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tv   Anderson Cooper 360  CNN  March 20, 2024 5:00pm-6:00pm PDT

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the diabetes drugs. if you have diabetes, it does not pay for the weight loss version of that drug. so nobody's taking drugs away from anybody else or medications away from anybody else because there is specifically and obesity medication. i think if you feel like being in a bigger body is great and you don't want to do anything about that and you feel fine that is beautiful. i really admire people who really believe that. and i also feel like if you think, if you can work out and workout and i'm like, you charles, i couldn't work out anymore. i mean, like i can't climb any faster or run any faster. i can i can't eat. that was down to eat one meal a day there's nothing else i can do >> well, you can watch the entire conversation with gayle charles and oprah on king charles at 10:00. thanks for joining us. anderson starts now
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tonight on 360, the former president said to be in panic mode with his half-billion dollars civil >> fraud deadline just five days away and no sign yet he can find anyone to foot the bill. also tonight catching up with the republican nominee to run north carolina's public school system, whose tweets have called for the killing of president biden and former president obama but plus a sinister new twist and the princess of wales medical saga, the possibility that hospital staff tried to snoop on her records while she was a surgical patient. >> good evening. we begin to and i keep them honest. we're just five days and counting until the former president's 464 million new york civil fraud bill comes due the one he's told the court he cannot secure a bond for despite prior claims like these by his attorney they know by looking at a statements of financial condition that this guy is worth a lot of money billions and billions of billions of dollars. and that didn't even include his brand martha. unfortunately, they picked the wrong guy to pick on, in my opinion, because he's strong,
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he's resilient and he happens have a lot of cash. this guy is worth a lot of money, billions and billions of billions of dollars happens, have a lot of cash. >> of >> course he has money, you know, he's a billionaire. we know that there will be a bond and there'll be no issues with that except he has had issues apparently, and according to his attorney, is still has issues finding any insurance company willing to underwrite the bond. not even chubb, which underwrote the $91,000,000 e jean carroll bond. that's according to the sources, kaitlan collins, who joins a shortly multiple sources telling her, as we mentioned, the top that he's in panic mode even though he said under oath not so long ago, he's got liquidity to spare >> we have a lot of cash. i believe we have substantially in excess of 400 million cash, which is a lot for a developer. developers usually don't have cash, they have assets, not cash we have i believe 400 plus and going up very substantially every month early not or not
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enough to back the bond, which is what underwriters are now demanding according to his lawyers, something the new york attorney general's >> office underscored and it's filing today responding to the former president's request for a stay quoting now, as far as the court can infer, sureties may have refused to accept defendants specific holdings as collateral because you using mr. trump's real estate will generally need a property appraisal and his holdings are not nearly as valuable as defendants claim trump attorney chris kise meantime says in a statement that the attorney general, a quote, demonstrates her continued willingness to misrepresent the facts and myths applicable misconstrue construe applicable law in her political crusade against president trump. so the back-and-forth continues as the clock ticks on. join me now, former federal prosecutor, jessica roth. to me, dia a gang williams who served as senior investigative counsel on the house january 6 committee, and kaitlan collins so what more can you tell us about the president's attempts to secure this? >> they had kind of been under this impression that because
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chubb, this other insurance giant underwrote his last bond that he had to pay a part which was the one for e. jean carroll about $90 that they would also do this one. so the head is 30 day grace period that they got because because the attorney general could have started collecting on this when the judge ruled, they've had this 30 day grace period that ends on monday. they had been under this assumption that they would be able to find some one and what they went to the courts with this week as saying, no, we so far have gone to 30 places. we haven't been able to find anything the ag's office is objecting to that today saying they really are casting doubt on it and don't believe that they actually tried their best efforts to try it and where it puts trump and his legal team now is they're scrambling to figure out what they are going to do before monday because when it comes to he could wait and count on this appeal, wait to see if they're going to lower what he has to pay for the bond to maybe $100 but they're also luck looking at wealthy supporters, seeing if they could help him here. they're looking at his properties, what they could potentially sell and quickly, but all of that is really
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complicated. and so really the reality is, he could find himself in a real financial bind come monday. >> just got wanna put this graphic up on the screen that shows some of trump's new york properties that i guess could be relevant to all of this. what do you think the new york attorney general's basically calling bs on trump's claims >> yeah. i mean, the puzzle here is why is it so hard for him to come up the money to secure the bond between his claims about how much cash he has and the value he's asserted with respect to these properties y as he having such a difficult time getting anybody to write the bond for him? those property is i mean, as the attorney general points out i mean, trump claims that these insurance companies won't write the bond and have real estate real property as collateral. and she says that's simply not true as as a hard matter of law. and if they have limits on how much they'll write the bond for which he also claims, why wouldn't you pool? some of the different companies and bonds to put together the full amount that euo or she also says, you could actually just transfer ownership temporarily to the
