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tv   CNN News Central  CNN  July 2, 2024 6:00am-7:00am PDT

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ashanti, maybe wrexham the killers and many more go for in america. thursday, july 4 at seven eastern on cnn i'm tom foreman in washington and this is cnn the sworn in major advancement for people with amputations, a bionic leg linked to the brain, seen as jaclyn howard is with us now, how exactly does this work? >> yeah, john, it's really fascinating science. the user's own nervous system is what controls the bionic leg. in this case, that's how it's works. electrodes are placed between the amputation site on a person's leg and the bionic leg itself and signals from the nervous system wrecked the legs, movements and the leg is able to sense its own positioning and send signals back to the person's nervous system. and in one study, john, people with amputated legs who were equipped with this bionic leg, they underwent a specific type of surgery the researchers
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found that the bionic leg was able to help increase their maximum walking speed by 41%. so this helped people with amputated legs to walk more smoothly and more quickly using the bionic leg. and one woman in the study told cnn that she felt like she had no amputation at all as soon as she was equipped with the bionic leg, she said she wanted to take off running and that's the kind of impact this has on people. john, we know about 2 million people in the united states live with limb loss. so even though this is jetson experimental now, it could have potential impact for millions of people out there. >> look at that. what i mean? hazing thing or a jacqueline hour. thank you very much. i knew rfc and i knew central starts now president biden slamming the supreme court's presidential immunity ruling as an affront to the rule of law. >> he says biden, hoping to
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turn the legal surgeon into a political boon for himself as democrats continued to discuss whether biden should actually stay in the race. and donald trump doing a victory lap after for the decision he's already trying to use it to overturn his criminal conviction and the new york hush money case and people thrown to the plane concealing bone fractured, and a forced emergency landing. after a flight hit strong turbulence, passengers saying, we thought we were going to die hi i'm sara sidner with kate bolduan and john berman. this is cnn news central new, fall out new warnings this morning about the future of americans democracy after this court's decision on presidential immunity, it delivered a significant legal win for donald trump. >> how far does that reach other very real questions this
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morning, how much power does a president? didn't really have? and what is and is not an official act the answers there matter matter in many ways. and the most immediate to the criminal charges that donald trump is facing. it also matters when it comes to the now core reelection message that president biden is trying to capitalize on as his campaign remains in full on post-debate crisis mode cnn's paula reid has a very latest, let's start there. paula, that we have not yet really heard from the special counsel since the ruling. do we know what his next steps are? well we know where this case is headed and that is backed down to the trial court before judge tanya chutkan. and it's going to be up to her the supreme court has deferred to her to suss out which actions alleged in smith's indictment constitute official actions that are part of the core constitutional responsibilities of the president. those would enjoy absolute immunity, likely not be able to be brought as part of this case then you have
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other actions that are official acts, but not necessarily something that's part of your core constitutional duties. so those have a presumption of immunity, but that would likely have to be litigated. and then there's gonna be other acts alleged in the indictment that fall outside of that things we're not official acts. then she's going to have to look at what is left of that indictment and then we know from my sources on the trump legal team that the trump's legal team is also going to try to get certain pieces of evidence tossed out and they argue that what remains of that indictment will need to be supported by pieces of evidence that are also blocked by this opinion because the justices ruled that ivan evidence of official acts. so official acts cannot be used as evidence to support charges. so they believe that they can pretty much undermine this entire case, but that will take time and they're also going to use yesterday's opinion to attack some of the other cases that trump is facing down in mar-a-lago, the documents case. they're going to use this is part to argue that trump had this classified documents as part of his official duties, so i can use it to attack that case. of course, down in georgia, that's the most
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similar case to the january 6 case. clearly, they're going to use it there. but as we broke the story yesterday morning, they're also going to use it in the next few months to attack the new york can fiction, specifically, they're going to try to get tossed out. hope hicks, his testimony portions of that, as well as specific tweets that were used in evidence. now, late last night, they is sort of sent out a long-shot bid to try to delay his sentencing based on this unclear if that's going to be successful. but as we've been reporting, they are going to to use this opinion to try to get that conviction overturned on appeal. that is also a process that takes a long time what we have in new york is a situation where a substantial number of official acts of the presidency, things that we believe are official acts were used as evidence to support the chart arches in that new york trial we believe that that corrupts that trial, that that indicates that that jury verdict needs to be overturned. >> and at the very least, you deserve a new trial where those immune acts will not come into evidence.
