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tv   CNN Newsroom Live  CNN  August 11, 2024 11:00pm-12:00am PDT

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mark ein: i really believe that at the end of the day, he wants what's best for this country. and the fact that she's getting off to a great start is something that makes him really, really happy. jim clyburn: i think he'll be the happiest guy in the world to see her sworn in. pamela brown: what if she loses? jim clyburn: it won't be on him. it would be on us. evan osnos: if she loses in november, i think, part of biden's legacy will be entwined with that agonizing period. could he have left earlier, maybe he should have forged ahead, but i don't think it will ever completely console the fact that he had to pull up short of the goal that he had been aiming for. joe biden: i made my choice. now the choice is up to you, the american people. god bless you all. and may god protect our troops. [music playing]
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would have you with us a barrage of rockets fired by hezbollah into northern israel is heightening tensions in the middle east as israel braces for possible retaliation from iran and its proxies over the assassination of a top hamas leader the israel defense forces says about 30 rockets were launched from lebanon sunday night, with some falling into open areas. no injuries were reported. this coming as israeli forces remain on high i alert cnn political and foreign policy analyst barak ravid reports that according to a source israeli defense minister yoav gallant told us defense secretary lloyd austin that iranian military preparations suggest iran is preparing for a large scale attack. austin has now ordered a guided missile submarine to the middle east with the announcement seen as a message of deterrence to iran and its proxies the u.s. is also accelerating the arrival
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of a carrier strike group as concerns over a wider conflict grow gaza ceasefire he talks are due to take place later this week. and cnn's paula hancocks is following developments for us. she joins me now live from london. good morning to you, paula. so what preparations are underway? the region for a potential retaliatory strike from iran and its allies on israel. and what is expected well, rosemary, we have been seeing some movements on the u.s. side is as you mentioned, there, some fairly significant movement. the fact that they have decided that threw the pentagon to move the uss georgia, which is a guided guided missile submarine to the middle east. now this is a nuclear-powered submarine, its armed with cruise missiles. it had been just, off the coast of italy, carrying out some training in recent days. and it has now been moved into the waters of the middle east. now, what's significant about this
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is the fact that it has been highlighted, it has been flagged. this is out of the ordinary. it is very rare for the pentagon to announce movements of its nuclear powered submarine. there's almost complete secrecy surrounding the movement of these kind of military assets which goes to show that this is a very clear sign to iran and sign of deterrence that this is what they have in the region. so we're really seeing this deterrence being, being beefed up by the united states. we're hearing from the israelis besides the idf saying that they are on a high state of readiness at this point. and we have been hearing from iran itself saying that they will be carrying out this retaliation. it's separate from ceasefire talks when it comes to gaza, but this is something that they have to do because israel, in killing ismail haniyeh, the hamas political leader on iranian soil, violated its
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sovereignty. so it is something they have to resign spawned two. now, we did see because of course it's a iran's proxies were looking at as well for any potential retaliation. we saw overnight on sunday night about 30 rockets being fired from hezbollah into northern israel. the idf says there were no injuries for that particular barrage of rocks razmi and paula, what is the latest on the ceasefire and hostage release talks set for later this week so at this point, the plans still is that there will be a meeting on thursday. >> this is a meeting that's the mediators, the u.s. qatar and egypt really want to try and have this final bridging proposal put to both parties to israel and to hamas to try and push this deal forward. now a few things have happened over the weekend. we did hear from one israeli source familiar telling cnn that they believed that the hamas leader yahya
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sinwar was ready for a deal and ready for a ceasefire deal. but we also heard a statement from her mass on sunday saying that they wanted the mediators, egypt and qatar to push forward with the deal that they have already agreed to effectively this deal from july the second the one that president biden publicly endorsed as well. so it does raise some questions as to whether or not hamas is still willing to be part of those negotiations on thursday or whether they believe that the deal has already been done. and this is what they want to agree to. now also questions about whether or not israel's prime minister benjamin netanyahu is fully signed up to this ceasefire deal. he certainly has enough pressure from his far right elements of his coalition not wanting him two sign this deal, but we have heard from the prime minister's office that as of now he is going to send a
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delegation to those talks on thursday. so there's a lot in the air at this point we have been seeing in recent months, both sides, israel and hamas blaming the other for the fact that this deal has not been done yet, rosemary, thanks to paula hancocks bringing us that live report from london us president joe biden is sharing new details was about his decision to drop out of the presidential race three weeks ago in his first sit-down interviews since then, mr. biden explained why he decided to suspend his reelection campaign when i ran the first time, i thought of myself as being a transition president. >> i can't even say how old i am. it's hard for me to get out of my mouth but things got moving so quickly. it didn't happen and the combination was that i thought is a critical issue for me until there's not