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court and they would hold these properties as the collateral for the bond. and so there's there there are these properties. the question is, what are they worth? y having trouble getting anybody else to accept them as collateral? why is a fallback doesn't he just transfer them to the court also just go why why is he waiting to the last couple of days? >> that's really a question, but his attorneys had to know that this was a real risks. they couldn't have been reasonably counting on chubb underwriting a bond and this amount. and so it's a real question of where they actually taken by surprise by chubb or have they been working behind the scenes on these other avenues? or have they just not been trying very hard and they were counting on some savior coming along and giving the money it's really not clear why they're in the bind that they're in, but they are down to the wire. >> timmy die, i want to read something that the attorney general's office said in their brief. they said defendants supply no documentary evidence that demonstrates precisely what real property they offered to sureties on what terms because that property was offered or precisely why the sureties were unwilling to accept the assets >> i >> mean, how can it be that they wouldn't provide i mean,
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do they not have to provide evidence of this y what the attorney general's suggesting is that they're not being honest here. i think it's not surprising where the very reason why the former president is where he is now is because he's had a pap at earn fraudulent dealings when it comes to his finances. so i think what's really important here is that these folks that would would say underwrite a bond here, these are rational business entities. if there's money to be made here, they would do so. and frankly, i think the fact that he spent i think noted countless hours negotiating a bon here suggests that there is a deal to be made here, that this is not some unprecedented amount, then insurance companies wouldn't support here. so i think what the ag saying is that put up or shut up, you there's a deal to be made if trump was really willing to make a deal. i mean, if he's willing to accept terms and he didn't like exactly any has assets are going to back this up if you've truly worth the billions and billions of dollars that he says he is, that he would be able to as either as jessica noted transfers, assets, use them as collateral. there are
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lots of avenues here. the sophisticated parties can arrive that but i think suggests here without any evidence that he is not quite as willing to make a deal with you, suggest not going to get to the heart of what hello, this is about and what the ag's office is saying here is that all along they said he over inflated the value of his properties that he inflated them and they're saying that whatever he's taking to use as potential collateral here, they don't actually know what the true value of it is because he has a history of inflating it. also, he's someone who he's talked in depositions it's cash he has, but he's asset rich in cash poor. he has much more in assets and that has always been the case. and it's not so clean cut that he could just put something up for sale because then it triggers all of these other factors. and so that's why he's in the position that he's in and why there is this panic of what he's going to do here and the anger that you see. and on the ag's office, i'll say there's a lot of mistrust in their claimed that they just can't find anyone to underwrite it because it was the 11th hour that they got chubb to underwrite the bond for e. jean carroll
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>> so just talking about the process here. if the appeals court they could grant foreign president reduction in the amount, right? >> they have that authority to >> do so that they could do in the next couple of days? they could. and one hopes that they will at least rule before monday if they >> don't grant a reduction an appeal, he can try to appeal up to the new york court of appeals is the highest courts. there's one >> more avenue of it because that has to be done before monday he would have to do that. i think if he's going to try to again avoid the consequences on monday, you'd have to try one more time to get an appellate court to stay the judgment. >> and then what would the process look like? the attorney jones starting to collect the judgment amount? yeah. so that's really interesting. it's not going to happen overnight. i mean, with respect to the cache and things that are in bank accounts, that process is more straightforward in terms of ability to actually send an order that effectively freezes those assets. the real estate properties are much more complicated and that's not self-executing at all. and so that's a process that would play out in court in terms of actually getting a judgment against those particular properties. he could contest
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that as well. their mortgages on many of those properties, right. so that's not something that's going to happen overnight. it would shock me that he would want to lose control to that extent that she would actually be initiating judgment and then sale of those properties so the whole purpose of the bond is to maintain the status quo as the appellate process works out. and so when certainly hopes that they'll reach some sort of accommodation, he'll come up with some package, maybe the ag would we're agree to something lesser to maintain the status quo and to avoid that prolonged litigation while the appeal is pending out to me >> how do you see this playing out? >> i think one thing that could be interesting here is going to be the former president's cash flow. i mean, one thing she can do quickly is freeze his accounts and i think that's gonna be very interesting because the assets so our liquid, so that's going to impact his day-to-day ability to live as life. but if she's freezing his accounts, that's going to do that. she also had the ability to go to individuals who owe him money and basically give them restraining notices that they no longer going to give him