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>> so they're one of trump's attorneys arguing why he believes his conviction was overturned. again, not clear that they're going to be able to delay the sentencing because of this opinion, this is absolutely something that is going to factor in to their ongoing appeals as they tried to overturn that criminal conviction. new york. >> paula. thank you so much, sarah. >> all right. donald trump celebrating, as you might imagine, the court's decision, hoping to use it to get rid of all the cases against him. cnns, alayna treene has more on this. trump is offering a bit of a preview. i think of what's to come. he's been all over social media talking about the decision that's right end in recent days there he's actually ramped up his rhetoric calling for retribution against his political enemies and luck. >> this is, this language from donald trump, isn't exactly knew. he has been calling for retribution for several months now and really made it a big part of his campaign. however, in light of the supreme court's decision, especially saying that presidents have
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absolute immunity for official acts. it has called into question whether or not if donald trump were to seek retribution as a president, what that would mean and if you could face any blowback for it. now we did here, donald trump yesterday, i as speaking to a local well radio station in virginia criticizing steve bannon, his former aide for going to federal prison for contempt of congress. and he said biden is going to pay a big price for it. take a listen to what he said what they've done in this century is unthinkable and biden is going to pay a big crash lord, i believe because i think that the people are going to say, well, wow, you've opened up a pandora's box, is a terrible thing that they've opened up. >> they've unleashed this. this is the third world functions nowadays they've wanted to silence see benton and the only way they could do it was way, putting them in jail now donald trump also,
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over the weekend and a much more troubling post called for liz cheney or i should say he reposted a truth social post saying that liz training should face military tribunals. >> i'm going to read for you some of what this post said. it said quote elizabeth alayna cheney is guilty of treason. retreat. if you want military tribunals. now we did hear from cheney herself, the former congresswoman, she wrote that this is the type of thing that demonstrates, yet again, that you are not a stable adult. and our not fit for office. we also saw donald trump share a different post calling for the jailing of president joe biden, vice president kamala harris, his former vice president, mike pence, again, all very troubling post that i think it's hard with donald trump. we know that a lot of people kind of take this as just language uses rhetoric. he uses however many of his strongest and fiercest supporters do read these posts and take them in some ways as marching orders. now we also heard from president joe biden at the
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white house yesterday denouncing this type of language, as well as criticizing the supreme court's decision on immunity. and he's also made the central to his campaign. but again, i really do think that all of this is getting heightened attention after that decision particularly with many critics worried about whether or not donald trump is emboldened by this decision and may further seek retribution if he is elected, sarah. yeah, it should be known as there are no criminal cases against joe biden. were kamala harris, but he's already talking about jailing them, alarming to say the least. thank you so much, linda train. appreciate it. john, look, if commander in chief military tribunals are arguably within your core constitutional duties. so open for interpretation, there. as for president biden, he is warning that the supreme court rule is supreme court's ruling could mean an unchecked donald trump if he is elected in november this nation was founded on the principle that there are no kings in america each, each of us is equal before the law no one no one is
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above the law, not even the president of united states today's supreme court cnn's, i'll let sides is at the white house. >> what else are you hearing from the president on this? >> well, john president biden is trying to use this supreme court ruling on immunity to turn the attention back to one of the central arguments of his campaign as his team is still grappling with the fallout after last week's halting debate performance. so this speech by president biden mark the first time he was speaking back at the white house after spending a few days at camp david with his family who has been encouraging him to stay in the race. the president spoke for just under five minutes using a teleprompter and taking no questions. but he once again, warned that donald trump poses a direct threat to democracy and criticized the supreme court rulings warning of the implications that could have for the power of the presidency. he said that this ruling would allow donald trump to do whatever he wants whenever he it pleases, and
