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switch to comcast business and get started for $49.99 a month. plus, ask how to get up to an $800 prepaid card. call today! meetings they billion with a b. we've got this honor. >> got this i'm or how solomon in new york and this is cnn you're in the cnn newsroom. >> i'm jessica dean in new york and we begin with breaking news and an emotional day for the people of israel as four
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hostages are rescued from gaza after eight months in captivity loud cheers there from a crown greeting the newly rescued hostages as they climbed out of a helicopter and took their first steps back in israel. >> the four hostages kidnapped by hamas from the nova musical festival during the october 7 attacks. they include 25-year-old noa argamani 22-year-old, a mog my ears, john, 27-year-old, andre kozlov 41-year-old, shlomi ziv. and you may remember noa argamani from this horrific video from october 7, it shows the attacks. it shows hamas fighters taking her away get on a motorbike. israel saying the special military operation took place this morning and central gaza, among residential buildings where hamas had been keeping those hostages palestinians described the rate as helen, earth is heavy,
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shelling and artillery fire bombarded that area the hamas-run government media office in gaza says at least 210 people have been killed. and more than 400 injured including women and children. cnn cannot independently verify these numbers and gaza's media office does not differentiate between civilians and militants who are killed cnn's paula hancocks is in tel aviv with more on today's rescue mission and the aftermath in gaza first video, cool, in eight months, friends or former hostage, almog meir, jan, welcome the 22-year-old homo his night, right hello hello yeah. just challenge at each other. yeah, yeah we're still happy. >> to see him. me. >> i'm john raised his hands in the air in celebration as he touched down on israeli soil. one of four hostages rescued him, what was called a high risk complex mission saturday morning in nuseirat central gaza the, idf. says all four
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were taken captive by hamas militants at the nova music festival on october 7, where hundreds more were killed noa argamani has become a symbol of israel's hostages being held in gaza filmed on the back of a motorbike, being taken into gaza by hamas militants from the festival used, and hamas propaganda videos while in captivity today, she is free, hugging her father, waiting to visit her terminally ill mother in a separate hospital under a kosla phentolamine sieve were working as security at the music festival when they too were taken hostage. all four were brought for medical checkups once back on home soil, or four are said to be stable and in good medical condition in this hospital just outside tel aviv, that israel's military security agency i'm pleased. say that this mission had been planned for weeks. israeli prime minister benjamin netanyahu giving the green light on thursday evening. >> this was a high risk complex
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mission based on precise intelligence conducted in daylight in two separate buildings. deep inside gaza israel's prime minister benjamin netanyahu visited the rescued hostages, were committed to getting a release of all the hostages and we expect hamas du you leave so more, i'd if they don't, i'll do whatever it takes. >> we get them all back. >> the hostage and missing families forum says 120 more captives remain in gaza. the way to rescue them is with a ceasefire deal. >> that's not the way we can bring 120 hostages back home. we must all of us together. the world follow. president biden speech. and go with the deal that the price paid in gaza for these rescues that has been unquestionably high. >> more than 200 killed, more than 400 injured according to the enclave's government media office, there is no clarity on
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the breakdown of civilian and militant casualties and got bone on this man says, there are children torn apart and scattered in the streets. they wiped out nuseirat. it is hell on earth an endless cycle of dead and wounded rushed into al-aqsa martyrs hospital saturday, a medical center already well over capacity and dangerously understaffed and under supplied it is a jarring view of two clashing impacts of one rescue mission pull hancocks, cnn, tel aviv paula, thank you. >> and cnn has been wait a minute, is joining us now with more on today's rescue operation. he is joining us now, live from beirut. then what more you learn it? >> well, what we're learning is that this operation began at about 11:00 in the morning local time, focused on let's say, rot refugee camp, which is in the central part of the gaza strip there according to residents it was like hell on