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that money. so she could make his life quite difficult from a cash-flow perspective in the short term. >> and from what we can see, he does have an expensive lifestyle. so i think that's where you might see the crunch and and make him it may make him make a deal quickly, negotiate with her. so she's not going as hard as she could. there >> is this really a former judge has been appointed to oversee the company. would that judge have be privy to what negotiations were like between trump and these possible companies? >> i don't think she would necessarily be privy to the negotiations between trump and the attorney general but with respect to any transaction that would result in a sale of the properties she would have to approve it before it goes. >> and that's the trump legal team argument is that there is this monitor that was put in place because of this. so they would have to approve anything so they could basically keep an eye on everything as this appeal is playing out. but for letitia james, the attorney general, you're obviously there is no love lost between her and donald trump and she's made clear since last month of what property parties she's had her eyes on and she has said that
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she would start to seize them. she is not really been shy at all or any kind of shrinking violet on this. >> caitlin. thank you. wael said kaitlyn at the top of the hour for the source. now the politics of this campaign, politics joining us as he does most wednesday's democratic strategist james carville, james from a strategic standpoint, do you expect the biden campaign to take on trump civil legal troubles and his failure thus far to produce this bond >> well it's evident that he can't pay attention. and not only does he have this monday, i was his judgment, so republican party is not raking in money to speak up. and if phone at all through lara trump the state parties, you look around the country. these republican michigan being a prime example, the state parties are fallen apart and would, would biden can do is he can see here's, here's sufficient resources as superior resources right now now he needs to seize the moment and just go after trump would both hands and both feet, because there is an advantage and you get an advantage in
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politics business or entertainment or sports, you press your advantage is hard as you possibly can. >> so you think the president, the united states, should be talking about trump's civil issues, his business problems i think that there should be, i think surrogate should talk about them all the time i think they can run ads that but i'm not sure that his legal problems are the best avenue. steve bannon said as it would take an office in 2017, we're just going to flood the zone, would spit and say spit, but does a family show and will fly they flooded it. and the problem will trump has so many things you got to pick one or two and go after it not pope that the white house takes advantage of this leverage that they have right now is financial leverage that they have prison been condemned from prison. trump's rhetoric about migrants at an event in arizona yesterday. i just want to play part of them this is a guy who
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who's the way he talks about the latino community is well 26 he called latinos criminals, drug dealers, and rapists when he came down to escalator now he says immigrants are poisoning the blood of our country what the hell is he talking about? >> you are proponent of the president and his all his spokespeople in the campaign doing that more and more yeah. >> not so much him i mean be candid answer and president biden is not the best attack politician. i've ever seen in my life and hopefully leave it at that. but they are a lot of people to do what i call a quote, the wet work, unquote and i like a mob sort of a where i was kinda, but it's a paid tv and stuff like that. but yes, i cia term take a guy out but he doesn't need to do to what work people like me and
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other groups in the party need to do that he he's not very good at it. >> i >> don't think people want to hear from that. and then he can he can cruise along. he had a look at a better altitude, but this has got to be done and they've got a precious advantage right now and they have it. >> i've heard you said this is the first presidential race in your lifetime. that's not about the future. what do you mean by that >> won't mean exactly what it is. we do we want today or do we want four years ago? >> i >> mean, i don't know of any proposals. i mean, other than trump's and he's going to cut cho security. i'll get rid of obamacare i have no idea what he would direction followed him. i'll take the country i don't have much of a sense at present, binds articulated a potential second term plan or something like that and we'll just today or yesterday. that's your choice. tomorrow is not part of this equation
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which is unusual in american presidential politics. >> james carville, thanks very much, appreciate it >> thank you. >> good night coming up next cnn instrument prokupecz catches up to the candidate running to oversee north carolina's public school system, has been avoiding or questions about her extremist online postings, including june on slogans, conspiracy theories, and calls for the execution as traders of president biden and former president obama and mr. in the schools. later, cnn's gayle king and charles barkley just finished a conversation and oprah winfrey about her decades-long weight loss journey in the blockbuster drug ozempic and others part of that conversation, dr. sanjay gupta join us for his reaction. we'll be right back. >> this source with kaitlan collins. tonight at nine >> i have a question does anyone here
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unparalleled election at joy bird.com >> the woman you're about to hear from might never have found herself in the national spotlight. michele morrow is her name. she wasn't expected to win her republican primary race to be north carolina's top public school official. and last week in an upset, she did when and when she did her extreme and controversial comments began getting attention last friday, cnn's kfile reported that she has, for example, tweeted under her now-dormant personal account about wanting to see former president obama put in front of the firing squad on paper view
