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tv   CNN Newsroom Live  CNN  March 10, 2024 12:00am-1:00am PST

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absolutely free text dra w to 369369. today, >> hi, melanie zanona on capitol hill >> and this is cnn welcome to
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all you watching us here in the united >> states, canada, and around the world. i'm kim brunhuber. this is cnn newsroom. president biden is calling on israel to consider other ways to deal with hamas as conditions in gaza grow more dire. israel is scaling up its military action in lebanon with deadly strikes. will look at what israel's defense forces say they are targeting. plus both us presidential front runners campaigned in georgia today, laying out their swing-state it's strategies as they worked to turn undecided voters heads >> live from atlanta. >> this is cnn and then newsroom with kim brunhuber >> resin biden is still hoping to beat the clock and reach a ceasefire deal in gaza before ramadan diplomats are becoming skeptical, it can be done by the start of the muslim holiday to night, which was their goal. but an interview released on
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saturday biden said an agreement is still possible areas >> i want to see a ceasefire and i'm starting with a major major exchange of prisoners for a six-week period. we're going into ramadan. it should be nothing happening. and we should build off that ceasefire. i'm going to see i director in that region right this minute still talking about i think it's always possible. i never give up on that. >> but as biden talk, cease-fire, israel is making new military moves, at least 13 people were killed in an airstrike in central gaza on saturday, according to palestinian health officials, while israel says it also hit a hamas its military asset in the town of rafah, but a palestinian news agency says the target was a residential building. were a number of civilians were wounded israel says all civilians were evacuated before the strike. meanwhile, the us and jordan have conducted new airdrops of aid as un officials warn of a looming famine in gaza, the two
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countries please drop tens of thousands of meals and other aid on saturday, some humanitarian workers dismissed those drops as a band-aid measure, saying they're degrading and ineffective. gaza's health ministry says two more people died of malnutrition and dehydration on saturday, bringing the total to 25 for more nada. bashir joins us from cyprus, not more efforts to get aid into the region while the death toll from famine grows, how quickly might we actually see more aid? >> we'll of course. we have seen the inauguration of this new maritime corridor, which is another vital life failing getting aid into the gaza strip. we have of course, seeing those land crossings regardless, land boardings, those have been difficult. of course, you've seen various obstructions and that has caused a delay in the amount of aid trucks that can get it. and we have as you mentioned, kim seen airdropped as well being carried out by a number of nations, including the united states. the hope is that this new maritime corridor will
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allow for a significant uptick in the amount of humanitarian supplies and crucially, food and water getting into the gaza strip. now of course, this maritime corridor has now been announced. these ships would be departing from here in cyprus, heading towards gosars the coast of course we know that this has been endorsed by the united states viewers military has been directed to establish a temporary pier on gaza's coasted facilitates. the delivery of but aid and humanitarian supplies. and of course, we've heard from us officials over the last few hours saying that the first batch of equipment needed to construct this pier is now on its way to the middle east certainly is a process that is underway. the question is how quickly this will be established, how quickly these ships can actually get to the gaza strip. and of course, how quickly? that aid can get to those in need. now, as we understand it, according to european union officials, there was an expectation that those ships would be able to depart some point this weekend. it's unclear whether they still will be able to depart this weekend
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or whether perhaps we might see more delays. but of course this is a significant development, although there will be significant logistical challenges ahead of course. >> yeah, that's right. and now. >> as we played there, president biden still hopeful of a ceasefire. what's the latest there? >> sent, me as a shift in june, we did hear from biden just a day ago saying that situation was tough and perhaps hopes for a ceasefire were fading. slightly more positive tone there from president biden. we know that the cia director is in the region. what we have seen over the last few weeks as this sort of shuttle diplomacy, we've seen these delegations from hamas, from regional leaders as well as of course israel traveling back and forth between cairo where these talks have primarily been held, there has been a lot of questions around why these talks are stalling as we understand it. of course israel has continued to push for all hostages to be released before the beginning of ramadan. clearly that has not happened and activities to