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earth the israel rarely is using a lot of firepower, grand foot ground forces, as well as apache attack helicopters. in the air. now, because it was 11 the o'clock in the morning on a saturday, there were lots of people out in the street shopping and whatnot, and that might account for why there were so many casualties according to medical sources in gaza, at least 210 people killed more than 400 injured i went through tons of video that came out of gaza from our camera men at one of those hospitals. and even though we don't get a breakdown on the casualty figures, what i saw was a lot of children, a lot of women, a lot of civilians, either dead or injured, you can tell that the medical facilities in gaza are at a
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breaking point after more than eight months of war all right. >> then also we know secretary of state antony blinken traveling to the middle east to push for the ceasefire deal between israel and hamas how might this rescue mission impact those efforts? >> well, we shall see now hamas is put out a statement now saying that today's events will not packed, their position on the american proposal, their position however, it has not been finalized, so we don't know really where they stand i certainly both sides are sending mixed messages. the israelis have indicated in some respects that they favorite, but we know that primary minister benjamin netanyahu has made it clear that his final goal is major goal, is to destroy hamas completely. hamas on the other hand, once a permanent ceasefire and
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obviously it wants to survive this war. so how blink? can is going to bridge that gap is anybody's guess jessica, then we'd them and forest in beirut tonight. >> thank you very much. former israeli ambassador to the united states, michael orange is joining us now ambassador. thanks so much for being here with us first. i just want to get your reaction to this operation that rescued four hostages earlier today. >> what good to be with you, jessica? hi, listens. it's a joyous day for the state of israel after many months without any joy, we all know that no, no argamani was basically the poster child of all the hostages and her release, her freedom is dealing deeply precious to all israelis with it, the joys mix with sorrow. one of our commandos was killed in this rate, three are seriously wounded by all accounts, there was a furious firefight. there, and we talk about palestinian casualties, 200 killed. we really don't know how many of those were terrorists. i'm gonna assume
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that great number were. but that joy and but that joy is going to remain qualified as long as we have at least 80 more hostages alive. and in hamas captivity, right? >> and again, we can't confirm those numbers that they have given us out of gaza and they don't they do not break down civilian since versus militants in those numbers. so important to keep in mind when we are talking about those numbers and mr. ambassador, you talked about the joy for the people of israel that it was a joyful moment in about eight months that have been very those have been far, few and far between for them as that nation has mourned so much since october we're seventh. >> i do want to ask you more broadly what today's operation, if at all, what does it mean more broadly for the conflict and for those negotiations that continue to be ongoing for a potential deal, certainly. i'm not a spokesman for the government. i'm not an office, but i think i reflect a lot of israeli opinion in saying israelis
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would be willing to agree to a temporary ceasefire, six weeks and return for the release of say, 33 hostages. that's the deal that israel put on the table that president biden presented to hamas, that hamas has so far rejected unfortunately, a permanent ceasefire means the war is over. israel withdraws. hamas comes out of the tunnels it re arms at recaptured gaza and its own leaders said they're going to launch ten 10,000 more attacks on israel until it's until were destroyed. so i think israelis generally we're willing to make that risk of a temporary ceasefire to get more hostages back. but until that happens, is it was going to have to keep up the military pressure on hamas and it's trive that goal of denying hamas the ability to mount another october 7 type attack and in the meantime, there's a lot going on politically in domestic politics within israel. >> the war cabinet member and netanyahu's rival, benny gantz, had, had set today as his cutoff de, to leave the government if netanyahu did not
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have a plan for what comes after this war, he then later said he would not be holding that press conference today because in light of this rescue mission and the successful rescue mission what do you think is what does this mean for the current israeli strategy or the lack of one because the biden administration has been pushing i'm very hard to come up with the plan and netanyahu has been reticent to agree to anything for what comes after this war is over. >> yeah, i personally think that we should have a morning after plan. it's not going to be easy the administration wants to move elements of the palestinian authority from the west bank to gaza. the palestinian authority, the west spec, is having great difficulty managing the west bank. it's fabulously unpopular and corrupt about any 5% of the palestinians in the west bank according to the most recent poll, support hamas. but still, i don't think these really armies in a position to govern hamas in the long lever gaza rather in the long run, taking care of the health needs, the food needs of two-and-a-half million palestinians, and many of whom
