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tv   CNN Newsroom With Wolf Blitzer  CNN  May 24, 2024 8:00am-9:00am PDT

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>> you were alive. in, the cnn newsroom. i'm jim acosta in washington. we begin this hour with a groundbreaking agreement that could reshape college sports major settlement between the five power conferences and the ncaa. paves the way for schools to pay student-athletes , students say, it includes paying $2.7 billion in damages to past and current current student at those schools will also have up to $20 million per year that they can use to pay those athletes. and with me now to talk about this as dante stallworth is a former nfl wide receiver and played for the university of tennessee as well as many nfl teams. and jeffrey kessler joins us as well. he was lead attorney in the antitrust suit against the ncaa hey jeffrey, let me start with you first. you've been involved in several suits for athletes, including the fight for the women's national soccer team
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why are these changes needed right now for the ncaa? i mean, i suppose it sounds like we're going to start treating student athletes like pro athletes in this country so settlement has been a very long time colleague the reality is that big time college sports earns billions of dollars every year for these schools and the only one who docx been able to benefit for this has been the athlete this is the life trends for the opportunity for these student athletes to share in the revenues they've been generating? yeah, they're the ones making all the money and they haven't been reaping any of the rewards. and dante, you're with me here in the studio. i want to ask you about this. i know of course you played in the pros for many years of patriots and washington commanders and so on. but you played at the university of tennessee this doesn't go far back enough to
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guess. work to your benefit but how might it have changed your life and had this spin in place back then? >> yeah, i think it would've changed a lot of players lives. think, initially you look back and you see, you could have learned a lot of financial stability, a lot of fine that have a lot of financial resources from that aspect in a lot of guys don't make it to the nfl. i was fortunate enough to do but it gives you an opportunity to see how the sausage is made now and now the instead doublet is, has reaped the benefits for so long and now they have to pay the cost when as richard noted, this is a a long time coming. they could have easily have taken care of this decades ago. and here we are today and it looks like the house of cards is starting to fall. >> yeah. i mean, i guess what about the notion that college athletes, they're in college? you know, it am sure i can just here there are some old traditionalist who have been, who are watching this and saying, you know, they're in college, they should be getting an education and so on. they shouldn't be focused on getting paid like the pros what
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your response to that so this is not the drama club these athletes is dante do work 45 hours a week before they go to a single class they are asked to dedicate themselves to bake these teams great and to bring in all these buddy to these schools so it is very just like everyone else in this country has an opportunity to reap the rewards of what they generate. >> these athletes deserve this. and let's not lose sight of the fact that it, the big revenue sports or basketball and football both of these athletes or athletes of color. these are communities that we'll just saw benefit from having the access to these funds to help them in their later life dante, i mean, i have to ask this question because you do here
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the criticism from time to time in college sports so you have sort of like the elite, the top power five conferences like the sec and the big ten and so on. >> and then you have these other schools that are just sort of fighting for crumbs, trying to get in there, trying to make some noise in their respective sports. how does this work to their detriment those smaller schools to some extent, if they aren't paying their athletes like these big conferences or the sec is paying an athlete obviously, if you're a kid who was very talented, football or basketball, you're going to go to one of those conferences where you get paid. that might hurt smaller schools, medium-sized school? >> yeah, i think it could, but i think also to jim at the same time, that's that was happening before all this revenue started, right? kids would rather go to the university of michigan then a much smaller school. if you have the ability to do that, but you know, as richard noted, you know, the us bureau of labor statistics notes that the average american works around 40 hours a week. and these players are going to class with 45 plus hours a week. on top of extra
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curricular activities with the sports-related activity. so this they have, they have already a full time job and then they're asked to go to school? yes. well, in school is really secondary. i mean, it just to these big conferences, it really is and it proves that through the ensued doublet, by the way, they have treated these players for so long. yeah, data do we have any idea how much a top athlete? make? >> i don't know but for me, i'm i'm i'm actually going how much of it clark could have been made. oh, my god. >> she just no, actually, she won't because she's she's a part of that back ten years to 2016. yeah. so she should reap some of the benefits, which is good for her and all the other players that help the doublet make so much money and are the school is going to be able to afford this jeffrey kessler, i mean, is that i suppose i'm asking you a silly question. >> they make so much money now firstly, sports, so let follow. >> you buy college football or basketball urge board buddy, every year that the nba, they'd be two league baseball