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be the primary focus according to israeli authorities, we have heard from us officials who have accused hamas is doing the primary reason as to why these ceasefire at deals have not reached any sort of formal agreement, just didn't of course, important to remember that this isn't any sort of talks around a lasting ceasefire just yet, but rather a temporary truce, a pause in fighting in looking at about six weeks which would allow for further that dramatic discussions in the hopes of establishing a long lasting ceasefire. that of course we are still hearing but the area officials talking back and forth between other militaries. but of course no clear conclusions at this stage, no clear indication that we aren't seeing any sort of breakthroughs. and of course time is very quickly running out. we've heard from the israeli military warning that if there isn't any sorts of as cease-fire, if we don't see those hostages released before the beginning of ramadan, and they could launch a ground incursion into the southern city of rafah and that is of course a huge point of concern and fear. some 1.3 million
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palestinians currently displaced in the southern city in these cramped conditions. of course, we've heard those warnings from the un that if indeed there is a ground incursion in rafah had and we could see untold bloodshed on the ground. and that is in addition to the looming famine in gaza is now facing >> i appreciate those updates. nada bashir in cyprus. thanks so much. israel has conducted new strikes in southern lebanon according to lebanon's state-run news agency, it says israeli war planes fired two missiles saturday killing five people and leaving nine others wounded. the agency says one home was destroyed in the strike, while dozens more were damaged. the casualties reported included a couple in the two children israel's military says it's still checking reports about the incident us and coalition forces shot down at least 28 houthi drones around the red sea on saturday, us defense officials also say there were no reports of any commercial ships being damaged during the airstrike. the wave of drones comes as allied forces continue
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to hit the road i will group in yemen, houthis started targeting ships in the red sea shortly after the israel hamas conflict began. there were clashes between police and protesters in israel on saturday thousands gathered across the nation demanding removal of israeli prime minister benjamin netanyahu. and that a general election be held police in tel aviv shot water cannon to disperse protesters. law enforcement says demonstrators cross fences through smoke grenades and a gas grenade. least say 16 protesters were arrested another set of nominating contests in the race for the white house is now just two days away on saturday, us president joe biden and republican presidential candidate donald trump held dueling rallies here in georgia. a key battleground state. it's one of a handful of
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states set to hold primaries on tuesday both men are ramping up attacks on each other as it becomes clear, they will face a rematch this year. biden slammed trump for hosting hungary's authoritarian prime minister on friday. i'll trump criticize the president's state of the union address, calling it quote, partisan, an angle three cnn's steve contorno was at trump's rally. but first we go to cnn's priscilla alvarez, who's traveling with the president >> president biden delivered a fiery speech here in atlanta, georgia on saturday. a crucial state for him to clinch that victory in november of 2024? where it's one of the campaign is aware of in a state that he only narrowly won here in 2020. and the president tried to shore up his supporters here in the state by ticking through some of his domestic accomplishments, including on reproductive rights, lowering healthcare costs, student loan, debt relief, and making inroads with the economy. but he also tried to draw stark contrast from former president donald trump, who himself was holding a rally only 60 miles up the
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road from here, president taking direct aim at him and who he was keeping company plenty with. >> no, you're the reason why we're going to win that's not hyperbole. you are the reason we're going to win. >> donald trump >> has a different constituency here's a guy is kicking off his general election campaign in the road up with marjorie taylor greene can tell you a lot about a person who keeps company with they're only minutes into the speech, the president was interrupted by a protest or calling him genocide. joe was the latest sign of the president. still needs to make inroads with some parts to his coalition as a fractures over the course of this israel-hamas war. >> but >> even when that occurred, people in the crowd still chanted four more years at democratic strategy i just say that voter outreach is going to be key in a state like georgia. and the president making that clear today when talking to supporters priscilla alvarez, cnn, travel leveling with the president former president donald trump held a rally
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saturday in rome, georgia. his first is becoming presumptive republican presidential nominee. he wasted little time in his remarks going after joe biden. in fact, he also made fun biden delivery of his speech at the state of the union tonight to go, we all heard cookie joe's angry, dark, hate-filled rant of a state of the union address wasn't it didn't it bring us together emerging border, bring the country together. >> joe biden should not be shouting angrily at america. america should be shouting angrily at joe biden. a major focus of trump's remarks was on the situation at the us southern border and ahead of his remarks, he met with the family of laken riley. that is the 22 year-old nursing student who was killed in georgia, allegedly by an undocumented good man. trump also criticized president biden for saying that he shouldn't have used the word illegal to describe that individual. >> and i say he was an illegal alien. he was an illegal immigrant. he was an illegal