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are homeless and need tremendous support we're going to need an international support. their preferably from our friends in the arab gulf being involved. and international funds to rebuild gaza. but israel have to maintain some level of security control over gaza because you can destroy hamas as a military course, you can't destroy hamas is an idea and there will be cells that will pop up just as you can't destroy isis, al-qaeda entirely and they will keep popping up. so israel have to maintain some degree of security involvement in gaza. >> i think it's very important that israel and the american government, the israeli government, the american government, get involved in a a very detailed, intimate discussion about the day after we do need a day after program, but very important point, jessica american media is very much focused on what's going on in gaza and certainly in light of today's events, we can understand why. >> but in the northern of israel there's a war going on dozens of hamas afc is balah rockets raining down on the
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galley. one of them hit as far south as nazareth today, which is in southern galilee. and 80,000 israelis have been displaced. half of galleys up on flame from his mother rockets and the government in israel is under tremendous pressure to react to this. and that could trigger a much, much broader war. this is bola as a military force is ten times what hamas was. and with rockets that are far more accurate, 150,000 of these rockets so it's really government and benny gantz's decision to remain in the government very much reflects not just what's going on in gaza today, but i think even more to the point, what's going on in galilee and i want to underscore something you just brought up because when the president announced this plan that he said was the israeli plan and will and pressure hamas to accept it. >> he said that he it was his understanding and belief that hamas was not able are in a place where they could go forward with another october 7 type attack at this moment and you bring in hezbollah and what they are doing in the north.
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would you say it's a fair assessment now to say that president biden is correct about where hamas it says and that so much of the military strength is now with hezbollah in the north. >> all that is, yes but with one caveat that hamas is not in a position to a mountain other october 7 now but if israeli forces withdrawal basically to the border and end the war, hamas would be in a condition to amounts of similar attack in a year from now, two years from now. so i think israel is right and trying to secure guarantees from the biden administration. okay. how do you plan to stop that happening? not just in the short run but in the long run. and that's crucial for israelis because there are still tens of thousands of israelis in the southern part of the country, can't go back to their homes who won't go back to their homes unless they're sure that two years from now, three years from now, another october 7 is not going to happen i think that is you're also has a primary interest in concluding as quickly as possible major military operations in gaza. so we can focus the the major
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thrust of our military might to meet the threat from his father, which i said earlier is a threat of a far greater magnitude. >> all right. ambassador michael oren, thanks so much. we appreciate it. thank you. >> former president trump and allies are vowing revenge on those who've crossed him if he wins a second term in the white house, but is retribution a winning strategy for the gop in november we're going to discuss next and cnn newsroom tomorrow with president biden overseas making the case for democracy, national security adviser jake sullivan joints dana plus the latest from the campaign trail with key governors kristi noem and gretchen whitmer state of the union live tomorrow morning at nih if you have chronic kidney disease, you can reduce the risk of kidney failure with par sega because they're places like to be for seeker can cause serious side effects, including ketoacidosis may be fatal dehydration, urinary tract or genital yeast infections in low
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is a secret war secrets and spies tomorrow at ten on cnn are both wilkins have been standing by former president donald trump's since last week when he was convicted of 34 felony counts in the new york hush money trial, they're taking cues from trump, who's also been flirting with the topic of revenge well, revenge does take time. i will say that it does. and sometimes revenge can be justified, feel i have to be honest sometimes it can look when this election is over based on what they've done. i would have every right to go after them and it's easy because it's joe biden cnn political commentator and columnist at the new york daily news, s. >> e. cupp and see it in commentator and new york times journalists lulu garcia-navarro both join me now, great to have you both here with us on this saturday. as he let's start with you. we just heard that clip from the former president is this a winning strategy, revenge well, it is with this
