bill says, no action suit or
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criminal prosecution shall be brought or maintained against any individual or entity providing goods or services related to ivf, except for an act or omission that is both intentional and not arising or related to ivf services. i want to bring in democratic congresswoman sydney can let her dove of california, who was the co-sponsor of the women's health protection act, which would restore abortion protections nationwide. laying begin right there. congresswoman, because you have been outspoken with alabama in terms of their supreme court's decision to make that finding. does this new decision by the alabama governor changed your mind? >> absolutely >> not. in my opinion. it's a fake out there gaslighting the american people we know that when trump decided to appoint activist evangelical extreme judges to the bench, it was with the intent to overturn roe v. wade. they did it with dobbs. this is part of their
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long-term strategy and of course, the next thing would have a ruling like what we saw in alabama take place clarence thomas said, we're coming after contraception and everything else. so no, for them to then say, oh, my goodness, we actually do support ivf treatment. let's put this bill that actually says nothing about the legal definition of an embryo. so what doesn't protect that? and when you are a woman going to fertility treatments, you now, especially after this ruling, you're going to have to have some really clear definitions about what constitutes an embryo and what you can do and what your dr. there can do with you. >> that's >> interesting point to think about what the bill does not say is do you think it may be trying to placate those who saw this as in their minds, not an inevitable extension of the dobbs ruling. i mean, people have what mifepristone they thought about, obviously abortion, ivf people, i think believe was going to be a sacred space. but you knew it
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wasn't? >> no. i mean, this they open the doors with the dobbs decision and so now you have republicans who are afraid of the millions of men and women who are saying women have a right to have autonomy over their bodies and make decisions about their abortion care, their reproductive health care. so let's do something, but let's do something that's fake. i mean, we even have republicans in congress wanting nonbinding resolutions on ivf treatment so lip service to say, the very least, let me ask you though, this is very personal for you indeed, and this ruling prompted you to come forward with >> your own personal story of your ivf journey. i wonder who would share it with us a little bit about that. and why now do you feel comfortable talking about it? >> well, you know, i hadn't really planned on talking about this at all. i didn't think it would resonate or that people would care. but when i was younger and married, i finally decided that i was financially secure enough to try to have a child, but my body had other
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designs and so i tried and tried and eventually went to ivf treatment and i can tell you that it is financially, psychologically, physically, emotionally exhausting and draining. and you're going to your dr. you're asking that person to give you as many options as possible and ultimately, you know, i had to make some decisions because of the cost and the wear and tear on my body. now, i'm grateful that my story ended with me being the stepmother to three children. my journey didn't end with me becoming a bio parent. and every woman has a different journey to motherhood. the goal is to allow her to have as many options on the table as possible. and the ruling now complicates that. >> do you know how i wonder if you just you ever think about the poignancy of somebody in congress having that statement be made, having that story out there, what comfort, what protection, what validation,
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what you said must be like well, i know after i shared, i did reveal that i've never shared this publicly before and i had a lot of folks come up to >> me thanking me for sharing and then asking me if i would share it with friends that they knew when other people who needed to hear it so i was actually taken aback by the response that i was getting. >> we've been hearing a lot, especially from women who have talked about ivf, but also about what's going on in places like texas and beyond where there are restrictions, reproductive rights and kate cox, who is the texas mother, you may recall mother of two who had to leave her state to get an abortion to end a life-threatening pregnancy. our own dana bash spoke to her today and about how she's been feeling about all of these different movements and conversations and the way it's gotten. listen to what she had to say if we survive the pregnancy and we survived with birth how long best-case scenario does she think we
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could have with her? and she said the longest would be a week she would be placed directly on to hospice. there was no treatment that could be done and i didn't want her to suffer would want to life measured and minutes or hours, or days with medical machinery for us. and the risks as well. we wanted to be able to have a baby if we wanted a sibling for our children as well >> she'll be the gas or dr. jill biden that tomorrow, say the union. what is your reaction to hearing that, especially given that there has been a longstanding stereotype and narrative about who is seeking abortions and the fact that she is a mother of two disrupts that well, i think all of these rulings are really designed to reframe who they think republicans, who they think >> should be able to birth and