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migrant. and he shouldn't have been in our country and he never would have been under the trump policy. biden, should be apologizing for apologizing to this killer. >> trump's visit. this georgia is the first of many expected in the coming months once the peach state is gonna be one of the top battlegrounds in the 2024 election. it's one trump lost by less than 12,000 votes four years ago. and his team knows is going to be close to this goal round steve contorno, rome, georgia, cnn, >> whole immigration is shaping up to be a large part of the 2024 election race. and you just heard donald trump say that he has no qualms over president biden referring to laken riley's alleged killer as an illegal immigrants, but too many, it's not that simple. now, earlier i spoke with journalists sandra sanchez about that term. here she is >> migrant advocates say there's no such thing as an illegal immigrant. there's illegal immigration. there is
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the act of illegally crossing, but anyone has a right to come to the united states and tried to claim asylum. so to put those words together, this is something that really is frowned upon when you're at the border you know, clearly he is. i think posturing more to a conservative base, recognizing that immigration is such an important issue. and that this is the way he is going to get boats. >> but >> several organizations throughout the country, throughout the world are just enraged at the fact that he didn't talk about dreamers. he didn't talk about a pathway for citizenship for the dreamer population and so many other issues regarding humanitarian parole and those who are seeking asylum, it was more all about stopping them a militaristically kind of approach. and frankly, i just don't see where 4,600 added asylum officers is going to get
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the 3.2 million he in backlog immigration cases down to six months from the five to seven years that it currently takes, which he says it will. i think what we need to do is get back to the push and pull factors that cause people to come here. and i think that's what everyone, local leaders are saying. look tonight they met with two state senators and dogu county judge and state senator. one should we know how says on the border security committee he wasn't even invited to biden's visit. and he said, we've got to stop people from coming. it's just it's an untenable situation. we can't handle everyone coming across in by the thousands and something has to be done. congress has to act. it can't the shoulder can't be put on border communities. and really the american public. we're all here. put to choose how we feel about what we just
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heard. well, they're saying it's time for congress to really make some laws that force people to apply for asylum from their home countries not to get this far to the border, to have lottery systems where you can have certain number of people who can come i'm in there has to be actively active measures to aid people to lawfully come >> and you can watch my full interview with senator sanchez in the next hour >> us national >> guard troops are now patrolling that new york city subways coming up. why some of you sorry about that. that ahead, plus, france becomes the first country in the world to secure abortion rights in its constitution up more on the historic move when we come back please stay with us >> there's something going around. the glory good thing gertrude found delsam how,
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no reports of injuries and no ordinance or military supplies were involved. the royal navy says the 65,000 ton warship can hold up to 40 aircraft an update now, on those ten cold barges in kentucky, which broke away from the vessel towing them in the ohio river. coast guard officials say efforts are underway to recover any remaining barges doesn't pushed them out of the channel. two of them sank authority, say the vessels disconnected from their towing vessel after exiting a salvage operations will begin once equipment arrives on the scene and investigation is still ongoing into what caused the barges to break away. there are preliminary report into the deadly condo collapse in surfside, florida is in but at leaves many questions unanswered. it contains about two dozen theories of what caused the catastrophic failure that killed 98 people in 2021. although the condo was north of miami, many residents were from different parts the world. the daughter of one victim maths, if there were so many signs, the building was unstable, why
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wasn't it evacuated before it collapsed and killed her mother and so many others? the towers were completed in 1981. the report says, parts of the design were sub code even back then, including steel reinforcement issues in the strength of concrete in columns and flores. a final report is expected next year. prince harry and his wife, meghan, made a surprise visit to evolve the texas side of the the second worst school shooting in us history the duke and duchess of sussex met with the family of irma garcia, teacher who was killed in the 2022 massacre. garcia's nephew says harry and meghan spoke with irma's children about their hopes for the future family members say the royals have kept in contact with them since the shooting in an october of 2022, their charitable foundation contributed to a new playground for uvalde is children the governor of new york is facing a backlash for sending national guard troops into new york
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city. subway is to help tackle crime. and the critics aren't just politicians or a subway riders, even some in the new york police department are blasting the move with the department's patrol chief saying on social media, go to our transit system is not war zone. polo sandoval has the story >> this is the first weekend for these new security measures to be in place after new york governor kathy hochul made that announcement of approximately 1,000 more personnel added to the subway system here to try to really reassure the passengers that use the nation's largest transportation system here in puerto point out, though that the governor make it very clear they will have a very principled, very main objective here in terms of what we can expect, which will be to assist with those random searches, things like luggage, and also parses its support to point out that these are actions that we've seen before from the nypd in the past. so this will essentially supplements those efforts hertz in the past, this after recent very highly