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base. >> he knows his base very well and they've been into this long before the trials. he ran on a politics of revenge. the first time in 2015 and 2016 and carried that through his his campaign. remember, lock her up. remember mexico is going to pay for sending. they're rapists and they're criminals. they're going to pay for the wall. his politics of revenge was predicated on his personal grievances, but it was also on behalf of the perceived grievances of his voters. it's why they like so. yes, the answer is yes. this works for him and his base what it does not work for. all of those independence and undecided in the swing states that he will need to win this election, right? >> and those i want to get to some new polling on those in a minute. that's very interesting, but you're exactly right. it's, it is that kind of sliver of these more moderate voters, these swing voters, lulu how might the biden campaign then effectively
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respond to this type of rhetoric and try to win over those voters with a different message. >> forcefully, i think trump is trying to paint this as some sort of righteous retribution. and it's not, and it's not for those swing and independent voters and soft democrats that he really needs those nikki haley voters, for example what trump is talking about is using the government to process so cute. his personal political enemies. and you can argue about trump's conviction but he was judged guilty by a jury in a fair trial. >> and this was a state trial. this wasn't a federal trial. the federal government had nothing to do with it. and so democrats feel that trump's calls for personal vengeance are good for them all right, so let's go to this new polling. >> it's from fox news. it's from battleground states. they're all within the margin of error, which just underscores how very tight this race's. but we see their trump up by five and arizona and
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nevada almost four and florida what is interesting here? i thought to virginia is tied. joe biden handily beat trump there in 2020 by ten points. >> what do you make of all of these together? >> and specifically that virginia policy yeah, these swing states are going to be super important. they are going to decide this election and it was close last time in swing states. remember joe biden won georgia by only 11,000 votes. it was even tighter in some other places. >> so that's where both of these candidates really need to be pouring their effort and attention into. >> and those polls those are interesting now when you pierce the layers of them, there are plenty of undecided and under undecided an independent voters who are not into the politics, politics of revenge, who don't think the trial was good for, was good for trump are having thoughts about about what that means for trump and voting for a convicted felon so it is important, but it really just
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underscores how close this election will be. there are other states from virginia to minnesota where the race is tightening as well. we could see, see adding those as swing states this year. so it's a super, super tight race. every vote is going to count. >> and lulu as the biden campaign tries to sell their message and what they've done in the last four years they do have this list of legislative accomplishments that they want to be talking about. they want to be talking about an infrastructure bill that's putting jobs in different states, but it does not seem to be breaking through in these places. >> yeah. i mean, we've actually seen other polls show a small but significant movement towards biden in the wake of the conviction, especially amongst soft democrats who might be disengaged voters of color that had been going towards trump. and now in the wake of the conviction seemed to be pulling back. so i do think this is a very fluid race. but yes, to your point there's no question that biden is struggling and he needs to
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surrogates out much more aggressively because he's not the best messenger for his own message. we've seen that repeatedly when people see him, they see him as old, they see him as frail. they wonder about whether he really has enough in the tank to go the distance so democrats really need to get their surrogates out and really bring the democrats message to the people as he so much about this is creating contrast where they can between these two candidates for voters. >> and i'm thinking back to this last week or president biden right now, he's meeting with president macron and france the previous to that, he's marking the 80th anniversary of d-day. he's talking about democracy in the world and the western alliance. and you do contrast that with what former president trump has said about nato. what the message he's putting out right now when you kind of take that in totality what do you take away from it and watch? seeing those side-by-side last week i mean, they should be reminders that joe biden has a much