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saying, quote, we could make some money back from from televising his death that's just one of a string of social media postings between 2,019.20, 21, in which ms morrow made suggestions about executing obama and other prominent democrats for treason, including congresswoman alone omar, north carolina governor roy cooper, former new york governor andrew cuomo, hillary clinton, senator chuck schumer, and then press as an elect biden in the biden tweet. here's how she answered the question. will you follow joe biden's advice and wear a mask for 100 days? never. she replies. we need to follow the constitution's advice and kill all traitors ms morrow has also promoted q and on tweeting the queue non slogan where we go one, we go all multiple times. she also tweeted that the actor jim carrey was likely searching for adrenochrome, which is a reference to acute non conspiracy theory, which claims that celebrities, celebrities harvest the harvest the blood and drink the blood of children to prolong their own lives. >> that's what they believe. in addition
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>> to all that, ms morrow, who again, is the candidate to be north the carolinas top public school official has called public schools socialism centers and indoctrination centers. now as part of that kfile report, cnn reach out to morrow and her campaign multiple times to get her side of the story. but received no response. so after publication, the kfile story, morrow tweeted the following according to at k filing an ad, cnn and at cnn politics obama's drone attacks on hundreds of innocent muslims in yemen are not treasonous the insanity of the media demonstrates the need to teach k12 students real history and critical thinking skills, which of course doesn't directly address the multiple social media postings we just listed. so with that in mind, cnn shimon prokupecz beds went to north carolina and try and speak with her in-person took him several days. they finally caught up to our outside of wake county republican party event in raleigh. shimon joins us now. so what did she have to say? >> yeah. anderson. so she went to this gop convention. it's a local gop convention in wake
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county. there were other elected officials those are including the lieutenant governor, mark robinson, who himself has had some controversy and has had some controversial statements. and we finally got to speak to her as she was leaving. take a look at that exchange >> hi, ms morrow. how are you how did it go in there >> yeah, great. young good. who are you guys with? i'm shimon prokupecz on with cnn >> have you been parked in my neighborhood by any chance? >> we've been trying to talk to me. yes. >> okay. >> well, you can go through my cell, but i have you now, so why don't we talk now? >> why not? well, i want to ask you, do you >> still stay? and i'm not talking too, ma'am, do you still stand by your comments about former president barack obama and that he should be executed it's calling for the death of other presidents. do you stand by that we're doing do you stand by those comments >> good night. >> do you stand by what you've
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said about the public education system and that it needs to be destroyed. >> no. do you can by that? do you understand the concern that people have with this nomination? i do now do you vote in north carolina >> that keep your eyes on your own paper >> well, let me ask you, i i've read i've read papers. >> so here to keep your >> concerns, that people have with your nomination and the things that you have set people in new york have concern over the cone >> really >> concerned about north carolina. do you know that education is a problem in this entire country? so maybe they need to focus on what's going on in your state of new york, which by the way is where i grew up maybe they need to focus on what's going on in california where children are not getting the education that they need. maybe they need to focus on what they're doing in michigan because right now in north carolina, i'm focused on helping the families of north carolina for their children to get quality education for them to be safe and for us to be sure that our money is going into the classroom rather than
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bureaucracies. that's what i've been focusing on. that's what i've been fighting for for the last five years, going to the general assembly and dealing with those issues. >> right. so that is why i'm running my and the sooner you have set such hurtful things it's true. it turns of the education to tell you about transgender. one is so done with the gotcha moment. >> this is not a gotcha. >> your own words, ma'am. he's are your own that's not you. have education. the former president are my words, because you tweeted, are those not your tweets? do you deny saying that you have an opportunity now? totally deny saying that i am. are you denying that you said that in those tweets? >> i am telling >> you, have you that i'm going to do talk about the indoctrination of children by teachers i am telling you, have you talked about that? have you said that about student have you seen any of me going to the school board for the last five years because you will have my answer >> so schumann, clearly, she didn't answer your questions. she didn't want to talk about the tweets about executing president obama or biden has ms
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morrow ever explained her tweets calling for the execution these executions >> well no, not not exactly. she's deflected a lot. she's tried to suggest that perhaps like she did to me that maybe wasn't even written by her how do i know? she said to me at one point that it was something that she posted. so she's deflected, she's of course michigan clear that off and she can clear it up very simply just by answering answering the question >> yeah. >> i mean, it's not that difficult to do, but you can see there that when i wanted to talk about some of those things that she has said and they're very hurtful. i mean, there are people in this state who are very concerned about what she has said and just her lack of empathy and understanding into different different issues that affect students and children. and yet, when you look back at everything, she has said, it is very troubling. and she could clear so much of this up. but the bottom line and she's now in a position to get elected to a position where she will be