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and the national hockey week layer. second only to the nfl and they are gaming so the buddy is there. >> there is a reason why strength and conditioning coach at alabama mixability a year because the body go to the athletes all right. >> so the minus hear that correctly, right yeah. >> not not the head coach, the strength and training coach, o'donoghue coaches wet vacate. way over 10 billion my goodness. all right. well, there's a lot of money sloshing around might as well give it to these kids coming from these neighborhoods that where they sorely needed dante, jeffrey kessler. thanks, guys. really appreciate it. huge, huge development lecture. >> thanks sports world. absolutely. thanks so much. in the meantime, i'll falsehoods and fearmongering at donald trump's rally last night, and the bronx. in addition to spreading election lies of demonizing immigrants, former president, it's been a large portion of that rally or loved fast as he called it, airing has many grievances and talking
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about how he views himself i'm od don't jump. >> i turn on the television. trump. trump. trump. trump. how do you do it i said do what? how do you get up in the morning and put your pants on plenty of put the pencil and i'll explain it to you someday. i was sort of like a hot guy i always had his epistle. >> i said to somebody was i hotter before are hotter now, i go to hell. >> so horrible thing, but many of those hostages are dead, it would've never happened if the election weren't rigueur let's discuss now with cnn political analyst of washington bureau chief for the boston globe, jackie percentage and markup udo, national political reporter at the bohr jackie, i don't know if we want to get into the pants thing. the pants part of the conversation here, maybe we'll skip past all of that your thoughts on this real last rally last night. i mean, he's in the bronx obviously, you know, he would love to say that he could win new york.
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that's not going to happen, but maybe there was a larger point to the rally that using this as a backdrop to appeal to minority voters are key voting block in the election and a demographic that he's been chipping away at, right? >> you're right. i mean part of this is proximity. i mean, he's kind of stuck in new york right now. so but i think it's places like the bronx. this is going to be an election that is decided on the margins in places like georgia, in places like michigan, and places like arizona and while he probably won't never say never, but he probably won't win a majority of black voters if he just peels off some of those people that may have voted for joe biden, that might be enough in some of these states where it's going to be very very close. >> yeah, markup udo. i mean, let me ask you he was talking about the election of 2020 i mean, i guess we've moved beyond the the point that, you know his his supporters are just going to eat this up every
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time and they're just going to continue to hang on to these election lies. but i do want to ask you about this new piece that you have out about an aid his campaign calls the human printer and she has built-in career, spreading many of these election lies on oan before joining us 2024 campaign tell us a little bit about that. you said she made me behind that infamous unified reich video what more can you tell us natalie harb, 2023. >> she got hired by the trump campaign after being an anchor on oan, as you had pointed out, and she is essentially the personal assistant of the president or the former president. but as a campaign culture, the human printer, why? well, like a lot of older people, heck, like crabs, love younger people. he doesn't want to just look at his iphone all day donald trump prefers to read things on paper. well, you've got to print those things so natalie part actually follows him around at
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historic lows under president biden let's let's talk a little bit about this particular subject because i mean, just getting back to our earlier conversation and we had kate benningfield on earlier in the in the previous hour and she said they're worried about this inside the biden campaign that these, these margins are so tight and it just makes you wonder when last night trump is saying things like migrants are bringing diseases into this country and so on. >> you know, we're just talking with mark about the unified reich of video that was playing earlier this week. they've took it down off of his truth social account why is it that
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he is able to chip away at some of these demographics away from the president. when at the same time he's engaging in this kind of rhetoric. have you been able to make sense of that? >> so i think you're absolutely right that the biden campaign is taking this seriously, which is why you see them spending money which you've already seen them sending, running ads that are targeted to black americans. but i think at the root of this right now is the economy. while on paper, it looks good. a lot of people who don't feel it, where they live and their day-to-day, there's still things at the grocery store is still expensive even though inflation has gone down we're going to summer. i promise you they're going to be attacks on biden and gas prices because that is for every time there is a season but i think because of that, because of people's personal economies, that is why that's why this door is cracking open, particularly with some of these more usually stable democratic demographics. all right? very
