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join the millions of people taking back their privacy by downloading duckduckgo on all your devices today. spring black friday sale and ll four >> and rafael roma, the georgia state capitol in atlanta this is cnn closed captioning brought to you by mesobook.com >> if you or a loved one half mesothelial, not we'll send you a free book to answer questions you may have call now and we'll
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come to you 808 214000 >> cnn breaking news >> we begin with our breaking news. the supreme court is letting texas begin enforcing a controversial immigration policy that will allow state officials to detain and arrest people they suspect have entered the country illegally. immigration advocates have raise concerns that the law could lead to an increase in racial profiling detentions and attempted deportations in texas where latinos make up 40% of the population. cnn supreme court analyst joan biskupic is joining us. joan, and we understand now that the three liberal justices dissented. what can you tell us? >> sure major news from the supreme court allowing this controversial texas law to take effect immediately that would allow texas state officials are not federal officials who normally are in charge of immigration to arrest and detain migrants who cross the
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border at your ride. the majority did not explain its reasoning seen briana, but three dissenting justices did explain why they don't think this law should take effect. justices sonia sotomayor and ketanji brown jackson said this today, the court invites further chaos and crisis and immigration enforcement. texas passed a law that directly regulates the entry and removal of noncitizens and explicitly instructs its state courts to disregard any ongoing federal immigration proceedings. the law appends federal state balance of power that has existed for over a century. and then the third liberal joining in was justice elena kagan, who said the subject of immigration generally, and the entry and removal of noncitizens that's particularly are matters long thought. the special province of the federal government. and that's the point here. briana you're looking at all the human drama at the border right now with those pictures and we've just seen so much turmoil as migrants have tried
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to make their way to america across the river there. but what this is about at this point is essentially state powers versus federal powers. and as it said, it's been for more than a century that the federal government has had control of immigration. and this is the first time any kind of law like this is being allowed to be enforced. but let me just stress that this is not the end of anything we're just very early in, actually the legal proceedings on the merits of this law. governor abbott signed it into law back in december. it was challenged by the biden administration and immigrate immigration rights groups and the lower-court, the fifth circuit, that's based in new orleans is going to hold a hearing on the merits on april 3rd which could begin to change some things, but it's that court that had said that this law should be able to take effect. and today, the majority agreed with it. the only two justices in the majority, and it was the concern derivative dominated majority. the only
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two justices of that group to write to explain anything. were justices amy coney, barrett and brett kavanaugh and they concurred in the majority decision i'm talking about how they didn't want to second guess the fifth circuit and it wasn't proceeds really proper and their mind for the supreme court to intervene at this point. but by, by this decision they essentially shaped what's going to happen at the border. now, even if months or years from now, things change. but for now, as i said that a very potent state law is going to take effect in an experiment in a state executing what is normally the purview of the federal government is going to be playing out and we'll see that joan biskupic. thank you so much. i want to go now to priscilla alvarez, who was at the white house. priscilla, what is the white house saying >> well, they have not yet weighed in on what the supreme court decided here, but this is a significant development in this ongoing feud between the white house and texas governor
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greg abbott. of course, the governor has launched his own border mission that has been spurred controversy and pushback from the white house. and just yesterday, the white house press secretary was asked about this law and she said that this was just another example of how the texas governor has politicized the border. and then she also punted to the doj filings and what they have said about this law and what they have said is that this is a federal law enforcement is charged with enforcing immigration law. that's what it was unusual about this state law. to begin with. so it's very unclear at this point how this is going to be executed. operationally, i have been in touch with homeland security officials in the minutes since we've seen this and they have all been surprised. and it's also unclear to them what happens next. of course, we're talking specifically about the texas mexico border here, but there is no doubt, brianna, that this has been a politically vulnerable issue four the white house for president biden, even