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better relationship with our allies and we're trump had a much better relationship with our enemies and seems to want an even coase you're one, but i gotta be honest, jessica, when we go out, we talked to voters this isn't really top of mind right now. >> they're worried about the economy, crime, immigration, women's reproductive rights, this melange of domestic issues that are very frightening for a lot of voters on both sides of the aisle, depending on what you're asking them about, that's what's driving them to the polls this year. that's what both of these candidates need to be talking about. not revenge and not on the other side on biden signed pretending that things are rosier than people feel they are and lulu, do you agree, just as we, as we wrap up here, do you agree with that assessment from esi there? yeah, i do agree with that assessment biden is trying to show that he's the leader of the free world. that the danger to the free world now comes from trump and his plans for
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the united states. and what was interesting to me was seeing that indeed the united states is traditional allies. braced biden on this visit and i think seem to support that message. but at the end of the de i don't think that that's going to be what wins this election, wins this election is as he was saying, domestic issues, lulu and i say thanks to you both. i appreciate it. good to see you sure. >> so i had a new report from the cia concluding israel's prime minister, maybe ready to defy international pressure by not coming up with a plan for gaza after the war and startling new images into our newsroom of a catastrophic landslide that has a crucial wyoming highway completely shut down. your in the cnn newsroom sirens are going off tornado here. i'm thinking i'm going to die and i thought that was it earth with the liev
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tableau switching to tableau has really been a money saver without a monthly subscription was amazing quarter today at tableau tv.com back now to our breaking news today for israeli hostages held captive for eight months have been rescued in the military operation. >> israel saying it took place at two separate locations in central gaza near a refugee camp earlier today, israeli prime minister benjamin netanyahu met with the rescued hostages and their families at the hospital vowing to do what it takes to bring those still being held captive back home. his visit and this rescue mission comes as a new cia assessment reveals more about netanyahu's mindset, about the ongoing war and what comes next scene in zachary cohen has more this represents one of the most up-to-date intelligence assessments about benjamin netanyahu's mindset. >> that's been circulated to senior us officials and it shows the cia has concluded that netanyahu likely believes he can continue to defy
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pressure from the biden administration in western allies and some within his own coalition government, who were pushing for him to define a post-war plan for gaza. now the cia assessment underscores how deep fractures within the israeli government are likely impacting netanyahu's calculations. and specifically, it says netanyahu quote, probably believes he can maintain support from his security chiefs and prevent defections sections from the right wing of his coalition by discussing the future of gaza inke, vague terms. that's what the june 3 report that cnn reviewed says. and the ci report is consistent with what cnn and others have reported in the days since president joe biden announced a three-pronged peace deal proposal for gaza book. the assessment is also significant because it reveals us intelligence agencies expect israel is likely to act in a way that has didn't direct opposition to the biden administration's stated goals. and it comes amid a clear shift in how the biden administration views israel less as a trusted partner and more as an unpredictable foreign government to be analyzed and understood jessica, zach cole,
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enforce. >> thanks so much. or joined now by lieutenant general mark hertling, i see an military analyst and former us army commanding general. >> great to have you here with us. >> let's back up for a second and then i want to get to zach's reporting their i first want to get your reaction to this very high-stakes rescue mission that brought home i'm for israeli hostages today well, from the details, we know about it, jessica, we know that these four hostages were in two different locations. >> they were very close to a refugee camp, a un sponsored refugee camp. they were taken out of civilian homes. and what we know so far as the gorilla government has suggested, is that there were citizens in those homes who were taking care of these hostages. we also here early reports from the hamas driven ministry of health within gaza that over 200 people are 400 people. they can't even get the figures correct in terms of their estimates. have either been