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he's also using this as sort of a rallying cry for his supporters saying that they need to vote in november to show their dissent to the supreme court ruling. now at the same time, the biden campaign is also pushing back on trump's legal team, which has indicated that they want to try to use this immunity ruling to challenge that hush money verdict spokesperson writing quotes the supreme court's decision, is an affront to the rule of law. and the very ideals our country was built on. but it has nothing to do with donald trump had been convicted of 34 felonies for paying hush money to a porn star then breaking the law to cover it up. it comes as biden's team behind the scene for days has been working to try to ease some of the concerns of anxious democratic lawmakers and donors as well. we know that the campaign chair and other top officials last night held a phone call with about 500 donors to try to defend the president's health and also argued you that president's candidacy remains on track now some allies have been encouraging biden to have
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more informal sessions, things like a news conference or a town hall. it's unclear whether his advisers will go ahead and move forward with such type of events to try to prove the president has the stamina and is ready for a second term. but it does come at a time when the campaign continues to face many questions about the path forward for president biden after that well, that's signs at the white house or what. thank you very much. kate, joining us right now with cnn senior legal analyst, elie honig. so la next steps in terms of the special counsel's case and the impact of the supreme court case. this hearing that judge chutkan is now going to need to oversee and preside over we don't know what it is. we don't know how long it will last. what could it look like? so, judge chutkan, in a tough spot here, she's just been reversed by the united states supreme court. they've sent the case back to her. they told her your job is to go through for the first time in history and decide which presidential acts are official. therefore, immunized, and which are not official. they again, some broad hints as to how they expect her to do, but she has
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to figure this out on the fly. i think what we're going to see, we're not going to see it because there's no cameras in federal court. but i think what's going to happen is going to be like a mini trial. i think the prosecution will put on live witnesses, including potentially some very important explosive witnesses. and i think judge chutkan, based on that, is going to then have to go through the indictment and the evidence and decide some parts are in some parts are out. i think the big question is how much is even left on the page there for jack smith to use in light of yesterday's ruling, that's right. >> how clear cut or not? is official versus not official acts? >> well, that's where the whole nexus is right there. that's the big question, right? there are some things that are obviously official acts vetoing legislation, issuing pardons, firing, and hiring federal officials. but then there's a whole lot of gray area tuesday example we just saw in the lead in what if the present started? ordering military tribunals of his political rivals? i think any reasonable judge would say that's outside the scope if it's a personal political
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motivation that's driving you. but there's a legitimate question. this is the point of justice sotomayor's dissent, where she says while the president can order an assassination by seal team six of a political rival and be immune. i don't think that's right. i don't think that's clear. i think any reasonable judge or justice up to and including justice sotomayor, if presented with that fact pattern would say that is far outside the scope of the official acts. but it does raise the question that there's now a lot of gray area, a lot. we just don't know about what's in or what's out and then there's the fallout on the other cases and donald trump is facing most immediately. >> we know that the dom trump's legal team is moving to try to use this against the guilty verdict in new york. we played it. i want to play once again some of trump's attorney who was on last night talking about how they're moving to get that verdict overturned because of it what we have in new york is a situation where a substantial number of official acts of the presidency, things
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that we believe are official acts were used as evidence to support the charges in that new york trial. >> we believe that that corrupts that trough that indicates that that jury verdict needs to be overturned. and at the very least, we deserve a new trial where those immune acts will not come into evidence as the supreme court dictated today. >> he says this includes communication made through official white house comms channels including tweets from the president. >> i don't think that's going to hack it. i don't think the fact that donald trump sent a tweet from the white house twitter account is going to be enough to make an official. i can think of some of the ridiculous, irrelevant stuff donald trump is tweeted from that account, but i do understand their argument. they're saying, well his communications with hope hicks for example, his comms director while he was president, they're going to argue that should be protected. therefore, he's immune for it. therefore, it never should have been allowed in a trial. therefore, they will argue were entitled to a new trial. i don't think judge merchan will be on board with that, but this will become part of the appeal moving forward. how big of a deal is it? this part you've written about this, it's not just what's official or non-official. it's also
