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tv   CNN News Central  CNN  May 22, 2024 10:00am-11:01am PDT

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that's 180712 3,800. >> i hanako montgomery in tokyo. and this is cnn back in court and not backing down donald trump's legal team trying to get his classified documents case thrown out after multiple delays. >> the judge criticized as a recent move by the prosecution boss a path of destruction, deadly tornadoes ripping through iowa, a storm system still threatening people all the way from texas to vermont and as one passenger on that singapore airlines flight says he's lucky to be alive, new questions about exam wait what happened will speak to the miracle on the hudson hero, sully sullenberger about the terrible turbulence that shook
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tuesday's flight, are following these major development hoping stories and many more all coming in right here to cnn news central we're following major developments this afternoon in former president donald trump's classified documents case. i'm boris sanchez, alongside jessica dean and the nation's capital first at any moment, trump appointed judge aileen cannon will hold her second pretrial hearing of the day related to the case. she's going to hear arguments from trump's lawyers as they tried to get many of the criminal charges against him dismissed. meantime, hundreds of pages of previously sealed court records are now giving us new insight into the fbi's investigation before trump and his co-defendants were indicted, it includes images as of trump's personal aide, walt nauta, moving boxes around just before trump lawyers search for classified materials after a justice department subpoena those on-sale documents, also
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showing trump's attorneys found additional classified documents at mar-a-lago months after the fbi's search of the property including in trump's own bedroom and all of that as lead to a dc-based federal judge to find, quote, strong evidence that trump intended to hide classified materials before it was charged cnn senior crime and justice reporter katelyn polantz is joining us now, and caitlin, let's start with these hearings today in florida water trump's lawyers claiming as they try to get these charges dismissed? well, today is about attacking the prosecutors and how they charged the people in this case, donald trump, and then specifically his co-defendants, walt nauta, seen they're carrying the boxes. he's accused just to lie about that and that being part of the obstruction conspiracy, moving them from the feds what is an issue today is just one of about a dozen different ways that donald trump in these co-defendants are trying to get aileen cannon to look very closely at the charges and they want her to toss them out of court part to dismiss the case
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this is one of those days that it's unclear whether there really needed to be a hearing on this, what the argument is that while nauta is making is that he's saying he was selectively and vindictively prosecuted that the justice department retaliated against him by charging him because because he didn't want to keep talking to them after he talked to them a couple of times and they believe they caught him in a lie the just farm, it says that's why we charge people. >> if if you lie to us. >> so that's what happened this morning. that was the argument they're going to have some more arguments this afternoon. judge aileen cannon has to work through all of these motions, whether by having hearings are just looking at the court papers and ruling one way or another, if this thing goes on to trial, and kayla, what about this newly released evidence? >> yeah, there is as part of this as we move towards trial, there are hundreds of pages that are becoming available to us in the record of this case that we never had before. and
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one of the things that is so interesting that we have been waiting for, for months. >> i've been waiting for for this ruling by judge judge beryl howell to allow prosecutors to get access to the testimony of donald trump's former attorney, evan corcoran, who's part of that big obstruction case that the challenge over his words and what he said, that's gonna be a big part going forward for judge cannon to look at. >> but now we have an opinion from howell, who allowed the prosecutors to get access to this, that she looked at that evidence and we have this 84 page opinion that we can now read from her and she says there was strong evidence that the president, former president, intended to hide boxes from his attorneys search efforts. she looked at that evidence and she lays out in fine detail exactly why she thinks there was a lot of reason for the just for me to believe a crime was committed and to keep investigating it by getting evan corcoran's information from including