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killed or wounded so it is a continuation of the kinds of things on both sides where israeli defense forces is attempting to find through intelligence sources, where are these hostages are they, they evidently had some good, pretty good sources on this one because they were able to rescue these four that we're in a neighborhood based particularly in a refugee camp or in a resident area. so i mean, we're talking about the continuation of palestinian citizens protecting hamas or hamas using them as human seal shields and asking them to do their to coordinate with them in terms of their actions. >> and i want to ask you now about what we just heard from zach cohen, the cia assessment that benjamin netanyahu thinks he can get through all of this without any plan for a day after. and so many of the military analysts, we've spoken to on the show of said that that is always part of a military strategy or it should be part of a military strategy. we know that president biden
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and the administration have pushed them very hard for some sort of day after plan. what do you make of that assessment and what it means for them moving forward? >> well i'd be hesitant to comment on assessment. i haven't seen jessica, especially one that probably was classified as if it came from the cia. but what i will tell you is interesting what you just said. all of the military analysts myself included have said since october that unless you have a political strategy as opposed to just a military strategy for this operations, it won't come to a good end state. mr. netanyahu has said from the very beginning that he wants to destroy hamas. that's a very valid military strategy, but it has nothing to do with what than what does it look like when you do destroy hamas? because you have an area of gaza with 2 million people living there and it has to have some kind of political outcome. and mr. netanyahu has been hesitant to describe what that
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looks like, even when mr. biden has pushed him on that. so there are i don't have a doubt that the cia assessment said exactly what zachary just said, but truthfully, this war is going to continue because mr. netanyahu has placed the destroying of the hamas organization before anything that has to do with a political ramifications of what happens next in gaza. >> and looking ahead to what comes next, i do want to ask you if you think we're, gonna continue to see more of these types of operations as they tried to rescue some of these hostages you laid out the situation which is the gaza government, which is the hamas-run gaza as the government media office is more than 200 were killed. we can't independently verify those numbers and they don't differentiate between civilians and militants killed at the same time. the idf is saying the previous rescue missions were called off saying that hamas is holding hostages in
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civilian buildings and it makes it impossible for them to get to the hostages without entering civilian areas. but you and i've been talking about this for eight months now and it always comes back to this push and pull of going into the civilian areas and that is again where these hostages were being held. do you think we're going to keep seeing these types of things? >> i do, jessica, it's unfortunate for the civilians that are putting this position by hamas. we have to continue to go back to that hamas is using this civilians as part of their strategy. they want civilians to die so they can blame it on israel as a former commander in combat, i've had to call off missions when i knew that there were civilians nearby, that we had to stop the mission because of it. israel has has done that on multiple occasions. i know that to be a fact, but the fact of the matter is that hamas continues to use human shields and place these hostages as well as the palestinian citizens in harm's
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way. they like to do that. they have their tunnel complexes and their operations nearby un underneath these facilities. so you're going to see israel continuing to go after these terrorists that are either underground or fighting from civilian structures. and we're certainly going to see more of this because it's part of the requirement to destroy this terrorist organization that continues to fire rockets into israel, attempting to kill their citizens lieutenant general mark hertling. >> thanks so much. we appreciate it. >> thanks jessica a suspect in a string of deaths in long island going back 30 years has two new charges on his case after authority but he's tied to new deaths to him. >> cnn was in court for that dramatic moment when prosecutors shared the new details. they have learned about rex heuermann are in the cnn newsroom this election season, stay with cnn with more reporters on the ground.