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a joke maintaining this democracy, but i thought it was important because all the way it's a great honor. been president thank i'm an obligation to the country to do what i am most important thing to do. and that is we must, we must, we must defeat trump will we see you out on the campaign trail for vice president harris? yes, he will i could talk to her frequently talking to governor shapiro, who is a friend we've got the win pennsylvania, my original home state he and i put together a campaign tour and pennsylvania, i'm going to be campaigning never states as well. and i'm going to do whatever in common things i can do to help most well as wasn't kamala harris would turn to her home state of california for the first time since becoming the democratic presidential nominee. >> she attended a fundraiser in san francisco telling her donors that the real work for her campaign he's yet to come. cnn's kevin liptak has more vice president kamala harris is
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looking to extend the momentum that has surrounded her presidential campaign into a new week she did conclude a five city introductory tour of the new harris-walz ticket. >> it was followed by an enormous amount of enthusiasm in energy all told, vice president harris spoke to tens of thousands of people at her rallies across last week. that is also extended to her fundraising on sunday, the vice president spoke to 700 donors in san francisco, bringing hanging around 12 million to her campaign war chest and her message to those donors was, don't be complacent. she told them she's never been one to really believe in them the polls and that they can take nothing for granted. she does acknowledge that it's been a good couple of weeks, but we have a lot of work to do and i think vice president harris would be the first to acknowledge that good vibes alone are not what scoring think to win the election in november. and to that end, she
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did tell us on saturday that she plans to unveil new policy proposals in this upcoming week specific quickly related to the economy and bringing down prices for americans. in fact, she did unveil one new piece of policy at her event in las vegas on saturday evening saying she would work to eliminate federal income taxes on tipped wages. that's something that's enormously popular among workers, particularly where she was so in las vegas. it's also a policy proposal that donald trump has raised on the campaign trail and he wasted no time calling her a copycat, a harris campaign official? so said that her proposal would need to be worked through with congress. that would include income limits when it also include provisions to protect against fraud. now, in this upcoming week she will continue this push on the economy. we will see her for the first time with president biden, their first official joint appearance since she replaced him, a top the democratic ticket. and it was interesting interview just
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this weekend, the president discussed how he would be campaigning for kamala harris and the months ahead, he said he was planning meaning a tour of pennsylvania, his home state. and he said he plans to do whatever camila thinks i can do to help the most kevin liptack, cnn, washington ron brownstein is a cnn senior political analyst and senior editor at the atlantic. he joins me now from los angeles, good to have you with us now, rosemary, vice president kamla harris is back in washington after spending sunday in california, she is poised to announce her economic plan. this week and enjoying some poll numbers that put her head of rival donald trump in some battleground states how significant are those numbers at this time? and where do you see this? it's why he's going from here well, those polls that came out in michigan, pennsylvania, and wisconsin from the new york times and sienna, which is really one of the most respected public polls
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they basically would have kamala harris as president. >> because if she wins those three states, the odds are it's virtually certain that she will, in fact win and she was up by identical margins of 50 to 46 in all three, there is a long way to go, but what i took out of those polls that was significant was there was not an intrinsic pull back from her as a mixed race woman among older and blue collar white voters, as compared to the support that biden was winning. and what that says to me, it's not that those voters are guaranteed be guaranteed to be with her all the way to the end. but the republicans are going to have to dislodge them. they were not inherently running for the exits. and the fact that she was running better than biden did in 20 among working class white voters? for isn't all three states i think as a striking result. and one that underscores the challenge ahead for the trump campaign and ron, meantime, donald trump is struggling. >> it seems to adapt to this new race with harris at the top
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of the democratic ticket, he's falsely claiming one of her campaign photos was created by ai, apparently haunted by the massive crowds that she's attracting why is he so distracted while also dealing with a campaign hack yeah. >> no. look, i mean, he they felt that they had essentially put the race away at that debate, that the basic construct that voters were looking at was biden, defined by age and weakness, as opposed to trump being defined by strength. you know, strength is still struck. trump's strongest asset with the public, but against harris, things look very different. she looks energetic, vibrant, suddenly, he's the candidate who seems older. you know that press conference the other day, a lot of his answers kind of hard to figure out where he was going they i think are going to end up with an eye pretty a logical argument that she is too liberal and too weak to keep you safe on issues like