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prosecutors cannot even introduce evidence of an official act as part of a prosecution that means what that is the biggest surprise in yesterday's ruling. >> it was no surprise that the supreme court said prosecutors, you cannot charge somebody right? based on an official act, what caught me by surprise. i think everybody is. they said and you can even introduce evidence of an official act as part of your trial presentations. i mean, when you're trying the case as a prosecutor, a lot of your evidence is stuff that's not a crime in and of itself, but it's necessary to tell the story. it's necessary to explain the narrative, the context. and so now for sample in the january 6 case, apparently jack smith can't even let the jury know about donald trump's communications with doj, which are essential part of the whole story. so that indictment is going to get torn to shreds by the time the courts are done with it, we'll see if there's even enough left there for jack smith to ever bring this case to trial. by the way? no. way this case get tried or any of the remaining cases get tried before the election. that much has now clear. yeah, that seems that that's the only
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certainty, right right now is about it's good to see you thank you. >> sarah. >> all right hurricane beryl now, a category five storm and still growing more powerful this morning, where it's headed in a look of the damage that it's already guns, even those outer bands. also a mistrial in the murder case of a woman accused of killing her police officer boyfriend what prosecutors are planning to do next? case it has garnered a ton of conspiracies and actor and singer jamie foxx were really new details about his mysterious illness last year how he says a headache led to his hospital stay july 4 cnn concert event. >> we performances by keith urban, ashanti, maybe wrexham, the killers go for dinner america. thursday, july 4 at seven eastern on cnn to test
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hit the eastern caribbean since 18, 51. the storm has already left a trail of destruction across the island of grenada, st. vincent, and the grenadines were power still out in many places today, seen as a leaf rafah, patrick oppmann, the tracking the storm for us, at least the first few. can you talk to us about the latest on the track of the storm? >> it's still going to track through the caribbean sea, headed towards jamaica. what we're watching closely to see if this intensity can get trimmed off at all before it gets there, we still have a monster category five hurricane, right? right now, 165 miles per hour, wind gusts over 200 miles per hour that i still so clear so organized, so symmetrical. we need to see though if it can get racked a little bit to bring down this intensity. the reason why it got so intense in the first place, rapidly intensifying more than once is because these ocean temperatures are in the middle and upper 80s. this is more typical for late august or early september, which is the peak of hurricane season. that's why we have never really had a storm this strong,
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this early as it continues its trek ii. so run into some dust and some wind shear which could level off some of that intensity, but it still heads towards jamaica as maybe a category three or a category four hurricane, hurricane force wind hurricane-force winds expected with hurricane warnings and effect for jamaica, a watch for the cayman islands then it continues to head towards mexico as we go towards the end of the week rain totals in jamaica could be upwards of a foot, especially in the high elevations that could cause concerns with flash flooding. we're looking at hurricane-force winds, tropical storm-force winds possible for southern parts of haiti and the dominican republic lisa, thank you for that. patrick, what more are you hearing about damage now? that's been sustained so far yeah, it's really just heartbreaking as communications get restored and the windward islands, we're starting to see new pictures and the damage really is a very, very widespread as you'd expect. >> but tito, just looking at some video of a woman in barbados talking about how the entire fishing fleet there has
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been sunk and destroyed and how this is the livelihoods of people who live there. and you can imagine the impact for years because of course, people work so hard to be able to own a boat and then it's sunk like this. and they've lost essentially their livelihood overnight. the storm right now, category 560 miles an hour. kate, if you've ever driven a car going 80 miles an hour and stuck your hand out the window? think about how powerful the wind is there and you double that. if you're a category five storm, you cannot be outside, you cannot stand up. most houses a will not sustain that kind of wind force. roofs get torn off if you're anywhere near the ocean, the storm surges credibly incredibly dangerous. it comes in very, very quick, something i've seen over the years. so people, certainly in jamaica and other places where the storm could hit, need to get to shelters, need to get places that are well-built, built to sustain this kind of storm and then jamaica, the prime minister or addressed the island last night and said, people have a window