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these victims. prosecutors say it is the forensic evidence that links the alleged gilgo beach serial killer with the murder of two more victims? jessica taylor in 2003, and sandra costilla in 1993, bringing the total number of known victims, to six he's indicated he is not guilty of these charges in 1993, a forensic scientists determine taylor had been decapitated dismembered at her arms below her elbows a male human head hair was recovered from underneath taylor's body and underwent dna testing. >> there's also that was able to exclude 99.96% of the population. the defendant could not be excluded as the donor of that hair taylor last cold, her mother on july 21, 2003. >> she was going to visit on july 25th to celebrate her mother's birthday. >> but taylor never showed up one day later, a person in manorville, long island found
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her dismembered body eight years later, her hands, forearm, and skull were founded gilgo beach those remains were found on the same side of the road as the gilgo four. >> the alleged serial killer was previously charged with murder in the killings of four women who have become known as the gilgo four melissa barthelemy, megan waterman, amber costello, and maureen brainard-barnes before the gilgo four, november 1993 remains of sandra cos theta were discovered by hunters. the 28-year-old was found in suffolk county, long island lying on her back three hairs, one male to female, were found on costilla's remains dna testing determined the male hair was more likely to have come from a person genetically identical to the gilgo killer and the female hair matched a woman, the alleged serial killer had previously been
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living with also found documents on a hard drive in the alleged killers home among them, what authorities described as a planning document essentially a blueprint to plan out his kills. it listed out problems to avoid apprehension and supplies to carry out the serial murders, and to avoid leaving behind a dna another document talked about body prep. the need to wash body remove trace dna, and included references to remove head and hands and package for transport. >> this case is about the victims and their families and, uh, hopefully providing them with that tom all measure of closure. >> jean casarez, cnn, new york so i had white president biden says his state visit to paris is the most remarkable trapeze ever taken to france as conflicts in gaza and ukraine
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her uncle's unhappy. i'm sensing an underlying issue. it's t-mobile. it started when we tried to get him under a new plan. but they they unexpectedly unraveled their “price lock” guarantee. which has made him, a bit... unruly. you called yourself the “un-carrier”. you sing about “price lock” on those commercials. “the price lock, the price lock...” so, if you could change the price, change the name! it's not a lock, i know a lock. so how can we undo the damage? we could all unsubscribe and switch to xfinity. their connection is unreal. and we could all un-experience this whole session. okay, that's uncalled for. health der any today i'd dose daily.co i'm dr. sanjay gupta. and this is cnn a former astronaut from the historic 1968 apollo eight mission has died in a plane crash in washington state. and would you want to warn you these images are disturbing the san juan county sheriff's office's william anders was in a plane that plunged into the water near jones island and sank a
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passerby, took the video of the plane going down. anders may be most well-known for the iconic photo of the earth he took from space called earthrise. former nasa administrator bill nelson posted this about anders 1968 moon mission that he traveled to the threshold of the moon and helped all of us see something else ourselves anders was 90-years-old from paradise, california to maui island. we've seen how quickly wildfires can suddenly appear, burning everything in their path in a new episode of cnn's original series, violent earth with leaves schreiber the cnn's bill, we're explores the destruction that these fires cause. here's a preview paradise, california barnea burned from an ember attack, from a plume miles away from paradise this is like 9:00 in the morning and its pitch why
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given the smoke, it almost appeared as though it was the middle of the night and it was snowing, ash and embers began to to rain down we're in the middle of the stapler's dan here like that. i don't know what to say if anywhere the fire was moving mad a football field per second what in the way it did that, of course, was by jumping ahead and starting these fires they would immediately take hold and rapidly grow into hundred acre, 200 acres spotfire. that was happening all through town that resulted in the town starting to burn all at once, 30,000 people were trying to be evacuated while being overran by fire. >> if i were to turn around this is bad catch a new episode of violent earth with liev schreiber sunday night at 9:00 p.m. eastern pacific only here
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on scene i'm ahead. >> israeli forces rescuing four hostages were being held by hamas in an operation that also reportedly killed hundreds of people in gaza i had what it took to carry out the rescue and the role american forces play, or in the cnn newsroom the most anticipated moment of this election and the stakes couldn't be higher. >> the president and the former president, one stage moderated by jake tapper and dana bash, the cnn presidential debate tuesday, june 27th, nine live on cnn and streaming on max. >> if advanced lung cancer has you searching for possibilities discover a different first treatment immunotherapies work with your immune system to attack cancer, but up devo plus your voice is the first combination of two immunotherapy these for adults newly diagnosed with non-small cell lung cancer that has spread tests positive for pd-l1 and does not have an abnormal egfr or alk gene up devo plus your voice is not chemotherapy it works differently. it helps
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