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immigration, crime, and national security. >> but they are sure flailing as they tried to get toward that trump's vp pick j.d. vance is responding to democrats, labeling him weird, saying harris and walz, a name-calling instead of saying how they will make the lives of americans better. but isn't that exactly what trump is doing? so, who wins in the name-calling stakes, especially if policies are ignored? >> yeah. well, i mean, for anyone associate with donald trump to accuse anyone else of name-calling, given crazy nancy pelosi and the names he applies to hillary and to ron desantis and to bird birdbrain, nikki haley it's equally i mean, to me, equally credible is the idea that j.d. >> vance wants to accuse anyone, tim walz of dodging military service when donald trump got out, got out of vietnam with a diagnosis of bone spurs in his feet that is
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still disputed. and later said that his equivalent of vietnam was avoiding sexually transmitted diseases while dating models in manhattan in the 80s and 90s, i you know, you got to kind of look in the mirror. i mean, there are vulnerabilities that harris will have between now and the finish line. as i said, largely around issues of strength and ideology and who can keep people safe. but the trump campaign, since the replacement of biden really has led with their chin with a whole series of arguments that are more likely to drive away, and then attract voters. >> enron in his first sit sit-down interviews since dropping out three weeks ago and passing the torch to harris, president joe biden said, defeating trump overrode everything. so he stepped aside because he didn't want to be a distraction for other down-ballot races. he now says he will do whatever harris wants them to do to help get her elected. so how critical was this interview at this particular time? >> well, he was right, you
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know, i mean, he you know, during the whole controversy when the white house was accusing people of being disloyal for pressuring him to get out after that really catastrophic debate performance, i felt that rather than being disloyal, they were holding biden to the standard that he himself in 2020. i mean, he he has said repeatedly threw his presidency that he views trump as an existential threat to american democracy, as we have known it and there were, there are a lot of reasons to agree with that judgment and so for biden to then say, well, you know, i may be diminished, but i should get the right to go on no matter what he was violating the kind of standard that he set out himself. and i think today in that interview, he was basically acknowledging legitimacy of people like pelosi who said that he had to put that overwhelming imperative. that's prime
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directive to quote from star, star trek over his own personal ambition and his own personal pride from brownstein, always a pleasure to chat with you. many thanks thanks for having me still to come. russia and ukraine are blaming each other after a fire erupts at the largest nuclear power plant in europe will have that and more after a short break stay with us with generative ai on aws companies are already transformed how they weren't to generate new ideas and turn experiments into reality aws is the easiest way to get up and running so you can quickly build and scale generative ai with security built-in with generative ai on aws businesses can push the boundaries of innovation just what blacks.
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to blackmail ukraine and the rest of the world he added that radiation levels in the area are normal, meanwhile, ukrainian troops are pushing deeper into russia's kursk region. after launching an incursion last week. but latest report by the russian defense ministry indicates they have advanced up to 30 kilometers inside russia on sunday zelensky said his military is doing what's necessary to end the war only from the beginning of this summer and only from the kursk region of sumy region suffered almost 2000 strikes, artillery voters drove. >> we also monitor every missile strikes and each such strike deserves a fair response ukrainians being evacuated from the border near kursk, echoing zelenskyy's comments how do. >> i felt great, really good. let's let them find out what it's like. they don't
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understand what war is. let them have a taste of it. >> cnn's clare sebastian has more russia is clearly racing to try to stem the ukrainian advance into its territory. >> now, almost a week since it begun, the ministry of defense putting out this video purportedly of a strike on a ukrainian military convoys on five armored vehicles on sunday, cnn has geo-located this to about 14 kilometers from the border. and near where the ministry of defense claimed to have thwarted ukrainian advances last week. now it's unclear at this point whether russian efforts have slowed. they advanced, but the question for ukraine, as russia, a mass, its forces and evacuate tens of thousands of civilians is how long they can hold on. and if holding on, even occupying pocket it's a russian territory. as part of the plan, videos like these have started to surface online. have ukrainian troops replacing russian flags with ukrainian ones. now after days of silence, only dropping hints
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about the operation president zelenskyy addressed it directly for the first time. on saturday. >> today, i received several reports from commander-in chief sierski regarding the frontlines. and our actions to push the war on to the aggressor's territory. i am grateful to every unit of defense forces ensuring that ukraine is proving that it can indeed restore justice and ensure the necessary pressure on the aggressor well, that pressure not enough to prevent another bleak chapter in an increasingly deadly summer for ukrainian civilians, ukraine's air force sunday saying that russia fired for for north korean ballistic missiles, part of a combined overnight missile and drone attack that killed a father and his four-year-old son in a suburb of kyiv, ukraine now grappling with a new front inside russia and an evolving enemy likely intent on hitting back harder. >> clare sebastian, cnn london after the break, family members search for answers as
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investigators try to figure out what caused last week's deadly plane crash in brazil o cnn is live from chicago as democrats unite to offer their support to a new nominee and her running mate fellow cnn for complete coverage that democratic national convention starts monday, august 19, on cnn and streaming on max that colonoscopy for getting screens while i'm delaying, i heard i had a choice. i know the name.