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should be able to parent it's a heartbreaking story for me because women like her are going to states like mine, california, where you can have access to abortion, but our states are being compromised because all of the pressure from folks who are coming to us from out-of-state and also trying to work with folks who are from california. and we know that even though california offers abortion care, we don't have the same kind of care for everyone. black and brown women have additional challenge on just when it comes to giving birth. her story makes me think of a story i heard from advocates, a 20 year old black woman pregnant, came in for a checkup. her heart was failing her because of her pregnancy and she had to make the decision to have an abortion so that she could live and get her heart fixed so that she could have a child again and she was compromised because she was in a state that restricted her access to abortion. she's 20 years old so is there a
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legislative component that you're advocating for to fix this? >> well, >> obviously the women's health protection act is about codifying abortion care. there's the access to building a family act, which i'm a co-sponsor on, which would codify codify ivf treatment, and then it's calling out the hypocrisy and the cowardice of the republicans, 184 of whom have signed onto a bill that essentially protects fetal personhood. and that is the antithesis to the conversations that we're having right now in the conversations that are happening in kitchens across this country congresswoman, i'm so happy that you came on tonight. thank you for joining me. thank you. appreciate it. >> well, there's news on the legal front, the armorer involved in the fatal shooting on the rust film set, guilty of involuntary manslaughter. what does it mean possibly for alec ball? wind upcoming trial? next
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home and abroad can he make the case for four more years in the white house joint cnn for special live coverage of the state of the union address tomorrow at eight times cnn >> the verdict is anand, it's guilty for involuntary manslaughter in the trial of the armorer on the set of the allocable baldwin movie rust. hannah gutierrez, reed was found guilty for her role and the accidental shooting that killed the movie cinematographer halyna hutchins on set in 2021. however, the jury found her not guilty of another charge, evidence tampering. the prosecutors argued that she repeatedly violated safety protocol onset and was negligent when her defense attorneys say that they do plan to appeal the verdict as well, actor, producer alec baldwin, who was pointing the gun at hutchins when it fired, is also facing charges and a trial down the road. show me now, criminal defense lawyer
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and managing partner at harden and pinckney, brandi, hard good. along with the agile firearm safety expert steve wolf. i'm glad to have you both here, bradley, and begin with you here, because the jury took just under three hours to reach this verdict. we the court of public opinion, but you arguing on behalf of the defense in this there were jury notes as well. did you think this would end differently? >> i did. i really thought there was reasonable doubt in the case. and even though obviously the jury decided that she was guilty, i think that the defense had a good job of establishing reasonable doubt. it just takes one doubt for you to find somebody not guilty. and i think that that ultimately there was reasonable doubt drew it looks like they decided otherwise, but i heard the closing arguments. i think the defense did a great job and i did think ultimately it would turn out differently. >> it came down to her having one job. it seemed one job and so the jury was sort of saying, look, i mean, even if live rounds got onto the set okay. that's one issue, but they just should have never made it into the gun. and i still just
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think, you know, at the end of the day, i feel like she was a scapegoat. i think that they put the blame at her feet she's obviously not the person who fired the weapon, but at the end of the de there's sort of saying the bullet should have never gotten into the gun. and then ultimately that shade of events wouldn't have happened. and i think it's unfortunate for her that she was found guilty >> we're also here, steve is with us as well, our affiliate, koat actually interviewed one of the jurors. and here is what he said convinced the jury that she was guilty. listen to this, steve pretty much very unsafe conditions and it was obvious it was a lot of the safety issues but she could have paused work. stop cleared it all up, and you just never did see you're a prop expert. you've got a replica. he doesn't have the gun that was actually used. the prosecution said that she was responsible for six live rounds being onset. one ultimately killing halyna hutchins so break this
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down for us if you can. what went wrong here >> okay. well, it's actually pretty simple. this is a gun and therefore, it is what? loaded, because all guns are always loaded. so just the way people in court have a presumption of innocence with guns, there's a presumption that they're loaded until proven otherwise. so on a gun like this, you would simply take the gun like that you'd open this port here. it's loading port. >> and then >> you rotate that. if you see anything in there that means that there's something in there and you take it out. so you do you check all six cylinders? and you verify their empty. and then once you know that they're empty, then you put what you want into them. if you want to kill somebody, you use a live round. it looks like this. we're should tin cans or whatever it is. but if you want to project a look them out, you have to have a primer, a casing
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gunpowder inside, and a bullet on the end. if you just want noise, you would use a blank and blank looks like this. it's got powder inside but it just has a piece of wadding. so that's just going to make noise. and if you want the appearance that there are live rounds in there without them being actual live rounds. then you use something that looks like this. let's call the dummy round and so all that you have to do to master this job is to know the difference between the dummy round, which has these holes drilled in it, and makes noise when you shake it. and live ammo. and so i would put it to you that pretty much any monkey could tell you the difference between these two rounds. so the job wasn't that hard. it's just that she didn't do it we'll see. >> you told me the beginning those rounds. you're looking at the end of it at one point in