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running a school system with 1 students and a massive the budget. and then she would just have this she would have the podium. she would have a place to speak and to say what it is that she is feeling more widely that is certainly very concerning to people here, anderson will prophase, >> thanks very much joining us now as republican strategist in north carolinian, doug hi, who recently tweeted, quote, north carolina republicans dump this lunatic >> doug. what does it say about the republican party into a carolina to an >> extent, the republican party nationwide, this person is the gop nominee he for such an important job in do you think voters realized these tweets that she had sent out the support of q and on no. >> absolutely not. look, this was a down-ballot race. it wasn't one of the top tier racist, obviously, you had trump running for president, mark robinson running for governor, which of the two marquee races this is down-ballot. it gets fewer votes. it was a low turnout year, about 25% of eligible
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voters of voted in this primary. so i don't think they knew exactly everything that she said. a lot of this has come out since the election, but i see so much of this in every direction. anderson this is bad. these are not just appalling statements. these are the worst of the worst statements calling you assassinate political opponents and so forth. as a former campaign hack myself, having spent a lot of time in wake county in raleigh, that's not the state party headquarters on hillsborough street. but what i see is bad staffing, allowing your candidate to walk that far. we shimon being able to get every question in that he could you won't have a car there, so you can get your candidate out immediately. italy because you know, and this is problem number three. you don't have good answers to these questions unless you can just simply say that either you didn't do them, which clearly she did, or what i said was wrong and apologize for it. unfortunately, in american politics these days, we don't really reward people for standing up and saying that they made a mistake. we don't reward the apologies. that's
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one of the lessons that donald trump taught us in 2016. i was in wake county in raleigh the day after the access hollywood tape came out and i would have told you that day, anderson that there's no way donald trump could win. the reality he is he did now, north carolina is a lot of close races. this may be one of them. we go back and forth with our politics is as far as senators and governors so she could still win. but we've learned the lesson and i think this is what she's learning. it's a bad lesson that maybe if you don't apologize, you can get away with it. >> i mean, it shows the whole trafficking in q10 on talking about adrenochrome and all that is based on anti-jewish horrible anti-jewish tropes which were used by the nazis about jews drinking the blood of children. i mean, the idea that this person could be head of the school system in north carolina is it's quite extraordinary it's extraordinary. and look, it would be extraordinary if she were also the insurance commissioner candidate or a state senator, or basically
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anybody running for governor unfortunately, though anderson in our politics right now, we're so stratified and we've seen the parties go so tribal. it's not even so much red versus blue anymore. it's almost shirts versus skins that everything thing that we do in our politics comes down to that sort of existential level and so we're calling for the executions of a former president and a president elect is not disqualifying for an elected official. america are running a school system. who's talking about teaching the real history? i mean, is there anything that's disqualifying? >> well, this should be it. and obviously, again, i don't think that the voters republican primary voters in that case new, but this should be a good example. four, we have a new state, or we have a new rnc chair. michael whatley, he's also the state party chair in of north carolina. i've known him for 20 years. michael, this is the time to stand up and show leadership this has to be a line that we don't cross because we've seen political violence against republican members of congress, against democratic congressman or
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congresswoman, obviously with gabby giffords, we know that this could happen again. this is a time for leadership to stand up and say no, the >> i appreciate your time tonight. thank you. >> thank you. >> coming up another in a series of conflicting court decisions over texas immigration law that could come at any moment or ed lavandera join us next on what's been a very confusing and a lot of skepticism greeting this law. even from the law enforcement agency charge. with enforcing it. also tonight, oprah winfrey on cnn about her recent special on weight loss drugs like ozempic, what she's learned in her own struggles with weight loss and our dr. sanjay gupta joins us for the science on exam pick and other popular drugs
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>> i want me check here now the space shuttle accidents usually not one thing. it's a series of events is that part of the wing coming apart >> space shuttle columbia, the final flight from your sunday, april 7 at nine on cnn, were awaiting a federal appeals court decision that could come at any moment. it would be the latest in a series of rulings, many of them confusing about whether a texas border security law may be enforced while its constitutionality is being debated just last night, conservatives on the supreme court said the texas law could be enforced hours later, the appeals court placed a new hold