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publicized incidents that have taken place on the new york city subway system, though it's important to point out that since in new york city mayor eric adams increase the number of nypd personnel up patrolling the mta system. there has been a decrease in the number of some of those violent incidents. however, new york city officials here, again, mainly governor kathy hochul here hoping to reassure some of those passengers. again, this was the addition of roughly 750 personnel with the national guard in addition to about 250 state police and also mta police. here's how some of the folks who use this system every day feel about these new changes >> i think it's can be sometimes hard to like process the statistics. when you hear about really scary profile incidents. so some of it is certainly an emotional reaction >> just >> like the comfort that i get from the present the national guard's people, it's probably somewhat emotional but it helps
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me go about my life. so i appreciate it, but never had a problem on the subway system the modal now on railroad, i think everybody that works in this system does a great job. this is new york city. stuff has been happening for as long as i can remember >> and of course no changes come without criticism. there is some of those critics who say that there is no evidence that indicates that some of these random bag searches could actually serve to prevent some of these random attacks that we've seen in the past. nonetheless, governor kathy hochul maintains that one of the main priorities is to make sure that the people he uses system i'm every day you'll say for doing so. polo sandoval, cnn, new york >> russia is preparing for its presidential election later this week, but it's clear that there's only one real candidate, vladimir putin taking a deep dive into his propaganda machine just ahead, please stay with what happened to the golden bowl plenty of new jersey. >> i engaged in an affair with another man. >> did you want to be outed?
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retirement and decisions you can make >> physicians, mutual physicians, mutual >> welcome back to all you watching us here in the united states, canada, and around the world. i'm kim brunhuber. this is cnn newsroom early voting is underway across parts of russia ahead of the presidential election this week, that includes occupied areas of ukraine where russian forces have taken control. >> now it would be >> a big surprise of president vladimir putin doesn't win this vote, given most opponents have been barred, locked up, or worse, putin is expected to hold power for years after signing a new law in 2021, allowing him to run for two more terms cnn's clare sebastian takes a closer look at the kremlin's propaganda machine now working in overtime to push a perfect image of putin in a time of war flying, into a fifth term the war of
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putin's nuclear capable strategic bomber. almost as loud as the propaganda machine propelling him forward >> why do you need a porsche know i know i sound let's talk >> the new for squish, patricia spicy was covered with ashraf. >> as we get correct? >> the play. and the most prominent of those is the constant scapegoating or even outright trolling of the us but actually is demand say joe biden won popular talk show played this split-screen or loop for putin boarding his
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bomber. biden, tripping up the steps of air force one fair use reports on the war in ukraine regularly showing off the wreckage of western weapons there's even a discarded styling cantona was boris akunin one of russia's most popular modern authors says the west needs to take note of this >> putin benefits from this picture of the outside world as something hostile. so that people would unite around him when the war started. a lot of russians start emigrated. then they met with hostility. a lot of them had to return and every single case has been used by putin's propaganda to strengthen this idea that we are together we are besieged camp. >> alexei navalny knew how to get around putin's propaganda machine and its longstanding policy of ignoring him what do
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you want to put a lot from this cramped moscow headquarters, which i visited in 2017, he and his colleagues beam to their message to millions of russians by a youtube. >> and >> yet his death was something state media temporarily found itself unable to ignore first, discrediting his legacy on bowl nazis, then blaming the west >> but your school it finally turning on his widow, yulia spot really, no reason currently have a pisces to rebut bucha vote on the hadoop >> virtually mia it guy that she is the watch yourself resist. yes >> a backseat to a much blunter
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instruments of control outright repression about by killing alexey navalny >> they lost the last chance of trying to pretend that they were legal >> dissent >> law abiding intimidation is now, is now going to be the main instrument. >> that's the cnn, london kremlin has called accusations that russian authorities were behind navalny's death, unfounded the distance spokeswoman says, the official cause of death on his medical report seen by his mother was natural causes pakistan's former prime minister or president, asif ali zardari was elected on saturday for a second term in office. he lost her from 2008 to 2013, start already got more than twice as many votes from the country's electoral colleges is