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good. jackie mark, we do not refer to you mark as the human printer. you re you re reporting machines. maybe we'll call you the reporting machine. jackie mark. jackie or as well both your great reporters. thanks a lot. really appreciate it's still ahead. we're following the breaking news. the united nations top court ordering israel to quote immediate italy, halt its military operation in rafah. and we'll look at how some big retailers are using their own detectives. get this to combat the brazing gangs of thieves that sometimes attacks on these department stores and retailers will talk about that in just a few moments. you live in seen in israel his new album is breaking records gets to say what country is comey country bianna, say a nashville's renaissance? >> monday, that aid on cnn from medium rare well done so many
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>> that could bring about its physical destruction in whole or in part of course, president called the humanitarian situation in rafah disastrous israeli prime minister benjamin netanyahu held a call last hour with his cabinet to talk about the ruling and joining me now to talk about this as brock, where venus is seen in political and global affairs analysts, he's also the politics and foreign policy
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reporter for axial baraka to see you. >> what, what's the implication of this ruling what i think this is the first time since the international court of justice started discussing the gaza war back in january, that it is putting out the ruling that calls on israel to stop part of its military operations in gaza, mainly now in rafah, where the maybe the most concerning operation of all since the beginning of this war, something that even president biden international pressure on israel to stop this operation. >> but you'll also increase the pressure on the biden administration to say whether israel has crossed president biden's red line or not. i think that the next few days this will go to the un security council how council for a vote. and when this comes to a vote
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in the security council by them, we'll have to decide whether to veto it or not while i'm speaking, if the president, the washington post has a piece out that says the biden administration is straddling. >> it's own red line on the rafah invasion going on to say the administration often appears to be taking both sides and satisfying neither i mean, this is become a very thorny issue for the administration i would have to think that netanyahu team knows that and what effect might that have? >> i think the israelis managed to both by the briefings they gave to the biden administration, both by steps they took on the ground to sort of convince the us that it hasn't crossed by these red line yet, that it managed to conduct a separation in a more targeted way than the us thought, and that it managed to evacuate more palestinian
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civilians from the area of the operation than the biden administration thought. and the combination of those two keeps the biden administration for now. for now, we have today from saying that is we have crossed biden's red line all right. >> barak, were vivo keep watching this. thank you very much. really appreciate it. >> and after days of delays and a rocky start, groups are now distributing humanitarian aid that was offloaded at the us built here in gaza, more than 500 tons of food and other supplies and handed off to partners. >> cnn, military analysts, kernel, cedric latent joins me now. kernel leighton delivery of aid was initially hindered by a hamas drone attack on the idf. some of the trucks are were apparently alluded. i mean, that's according to what we're hearing on the ground what's the security situation? there now? how is this working out with this pier? isn't going to have an effect? do you think well, i think it will have some effect gym in the in terms of getting some aid to
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the palestinians that needed however, the problem is, is that the security situation in gaza is always going to be tenuous. and the types of things that you mentioned, the drone attack plus the fact that there was looting that is unfortunately a natural occurrence in a situation like this. and they've got to expect that this will continue, especially if there's no internal police force worthy of the name in gaza that can actually help distribute the food. and at least create ordering in the distribution centers. so that's going to be, i think the key facts. >> and then that's the the issue. right. i mean, the food aid can get to the pier. >> right. >> where does it go after that? right. so it basically ends up in a containment area once it's offloaded from the pier, it goes from the ship to the pier, to the containment area. and that containment area then serves as the initial distribution point. and from that distribution point and then goes to all the different places. this is that organizations like the un, i tell say that they need and those are the kinds of things
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that we're going to have to work through when it comes to planning for these kinds of things. there's going to have to be basically an iterative process that is going to look at how the aid is being distributed, how effective that distribution is, and then what needs to be done to improve that distribution? >> well, in the israelis have responded to a lot of this criticism about aid going into gaza and saying that they're doing everything possible to allow aid into gaza and so on. it does that stand up with the facts? >> i would say anything possible was maybe a bit too far and to rosy. a picture that's being painted at this particular point in time. what the israelis have failed to do, quite frankly in this operation is create a situation where they are working with the local population since the old hearts and minds adage is not very effectively employed by the idf and i know there are a lot of cultural bridges, a lot of issues that are inherent in this situation. but the real problem is, is that they've never sought to accommodate any