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on enforcement of the law, which is aimed at arresting and deporting migrants and quickly scheduled a hearing earlier today again, it's been a confusing several days at 11 dara joins us now with a view from law enforcement on el paso's downtown streets, newly arrived migrants blend in. police on patrol the future of the controversial texas immigration law looms over these daily street scenes. some residents like elizabeth bone said delay on, shrug off the concern about being asked to prove she's a us citizen >> if they is done, me if they asked me why are you from i don't care. that's in bother me because i know i'm label and i'm not doing anything wrong. >> i'm just on edge more 28 year-old el paso resident, diego carlos fears the new law will mean he and his family will be open to constant questions and harassment i'm like, all the time, i'm like looking over my shoulder, but the dps officers, those are the
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ones like you know, i hate my hair stands up on the back of my neck whenever i see those >> black and white trucks the fate of the texas immigration law known as senate bill four, or sb4, is being hashed out in federal court during >> oral arguments in the fifth circuit court of appeals. today, texas officials argued the law should go into effect while the legal challenge plays out in federal court. >> texas has decided that we are at the epicenter of this crisis we are on the front line and we are going to do something about it. >> this law would give local law enforcement officers the ability to arrest migrants suspected of entering texas illegally and allows state judges to deport migrants to mexico but one of the judges voice confusion over how the law would work confusion partially echoed by the attorney representing texas >> i was just trying to envision how this all plays a couple other things just because i'm not sure i understand the law totally. so what if someone enters in,
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let's say, from mexico? into arizona and lives there for five years, then moves to texas. or they covered >> i don't know the answer >> that confusion and skepticism is a common theme expressed by law enforcement agencies across the state the laredo police chief says, his officers will not focus on arresting undocumented migrants he can be just by seeing somebody and thinking the officer thinking that he's not from here and then asking for documents, it doesn't work that the sheriff in san >> antonio says he would require deputies to file a report explaining the circumstances of an undocumented migrants arrest. >> we don't want a deputy that thinks that they have authorities that actually don't crossing the line over into racial profiling and getting themselves and the agency and a whole lot of trouble for again, a misdemeanor in el paso sheriff's officials say they don't have the manpower and don't want their deputies thrust into a fight between texas republican leaders and the biden administration this
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issue could quickly exhaust those resources for our community and cause extended response times >> absences in patrol areas and 11 year joins us from el paso, texas and would have officials in mexico said about this >> well, that's the next level of all this anderson. and not only is it a chaotic and confusing using for local law enforcement officials here in texas? but part of this law says that judges can deport a migrants to mexico, but mexican officials are saying and have been same for some time that they will not accept migrants that texas sends back. remember, it's not all just migrants from mexico that come here mexico is essentially saying, we don't except chinese migrants are bent as well or cuban or haitian migrants. that's another layer. really loud. a very chaotic, but even more confusing situation i would lemon era, thanks very much. or senior data reporter harry enten joint us now, let's talk about voters
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and immigration. where does that stand in terms of importance, its number one basically, and the trend line has been absolutely tremendous. i've watched it over the last six months. if you go back to the end of summer last year, less than 10% of americans said that the top problem in this country, the nation's top problem, was immigration. and we've seen that rise steadily to now, we're last month, it was 28% of americans. and if you go back and gallup polling over the last 40 years at no point did more american say that immigration was the top issue than are at this particular point. and it makes sense given and the border crossings being in an all time high by the end of last year, that americans seem to be responding in a way that they simply put, never had before him. >> and who >> does get more credit for the job they would do on immigration? yes. so obviously we have a presidential race coming up and this is obviously become a political football, right? >> and >> this is one of the trend lines that i think really tells the story that's the difference between this election and the 2020 election. so if you ask voters, who do you think would do a better job
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handling border security and immigration? what do we see? we see that back in 2020, it was basically a dead even split, right? joe biden was slightly favor, but not overwhelmingly. and of course he's slightly won the election, not overwhelmingly so look at where we are today in a marquette university law school, paul, that was put out last month. look at that advantage that joe biden has on excuse me, that donald trump has on immigration and border security. it's near 30 points. this is a tremendous change that's going on and it's no wonder that donald trump is running on immigration and he's not just running on it in republican primaries he's running on in the general election. and i also think that's why there hasn't been quite the backlash that you might expect over trump's comments, some of which i of course wouldn't make and it's because that voters at this particular point are quite concerned about immigration and they trust donald trump on this particular imprisonment is bin according latino voters in the southwest, where does he stand? >> yes. so you might think that hispanic voters might be the types of folks who would have a backlash against donald trump's remarks, write, ain't