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cause of friday's deadly plane crash near sao paulo they say all of the voice and data information has been pulled from the plane's black boxes. >> meanwhile, authorities are working to identify the bodies of these 62 victims with the help of family members, journalists to find a pozzebon has more the process of identifying the bodies of the victims or flight two to three here in sao paolo, brazil is still ongoing as of sunday the night these ease the institute of forensic medicine where all the bodies have been taken from the carcass of the plane and here is where dozens of relatives and family hello, members have arrived on sunday to participate in these investigation, only to bodies that were possible to have been recognized through facial recognition due to the violence of the impact when the plane crashed to the ground for mat for all the other bodies, it's necessary to go through dna
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identification and other techniques in order to correctly match. >> their identity. and for some of these family members, today was also the opportunity to say goodbye i had dna collected really identification of my daughter and i don't know what state she will be in. >> my daughter was 1.7 meters tall a strong and beautiful woman. you will see her photos on the internet. they will be about free like katie bo i saw my daughter burn live on television. >> a mother seeing the plane on fire with my daughter inside. guys, there is no greater sense. there can't be for a mother so i'm going to fight as long as i have life, as long as i have like, i'm going to fight because i know that she would be fighting if i had been killed because that this wasn't an accident don't label it as an accident don't use that narrative just like that mother the entire brazil is
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still waiting for answer to the question of what could have happened to cause that plane to fall from the sky and crash onto the ground on sunday investigators first from france, where the plane was manufactured there in the first place arrived in brazil to participate in the investigation they are analyzing and going through two black boxes that were successfully retrieved from the carcass of the plane to identify a probable motive for cnn, this is the final puts the ban. so paolo brazil the pilot of a helicopter, is dead after crashing into a seaside luxury hotel in cannes in northeastern australia. >> stan getz were evacuated out of the choppers, slammed into the seven story buildings, roof and caused a fire. police, say the pilot was the only one aboard the helicopter and no other injuries have been reported. the helicopter's charter company says it is investigating unauthorized use
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of one of its aircraft with official when we come back, we will always have paris, the city of light proves once again, it can put on a show, will recap the highlights from in the closing so many and look ahead to what's in store for 2028 the russians were trying to spy on us. >> we were spying on them this is a secret, war. secrets and spies. now streaming on max 20 seconds a week to lose 20% of your weight in a year with diet and exercise. that's the power of glp-ones through roe connected with a provider today at row.com slash 20 hugs biggest sale of the summer is extended, save up to 25% on moving in storage until august 12, cy pods has been trusted with over 6 million moves that don't wait, use promo code big 25 to save visit hot.com today,
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free. that's prize good. four to four to four the democratic national convention starts monday, august 19 on cnn and streaming on max look at that spectacular fireworks illuminating the sky above the stub, the frost just outside the french capital. >> this was part of the paris games actionpack closing ceremony, up to two-and-a-half weeks of exciting and his the storied competition, paris chose to go out with a bang. so many underscored the parisian flair for the dramatic aid captivating ballet showcase, the golden voyager overseeing the hoisting of the iconic olympic rings actor tom cruise went into mission impossible mode of the ceremony when he
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repelled down from the stadium's roof and when hollywood, with the olympic flag in testing. all right, joining me now, live from paris is cnn sports analyst christine brennan. great to have you with us great to see you. >> rosemary. so a stunning closing ceremony at the paris olympics and for the first time, it's a tie for gold medals between the usa and china with 40 each, the u.s. >> it's dominating the total medal count though. so how did these summer games compared to others in the past? and what were the highlights for you rosemary, really the best when you've got the backdrops and you've got venues like beach volleyball at the eiffel tower. >> you're able to use all of these amazing landmark said paris is so well known for tourists, know, everyone knows the seine river, of course, for the opening ceremonies and everything else that happened afterwards. i do think that paris goes to the top of my list. and as you know, i've been doing this for awhile.