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as he has tried to seize on border security. and this is going to mark another development in this feud between him and the texas governor, where it goes from here, still unclear. the white house is going to expect, going to issue a statement on this, and we'll get that to you as soon as we get it. >> all right. we'll be looking for that. priscilla alvarez at the white house. thank you. boris >> all right. i think we're going to get bohr's is >> microphone there re-established as i bring in the maire and i will hand off to boris as soon as we get that figured out. maire, i'm just going to stand in probably for one question here. dr. victor trevino with us can you just give us your reaction to the supreme court ruling that
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allows state officials and texas to arrest and detain people that they suspect of entering the country illegally. >> well, first of all, thank you for having me i think this is an important issue because this is the parser from a century old the federal laws overseeing immigration. and i think this is a great concern not only to us that 95% hispanic here on the border, but are trading partners that my chain, they concerning message being mexico, the largest trading partner for the us. this is very concerning and we have to look at this in another way that local enforcement officials are policemen, don't have the training immigration officer to deal with this situations. so anybody can be profiled, even including me. i can get stopped. and that's where my documents i don't have them. i mean, you could be arrested and then later on, as to produce my
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my citizenship. so these are things that are very concerning and we have to look at this and way that we have to understand that federal lawsuit and state laws that for us it's concerning because we need direction on to how which lotto forward this point >> mayor. we were fortunate to get that mic issue fixer. thank you for being with us on that question. of the problems caused by local law enforcement handling what is typically what are typically duties handled by customs and border protection. i was speaking with brandon judd. he's the head of the border patrol union and he was essentially arguing that people should put their faith in local law enforcement, that they will get the training, that they will get. what they need in order to carry out these state policies i'm curious to get your reaction to that specifically because it sounds like you're very skeptical it is a difficult situation because we have limited
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resources here. we don't have the jail capacity to the house. all these people that would be arrested, we don't have with shortness, it is a police officers. so that is another added burden that think would be very important. so these are things that have to look it'd be looked at a better way. there's better ways to handle this as by, by national collaboration. i think would work better. and we don't want to send a concerning message to our trading partners. we have received letters already from our counterparts across the border and for me, even state officials here saying that this good cause train and the relationships being that it's a number one trade partner of the us >> yeah, there's also the question of once those folks that have been put in the system, what you're saying, the legal system has already strained once those folks are already processed and they serve whatever time the state deems that they should sir, for being undocumented does the state have any clarity on how
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they're going to get those folks back out of the country because it doesn't seem from my reading of sb4 that that's made clear a lot of those immigrants aren't even from mexico. so what is texas going to do with them? >> that, is another situation. and that is why immigration officers need to handle this and not the local police officer. this is a federal issue, not as a state or a local issue. and i think this needs to be looked at and thought and a better process. there's better things to do. we have a lot of difficulties that we have to look at if that comes about and more so, one of the main things is the racial profiling and financial devastation to our local communities. >> yeah mayor. the other question i had for you was about the way that sb4, whether
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it's constitutional or not, speaks to a desperation among communities at the border like yours that have had a serious difficulty with the unprecedented numbers of migrants crossing the border and have not seen much action from the federal government when it comes to immigration reform. we just saw a bipartisan senate bill not even get a chance on the floor of the house. what's your message to federal lawmakers on what they need to do to ensure that something like sb4 doesn't even need to happen >> well, first of all, we need to understand we're not democrats or republicans when the deal with this, we have to get together and get a good immigration reform going because this is long overdue. it's been overdue for decades so anybody that's tries to force any immigration laws with antiquated rules is dysfunctional. so we have to get a bi-national cooperation and get this immigration laws
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fixed. we work and live here at the border understand what the real situation is, and how it can be handled. rather than people but miles away trying to understand what the border is like. it, you have to live and work here to understand. and my point of view is that you have to get countries involved to do a common sense immigration reform, rather than putting band-aids on the situation or putting border walls mayor dr. victory today arena, we very much appreciate your time. i send thanks from brianna as well >> right now, retired generals who had been in charge of the chaotic us exit from afghanistan in 2021 are testifying on capitol hill. this is the first time that general mark milley in general, kenneth mackenzie are speaking to lawmakers since they left the pentagon and entrance civilian life and the two former military leaders paid