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folders labeled highly classified in the former president's bedroom that they found months after the search and they found them in mar-a-lago, months after the fbi's scoured mar-a-lago. and then donald trump's lawyer even came on cnn in december of that year and said ed, that yeah, he had a document folder that had classified markings on it using to cover a light at his bedside table. fascinating, detailed. caitlin polantz. thank you so much for that. want to discuss further now with david shown he is a former or rather he represented former president donald trump during his second impeachment trial, david. thank you so much for being with us. let's take a step back and talk about the time of all this because this is the first hearing since judge cannon delay the start of the trial indefinitely. she cited this mountain of unresolved pretrial issues the defense's strategy to delay as much as possible seems to be working, right well, i mean, i
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think these are legitimate motions. >> i think she's going to have pretrial hearings on motions throughout the case, but she has to feel comfortable with when she thinks is the appropriate schedule going forward. i know she's taken a lot of criticism, but actually as a terrific background, she really kind of an american story, given the parents background or education, or clerkship work as a prosecutor, i think she's being very thoughtful in this case. it does cause some delay to have these hearings, but i think they're all very important with very important issues david let's get into one of the issues these newly released documents from the dc-based judge that found strong evidence that trump intended to hide classified information, the defendants is taken exception to how prosecutors presented evidence before that, judge. >> why? >> well, a couple of reasons. it's unusual to have evidence presented before a grand jury and decety for a case in florida in the first place secondly, there's an antipathy
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toward judge howell dodge owl wouldn't like the way donald trump got out of bint in the morning. she's very, very, very strongly against that. that's part of it. but i think an overriding issue in this case is whether there she is. right. and katelyn polantz was exactly right. we've been waiting for this opinion because judge hallam made a remarkable findings. she found that evan corcoran's all of every corcoran's nodes, personal notes should be turned over to the government and they were and presented to the grand jury based on her finding that the attorney-client privilege is pierced by the crime-fraud exception did she found that these were notes were relevant to the commission of a crime? i think she handled it poorly because she had them turned over and wholesale fashion without evan corcoran ever having a chance to see any editing that was done and that sort of thing. i think that may well have tainted the grand jury process, but anyway the opinions very important thing an important development in the case. >> what did you make of that portion specifically, we're judged howell describes there being no excuse provided for
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how trump could miss classified-marked documents being in his own bedroom and on also the revelation that staffers at mar-a-lago were moving things around before evan corcoran could actually get a chance to look at them yeah. i think that from a defense perspective, they can and will have to eat all of those kinds of facts and allegations under their theory that under the presidential records act, he had at the sole authority, designate whether records were presidential records or personal records. >> and so on relying on the 2012 opinion, from judge amy burma jackson in dc, that's their defense theory of the case. the prosecution of course, says the pra is absolutely irrelevant to the case. i think at a minimum, you have to say that it's relevant to the state of mind president trump because the statute, the relevant statute here is 7903, requires a state of mind that he knew and believed he was unauthorized to have the documents and had certain specific purposes in mind for them so they can eat all of these facts in their defense
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theory. but you're right, there's sexy facts that the prosecution should also has this recording of donald trump being interviewed for this book about mark meadows saying, hey, you want to see something classified like that. that's that's gonna be a challenge for the defense, right i think that l of these tapes and videos and all that are always a challenge because people do get glued to them, that sort of thing. >> but again, he's going to have to be consistent but his defense theory of the case to explain why he believed he had the right to all of these documents david shown we very much appreciate your perspective. >> thanks for joining us thank you another big story we're following this afternoon. severe storms are threatening more than 75 million people across let's the united states, bringing damaging winds, intense hale and possible tornadoes from texas to vermont. this is part of a deadly storm system that rip through the midwest on tuesday least 18 tornadoes, including this one. were reported in iowa alone. >> that is really incredible video. the city of greenfield, iowa, about 60 miles southwest