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the case. if you ask hispanic voters who do they trust more on border security and immigration overwhelmingly, they trust donald trump more by a tremendous margin. look at that 49% to 24% that is in line with what we're seeing in the polls in general amongst hispanics, right? joe biden won them overwhelmingly back in 2021 and by over 20 percentage points, democrats normally carry them overwhelmingly. if you look at the polling, write now on an average, appalling amongst hispanic voters, who did they choose in the ballot test, it's barely biden about biden by about two points. it would be the smallest margin if for any democratic candidate among hispanic voters. basically throughout history since we started pulling the gosh darn thing. so the fact is that this point, there's no backlash. and at this point, i don't see one coming >> stone. harry enten. thank you very much >> sometimes coming >> up over winfrey lens, her star power and her own personal story, the ongoing conversation about weight loss drugs and a new interview on cnn and tonight details next >> so would you get to nashville hot tenders and three
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on cnn at 10:00 p.m. tonight, i seen in colleague charles barkley and gayle king aired their interview with oprah winfrey. oprah talks about her recent special and weight loss as well as their own experiences with drugs that are run enormously popular like ozempic, that also comes with concerns about possible side effects and a high price tag here are some of what ofer say >> the benefit of people. finally, recognizing that obesity is a disease far outweigh to me any criticism that i would receive for doing it. and also people no longer blaming themselves for something that you cannot control in your brain. when the dr. said on that show that it's like holding your breath underwater and trying not to rise to me. that is the greatest metaphor because all these years i realized that's what i've been doing. you go on the diet, you're trying not to rise and then you rise again and you can't even understand why. and before you know it, you're ten pounds, 20 pounds, 30 pounds, and all of us have
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done this. who have this as an issue? you have your limit. yeah. yeah. i have my limit. i'm not going to go over a certain number. then you go over that number, then you say i'm not gonna go over five pounds over that >> and >> to know that you always going to go back. because if you have the propensity for it, if you can carry the marker for it, that's what's going to happen in your body. and somebody else's body, it may be different the one thing i wanted that's what i think is so important that i think for a lot of people, they didn't realize it. it's a thing with the brain. >> i >> heard i pulled some of the comments. i'm a smart person. why can't i figure this out? somebody said we've been blamed this whole time for being lazy gluttonous, and on discipline, it wasn't our stomach, it was our brain. i got the wake-up call on joe now by our chief medical correspondent, dr. sanjay gupta is also the host of the chasing life is sanjay over and touch on the association between the brain and wait. in her special way but his sine say about why it's so hard for certain
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people lose weight and how much of it is out of an individual's control >> yeah. i think there's two things. first of all, i think obesity in and of itself is probably not just one disease. it's many different diseases, so different individuals respond differently to things. but when talking about these medical occasions, by the way, i don't know if you've seen this anderson, but this isn't ozempic pen. this is what it looks like. you basically can dial in your specific dose that's what people have at home and they give themselves injections typically once a week what the drug does is several things. one of the things to this point about the brain is that it does seem to affect what is known as the satiation center of the brain that's an area of the brain that's right in the middle over here. so it makes you feel full. you eat, you feel full. that's what should happen. but for some people, they just don't get that feeling of safety she ation. they don't get that post meal sort of feeling of fullness they continue to have this sort of food chatter as it's been described to me, a term that i didn't know, but they're
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constantly thinking about food. and that's what this drug seems to be able to target it allows people to feel full after a meal. and it also slows down to some extent they're intestines as well. so that feeling of fullness stays even longer. >> so who exactly might be a good fit for these drugs? >> yeah. >> they've got really specific criteria and i'm going to put some of this up on the screen here, and i'll preface by saying this. we talked a lot about bmi, body mass index but it is a pretty blunt tool they say a bmi of over 30 that would qualify you for this. i don't know if you knew this anderson, but bmi actually was something that was first developed 200 years ago, primarily in european soldiers. so men primarily not really that relevant to today's day and age. so a lot of people have problem with the bmi measurement. but if you use that about 42% of the nation would qualify based on bmi alone. they also say people who have a bmi of 27 plus some other condition be at heart
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disease or diabetes, or high blood pressure or something like that so there's a lot of people who would qualify. i will say there's a lot of people who are taking either ozempic or this is majora. this is again a similar sort of pen you inject yourself at home who, who frankly don't qualify for this? and that's problematic because there has been an acute shortages of these drugs for people who actually do qualify, they have a hard time actually getting a hold of these drugs and there may be significant side effects. maybe even more so in people who are doing this, who don't fit those bmi criteria. >> so let's talk about side effects are and how serious can they be and what a person i mean, stay on these drugs forever or i mean, can you yeah. >> well, you know, we're we're still learning some some of these drugs have iterations have been around for a long time 20 years, even for some of the ozempic's type of drugs but not in the numbers that we're seeing now. so as you start to increase the population of people who are taking that, you're going to