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this is number 21 in a row, there have been some every olympics is fantastic in its own way. but just because it was paris and as far as highlights, you know, i think being covering swimming, being at the swimming venue that first week, watching the frenchman leon marshawn go for, for, four in his individual racist his gold medals each time. >> the crowd roaring, singing them are arce as you know, that's what the olympics is about host nation gets to have that moment but so many across the board and katie ledecky, simone biles, the 220 year-old's just still on top of their game for the united states on and on, it goes, i could, i could take the whole segment just talking about the highlights because it truly was a terrific olympic games as you say, so many highlights, a couple of low ones, though. the most i think for most americans, it's going to be very hard to get passed the controversy involving gymnast
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jordan chiles after she was stripped of her bronze medal by the ioc, what will likely happen? do you think with her us appeal? >> rosemary, i think she wind up keeping her bronze by the way, she's already in the united states, so it's not like it's been delivered back to the international olympic committee here in paris if he has it, i guess maybe they'll give out two bronze medals, won to the romanian and one, of course, chiles will keep her is that's my guess. the us he'll is going to be strong. the problem was this happened too quickly the united states wasn't really even aware of what was happening. and there is now getting in the minutia. there is now timestamped video footage that the u.s. usa gymnastics has sent to the court of arbitration for sport that shows the u.s. he'll was within the one-minute 47 seconds. so they did get that appeal in in time. my sense is that they will win their argument and cast and i'm surprised, frankly, rosemary,
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that the international olympic committee let it get this far and didn't just say, hey, you both get bronze medals and let's not have this ruin the last day of a fabulous olympics. there's precedent he figure skaters and 2002 and salt lake city double gold medal for the canadians and the russians. in that famous french judge judging scandal. and so i think that they could have done that and handle that. i'm not sure why the adults in the room did that take charge and figure this out because he's too young women. jordan chiles, and of course rosso ana barbosu have now been twisting in the wind it's such an unfortunate situation for those young athletes really isn't. i think you'll solution of two bronze is perfect to and of course it is worth pointing out that us women dominated winning more medals than us men for the fourth consecutive olympics. >> what's behind that incredible achievement? do you think i believe it's the law signed by richard nixon in 1972 called title nine. >> that's the log of flood. open the floodgates for girls
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and women to play sports and basically it wasn't just a half of the u.s. nation. the male half, they got to play sports, but now we wanted our daughters, our nieces, our granddaughters, the girl next door to play sports as well. and 52 years later, look at what has happened at the dominant athletes are women. this is all about the grade college system in the united states. it's all about the great professional opportunities now for women in basketball and soccer, volleyball, others thanks. of course, tennis for years. and we're seeing the results and us women are just so confident, so strong, so well coached, all the things that their moms and their grandmother's never had. these american olympic stars have and yes, they went 56% of the metals that the u.s. one, if they'd been a nation unto themselves us women what have finished third in the medal count behind the full us team and china, that's how dominant the us women were. >> wow, that is impressive. christine brennan, am paris, many thanks for joining. push it my pleasure. thank you.