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of des moines, is among the hardest hit areas this is one neighborhood just left in tatters, piles of debris scattered everywhere. you see the truth, the trees just broken in half, homes destroyed, multiple cars, flipped over over we do know that several people have been reported dead and that the search and rescue efforts are still underway it is just horrific. >> it's hard to describe until you can actually see at the devastation. everybody became a little shift ambulances. we pulled the guy from the rubble and put him on a little makeshift stretcher that we made through him in the back of a truck of a guy that isn't even from iowa and we just made our way to the lumber yard, which was the makeshift hospital scene ends when the wild is in greenfield and found this report just a few moments go where i'm standing right here. >> this was a garage and right behind me, this was someone's home. it is now completely destroyed. and if you look beyond this scene plays out
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over and over and over, holmes absolutely annihilated here and greenfield where this massive tornado rips through this town that is just less than two square miles and just around 2000 people live here. and if you look over my shoulder here, another example of how decimated this town is this area right here. you can see where there's the stone slats and then there's the gravel on top of that that was where ambulances parked and then beneath that right here where you see these groups of people and all that debris that was where the emts would have their rest area the hospital was also hit here in greenfield and a few swing over my shoulder. you'll see this white truck here. just over that area, right in the parking lot behind that. that's where they had to triage patients because the hospital was so damaged, they were actually taking patients out of the hospital and bringing them to the parking lot of a lumber yard here in greenfield because the hospital parts of it, at least we're inoperable. that is how dangerous and curious the situation was here in
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greenfield. we do not yet know how many fatalities there where you don't yet know how many injuries there were and we do not yet know what the dollar amount was here. but what is very clear is that this is a story of a town that was, now it is completely decimated. this happening as 3405 tuesday afternoon still more almost a day later, the search and rescue is very much underway here. and according to governor kim reynolds, hundreds of first responders are here to try to get this cleanup underway. this is a very long road back to you or thanks to whitney wilds for filing that report. >> a
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palestinian state should be realized through direct negotiations between the parties, not through unilateral recognition. >> meantime, israel's foreign minister said the decision by those countries sends a message that terrorism pays. cnn's jeremy dayana is following the story live from jerusalem forest. jeremy, what can you tell us about the reaction from inside israel? >> well, there's certainly a lot of outrage being expressed by israel and warning of consequences not only for the countries who recognize palestine as a state here, but also for the palestinian authority itself, the israeli foreign minister today recalling the israeli ambassadors to spain, ireland, and norway, and also summoning the imbalance acidosis from those three countries. in israel for a formal reprimands, wondering which the israeli foreign minister said he would show these ambassadors videos of women being taken hostage on october 7, he, israeli prime minister himself, a calling this move by these three countries attempt tantamount to
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a reward for terror and a vowing that a palestinian state would effectively be a terrorist state, which he said would attempt to perpetrate the october 7 massacre again and again, we should note, of course that the israeli prime minister in saying that is making very clear that he opposes the creation of a palestinian state. he opposes a two-state solution, which is very much at odds with the united states position on that issue. now, in terms of consequences that could come for these countries, we've heard from the finance minister bezalel smotrich, a far-right member of netanyahu's governing coalition, saying that he will seek the approval of tens of thousands of housing units in settlements in the occupied west bank, additional new settlements in the west bank. and he is also seeking to cut off the palestinian tax revenue, which israel collects. but his meant to be going to the palestinian authority that could have some serious ramifications for the already
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cash-strapped governing body in the west bank? >> jeremy, today, the families of seven young israeli women soldiers who were captured by hamas have released graphic footage of that abduction. and now we want to warn everyone, these are very disturbing images that we're going to show you. but jeremy, tell us about these photos and why they're coming out now? >> yeah, it is a graphic video showing the moments when seven israeli women soldiers in the idf at a military base in nahal owes on the border with the gaza strip, the moments when these militants came in line them up against the wall, they bound their hands. >> you can see that they are bruised and bloodied and absolutely terrified. >> there's no mistaking the fear in their eyes as they are face-to-face with these hamas gunman. you can see one of the women, the ama lavy she is bloodied, her faces buddy,