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aspect of the gaza population and the gaza population looks at israel is more of a enemy than a distributor of aid. >> and getting back to our conversation with baraka few moments ago about what this un top court is saying. the international court of justice is saying obviously it doesn't have any teeth and what might this have in terms of an impact on the israelis? might they look at this and want to circle the wagons even more? >> you have the reverse effect of what the court is attempting to accomplish here, i think that might in fact be what is happening here, what will happen in this particular case? because what you're seeing is the israelis are already in a circle the way against mode when it comes to pressure from the united states congress, when it comes to pressure from democrats here in the us and wind comes frankly from pressure from some elements of the us population i, this international pressure, especially in this legal form, is also going to add to that, israel does not accept their jurisdictions. the court's jurisdiction in this case and as a result of that, it's going
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to be another instance of c. they're all against us. we israel are standing alone and that will serve to unify the political situation. for prime minister netanyahu to some extent in israel kernel eight. >> and as always, thank you very much really appreciate it. in the meantime, we're also fallen escalating tensions which china today at launched a second day of large-scale military drills around taiwan. the chinese military claims it's testing its ability to quote, seized power in occupy key areas. and it comes just days after taiwan's new president took office. taiwan says dozens of chinese aircraft worships and other vessels have been detected in and near the taiwan on straight a senior biden administration official called beijing's moves, reckless coming up. we'll take you live to uvalde. we're in texas where families are marking two years is one of the deadliest school shootings in us history. your live in the cnn newsroom
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>> it's been of 19 children and to teachers inside a rob elementary school classroom menu vaulted texas memorial events are planned throughout the day, including a gun violence awareness demonstration by our new full array one of the survivors, ray, as will stand with 100 orange flags and the main plaza for 77 minutes are seeing some of the video right there of some of the markings for the victims in a lot of this,
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obviously is hitting very close to home for the people in evolving. and i want to bring an oscar or rona, his son wish shot but survived on that terrible, tragic day. oscar, i just our hearts go out to you, even though it's been two years i know how painful that must be for all of you, but it's still painful for so many americans around the country. after what took place. and you've aldi in the fact that you're still fighting for accounting mobility in your community. first of all, though, how is your son doing? and i know his recovery has been difficult. can you give us an update yes. first of all, thank you for having me. >> i appreciate that he is progressing he's not back at the level where he was at before all of this started and i'm not sure if we'll ever have that version of nola. again but we are happy to have the version we have now he's a
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lot quieter. >> you keeps a lot inside internalizes a lot. but the sheer grace of god he survived that horrific event. and we are moving forward. we take each day one day at a time. it to use a cliche, but literally that's how we live our lives. and we hope for the best and we move forward. ghazni asked her, i mean, that breaks my heart when i hear you say that. >> and so what it sounds like, what you're saying is that it's the mental injuries that he is still grappling with from that day or can we talk about physical injuries as well? >> no it's more mental although he does have pretty vicious looking scar on his shoulder that he's well aware of and does everything he can to hide but mentally, he's he's not the same young person, young man that he
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should be four 12 year-old. he's very mature for his age obviously because of what he experienced and what he saw and what he heard and we were doing the best that we can and we have a very close-knit family tremendous group of support friends that help us and we we're hoping that at some point in time we'll see some semblance of what he used to be before all this happened. >> we're obviously pulling for now and for all of you and the families they're fighting for justice through the courts. we've been talking about this all morning long. there has been this $2 million settlement with the city of uvalde, but there's also this 500 million federal lawsuit filed against the officers can you talk a little bit about that? how might that get the community to some accountability well, i
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think the community despite its best efforts is somewhat divided unfortunately there is a faction that wants this to go away they want uvalde to be remembered for something other than this horrific event. >> but unfortunately, this has marta's psychologically, mentally, you name it. the thing is with us i'm will be with us for a while. nobody forgets about these things, especially not the number of children that were affected, the number of families that were affected and all we wanted from the get-go was some semblance of accountability and transparency we've not really received either one. and now we'll leave it up to our attorneys to begin another phase of our fight as we continue our fight as well.