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time, but know what's inside of it. so assume, as you said, that presumption is that the gun is actually loaded what would distinguish one round from the other by looking at it while it's actually inside, while a bullet is inside of one of those chambers well, it's inside. >> you could look at the back. >> so >> even when the cylinder is loaded with all the rounds, if you look at the back of a live round, you'll see a primer right there, which is un-dimpled if, you were to look at the back of a dummy round, first of all, you could see from the side, right, that that's got holes drilled right through it. but then when you look at the back of that you'll see that it's dimpled. meaning that this primer has already been fired and rendered inert so if you look at the back and you see it intact, primer this should be your first clue that there's something in the gun that shouldn't be there now, in the case of blanks, they'll also have an intact primer but it's really your job as the armor to make sure no one gets hurt and if somewhere along the way you can make a movie with
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firearms involved, that's great too. but job one is to keep people safe in the way you do that is by assuming that there's live ammo in the gun, assuming that the gun isn't working condition. and then making sure that there's nothing in it that shouldn't be in there before you hand it to anyone this is where the person who receives it also needs to do the same thing, right? if there's a gun in your hand and something goes wrong? you have responsibility for that. >> save all. thank you for that breakdown. that was really important speaking out of somebody else was handed to me, go back to brandy harden here brandi, when you look at this, look ahead for me to the alec baldwin trial, because that's who was handed the gun and he is going to stand trial apparently, for actions related to the firing. >> i do >> wonder if they're going to dismiss the charges really how it looks like they are not. and i think it's gonna be quite problematic for mr. baldwin. i think, you know, now that
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hannah gutierrez reed has been found guilty. they're going to say you are responsible for the security if she's negligent, you were negligent? >> that might be the case. i wonder if in fact this will actually go to trial or this you mentioned her being a scapegoat potentially, how that will impact him down the line as well. brandy hardened, deceitful. thank you both so much. next, there is new drama in the georgia case against donald trump as one of the defense lawyer is trying to disqualify fani willis testifies before for a georgia senate committee. >> and what >> lewis is firing back >> they can continue on with their games and i'm putting you to do the work of the people to be a headliner lawrence vegas >> that's what i want to do. >> they had the biggest entertainers in america >> vegas is always marketed itself on its naughtiness. >> and the only way you find i know what you can do is if you do on anywhere else in the
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georgia state capitol in atlanta. this is cnn >> tonight. the drama is heating up in the bid to remove district attorney fani willis, georgia election subversion case your republican led georgia state senate panel subpoenaed ashleigh merchant, attorney for one of donald trump's co-defendants she testified about the affair between willis and special prosecutor nathan wade and willis to wade was tapped by willis, as you know, to lead the case against the former president merchant told the committee she heard about the affair at last summer from terrence bradley wade's former law partner, and onetime divorce lawyer nathan was still married and he mr. bradley was upset because of what happened in the divorce. he was upset because they were still married the waves were still married and he essentially just left her after meeting ms willis and dropping the kids off at college. and we talked about it. i mean, ms wade had ben a stay-at-home mom for they'd been married almost 30 years. and literally it was right after they dropped their their youngest off at college that he said move out willis, and wade
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at both acknowledged relationship, but deny any wrongdoing. the judge has promised to issue a ruling any day now, i want to bring in cnn legal analyst, michael moore. thank you for joining us. this is a state senate committee. they don't have any power does qualify or sanction willis. so what's the point of doing this? >> yeah, i'm glad to be with you tonight. they really don't have much power except to cause problems. and so right now what you see it as just a legislative committee that's been put together. there's been sort of an attack on prosecutors in the state for the last couple of years is they've tried to pass roe prosecutor bills that type of thing. but this committee now has been pulled together to look into this allegation that's been made against ms willis. so while they can't disqualify her, they can basically conduct a parallel proceeding, if you will, or something going on at the same time so that it just gets it's more of the sort of salacious
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trash out into the media >> she is pushing back pushing back as she did in the courtroom monday, that she made that now infamous appearance. let me just play for you what she has to say. >> i think it's all just a political quest. i think that people are angry because i'm going to do the right thing and i'm going to stand up for justice. this no matter who is the person that may have done wrong in fulton county. and so they can continue on with their games. and i'm told continue to do the work of the people >> i mean, >> this could take months this investigation and we don't get have the ruling, although the judge said within two weeks about whether she'd be disqualified or not. we haven't actually gone to the heart of the matter though. the facts as alleged in the indictments, but as all of this hurting the case against trump and his co-defendants it's not something that's going to cause a case to be dismissed, but i think what's happened as you've seen, this has become such a distraction that it has >> hurt what i would call those. the pr of the case. and