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tribute to the 13 american troops who were killed outside of hamid karzai international airport by a suicide bombing back in 2021, it happened in august of that year when the us evacuated thousands of afghans and americans as the taliban took control of the country three remains my opinion that if there was culpability in this attack, it lies and policy decisions >> that created the environment of august 2021 and column, if there's fault, it lies in a policy decision that placed the joint force in this situation and expose the force over time to the possibility of these kinds of attacks >> santa national security and politics correspondent natasha bertrand has been following the hearing. natasha, what more we learning about what they've said about what happened in afghanistan? >> yeah, brasil, one of the big themes of this hearing really has been tension between the
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pentagon and the state department. and these two generals really underscoring the point that they believe that this evacuation operation, which we saw ended so chaotically in august of 2021, was delayed and delayed and delayed, and that is the reason why the events of that august and the chaos that we saw unfold took place according to general mackenzie, he was asking for the state department's plan for an evacuation operation. really up until that point up until august when they finally gave that order in that plan to begin the noncombatants evacuation operation and his his sense was that a lot of the chaos that unfolded could have been avoided if this was done sooner. here's a little bit of what he said about the kind of back-and-forth that occurred during that time period so, chairman, every every embassy has an evacuation plan for afghanistan and embassy cobble had had a plan,
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>> had what we would call an f 77 lists, which is the list of us citizens and their families that are in the country and we struggled to gain access to that plan and work with them over the months of july until we finally got a decision to execute the neo, which as i've already mentioned, occurred on the 14th of august. now we we worked with the embassy before then, but we didn't have authority to move out and do the things that you have to do to make a neo happen until the 14th in july correction the 14th of august. and as i noted, we were in extremis at that point >> so the 14th of august that's a really important date because that really was simply one day before the taliban was able to overrun kabul and it was really, as he said, an extremity that the us military was under extreme pressure at that point to try to execute this very complex noncombatants evacuation operation is very large operation and they are saying that it was so delayed that it really just made it all the more chaotic. now, of course, the state department, on the other hand, was trying to delay it because they
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didn't want there to be chaos in the government. they didn't want to undermine the african government to the extent that it would then rapidly collapse. and so they were trying to maintain a diplomatic presence for as long as possible. but of course that kind of backfired according to what the generals are saying here. and another big theme of this has been that they recommended to the president that the us ultimately keep roughly 2,500 us troops in afghanistan and in order to maintain that level of stability and hold the taliban back. but of course, the president ultimately chose a different path. briana >> all right. natasha bertrand, life for us from the pentagon. thank you for that report. >> still to come, former president trump says a fire sale of his real estate that it might be needed to pay the nearly half billion-dollar bond he owes in his new york civil fraud case also ahead, a 20 years the prison sentence for the first of six. now former police officers who tortured to innocent black men in mississippi a second x cough is being sentenced this afternoon.
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>> were you worried the wedding would be too much >> another destination wedding? why can't i use my backyard within power? >> we get all our financial questions answered, so we don't have to worry, empower what's next >> closed captioning brought to you by mesobook.com >> if you or a loved one, half mesothelial not we'll send you a free book to answer questions you may have call now and we'll come to you 808 to 14000 former president donald trump says, it'll be close to impossible for him to pay the nearly half billion dollar bond he owes. and his new york civil fraud judgment. this morning, trump railed against the judge in the case as he has done for months. but he also said he may need to mortgage or unload his assets in a quote, fire sale to cover the cost as his appeal plays out cnn's kristen holmes and