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there was a very famous video of her where you can see her pants are also bloodied as she's being put in the back of a jeep, taken to gaza of the seven women who were taken a captive from that base. one of them, no mr.. siano is believed to have been killed in captivity according to the israeli military, her body because retrieved or mega de shoe was rescued actually, in a special operations maneuver in the gaza strip by the israeli military months to go. but there are these five women, naama levy, leary, elbagir, a gum burger, carina, ref, and daniela gilboa, all 18 and 19 years old, who remain captive in the gaza strip and their families are hoping that by releasing these video, they can bring the world's attention back on the plight of their daughters and also of course, pressure the israeli governments to reach a ceasefire and hostage release deal. jessica truly, truly horrific images and a reminder that they have been there since october 7, taken against their welch jeremy diamond. >> thanks so much for that
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reporting and joining us now to discuss all of this is democratic congresswoman debbie dingell of michigan congresswoman. thanks so much for being here with us today. i want to start first with this move by these three nations, the spanish prime minister saying that the decision to recognize a palestinian state was in his words, not taken against the people of israel and certainly not against the jews, or in favor of hamas. but instead of support of peace and coexistence, i'm curious what you say to that and what your reaction is you know i've listened to the report or her to this. i've are very strongly support us two-state solution. i do believe we need to go at it through a diplomatic approach that people need to be working together to get to that. but i think they've said it very well. that, you know what hamas is not. the palestinians. there are many, many innocent civilians that live in
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palestine that have just become victims of this war. >> in my district, i have families that lost members in the hamas terrorist attack. >> their grieving ahmet, the tissue the families that want to have the hostages brought home. but i also have constituents. i have one constituent and has lost 40 members of his family and gaza in my district, people are raw and they are hurting and i want, i want peace and it want to figure out the best way that we can get peace. and i do believe that ultimately that is going to be a two-state solution. if we ever can get to a ceasefire and the president and the white house has said that they also obviously support a two-state solution, but they say that it should not be coming unilaterally, that it should be brokered by the parties talking to each other. >> do you think that's the right way to get there or do you think that these countries recognizing them now is the proper way to get there? >> i'm not going to tell those countries how to run their business. i right now support
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the president in our state department in strongly supporting that president biden has been very clear with israel how he feels on that issue. and i will strongly, strongly continue to support that. pep supported that for decades. >> and the secretary of state, tony blinken, has said that he wants to work with congress to craft bipartisan legislation that he says in his words, isn't appropriate response to the international criminal court after eight applied for those arrest warrants for israeli prime minister benjamin netanyahu and israel's defense minister, among others is that something you would port. and what do you think is an appropriate response? >> i'm going to tell you right now that that's a very hypothetical question that you were asking and everything that we seem to be doing appear there not everything we've actually done one or two by partisan things but there are a lot of gauchos, right now. and i really, i'm not sure that all of this demagoguing, all of these we're seeing a rise. we
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are seeing a arrives in hatred of antisemitism, islamophobia, zen, everything. and we got to stand up to it. so i'm not sure what that means, what form it becomes. and i'm going to be very careful to support anything that you've just contributing to more. gotcha. message legislation that gets us absolutely nowhere but contributes to the hate and division we're watching in too many places. including in our country but the secretary of state himself said he wanted to work on a bipartisan solution here and response as he called it, do you think that's the correct thing? >> should there be an effort to craft bipartisan response to this, this move by the face, we shouldn't i think we should all be working together to try to find peace and where we are right now, this pitting up against each other, we need to terrorism cannot be tolerated, but we also have to really realize there are a lot of innocent people that are being killed and everybody's trying to pitt each other against each other.