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now to get prepared. but of course time is running out absolutely. patrick. thank you so much for that and got much more to come as after saying jamaica now, preparing for what they're about to see, sarah. all right. this case caught the nation's attention. the murder case that spurred 1,000 theories. let the blog or charged with a crime and a police officer fired ended in a hung jury, but prosecutors are vowing to retry the case. the defendant, karen read, so relieved after the mistrial that she embraced her family and supporters in the courtroom, read is accused in 2022 of killing her boyfriend at boston police officer investigators say read drove a car into her her boyfriend while she was drunk, killing john o'keefe, and then leaving him to die outside the home of another officer. read insist she is innocent here's what reads. attorney says. after hearing, prosecutors say they are going to retry this case
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the deep division is not due to a lack of effort or diligence, but rather a sincere adherence to our individual principles and moral convictions to continue to deliberate would be futile in only serve to force us to compromise these deeply held beliefs. >> i'm not going to do that to you folks. your service is complete. i'm declaring a mistrial in this case. >> that of course was not the prosecutor. that was the judge saying there that the jury could not come together after days of delivery variations, and she had to declare a mistrial. cnn's jean casarez is following this and dedham, massachusetts gene, good morning. this case has so many twists and turns. >> absolutely. well, the defense attorney, the lead attorney, alan jackson, said yesterday, they will not quit they will never quit. the defense and the fact is that the lead investigator for this case, massachusetts state police, michael proctor, or has
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been under internal investigation for quite a while now, in regard to a personal texts chain that he had with some old high school friends on his personal phone during the invasion let's take action where he said vile things about the defendant. karen read, we also know that the u.s. attorney's office for the district of massachusetts is in the middle of an investigation of the arrest of karen read and also the investigation, but nonetheless, the prosecution four weeks put on direct evidence and here are some examples. the first responders that went to the scene when the body i'm john o'keefe was found. it was covered with snow. there had been a blizzard that night in january of 2022. karen read was there at the scene and the invest in the first responders testified that she kept saying i hit him, i hit him, i hit him a few hours after that, investigators came to the front lawn of that home
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where there had been a party in that night? with police officers than their wives, and they started finding pieces of taillight red pieces, clear pieces, close to a shoe, which was john o'keefe shoe that was flush with the curb out near the street? seat now, the prosecution is saying that she hit him, and the forensic showed that she put the car in reverse after letting him off for this after-party at this house? and that she was going forensics expert said 24 miles an hour and she drove backwards for 62.5 feet prosecutors say she hit him. he went down and that's how he lay in the snow as the blizzard began and died. but the defense is saying no, not at all. he went into that house and a fight began with his friends off duty police officers, but he was hit. he was mauled by a german shepherd and people in that house through his body out in the
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snow. and it lay there as that blizzard kept acute to me, lighting through the night but there will be another trial. prosecutors have vowed, i think we've got some footage though because this was amazing the support for karen read during this two month trial was amazing list send to their reaction when there was announced a mistrial they were a static to know that karen read would walk out of that courthouse. but in three weeks on july 22, in this courthouse right behind me the the judges having a status hearing. all parties are to be there to discuss this retrial of karen read. sarah jean casarez. it is a case that i know you'll be keeping your eye on. it is a
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facet donating case. thank you so much. appreciate it. john. >> all right. mid air turbulence is so severe. a passenger actually became lodged in the overhead bin dozens of people injured our mission here at cnn is that the news comes first that's the promise of the situation room we work as hard as we can to get the facts. the situation. if wolf blitzer didn't night at six on cnn, 1978, we were the hottest pleasure alice in miami, nicole came or stopped or interests. enjoy your stay let's play, find the dea agent at the bar. your brothers, the biggest traffic or inland we went our separate ways. >> i'm going to need you to re-establish the connection you don't have to prove something. i remind you that you trying to keep the family together. i will come to learn the hard miami lesson every pleasure has a price they get it they know
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the moment i met him i knew he was my soulmate. "soulmates." soulmate! [giggles] why do you need me? [laughs sarcastically] but then we switched to t-mobile 5g home internet. and now his attention is spent elsewhere. but i'm thinking of her the whole time. that's so much worse. why is that thing in bed with you? this is where it gets the best signal from the cell tower! i've tried everywhere else in the house! there's always a new excuse. well if we got xfinity you wouldn't have to mess around with the connection. therapy's tough, huh? -mmm. it's like a lot about me. [laughs] a home router should never be a home wrecker. oo this is a good book title.