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so a prosecutor's job is, you know, is to protect the integrity of investigation, the integrity of the case. and if you get a conviction to protect that conviction on appeal he'll what this is not as cast a shadow over the case so that we're not talking about the facts of the case. we're not talking about the things that the grand jury found. instead, we're talking about we're talking about these other details. the problem that they may have and they'd be willis and mr. wade is if in fact there's other evidence out there you're back continue in this saga. they've now placed themselves potentially in some other jeopardy, but i've sworn statements, given sworn testimony, and that type of thing and as you know, in all oftentimes, sometimes the worst problem is an attempt to cover things up. and that may be what we find out here. that's one problem. senate committee could pose, and that is if they continue to talk to witnesses that they found new witnesses, if they find new data, we've already seen the cell phone data that has come out at the seems to refute some of the sworn testimony that could be a
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problem. and again, it doesn't mean she's disqualified, but it doesn't help the case anymore. >> well, we'll see if the damage for the jury pool is dana. remember where she's elected and the people of fulton county have asked for her to be in that position. we will see whether all of this adds to the notion of whether the appearance of an issue would be enough for this judge to rule to disqualify michael moore. thank you so much. >> always good to be with you. thank you. >> thank you. >> up next, the national guard being deployed to new york city's subway. why? to combat arise? prime and in california, a new ballot measure that's tough on crime, and it shows some democrats maybe making a political pivot president biden's last state of the union before the 2024 >> election, with challenges at home and abroad, can he make the case for four more? here's the white house. join cnn for
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cnn's veronica miracle on this san jose street. >> it's no secret among neighbors >> that more lean hardens teen daughter was killed by fentanyl poisoning, complications of combined fentanyl sertraline, khloie go to percocet from a dealer on snapchat hardin says, but the pill was laced with fentanyl had to make the toughest decision of my life and that was to take her off. life support lacks california criminal policies. she believes are part of the reason chloe died. >> they're coming in to the court through the court system, getting a slap on the getting sent home, but a new proposal called the homelessness, drug addiction, and theft reduction act is giving harden hope it would overturn parts of the controversial proposition 47 which was approved by california voters ten years ago to reduce overcrowding and jails by reducing punishments for some crimes. it turned most drug possession and offenses from felonies to misdemeanors
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this new proposal would create harsher penalties for people who deal fentanyl and other hard drugs another big component of the proposed law targeting chronic and repeated retail theft currently under prop 47, if someone steals less than $950 in merchandise in most cases, there'll be charged with a misdemeanor it's why some argue retail theft has skyrocketed in recent years. things got so bad this san francisco walgreens resorted to pad locking, ice cream the entire row is basically locked up. >> at one point, walgreens said, this >> store had the highest theft rate of any of their stores, and the entire country under the new proposal, repeat offenders could be charged with a felony. and while this proposal has garnered predictable support from big retailers and republicans across the state with dozens of lawmakers and district attorneys signing on and support. >> it >> has another unlikely
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champion you are breaking from the party on this issue. >> i don't see this as a partisan issue. this is about keeping people safe in francisco mayor london breed is one of just three democratic mayors the proposal. it comes as she faces a tough reelection campaign and a city full of voters frustrated with crime and blight, they want us to hold people accountable, especially people who are violent criminals, accountable. they want to make sure that their communities aren't destroyed. do you think that maybe the rest of the country is going to see this and think maybe liberal policies don't entirely work i don't think it's fair to say that liberal policies don't work. we're not abandoning san francisco values. of second chances and compassion and support and oh, those things will continue in addition to the accountability for breed and many others, this is a nuanced issue. >> robbie papa tan >> ran spent ten years behind bars. most of his time in state prison for attempted robbery
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and attempted murder. >> sometimes i can't believe that's even me. >> tram believes fixing the root of the problem is the only way hey, to freedom for mental health issues of poverty, right? of all of these different issues that we don't necessarily want to address. it's easier to be like, oh, they have a criminal problem. >> the problem may have different solutions and could be in the hands of california voters. again, this fall veronica miracle, cnn, san francisco >> friday, give me real cole. thank you so much and thank all of you for watching. our coverage continues. >> what happened the golden boy of new jersey, i engaged in an affair with another man. >> did you want to be outed? united >> states of scandal with jake tapper? >> i'll go there, get a therapist they're having an interview with jake tapper, new episodes next sunday at nine on
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