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>> i know what those countries did is not against the state of israel or the jewish people. >> i know many people know that the people are palestinian are innocent civilians caught in this that's what we've got to work towards, not these, not continuing. >> i don't want the hostages released. we need to get them released, and i don't want to see any more innocent people die. i keep telling people are jewish baby and a palestinian babies are both babies. >> and i hear you talking about your home district where so many people in your words are raw, their grieving, the loss of family members, allies of former president trump met with arab and muslim american voters in your home state of michigan. they're trying to win their support amidst those voters frustration with, with president biden over his handling of this war. he won michigan by around 154,000 votes in 2020, we know over 100,000 people voted uncommitted in that primary this year. do you think the biden campaign is taking the concerns of your community,
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your constituents? >> seriously enough. >> look, i've talked very directly to the president about this. he knows how people are hurting i also want to tell you that i remember the first week that donald trump was president and remember everybody, everybody thought i was crazy. and i said he was gonna get elected and that he could win michigan and then did when michigan but the first thing he did was posed, wanted to try to impose a muslim ban. >> and we need to listen to the things that he's saying and i think we've got to do do a good job of communicating all of the issues and who people really are that they stand for. >> i want peace right now. what is going on between israel and in the mideast is we need, it's got a right to so does palestine. and it's a, it's a decades long, centuries long issue. but we got to try to find peace. and that's what i'm focused on. and i'm
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talking to everybody and trust me, i've had some hard tough moments okay. >> you have congresswoman debbie dingell. thank you so much for joining us. i appreciate it thank you still ahead. the louisiana house passes a bill that would make the state the first in the country to criminalize abortion pills. what this could signal for reproductive rights in post-roe america? and elvis is graceland stays in the pressly family for now. what's next in this foreclosure fight simons are going on and wearing the tornado. >> here. >> i'm thinking language, die and i thought that was it. >> finally, earth with liev schreiber premieres june 2 at nine on cn fashion moves fast, setting trends is our business. >> we need to scale with customer demand in real time so we partner with verizon, their solution for us, a private by
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mesothelioma call us now we've now learned that more than 100 people on board a singapore airlines flight yesterday were heard from severe turbulence. according to a witness, about ten hours into the trip from london to singapore, all hell broke loose the plane began to violently shake at about 37,000 feet hospital officials in thailand where the plane made an emergency landing, see that 20 of those hurt are now actually an intensive care i'm lucky. a lot of people have got some spinal issues from hitting their head and then connect back downstairs quietly a lot of people can barely move her back. i'm very fortunate to be go at shift to some that's my neck by everything is fine. and until i arrive back in apple and then i started feeling really safe bombing can stop vomiting, can walk yeah, it was
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it was pretty bad joining us now is a retired us airways captain cb sully sullenberger. he's on the phone for us. he served as us ambassador to the international civil aviation organization. he also drew international acclaim for landing the so-called miracle on the hudson flight back in 2009. captain, thank you so much for being with us. you were a commercial airline pilot for 30 years. i'm wondering what's it like in the cockpit when you experience extreme turbulence like that? >> boris, just good to be with you. well, fortunately, in my 57 years as a pilot and 30 years as an airline pilot, is a captain, as you mentioned i'd never encountered turbulence sets severe fortunately these encounters are robert but when they happen, they can be very damaging and cause many serious injuries like in this case. and it can be very sudden as hard as we all work in the aviation
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industry to understand the science of the atmosphere, it's still difficult to predict with precision exactly where or when, or what altitudes this turbulence may occur and it's difficult to detect unless it's associated with cloudiness, it can happen and clear and that's that's one of the most dangerous encounters as the clearer tournaments or cat. there's nothing to see is just a change in the the movement of the air, either horizontally or vertically and it can really be a big surprise. and so that's one of the biggest reasons that no matter where in the world you're flying, that is a past year that the single most important thing that you could do is to keep your seatbelt fastened so captain, as a pilot, you first sense that sort of clear-air turbulence based on what you get from the controls, the feedback from the controls is that right from the movement of the airplane for you can feel it the sudden upward or downward movement are
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these verticals curb occurrence of air or with this sudden changes in wind speed or direction at a given altitude and is there much a pilot can do when you're in that situation where it surprises you to get out of it or to avoid it to lessen the damage caused by it. well, look, of course, the airline meteorologists and the flight planners and the pilots do their very best to try to anticipate where this kind of 30 might occur. but once it is encountered, you have to maintain totally the airplane to maintain your assigned altitude possible and two db gate from your designed from your assigned altitude from air traffic control, if necessary, to avoid over stressing the airplane. but these are plans are designed, engineered, and built to very high standards to accommodate severe turbulence plus a 50% margin of safety. so it's very unlikely that it's going to severely damage the