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>> and thank you for joining us. i'm rosemary church for our international viewers, world sport is coming up next. and for those of you here in the united states and in canada i'll be back with more cnn newsroom after a short break. do stay with us looking nature boys won't stop good some mail finch they give seeds to females in a bonding mitchell wow king of banking in africa things in today's fast moving, fast changing world, you need a financial partner that understands your unique expectations of birth okay,
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deals on top before their car sovereign ai law that welcome back to our viewers. >> here in north america. i'm rosemary church. we are learning new disturbing details about one of the worst school shootings in us history. this weekend, the city of uvalde, texas released a trove of body cam videos, 911 cold record putting this and other documents related to the massacre at robb elementary school, 19 students and two teachers were killed by a gunman there in may 2022. and these new materials are shedding more light on the horrors of that day camila bernal walks us through them there's audio, video text messages that are really hard to listen to, to watch into read. >> and most of the cnn and the outstanding team covering this shooting has already reported on and showing you but we did learn that a man who said he was the shooter's uncle called
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911 that day and begged a dispatcher to talk to his nephew, hoping that he could put an end to the situation. take a listen to the new 911 audio that robert know. >> my nephew, who's your nephew was wondering if you could he could listen to me because he doesn't listen to me everything i tell him he could come down hard, look something that call came into dispatch and 12 p.m. that was seven minutes after law enforcement had used the janitor keen to get into the log classroom and killed the suspect. >> now in another one of the 9-1 one calls released, that was actually first reported on by cnn in the months after the shooting a ten-year-old girl trapped in a classroom can be heard telling the police dispatcher to hurry because there were a lot of dead bodies. now, we also receive text messages that show a group of officers expressing fear for their safety in the hours and the days after the shooting
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asking if their photos could be taken off the website, one group chat also mentioned that up director throwing everyone under the bus, referring to the director of the texas department of public safety. and in a press conference after the shooting, the dps director did say that the on-scene commander made the wrong decision and did not attempt to go into the classroom quickly enough. he later said that the officers that first responded also acted against active shooter training. we have reached out to ups for a response and these text messages and have not heard back and just this week, former uvalde school police chief pete arredondo told cnn's ed lavendera that he felt that he was scapegoated from the very beginning. there are still a lot of questions and law enforcement was heavily criticized for their failed response. remember, it took them 77 minutes for these officers at the school to confront the shooter and the families of the 19 children and the two teachers killed they are still dealing with this and
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they still want accountability. camila bernal, cnn, los angeles a mexican drug lord is sharing in his own words how he ended up in a us prison awaiting federal trial is male. el mayo zambada says he was kidnapped by the sons of another notorious mexican cartel leader and drag to the united states against his will, rafael romo tells us why his statement is extraordinary you normally only hear from a suspected drug lord speaking publicly and movies or tv. so on the rare occasions when they do so in the real-world, everybody pays attention as statement from his myeloma. you're son bother re tghis attorney on saturday is making headlines around the world in the statement some other reiterate the claim that he was ambushed and kidnapped by a son of notorious drug lord, joaquin el chapo guzman and hand delivered a to us authorities. the notion that i surrender their
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cooperated voluntarily is completely an unequivocally false. somebody says, i was brought to this country forcibly an under direct without my consent and against my will. we had heard us much from somebody us attorney days after us law enforcement or reye's that both some butter and joaquin guzman lopez or an airport near el paso last month. but this time somebody added details including accusations that he was being asked to mediate in a dispute between the governor of a mexican state of sinaloa, which gives its name to the cartel and a political rival, seen a lower governor, reuben rocha maurya, who belongs to the same party as mexican president andres manuel lopez obrador, been mentally denied the accusations on saturday at an event where they appeared together there's absolutely nothing nothing that can link me to that matter. nothing i say it bluntly forcefully nothing the mexican president
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later said he fully trust the governor and praised them for forcefully responding to the 90 accusations as for the statement from somebody, he ends by calling on the people have seen a lot to use restraint and maintain the peace. the men accused by the u.s department of justice of atrocities like conspiracy to murder countless people in trafficking of the deadly chemical known as fentanyl added that quote nothing can be solved by violence some bother remains in us custody, held without bond after pleading not guilty to seven federal criminal charges. he's due back in court next month. rafael romo, cnn atlanta a report from the us centers for disease control and prevention highlights the ongoing importance of childhood immunizations. >> it finds a vaccines have not only prevented millions of it jonas's and deaths, but also provided significant economic benefits cnn's jacqueline howard has more in this new cdc
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report, researchers looked at nine different common childhood vaccinations. this includes the measles, mumps, and rubella vaccine, the poliovirus vaccine, hepatitis a, hepatitis b vaccine scenes among others. and the researchers looked specifically at children born between 1994 and 2023. and the researchers found that routine childhood vaccinations will have prevented more than 500 million cases of illness. about 32 million hospital and more than 1 million deaths. this is all within a child's lifetime and the researchers say that results in a direct cost savings of more than $500 billion for the country. when we think about the medical costs and the researchers say that this results in an indirect cost savings of about 2.7 trillion. now, in this new report, it is noted that during