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coventry direct.com there's no war, so hateful war between kim between trackers house of the dragon streaming exclusively on max. all right. since the debate thursday night, we had been looking for signs from elected democrats that may be they might split from president biden may be elected democrats might be open to the idea of him leaving the presidential race until this morning. we really hadn't seen any cracks at all until this morning. this was congressman mike quigley who spoke with kasie hunt on cnn a short time ago. >> but i think he has to be honest with himself, this decision he's going to have to make. it clearly has to understand. i think what you're getting to hear is that his decision not only impacts
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who's going to serve in the white house the next four years? but who's going to serve in the senate? who's going to serve in the house, and it will have implications for decades to come. but we have to be honest with ourselves that it wasn't just a horrible night that was democratic congressmen mike quigley from the state of illinois with us now with cnn senior political commentator, adam kinzinger, former congressman from the state of illinois. >> you speak illinois. so what did you hear from your former colleague mike, right there? >> well, i mean, i heard what frankly democrat and this is what i've been saying to what democrats need to do is from the biden campaign perspective you know, don't pretend like it was just a bad debate night. again, there's a there's a big issue here and there's real importance in addressing that to the american people, saying you saw what you saw. here's the deal though compared to this habitual liar, this terrible whiny victim over here, donald trump you know, this is no comparison. but i
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think the campaign and put out a statement once it was just a bunch of bed wetter is and angry podcasters, i think that's not a great thing. so i think what mike saying there is not necessary secondly, joe biden needs to get out, but what he's saying is, you've got to address this head-on because if this is in the american people's soul, right now, they see it and they need to see why donald trump is far, far worse than anything else. how do you like being called a bed wetter? >> by by democrats i think it's pretty bad. >> i mean, look you know, from my perspective, i haven't said that there needs to be any kind of change. i've just said, look, i'm not a democrats. the democrats just make sure you put your strongest foot forward. and obviously right now it's joe biden's so you need to find out where that weaknesses and what happened on the debate. what is it that people are seeing and how do you, how do you counter that? because joe biden has got to beat donald trump. donald trump has been the supreme court
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yesterday basically said that donald trump can do whatever he wants to stay in power. knauer or when he's in office. so this is why this race is so central but if you don't like, you can call that i don't think a lot of people do. and it's gotta be a coalition of people for biden here you say that you haven't yet said that the democrats should change their ticket and you say right now president biden is still the best choice. is that what you just said there? do you believe that to be the case? do you believe that given the option right now, president biden is the best-case to lead the democratic ticket well, because they looking at the fact that i don't understand how is this going to be with i'm not a democrat. how will this how will the politics in the party b, if they make a decision to replace before the convention you know, all this kind of stuff that's, that's unknown. i will get it and i say, look, joe biden heading hey, bad night. he is he has every right to stay in as the nominee because he won that nomination
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so it's a decision all the democrats have to make from my perspective, whoever runs and right now it's joe biden and probably will be joe biden in november whoever runs out to beat donald trump and it will be far better than donald trump. and this is my only advice to the campaign and i'll tell him this one on one to which is continued to prosecute the case for why donald trump would be awful for this country and why joe biden would be better. >> and i'll talk to me about the supreme court. what do you think? of the supreme court ruling and what do you think of of frankly, the nine justices who made it look, i, you know, up until basically yesterday i would tell you that i thought the supreme court was pretty much, you yeah, there'd be a few folks on there. >> we see justice thomas, et cetera. that are pretty focused on the politics of it. but generally, people cross-party leinz. this, this yesterday, i don't understand. this is this surprised many people what