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competitor and won support from the ruling coalition. zardari is the husband of the late prime minister benazir bhutto, who was assassinated in 2007 portuguese voters are heading to polls today to elect a new parliament two years ahead of schedule. now you're looking at live pictures of polling stations in lisbon. polls opened at the top of the hour the election comes after a sweeping corruption probe led to the fall of prime minister antonio cost us government on the balance, he drove nuno santos, secretary general of the socialist party. he's looking to expand upon portugal's current center-left socialist platform. luis montenegro is the president of the central right social democratic party and leader of a broad, conservative coalition. and a third contender is under a ventura from portugal's radical right-wing checkup party now sunday's election comes as portugal prepares to observe 50 years since the fall of a fascist dictatorship. >> voters in
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>> ireland have rejected government attempts to modernize what's called sexist language in the country's constitution. ireland's public broadcaster, reports of proposals to add durable relationships other than marriage to the law lost by a two-to-one margin. a second proposals were replaced, references to women his duties in the home fell by a three-to-one margin the prime minister have ended, voters have given his government to wallop's for some people, it was the fact that they wanted the concept of motherhood to remain in >> the constitution and be a distinct sting others didn't like the word strife and felt that it didn't go far enough. and then there are others who felt that it shouldn't be just about family care that should have been about people with disabilities it's too so when you lose a referendum, this badly by just margin there are many reasons as to why is defeated >> the votes on friday were timed to coincide with international women's day.
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despite its strongly catholic history, ireland has liberalized divorce laws and legalized same-sex marriage and smears on friday, france become, became the first nation in the world to explicitly enshrine abortion rights into its constitution. french president in mandarin back haul, said he was like to see it in the european union's human rights charter as well. cnn's melissa bell is in paris with a closer look at the historic move >> south sandals >> pool adopts >> you said some ketuvim >> it was an overwhelming sorry to be a french lawmakers gathered in versailles who voted in favor of changing france's constitution in central paris women are celebrated. the fact that their freedom to terminate a pregnancy would now be beyond just the women of political change >> a funding have villa the this will enshrine the freedom
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of women to choose abortion and to be a solemn guarantee that nothing will ever limit or abolish this, right, >> because it will have become irreversible >> back in 2022, the streets of paris two had heard the cry that became so familiar as the us supreme court prepared to reverse roe versus wade >> of excusive by solves we use it as union with what happened in the us. >> there was a strong reaction in france by politicians are probably several laws are proposed and the feminists came to see us here at family planning to tell us how worried she was about the right to abortion. a righteous hard one in france as it was elsewhere. >> the procedure only legal allies in 1975 after a battle led by the lawmaker and then health minister simone veil, a woman speaking to a parliament of men so that's what this is an injustice that must be stopped nearly 50 years on. it is a different generation of women celebrating the fact that
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france is now going a step further. the charges, baobab heavy says her own experience with abortion at 17 was so traumatic that wasn't song that you tried many years later to deal with it. >> what difference do you think it'll make to have it inscribed in the constitution, having the right to do abortion cannot be like a condition of politics. you know, it has to be something we have no discussion >> recent polls suggests that over 80% of the french population supports safeguarding abortion rights if you put something in the constitution, it automatically change peoples minds. i know that my children will never think about the question about abortion barboa says, she was able to put her loneliness and shame into song, but believes
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that france is constitutional change might help women in the future to feel neither melissa bell, cnn, paris >> let's of oregon has taken a revolutionary approach to drugs, but that's about to change coming up. we'll tell you why some believe a new bill will cause more harm than good, safe >> tonight. why is china targeting time? i won. and if the conflict boils over, what's at stake for america, fareed zakaria presents an in-depth look. taiwan unfinished business tonight. today on cnn pain hits back. >> so get relief fast. only tylenol rapid release generals have laser drilled holes. they release medicine fast professed painterly and now good max, drink topical pain relief precisely where you need it with new tylenol precise >> thinking of banking in africa thinks in today's fast
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pair of jeans today. i'm taylor available now on the apple app store, android and m. taylor.com for more than three years. the state of oregon has conducted a brave and risky experiment to treat addiction as a public health crisis and not a crime. in 2020, voters chose to decriminalize the possession and personal use of all drugs, meaning anyone who was caught using would only face small fines. and will be offered access to addiction care and other services. so it was meant to offer them help for other than to punish them.