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airplane, but it certainly can injure people and make a mess of the cabin warned things lie about. >> yes. no question about that. and rattled the crew as well. i want to play some sound for you from a passenger talking about what he saw the crew and dur during all of this, let's listen i didn't see any member of cutting through that wasn't injured. they all every single cabin crew person i saw had had an injury of some sort. the heart goes out to that ashley because they were doing their job and they're quite vulnerable as well because there on their pain. they weren't seated they obviously didn't have the seat belts on because they were doing going about their duties. so that they were extremely vulnerable and as i say, not one of them was uninjured that i could see i'm curious captain, about the training that an airplane crew goes through to try to mitigate this risk that's part of the job and if there's much that can be done to protect them
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further in situations like this. >> well that, passenger is right that the flight attendants are often the most vulnerable there on the front lines. they are the ones moving about the cabin during their duties serving passengers. and so they're the ones who are not buckled in and as safe as the passengers. and event like this suddenly occurs and as i said, pilots and the airline and meteorologists and flight planners do everything they can to anticipate this and avoided and including using airborne radar when there is precipitation that's ahead but you have to understand that radar can only see something that's got water in it, precipitation, like it's under storm. if it's clearer turbulence and just know cloud with a lot of moisture in it. radars not going to detect that. there are some efforts that have been made to use lidar, do use light beams to try to detect a clearer
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turbulence to see the actual movement of the arrowhead of the airplane but as right now, it's still in its infancy and it's not really reliable, effective tool so aside from looking out the window and seeing cloudiness or knowing from experience where at certain out due to there are forecast to be big changes in wind speed or direction or sudden up doc drafts and downdrafts are mountainous terrain, for example, it's very difficult to predict retired us air. we have, we have to be prepared for it by warning the cabin crew and the passengers to keep their seat belts fastened throughout the flight, especially on very long lights that cover huge parts of the globe many changing climates and atmospheric conditions over a ten hour flight, for example so even though we've made common place and very routine air travel around the globe, we have to remember that what we're doing really is pushing you to build with people through the upper atmosphere
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seven or eight miles above the earth and we must freely be prepared for whatever conditions we might encounter. >> so important to heed that warning about keeping your seat belt on captain sully sullenberger. a pleasure to have you this afternoon. thanks for joining us. >> good to be with you still had the white house is sounding off after the louisiana house votes to criminalize the way that certain abortion pills are used. >> what's next for the controversial legislation? >> right now, pet dander skin cells, mold spores, pollen, and dirt are being sucked into your air. ducks get cleaner air in system efficiency. now, with stanley steamer, your air ducts are clean until they're stanley steamer clean. >> his name from roger we there yet so many ways to save life ready while it happy. that's
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adhd begin tonight on tnt today, the biden campaign blaming trump for the latest move by states to cut back on women's reproductive rights. the louisiana state house passing a bill to classify abortion inducing drugs as controlled, dangerous substances. >> the biden campaign warning this law is quote example, of this dystopian agenda that trump and his allies are pushing dr. meghan ranney is joining us now to discuss she's an emergency physician and dean of yale's school of public health. >> great to have you with us, dr. i. just want to start with the fact that the risk of death with mifepristone is lower than that of penicillin so medically, why would it need to be classified as a controlled, dangerous substance it doesn't not only is the risk of death less than penicillin, it's less than the risk of pregnancy and let's be clear on what the controlled substances act and this whole idea of scheduled drugs is about. >> it's about trying to unify hi federal drug laws to control medications that have high risk
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of addiction. mifepristone, and misoprostol in no way, shape, or form have any chance of causing addiction, substance use disorder, overdose, or any of the other things that all of the other medications under the controlled substance act lead to. so this is pure legislative overreach that has nothing to do with the actual risk profile of the medications at hand. it's yet another example of legislators and politicians trying to get between women and physicians when it comes to allowing women to make the best choices for their own and their family's health? >> yeah. when you're seven, we're talking about it. you say controlled substance and it's like what you're talking about, your thing about narcotics, things like that that are highly addictive. and this is just not proven to be that a group of nearly 270 physicians, health care providers medical students all signed a letter to the bill's sponsor, republican state senator thomas pressly and they wrote in part, neither mifepristone and misoprostol