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tom former here to break it all down. so kristen first trump going on a rant against judge engoron, which is par for the course, not unusual here. but this bit about the fire sale was new >> in this is just trump ranting and complaining. i don't think anyone believe that he's actually going to have a fire sale of his assets, also, his assets are all of his property and his brand. so it's unlikely you would try to offload all of that or if that would even be possible to do. but i can tell you that inside trump's camp, they are very consumed by figuring this out. there are a lot of excuses that they have come up with and i will tell you that i ran some of these by financial advisors and they're not completely the off one of them being any billionaire that is not going to be that liquid to provide half 1 billion. it's tied up and assets. the other part of this essentially saying that it's the underwriters fall because they can only underwrite up to $100 million because this is really an unprecedented amount of money. now i have d2 again, financial advisors who say that that is true. however, he has had a lot of time to do this. he knew
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this was coming. he was new, it was going to be an enormous amount of money. it's not as though this was just a surprise. however, terms of a fire sale it's very unlikely as a billionaire yourself, as a billing yeah, walk us through the numbers though. what properties could be on the chopping block for? fire sale as you pointed out, is fantasy talk no serious real estate person is even using language like this. >> let's >> look at some of trump's properties based on a forbes estimate from last fall, what they would be worth if you wanted to get up to this roughly half billion-dollar judgment here if they got rid of 12, 90 avenue of the americas, whereas 30% stake that'd be $287 million trump park avenue condos and retail about $100 million. hundred and one trump tower, offices and retail $56 million. and trump plaza was co-op units, retail garage, residential $18 if they got rid of all of that, which has christian pointed out lot
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of trump names. there are a lot of trunk brand being struck down right there. he would get to 462 million so just over the gold, the problem the problem is i talked to dr. tim savage over to nyu's shack institute of real estate. and this is virtually impossible. in fact, i would say it is impossible for a couple of reasons. commercial real estate is not like selling your house. you don't put a cardboard sign out front that says for sale by owner, it takes a long time. there has to be an outside of assessment of what it's worth occupancy of buildings in every major city has been weighed down since the paint endemic. and trump's buildings aside fr whatever debtight be invoed, he points out, they are old. donald trump doesn't want to hear this, but they have to compete against brand new state-of-the-art buildings that people really want to be in. so even if he sold all that, he could come in at a much lower value and look if he
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were only if he got 80% of the estimated value 80% of you did that well, that would still drop them to $370 million way short of what he needs so the idea of a fire sale here is is it's absurdity. it has nothing to do with reality. the issue of a fire sale and him describing it that way is also ironic because this judgment, this disgorgement was based on him inflating the value of his properties to begin with yeah, that's that's one of the real questions here. what is this stuff actually worth? and what we know as you know, the trump organization is very wary about letting true outsiders come in and really walk the bricks, inspect the plumbing and say this is great or this is not. he wants to say trump tower is perfect. he probably doesn't want somebody to walk inside say well, you've got an old building here that has problems that needs a lot about i can tell you one thing. yeah, he would >> not sell mar-a-lago for 18 million, which we have heard time and time again. and he
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thinks that is worth five times that price, if not more if he did end, if he did, that would be in effect publicly admitting that his big sheen of being so successful that everything is so successful >> as tom knows, it's tough to be a billionaire right? have to be a building >> some form. and kristen holmes. thank you both so much. appreciate it, brianna voters in ohio are heading to the polls right now and a high-stakes republican senate primary, the three-way race. it's a critical test of the power of former president trump's endorsement and the winner will face off against democratic incumbent senator sherrod brown and erase that could decide the balance of power here in washington. cnn's jeff zeleny is at a polling site for us. jeff what have you been hearing there in ohio? >> breonna, there are about four more hours left. a voting here on this primary day in ohio. and as you said, the senate race is front and center. here are the presidential candidates also on the ballot that of course has already been decided, but the
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senate race, a democratic senator, sherrod brown, who's fighting for a fourth term in the senate, knows that he has a great difficult to race in november just how difficult that will be determined by the primary today. it's been a very spirited, heated some would say ugly and nasty republican primary campaign, some 40 million it's been spent in advertising alone, but donald trump also has been sort of weighing heavy in this race. he was here campaigning just a couple of days ago for his candidate, bernie moreno, he's a cleveland businessman he believes that he best represents the maga movement, if you will. well, not dolan, a state senator, he essentially represents the old guard, the stablished front wing of the republican party. he's endorsed by ohio governor mike to wine and former senator rob portman as well. and then the ohio secretary state to frank larose is also in this race. but the center, matt dolan last night at an event here in columbus summed up the stakes of the race, like this >> you would ultimately, we