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see different sorts of side effects a lot of them focus on gi type symptoms. people may feel constipated, they may have nausea or vomiting, stomach paralysis. it can be more serious. people can develop pancreatitis as well. bell and again, talking to obesity doctors, they say that the likelihood of these sorts of side effects seem to be amplified. and people who are taking it more for vanity reasons other than for really needing it because of bmi. i will say this. a lot of weight loss also seems to come from the loss of lean muscle mass so especially for older people who might already have a diminished muscle mass this can be problematic. you're losing your weight because you're losing muscle in addition to fat. and that's a problem. the second question you asked in terms of d need to be on it for your entire life. i wanted to pull this graph just just to show you. this is a particular drug like this. the mengzhou type drug and what they found if we can put up that graph is that basically in 36 weeks, about eight or nine months, you
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lose about 20% of you >> that's a lot. >> i mean, think about that 20% of your body weight, you can do the math on that. but at that, see that vertical line there they kept certain people on mounjaro. you see the wake continues to go down and then plateaus but they gave a placebo to the other group and people started to gain the weight back. and within a year, so they gained at least half the weight back. so what does that mean? again, we don't know, but i think talking to a lot of obesity doctors, the presumption is for a lot of people they may need to be on this medication for the rest of their lives. and there are people who are starting this medication in their '20s or 30s, anderson. so think about that every month for the next 60 years or so. that's a lot of drug there are shortages. it's $1,000 a month so these are these are issues that they're going to have to grapple with. >> sanjay. thanks so much. you can listen to his podcast chasing life on the subject to weight loss drugs by clicking on the code. you see on the screen right now, don't ms oprah's interview with gayle
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king and charles barkley at 10:00 p.m. eastern here on cnn tonight, just about an hour from now, because we have next more royal drama surrounding prince william and kate as someone tried to. it seems accessed the princess of wales medical records at the london hospital where she underwent abdominal surgery. they've launched an investigation, reportedly more details coming up did you not turbotax now provide you with a tax expert who will do your >> taxes from start to finish. try turbotax live full service. your full expert will do your taxes for you as soon as today, plus, they'll only sign in file when they know it's 100% correct correct. and you're getting the best outcome possible for a tax expert who will do your taxes from start to finish, try turbotax live full service, visit turbotax.com today, brand power helping you buy back >> jorge is always put the ones he loves first but when it comes to caring for his team he's led his own maintenance, take a back seat. well, maybe
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hospital where she underwent abdominal surgery in recovered for, you so the two weeks is the center of a scandal over her medical privacy seen as max foster has details >> another day, another princess headline, this one alleging medical staff tried to illegally access her records while she was there to undergo surgery at this private london clinic? the country's data watchdog now says it's assessing a breach of confidentiality reported in the daily mirror. the british tabloid reported that at least one hospital staffer allegedly tried to illegally access kate's private medical records while she spent 13 nights at the london clinic hospital in jail henry, after planned abdominal surgery. the mirror says the hospital in the palace and launched a probe into the allegations and did a statement to cnn, the uk's information commissioner's office said, we can confirm that we've received a breach report and are assessing the information provided on wednesday, the
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uk's health minister, maria caulfield, warn that hospital staff could face prosecution or any allowed to access the patient notes you're caring for with their permission and there's really strict rules. information commissioner would take enforcement action against trusts or primary care practices, but also as individual practitioners, your regulatory body. so for me, it would be the nmc would take action as well. so it's pretty severe it's another blow for the princess and the palace. that's being protecting her privacy fiercely during her recovery they've minimal information which has sparked wiles speculation about her true condition and whereabouts wherever she is, i hope she's fine and well, i think there are a lot more pressing things that people should be putting their attention towards. >> on tuesday. another uk newspaper, the sun, published a video taken by a member of the public showing a smiling kate walking from a farm shop alongside her husband, prince william kensington palace has
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referred or questions over the hospital breach to the london clinic in a statement, the ceo of the hospital russell said in the case of any breach, all appropriate investigators, regulatory, and disciplinary steps will be taken. there's no place at our hospital for those who intentionally breach the trust of any of our patients or colleagues so the hospital is investigating. so is the information watchdog and the government wants answers. the princess of wales will simply want to know whether or not the reason she went into hospital, the underlying illness will remain secret as she wished addison. >> thanks very much. now, a quick update on a story brought you last night, the israeli supreme court has issued a temporary injunction that'll let a group of about two dozen palestinian hospital patients being treated in israel, including infants and their moms. as well as cancer patients remain where they are in israel. jeremy diamond brought us story last night and spoke to several the moms who were at that point days away