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it's basically said is that if you're president of the united states, you can do anything and even if ultimately it is determined that it doesn't fall under immunity, you have immunity is what presumed immunity, which means that somehow whoever to prosecute that president, you have to go through a whole court system to say it's not real immunity because it's presumed at the beginning i think they they made a terrible mistake they have potentially allowed whoever comes to office at some point that is bad. they've allowed them to take advantage of a system that our founding fathers never intended. so it's very disappointing very concerning. >> let me just ask you because donald trump, on his social media over the last few days posted are reposted, something that's said that liz cheney should be tried for treason in a televised military tribunal. does the supreme court ruling, how does that impact how you
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view that well, it's gotten darker. >> i mean, look, you know, every time donald trump posts up and everybody's just like lol, he's not serious. like first off, do we really want a president who nobody takes seriously, but like in this, you should, i mean here's the reality of it. he made an accusation. the debate, and here's a little my of my being upset about how the debate, when is the one that should be fact-checking donald trump was joe biden and he didn't. and one of the things that was said was that the january 6 committee destroyed all the evidence. it is garbage. it is on the internet. you can google it and get all the evidence on top of that, donald trump has a defense team. he can scourge that evidence up. but what he's doing is creating a dark enemies done that liz cheney in january 6, committee to try to bring his base together, let me be very clear about something. if you have an accusation that we deleted something, show us what we deleted but you can't
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you just make this crazy accusation and this is that dark moment we live in and yeah, so this made it worse, made it a little worse, but we're going to we're going to make sure he doesn't win in november. >> adam kinzinger, thanks for being here this morning. appreciate it. okay. >> so flight forced to make an emergency landing after hitting turbulence so severe that one passenger flew up into the overhead department like flow up into the ceiling of the cabin dozens of people, dozens of other injuries were reported. and we're also now hearing from the passengers themselves about it, about what it was like. and dr. say a teenager was minutes from dying after a terrible accident. and how they now say that teen save feeling from a backed up gut mirror lacks works naturally with the water in your body to help you go for your gut and your mood will follow for eight grams of fiber and trying mirror fiber gummies were
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that been there somehow getting up in there because of the turbulent sea in an aviation correspondent, pittman teen joining us now. wow, those images are insane and then you have people thinking that they were going to die. we have heard about this turbulence before but what are you learning about this particular case? >> the scene is so incredible, sarah, the interior panels broken off a seat folded like a book which just shows how severe this turbulence was. those are pretty strong. one passenger is you mentioned lodged in that overhead bin launched up inside the luggage compartment according to one onboard air europa says 30 passengers received what they call minor injuries according to reports brazilian public health officials say passengers got head, neck, and chest injuries. want you to listen now to one of the passengers who was on board this flight? >> i'm ready i'm from one moment to the next plane destabilized and went into a die. the people who didn't have seat belts went up in the here and hit the ceiling and they
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got hurt. those who have seat belts on, not so much then we landed here as an emergency. they helped us on the runway. we were on the plane for three or four hours without being able to move will get to the part about seat belt in a second. but the question for investigators now will be how this happened since airlines are getting better at forecasting turbulence all the time, it's an invisible phenomenon to pilots onboard radar can detect some of the major causes like thunderstorms, though important to note here are cnn whether team says there were no thunderstorms in the area at the time, there's also mountain wave turbulence, which creates shearing columns of wind. there's wake turbulence, which is created by another airplane, just like the wake on a boat, then there is clear air turbulence that's the turbulence associated with none of those tails. tails, the bumpy patches at high altitudes that are more frequent in the winter time. remember, brazil is in the southern hemisphere and it's wintertime, right now. so the big takeaway here for passengers, keep your seat belt buckled as much as it can.