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need to do to get our country back and that's beat sherrod brown and get the majority back in the united states senate that's what we're focused on >> so the question is which candidate is the strongest or perhaps the weakest to challenge senator brown, a democratic super pac with ties to chuck schumer also has been weighing in, essentially promoting the moreno candidacy the trump-backed candidates. so they clearly believed that he is the weakest to challenge senator brown in november. so a lot of three-dimensional chess here, if you will, that the outcome of the primary tonight will certainly be an indication of how competitive this race will be in the fall sherrod brown and jon tester out in montana, the only two democratic incumbent senators in red states that trump won. so both of them have very difficult races. question is how difficult, depending on the outcome of tonight's primary brianna, our chess master, jeff zeleny there in columbus, ohio. thank you for that report. >> still ahead, the state department says nearly 1,000 americans in haiti have reached
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out to the us government is the nation is being ravaged by gang violence. when we come back we will take you inside one of the last working trauma centers left in the country >> week's slides, cia secrets, maori play, salary plane claimed lives were at stake. >> yes, my children, this is horrifying united states of scandal with jake tapper, new episodes sunday at nine on cnn >> demand for energy is growing and so as the need for american oil and natural gas, it's time to turn the lights on. >> america. resources are abundant. our nation is a global leader in reducing emissions and innovators and delivering more energy sources to secure our future. 9.10 americans agree, american oil and natural gas are vital well to our account >> lights
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a stuntman for money. get a free line of unlimited intro for a year when you buy one unlimited line. visit xfinitymobile.com today to learn more. visit coventry direct.com space shuttle columbia, the final flight premieres sunday, april 7 at nine on cnn >> as of today, almost 1,000 american citizens have reached out to the us government to get information about evacuating from haiti. that's according to the state department the
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country is spiraling. i made a rampant gang violence, political instability gleaning humanitarian crisis. un estimates that gangs control 80% of the capital port-au-prince. cnn's david culver is there and filed this report would it prints feels host apocalyptic. >> this is basically the aftermath of awards driving read the battlegrounds between gangs and police. we dodge a massive craters and piles of burning trash the police controlled these roads leading to haiti's international layer for today, at least, it's been shut for weeks outfront. checkpoints to search for suspected gang members in an armored truck to keep watch. it sits beaten and battered >> less than a month ago, we flew in and out on commercial flights here now, it's desolate the country is in chaos essentially held hostage by gangs eager to expand their reign of terror over the
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weekend, more businesses looted in car stolen gangs, leaving behind a scorched path of rune we're headed to one of the last remaining hospital trauma centers. that's still functioning in port-au-prince. >> february 29 was probably the worst >> and as soon as we meet one of the doctors to go call comes airport. >> go ahead. if you need to get it >> a gunshot victim heading into surgery, he takes us to him most of those cases that are brought here are gunshot victims from the gang violence with the patient's family giving us permission. we'd go in as staff prepared to operate we're told the 24 year-old truck driver was caught in the crossfire between police and gangs. >> the >> dr. is showing me here images that are very disturbing, but they show an entry wound of a bowl, it basically around the temple and went right through and cause damage two, at least one i >> the dr. >> tells us the man's lost vision in both eyes. another bullet hit his arm and so they
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will have to amputate his arm we peer into the icu. >> it's full. >> are most of these gunshot victims all of the marks that >> she's in pain, she feels a pain in her leg. >> and so how did it happen? where were you >> she was going to the market at six years old, a reminder no one is shielded from the violence that's gripped haiti's capital in recent weeks police are exhausted one local commander telling me morale is broken and that the gangs have more money and resources than they do. low on ammo, their squad car cars out of gas. it is personal for the commander. >> he was >> forced out with his family from their own and now this is essentially the police, at least in this community, do have backup in the form of local residents. do you feel like gangs are trying to move
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in and take this area? >> for sure. >> what many community leaders call for peace. they admit they're tired of feeling threatened so much. so some have created their own checkpoints. m barricades staff 24/7, redirecting traffic and determining who comes in not everyone gets out. >> you can see right here this intersection, there's a massive burn. >> i'll >> this is actually where the community takes justice to their own hands. that a week ago is the most recent such case. they captured for suspected gang members. they brought them here killed them with machetes and set their bodies on fire the gruesome vigilante acts recorded in part as a warning to the gangs. but even amid utter turmoil, life, moos ford and within moments to celebrate outside the church, these bridesmaids excitedly awaiting their queue twalk down the aisle port-au-prince