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well, now that experiment is about to end, organs governor will soon sign new legislation making the possession of drugs like fentanyl and heroin a misdemeanor offenders could face up to six months in jail. state lawmakers voted overwhelmingly to approve the new bill and some addiction care advocates aren't pleased with this about face joining us to talk about organs decision is terahertz the executive director of the health justice recovery alliance. thanks so much for being here with us. so you helped lead the effort to implement the bill. so this turnaround must be a big disappointment for you to start just briefly take us back to the hope you had. what was the thinking behind this here >> yeah. i mean, i think that ultimately what measure when ten did was it really created a health approach or started to create the public health approach that the voters wanted to addiction and make sure that
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when we are working with somebody who is struggling with addiction, when somebody's living on the streets were able to meet them with a health door instead of jail cell and really trying to shift away from this idea that we need to punish and criminalize folks who are struggling with a health issue and really make sure that we were funding and investing in services that we know work. and so measure 110 also diverted hundreds of millions of dollars in to addiction and harm reduction services from the cannabis revenue accountants. so that is still going on. and we've already served tens of thousands of oregonians through those services unfortunately, the state was slow to fund those services and get the funds out and so what people saw was a lot of devastation on
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our streets and measure when ten was an easy scapegoat >> well, let me ask you. i mean, it's specifically in terms of one of the failures, people who were caught with small amounts, for instance, were issued a citation and then told to call a hotline, but only 1% did so in your mind, what went wrong with the way this was implemented >> yes. i mean, really this is not a policy failure. this really, truly was an implementation failure the hotline was never advertised the police were never given citations that were a uniform citation with that phone number on it with the kind of here's what you can do to get help. here's how you can reach out to get him get connected to those services that we've been investing in. >> and law enforcement was never trained on what measure 110 actually did so many of
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them thought that it legalized drugs, which it absolutely did not. >> and they >> were confused when they were handing out a citation, what that citation even did. so i think that mentally it's surprising that so many people the hotline, because nobody knew existed, right? and the good news was measure 110. the citation was one small tool, but ultimately, what we wanted to do is if people have rapid access to care and free access to care, will they access it? and what we found overwhelmingly was yeah, they will they don't need police intervention. >> yeah. but but the problem is now organs experiencing one of the nation's largest spikes and overdose deaths, particularly due to fentanyl. i'm sure you've been hearing plenty of i-told-you-so's particularly from you know, tough on crime republicans. we know correlation doesn't equal causation, so it's hard to make that sort of straight line between decriminalization in the rise of these recent drug
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problems. but is there a link there? do you think? >> no in actually the researchers who have been studying the impacts of measure 110 have unequivocally said that there is no correlation between measure 110 and the overdose deaths that we're experiencing here what happened is, is that we didn't have, we didn't have the services or even the kind of crisis intervention that we needed for when fentanyl was coming into our market before measure 110 was even passed, we experienced a 70% increase in overdose deaths from 2019 to 2020. so these are tragic deaths, but they were not because we decriminalize small personal amounts of drugs. these were because a really lethal drug supply came into our market and we do know that our neighbors to the north also experienced
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these kinds of spikes and overdoses. so it really isn't an, the data shows that it isn't, it isn't a decriminalization issue by any stretch, but it's a way to poke holes in this issue >> will only have a minute or so left, but i wanted to end on this. i mean, this is just one example in one state, but, but it's being used as a cautionary tale that being soft on crime doesn't pay. so what are we to take away from this experiment if, if, let's say our viewers are watching from another community that's hard hit by the drug crisis and wants change i think it shows the palm policymakers aren't listening to the voices of people who've been most impacted by the failed war on drugs. and they're letting politics and not policy and data drive their decisions. we have been raging this drug war on communities for the last 50 years and we are, we're