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>> and what does accountability look like? what does justice look like for you in the rest of the famous are just for you personally. >> for me, i would just like someone to say, you know what, we botched this we apologize. >> we did things wrong from the get-go. and you know, and it wasn't just one single department. it was a a group of law enforcement officers, officials that were present that did nothing for a very long period of time. one minute with an armed gunman is one minute to many if, you multiply that time 77 then you have a nightmare from hell, which is what my son managed to somehow survive after being shot in the back and we don't wish it on anyone but by the same token in order for the heading to begin, someone has to step forward and say, you know what, we did not
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handle this right? we are fall. we should have done a better job and until that happens, i don't think that you can even begin to talk about the healing process. >> yeah. i can imagine. i mean, how how can you heal if if you just can't hear those words that they're sorry that they messed up and they're not going to let it happen again doesn't seem like much, but it should be said, oscar rhona. thank you very much for your time. we appreciate all our best to thank you for your time. >> thank you so much as we had to break, we want to remember the 19 students and two teachers were killed at robb elementary school as the community comes together today, but also the lasting memorials in their honor, stay with us
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tuesday the evidence is in the testimony has ended, but it's not over yet before the jury gets the final say prosecutors and trump's defense team get the final word, live coverage of closing arguments the trump hush money trial begin tuesday at 90 from tried and true to try something new so many ways to save life, ready wallet, happy. that's 360 by whole foods market. >> what's the greatest invention of all time? new hands-free sketcher slip ends. you just slip in and they're on. it's like they have an invisible built-in shoe horn. so your foot slides into place without bending down, or touching your shoes, then the heel pillow technology keeps your foot v and secure hands-free sketch your slippers oh, carney has golda. it's gotten me. i saw them. that's what i said god-man, saada
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was in his bag following a recent trip, he was one of five americans arrested in recent months and the turks and caicos on similar charges will keep you posted on any other developments or come out of this case, but this american getting a one-year suspended sentence, some of these americans facing up to 12 years in jail and the turks and caicos, if they're convicted on similar charges, will keep you posted as all of this develops. in the meantime, russia is stepping up its attacks in the eastern part of ukraine, at least seven people in kharkiv have been killed after russia pounded the city with missiles on thursday, ukrainian forces struggling to fight back as they wait for more us aid to reach the battlefield. let's discuss with democratic congressman jim hims of connecticut. he's the ranking member on the house intelligence committee. congressman, i do i do want to ask you about ukraine and just above, but we'll get to that. but i i'm not sure how much you've worked on this turks and caicos issue, but what's your response to this american getting a suspended sentence? i know there's been a lot of congressional activity on those lotto your colleagues up on the
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hill have been working on this, your thoughts. if you have any well, yeah, jim, not exactly my area of expertise, but it as much as i am an expert on this, my view is if you're going to get on an airplane and go somewhere else, make sure there's no firearms and ammunition in your luggage. >> how hard is that? right? >> now? i'm sure there's somehow gets wrapped up in the whole gun debate. obviously, anytime we have an american citizen who who is in jeopardy abroad, we care about it, but come on, folks, make sure you don't have ammunition or firearms and stuff. you're trying to move across international borders all right. >> fair enough. >> let me ask you about what's taking place in ukraine right now with these russian advances? >> you are the ranking member on the house intelligence committee. how concerned should americans be right now about whether or not the russians are turning the tide? there are in ukraine ukrainians have been waiting for a long time. they haven't waiting for a long time to get that aid from the us and other countries. it's finally starting to trickle in. your thoughts on that yeah.
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>> well, i'm jim, i mean, it's it's it's horrifying in the sense that we're seeing the effects now of the six month unconscionable delay that the congress took and providing the weapons that ukraine needs to win this war. >> and of course, weapons can't magically appear on the ukrainian battlefield overnight. so while i'm delighted that the speaker finally did the right thing, and we got the 60 billion in aid were in that period right now where an awful lot of aid is on, it's way that doesn't do anything for ukrainians on the frontline meanwhile, the russians have sort of learned from their catastrophic mistakes of the early days. and so they're getting better the chinese and the indians continued to buy their energy. so they're economy is doing just fine. and so what's the answer? the answer is we should never again let a gap in our aid to ukraine appear. and as you probably know, jim, i've been part, of a group of members of congress who've been urging the white house to lift some of the strictures that exist on the use of american weapons we and i understand
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that the president has to really factor in the possibility of what russia could do if they were really losing. but the problem is that's not a question right now because they're not really losing. so i think we need to get more aggressive in terms of what we supply and the rules that we put on the use of the weapons that we send. >> and i did want to ask you about four husband donald trump and what he is. he has been claiming within the last day or so that russia will release the wall street journal reporter evan gershkovich within 24 hours. if he wins this november, let's listen to this and talk about on the list sorry i will get them out very fast. >> hopefully he'll be on before that. but if he's not, i'll have them out with 24 hours because you're not negotiate hell, i'm not going to pay anything for it. i'm not going to get can't pay anybody can pay you can pay. once you pay, you're going to have to pay for everybody president putin respects me and he's going to come out. he's gonna come out with 24 hours congressman what's your. response to that so jim, the headline is that