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is a city. now shattered by the relentless blast of violence that a forced more than 300,000 its residents out of their homes. where are you staying here? where's your home in this facility >> right up there >> they take refuge in places like this school classrooms, turned dorm rooms were more than 1,500 people cram in so she's showing us this is her style. that's first to bring and this is where she is set up right now in the classroom next door, we meet this woman, her husband killed by gang members. she and her five-year-old, like many here, have been forced to move every few weeks oh, were sleeping hungry. we're in misery. she tells me exactly >> we'd >> probably be better off dead than livingness, life adding to the complication for those folks is the reality that they are not only facing threats from gangs, but as they describe it to me, there also
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been ostracized from the communities in which they are now essentially camping out and they say those neighbors don't want them there and we'll likewise attack them because they feel like having these refugees. now within their community is drawing the gangs attention and potentially bringing more violence to their homes david culver, cnn, port-au-prince, haiti our thanks to david for that report still to come, they call themselves the goon squad. and now they're headed to prison. the first of six former mississippi officers who pleaded guilty to torturing two black men were sentenced today with the latest from sisyphean, just moments >> my fellow citizens need to be better >> renewal, not normal. it makes me want you to be dead be better at being on good >> regime streaming. exclusively on macs. >> this is a futurama go daddy arrow creates a logo website,
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pants >> skechers go won. pants are breathable and flexible with a comfy soft feel. plus they have front and rear pockets, including a hidden zip security bucket, try sketches affordable, go walk pan sentencing is underway in a police brutality case in mississippi. former officers, hunter elward and jeffrey middleton, part of the so-called goon squad, pleaded guilty last year to torturing two black men elward was sentenced this morning to 20 years in prison. they repeatedly attack the menn michael jenkins, and eddie parker in the victim's jackson area home for nearly two hours. the menn said they were kicked, waterboarded, and tased by the former officers all while they were handcuffed jenkins was also shot in the mouth cnn senior national correspondent ryan young is here with more on today's sentencing ryan, today's hearing was emotionally charged. no surprise there. tell us what happened yeah.
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>> mostly charged is almost an understatement. there were times in court. >> we're >> almost everyone in the court was crying. that's not only the victims, but the people who accused were crying as well. hunter elward actually turn to the two victims and said he was sorry and said he is upset that he put this mental anguish on their lives for the rest of their lives and he understood what was going on. the menn who did not decide to decide not to read their impact statements, actually said through their attorney that they felt like their manhood was stolen on that night. there was so much pain. they're and of course, they went through parts of this where the men who were former officers and a deputy showed up at a house, they stick it out, they made sure there wasn't a camera. they went to the door where the camera was not placed. the kick the door open, and immediately rushed in and started beating the men over and over and the question is, why, why did this happen? because apparently one of them was dating a white girl and they thought they were taking
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advantage of her. so all this played out in court and the victim statements, we're raul and full of emotion. i think no one in court will ever forget eddie parker is mom basically standing up and saying she's a black woman and just because she's a black woman, she is also still a mother who cares about her child after court, we were able to catch up with eddy elward, who is the father of the man who accused hunter elward for pulling that trigger. and he had some of motion himself. listen to what he said to me outside of court you said you were sorry to pick. >> yes. >> could you make that clear for us >> it never should have happened nobody went county sheriff experience what they experience >> when >> i found out what had happened that's when he he couldn't live with it anymore himself as a world only healing starts when you tell the truth
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now as you can imagine, hunter elward standing up there, basically coming forward, telling >> everyone his side of the story apologizing for pulling that trigger. it was his gun basically severed the tongue of michael jenkins. is it actually michael jenkins, mother who stood up and talked about not being less of a mother because she was black. this is really sent shockwaves throughout the justice law enforcement all across the country today, the fbi director actually addressed this, that happened in the last hour or so. take a listen to the fbi director, talk about the pain that these men went through and the crime that he says is unspeakable >> no human being should ever be subjected to the torture, the trauma, the horrific acts of violence carried out by these individuals >> briana, jeffrey middleton is actually upstairs right now, there was a 10-minute recess that's why we are able to come downstairs and do this report,