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i know that's hard on a flight like this, 12 hours long. so when you're up and walking around, going to the bathroom, stretching your legs treat it like a bit of a risk. we're going into a huge period for international travel right now. but remember the national transportation safety board says, turbulence is the number one cause of injuries on commercial flights. the good news is the data says that us airlines have become pretty good at avoiding it and the passengers are following the rules. sarah, wow. >> yeah. the seat belt you heard that gentleman say, like the people that were in their seat belts weren't hurt so much as those who are of course, out of their seat belt. so it's a good reminder to all of us pittman team. thank you so much, john all right gone for 20 days that a set jamie foxx describes the illness that led to his mysterious hospitalization last year celebrate, go forwards in america, thursday, july 4, 17, and see it at morgan stanley school hardware meats, bold new
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budget reminder smarter joan by morning. got it. >> got it, boss you got this more in liebermann at the pentagon and this cnn oscar-winning, after jamie foxx is speaking out about that medical emergency he suffered from last year. >> you'll remember the illness left him hospitalized for weeks in atlanta where he was shooting a movie. scene as lisa france, lisa respirate. france has all the details. lisa i've fair i love how you say my name. yeah. we don't know exactly the whole thing, right. we still don't know exactly what happened to jamie foxx, but he is sharing a few more details in a recent video that was posted on social media, he explains that on april 11th, back in 2023, when he wasn't atlanta shooting the netflix film, he he said he felt a really bad headache. he asked a friend for an advil and in the next thing he knew it was 20
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days later. he said he's not sure exactly what happened because he does not remember it, but he said that he was told after the fact that his sister and his daughter took him to another doctor who gave him a cortisone shot and that another doctor then told him that as he said, something's going on up there and he pointed to his head but he said that he was not going to say on camera exactly what it was we do know jamie foxx is extremely private he was off of the radar for weeks and weeks, and people didn't know what what was going on and his crew really kept things private for him because they respected the fact that he just is a person who wants to be seen his best. he came back months later and he said on social media that he did not want people to see him ill like that. he wanted people to see him laughing and joking and doing his work like he usually does. >> but but he did bring it up. it's quite interesting when you hear the word headache, you think maybe aneurysm, you think maybe stroke. maybe we will never know. we will all wait and say, lisa francis also. so good to see you. good. see your
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face. so good to see you. thank you. >> so a 14-year-old with quite a story to tell. first, she accidentally shot themselves in the leg when he picked up a gun at a friend's house but then he also saved his own live speaking from the hospital, shane butler was tearful and recounting what all happened. he managed to survive that gunshot thanks to the first aid lessons that he received from his football team this coach and brought in an er doctor to teach the team first aid last year flood didn't know what to do luck this isn't just a save a life. >> this is a save of a potential leader, hizon, his way toward amazing high school like kenwood, he's an amazing young athlete. luck what this doctrine de are for me and my kid he's here. he's here in that maze a lot oh, my goodness. >> so shane beller said that after he shot himself and grabbed some clothing and turned it into a makeshift tourniquet that helped him sustained, stop the bleeding
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until police and paramedics arrived and he learned that from that doctor, dr. abdullah hassan pratt, who led that first aid training last year and dr. pratt said that the bullet actually hit a main artery and butler's leg. and if he hadn't used his training, he would have could have died in minutes this is wonderful things where you don't get in trouble with your parents because of what shooting yourself in the leg and handling a gun. but you know, you saved yourself as well. you can see in this case, he was just he was grateful to be alive. hold right there. absolutely. all right. thank you all for joining us. this has been cnn news central see it a newsroom with erica hill. this morning special guest star okay hill up next what makes ewc so special? we do a really great job at sharing all of our associates to be the best of the best one thing that we're never going to do is double-dip
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