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have been shown to have any potential for abuse, dependence, public health risk, nor high rates of adverse side effects to your point, dr.. this drug has other uses outside of abortion we do know that i believe it can also be used sometimes in childbirth and in other situations. so how can it affect those who need this and other situations i and other public health professionals and physicians are worried that this is going to have a chilling effect on access to these medications. >> we use them to manage miscarriage. as you said, we use it to manage high-risk pregnancies, to manage postpartum hemorrhage, which is a leading cause of maternal death let's note that louisiana already has one of the the highest maternal death and maternal injury or morbidity rates in the country. it gets an f from the march of dimes in terms of its infant and maternal health outcomes. this is going to put more regulations in place that will make these medications harder to access particularly in rural
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areas or safety net hospitals, thereby putting many more women and children at risk of bad health outcomes. >> and so much of louisiana is serviced by in rural areas and they don't necessarily have great access to health care to begin with, dr. meghan, ronnie thanks so much. we appreciate your expertise in this thank you. stay with cnn. we'll be right back allergies with allegro. >> they won't stop me. nothing beats allegro. it's the fastest non drowsy 24 hour allergy relief your great. another telling people how they can save money with experience, which subscription cancellation you can be saved, but $270 on average a year, they less, i'm thinking girl math goodbye pair of shoes with that. that's what we're talking about get started now with the experian app from tried and true to try
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today i'm the ceo of my own company. it's the way my mind works. i have a very mechanical brain. why are we not rethinking this? i am more... i'm more than who i am on paper. says new album is breaking records who gets to say what country is comey country beyond, say a nashville's renaissance monday, but aid on cnn closed captioning is brought to you by sokoloff law mesothelial move victims call now $30 billion in trust money has been set aside. you may be entitled to a portion of that money all when 8085920400. that's when 8085920400 new today elvis presley is family is hanging onto his graceland
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mansion for now, a tennessee court halting a planned foreclosure auction of the memphis property, siding with the late singers granddaughter mia, she sued to block the move after a mysterious company claimed that it had the right to sell the home. cnn's isa for salad this has been following this force, so he said, well, what's the latest flores, jessica, good afternoon to you. yeah, it's the 11th hour. this ruling handed down by this judge because the foreclosure sale was actually scheduled for tomorrow. this judge now saying that he has blocked the sale graceland is staying in the hand of the pressly family for now, let me backtrack a little bit here as to how we got to this point. >> the lender behind the sail, nasr sunny investments presented documents claiming that lisa marie presley entered into a loan agreement with them for $3.8 million, and that put then put graceland the property as collateral. >> and when she defaulted on that loan, while the property
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then became theirs to sell as they see fit but the king, elvis's air, riley keough filed a lawsuit claiming that those documents are fake, that her mother, her late mother's signature was forged on there, that her mother never borrowed money he never put up graceland as collateral, and that na sonny she claims is not even a real company. now, the judge today at a morning hearing in shelby county, tennessee, specifically pointing to a problem with the notary, the person who signed off on these documents actually put in a sworn affidavit saying she had never met lisa marie presley, and never notarized her signature. here's what the judge had to say peter's journey a crime is assessable
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this right here and that chancellor saying that keough is likely to prevail in her lawsuit, ultimately saying that adequate discovery is needed here to argue the merits of this case as to who is the rightful owner of graceland also letting you know that back in 2020 uh, presley executive speaking to the rolling stone, stated that the property is worth an estimated 400 to 500 million. >> but beyond that, right behind the property, something more valuable than that. it's elvis presley's final resting in place. he's there along with several other family members he's ever as resellers. >> thank you so much for the update turning now to this week's home front, may is military appreciation month in one community is shining a spotlight on 100 year-old army veteran jimmy east burn he was the recipient of a hero award and l qarrah, indiana, the
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department of veterans affairs estimates of the 16 million plus americans who served in world war ii, fewer than 120,000 were alive as of 2023 an estimated 131 of those veterans die every day. here's east born and his daughter talking about the award and his service to this country to be alive grammar he's fuels privilege to have served his country and then to see the recognition from others, some way. it's extremely humbling we're certainly grateful to him too. >> it's an award for very deserving grad veteran from our greatest generation will break back home fraught brought to you by cornea saada, happy endless summer grill mao would golden corral carney isolde. >> it's gotten me. i saw them. >> that's what i said.
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