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the covid-19 pandemic, we did see delays in some childhood vaccinations. this is because some pediatricians appointments were delayed, canceled, or missed due to the pandemic, but also this is partly due to the spread of misinformation leading to some families becoming more vaccine. hesitant. but the researchers emphasize that now is the time to make sure your child is up to date on their routine vaccinations were currently in the backtest school season. so remember to talk to your pediatrician about what's needed for you and for your family as you head back to school, and as you think about your routine, vaccines back to you celebrities are becoming coming increasingly known for their participation in us politics and encouraging americans devote the 2024 race is no difference. a new harvard
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university study claims hollywood's a list are incredibly powerful at getting voters, especially younger voters the polls. cnn's elizabeth wagmeister has more details in this exclusive report we know she can sing, you know, the great thing about an australian accent is that you sound happy because always he know he's funny, but can stars like trevor, noah, and billie eilish get their fans to the polls on election day, increase the chances of a democracy succeeding facing a nationwide call worker shortage. the answer is polling yes, they can, according to a new study from harvard's kennedy school of government released exclusively to cnn. they have a group of people that also like the swifties, who want to be affiliated with each other, not just with taylor swift, but with each other as well. this study dug into the civic campaigns of stars like questlove hailey bieber, kerry washington, and taylor swift to see if celebrity endorsements really
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do matter, i need to be on the right side of history in swift's case, the study notes a 2018 instagram post and others since have led to a quantifiable call to action swift helped vote.org, registered 250,000 people in 72 hours. this study says, eilish and noah to had an impact. the non-profit power the polls track unique web links that each celebrity shared with their fans. noah directly recruited over 35,000 poll workers in 2020. this study notes eilish's impact on a recent recruitment day was measured in real-time way through the day power the polls announced that she had signed up 2,500 people, which is amazing that you can see that anti-a in real time. >> what the study only looked at civic campaigns i am with comma no seriously, i'm with kamerra, not partisan political endorsements. >> young people were often most influenced. >> whose is that? your snow,
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like when you tuber david, don't know for card giveaways, teamed with non-profit headcount to award five tesla's to registered voters of nearly a half 1 million raffle entrance, three three-fourths were millennial and gen z more than two thirds actually went on to vote with that kind of power. >> the study's author is urging other celebrities to follow we hope liberties will do it more often, more loudly, more boldly, more frequently and get your friends to do it to actress kerry washington is doing just that. it's handled she played a political fixer on the hit show scandal now in real life, she's helping other celebrities find their own civic voices, telling cnn, i don't speak out because i'm an artist. >> i speak out because i am an american. >> now, according to the study, celebrities have the greatest impact on you hunger voters, and a fascinating statistic from harvard study is that by the next presidential election in 2028, the majority of the
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american voting body will be made up of gen z and millennials, which means that the impact of celebrities, public figures, and influencers on social media could stand to get even greater do you cnn's elizabeth wagmeister with that report. >> what's old is new again is the message disney is sending out draw, unveiling slate of new projects over the weekend at its d23 fan convention. among the new films and shows a large number of sequels including the coming release of moderna to take a look my job as finish what he started how people, just how far we'll go disney's latest animated feature will release in november eight years after the wu of the first well, meantime, actresses jamie lee curtis and lindsay lohan, the teaming up
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more than 20 years after their remake of freaky friday for a second entry titled freaky friday disney executives also announced new sequels or tv projects for other animated franchises, including the incredibles toy story, and inside out i want to thank you so much for your company this hour. i'm rosemary church. i'll be back with more cnn newsroom after short break. do stick around fall comedy us coming to cnn. what could go wrong? i got news for you.
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premiers saturday, september 14 at nine on cnn you've got your sunday obsession we got you now with verizon, get nfl sunday ticket from youtube tv on us, and a great deal on galaxies e-field six for a total value of $1,250 only on verizon. see you sunday first of all, as we began arithmetic five today, we want to talk about addition. >> so today in that guy academy, screen time is actually good for your child when you start your free trial and save $100 today from need the dot to need it now so many ways to save life ready, wallet, happy. >> that's 365 my whole foods market. >> what's the greatest invention of all time? new hands-free skechers, slip-ins. you just slipped in and they're on it's like they have an invisible built-in shoehorn. so your foot slides into place so that bending down or touching your shoes, then he'll pillow
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but it's under siege from big out-of-state media companies and hedge funds. now, california legislators are considering a bill that could make things even worse by subsidizing national and global media corporations while reducing the web traffic local papers rely on. so tell lawmakers, support local journalism, not well connected media companies. oppose ab 886. paid for by ccia.

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