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but they're going through piece by piece of what each man was involved in during this raid. and this was a raid that was all happening under the goon squad. we've been covering this for a year, but i've been talking to the victim consistently for that year and they looked me in the eye and they basically said no one believed them at first. they actually were charged and now they're finally getting some peace by these convictions that are happening as we speak. brianna. >> so important that we are following what these victims are saying. ryan thank you so much for doing that. you're appreciated despite bans in more than a dozen states, abortions in the us reaching their highest rate in more than ten years. what's causing the surge? >> do you think that our democracy is at risk? >> we have to be very concerned why do you think he's doing this in can he be talked out do you think he's guilty? >> the lead with jake tapper next on cnn
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>> demand for energy is growing and so is the need for american oil and natural gas. it's time to turn the lights on >> america resources are abundant. our nation is a global leader in reducing emissions and innovators and delivering more energy sources to secure our future >> nine in ten americans agree american oil and natural gas are vital to our account >> lights >> i'm sure lay and i lost 75 pounds of gallo. i went from a size 22 sides six before i go low or nothing seemed to work, i was exercising for over an hour every day. it was really discouraging, but go low so easy, the weight just falls off >> it's a new day. >> one were our shared values propel us towards a more secure future through august, a partnership built upon cutting-edge american australian, and british technologies will develop state-of-the-art next
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available now, united states of scandal with jake tapper sunday at nine on cnn new research shows that abortion is across the us are on the rise. that's despite bans on the procedure that have taken effect. and more than a dozen states since the overturning of roe versus wade and the dobbs decision, let's bring it in, see in an health reporter jacqueline howard with more on the trend jacqueline, take us through this data. what does it show >> it's really interesting data, boris, we know that since the overturning of roe v. wade 14 states so far have had abortion bans. but despite that, and nearly every other state, we've sent, we've seen increases, really an abortion services so that shows it tells a story that efforts to maintain and increase access to abortion care in states without bands has improved access. we know that last year there were more than 1 million abortions performed here in the united states. that number represents
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an increase of 10% since it's 2020. and when you look specifically at states without bands, they've seen an increase of 25%. these are states like illinois, like new mexico, particularly states that border states that do have bands. and the reason why we're seeing this increase, we know that some patients in states where there are fans are traveling to say it's without bands to get that abortion care. we know that with a telemedicine and telehealth services, there has been an increase in abortion care there as well. so those are some of the trends that we're seeing. efforts made by clinics, abortion funds, advocacy groups to maintain access. those efforts appear or to be seen here in the data boris, jacqueline, you mentioned telehealth. i'm wondering how big a factor was medication, abortion, and all of this a huge huge factor. we know that last year >> medication abortion accounted for 63% of those
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abortions that were performed at medication abortion is when a patient is given two pills, two medications, mifepristone and misoprostol to end a pregnancy. and that's number 63% is up from in 2020. so we're seeing this is a more popular form of abortion that we're seeing boris, jacqueline howard, thanks so much for those details. still ahead. there's no place like home, the iconic ruby slippers from the wizard of oz we're finally returned to their owner nearly 20 years after they were stolen and emotional reunion when we come back two via headliner was vegas >> that's what i wanna do >> they have the biggest entertainers in america >> vegas is >> always marketed. so on it's not enough. >> and the only way you find out what you can do unlike
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>> the iconic ruby slippers warned by judy garland in the wizard of oz are finally home. the famous pumps were reunited with their owner, collector michael well, show on monday, the fbi said that shaw liken the experience to a heartfelt reunion, a long lost friend. that friend is worth more than $3.5 million. >> these were stolen from the judy garland museum in >> 2005, and just a little trivia for you here, only four pairs of this slippers used in the film are still known to xist the attorney representing a 76 year-old man charged in connection with this theft, tells cnn his client is innocent. for now, these shoes are going to go on a whirlwind tour around the world. >> i too have mistakenly taken by dazzled choose like that before it could happen anybody? >> yeah, i can happen to anyone yeah. >> i >> believe it take tapper starts right now donald trump might have come up with the >> perfect plan to put up that

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