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donald trump believes he can fix those all very difficult problems instantly i not news, jim. >> i am old enough to remember when donald trump said that he would build this wall from sea to shining sea and mexico would pay for it, didn't have happened, right? so look, you know, i think i think this is yet another example of donald trump's grandiose self opinion, but not, not, not a surprise. >> all right. congressman jim hims. thank you very much for your time. we appreciate it thank you, jim. all right. good to see us or we'll be right back with fast create factory great visual solutions to perfect your process that's sides. >> make your steak old spice gentleman super hydration body wash. >> and now that is 24/7
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cnn. >> the world's news network it's like shoplifting on steroids organized gangs of brazen thieves hitting big stores in cities across the country some of that video right there is a major retailers though are fighting
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back by doing their own investigations with their own detectives. cnn's qian law has a cnn special investigation report well, jim watson unavoidable site. these days. if you go shopping, whether it be at a pharmacy or a big box retailer, you see a lot of your items that you want to buy. behind plexiglass or locked up this is not just simple shoplifting. it is far more sophisticated pre-dawn raid. >> your hands dozens of heavily armed deputies and investigators from the santa clara county sheriff's apartment to round our house. more than the doorway 12 people arrested and organized crime networks as law enforcement suspected of links to narcotics dealing and illegal gambling. >> at another location. you're a proper santa clara county deputies recovered the fuel for this alleged criminal network tons of packaged goods, some
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parts of the house looked like it was a store stolen from the local businesses, but it is nothing like the shoplifting you've seen in the past brazen thieves recorded racing out with carts full of merchandise, even attacking store workers in the process. >> this is not somebody who forgot to scan something at self-checkout or somebody who stole food. this is a large criminal organization with multiple factors sean browne is not a cop. >> he works for home depot investigating organized retail crime. >> his job, a growing field and store chains as criminal organizations branch out from guns and drugs to stolen goods a cnn review of court records and interviews of more than two dozen retail chains and law enforcement officials show that the private sector is not just helping the police, but often delivering the initial evidence that leads to search warrants. >> a lot of times, local and state resources don't have the capacity to investigate these crimes at that scale.
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>> and incomes we try to full-service the investigations home depot gave us a glimpse of a model replicated by multiple major retailers across the us. this is their high-tech command center with electronic eyes on their stores throughout the country retailers have already moved beyond searching for the thieves uc and viral videos so their bosses they are the real targets known as the fences. >> these ring leaders operate as the fence of this merchandise where they're converting it to cash, drugs, and other lists, items, it sounds like you're talking about them. >> it often is conflated with what would be considered mob activities. bad actors will target specific tiktok merchandise usually directed by the ringleader, almost like a shopping list. >> store chains have the financial muscle to deploy high-tech tracking, like license plate readers and in-store monitors capturing the crime as it happens, we use a lot of different investigative tactics and technologies to
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ensure that we can build the absolute best case for law enforcement and prosecutors. >> the bad guys have the upper hand with respect to this issue. >> the sheer scale of organized store theft is so overwhelming. members of congress met with prosecutors and store chains looking for federal help. >> the organization and sophistication of these groups has grown exponentially in recent years. >> i think organized retail crime is one of the biggest issues that is facing our local economy this entire aisle on the side is almost completely locked up yeah, not the way we would like to envision our rough electrical aisle for our customers are pro contractors, but this is what your typical home depot looks like retail says brown has already locked down their merchandise impacting the consumer from inconvenience to higher prices how, would they get past this though? we've had certain crews that have caught locks
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and cables and broken into some of the fixtures that we've built inside of our stores. >> what you see here is because he explosion of online shopping has made it easier than ever to move stolen merchandise sold to a consumer hunting for a deal 20 years ago, i needed to storefront in order to sell laundry detergent. now, i can do it from my phone california has now put hundreds of millions of dollars towards combating this problem enabling law enforcement here in santa clara county to break up a major crime? >> ring, recovering $150,000 and stolen merchandise authority say, thumbs six retailers, how big of a heist was this? >> this happens daily across stores, even with all those measures that you've got to see an we're still impacted at this level a local and state law enforcement as well as these national retailers want more intelligence sharing. so they are all backing a proposed federal bill called the combating organized retail crime act. this bill would then
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set up an intelligence-sharing hub at the department of homeland security but this bill which does have bipartisan support stalled in congress. gym all right. >> qiong law. thank you very much. that eye-opening report and thank you for joining me here in the cnn newsroom. i'm jim acosta, stay with cnn inside politics dana bash starts after a short break. have a great weekend, everybody can the riva support your brain health? married janet, hey eddie know appraiser, franck. franck, bread. how are you? >> fred, fuel up to seven brain health indicators, including your memory joined the neretva brain health, we handcraft every stearns foster using the finest materials like indulgent memory foam and ultra conforming inner springs for a beautiful mattress. and indescribable comfort, save up to $800 on select adjustable
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