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experiencing the highest overdose death rates, the highest incarceration rates, and the highest addiction rates. as a nation. and so what we can say is criminalization does not work and what we can say is that we need to have patients when we're trying to build out a public health response. so this really is politics. this is not policy >> will have to leave it there, but really appreciate getting your take on this terahertz. thank you so much. >> thank you so much. >> so look, calm. their lines just had a very bad week with not one, not two, not even three, but four major incident it's involving their planes. that's ahead. please stay with us >> you should add to that and one aunty that when we can connect it with skill professionals to get all your home projects done well. you can focus on the important stuff millions of ratings and reviews. so you can feel
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four crew members were hurt during the flight. there was no damage to the aircraft's know it was apparently not an isolated incident. the report said the second in command had slept during the flight prior to this incident, the pilot in command now as for permission to also rest in the second in command took over the aircraft around 90 minutes into the flight. the second in command then inadvertently fell asleep, according to the report a united airlines flight from san francisco to mexico city was diverted to los angeles on friday. officials say one of the plane's three hydraulic systems experienced an issue in flight. now this is the fourth issue the airline has experienced this week alone camila bernal reports >> united airlines says they take safety very seriously, but nonetheless, these have been very scary situations for a lot of the passengers who've had to experience this, the latest incident happening friday, this was a flight from san francisco to mexico city and it was an
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airbus 3-20 with 105 passengers and five crew members. and officials saying and that will failed here was the hydraulic system. there's actually three hydraulic systems and one of them fails. so they had to land here at lax at around 430 local time. >> no was injured and the passengers, essentially one off to another plane and made it to mexico city, but it wasn't the only incident on friday. there was another flight from memphis this to houston. this was a boeing 737 max eight with 160 passengers and six crew members. and what happened here was in part because of the rain. so as this plane is landing and taxiing it's gets off the runway and goes into a grassy area. so it was a very different do planing situation for a lot of the passengers on board and then on thursday, we saw the images of another plane. this was a boeing 777. it was 235 passengers, 14 crew members on board flight from san francisco to osaka. and what happened here was that the
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plane lost to tire after takeoff. this tire fell onto a car. i mean, again, another very scary situation where the flight was diverted to lax and the passengers deplaned here and eventually got onto another airplane and made it too pan. but again, just a different very scary situation for a lot of these passengers. and then finally, on monday, another incident, this was a boeing 730 seven that was going from houston to fort myers. and what happened here was that the engine ingested bubble wrap and we're talking about 161 passengers, six crew members reverse. some of them were able to see the flames. one passenger speaking to cnn saying he wrote, essentially a goodbye email to his wife telling her that he loved her again, just terrifying moments for passengers on board united airlines saying that these are separate incidents, but that they are investigating all of these incidents since they're also saying that they're going
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to work with the manufacturers, with the faa and with the ntsb to figure out exactly what happened. and again, what they're saying is that safety is their top prize i already camila bernal, cnn, los angeles >> all there has been an art heists worth more than $1 in italy, nearly 50 gold pieces by sculptor umberto mastroianni were stolen from an exhibition near lake garda one of the pieces called man woman was found on the grounds of the exhibition, but the others are still missing. the theft happened wednesday night. the thief nor thieves apparently knew what they were looking for. nearby jewels were left untouched, only the mastroianni pieces were taken he is it failing can stand up? >> a mob of kangaroos. >> yeah, that's what the group of >> these marsupials is called. didn't even have the courtesy to save mine if i play through it a golf course in victoria,
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australia stephen ross shot this video. he says, it's not unusual to see ruse on the course, but the sheer number or surprised him. kangaroos have soft feet and didn't damage the greens though the bunkers will need to raking lower abs this hour of cnn newsroom, i'm kim brunhuber. i'll be back with more news in just a moment >> to be a headliner was vegas. that's what i want to do. >> vegas, the story of sin city next sunday and on cnn >> is your shower trying to tell you something is getting in and out of the bathtub becoming a safety concern. are you worried about the cost of a bathroom remodel that could go on for weeks and weeks. will now you can have a gorgeous new
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