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tv   Chris Jansing Reports  MSNBC  June 6, 2024 11:00am-12:00pm PDT

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it is good to be back with you on this second hour of "chris jansing reports." a strike on an slee school that was being used by hamas. one gazan described the nightmarish scene to reuters. quote, i was asleep when i found myself covered in rubble. no motions no hearings, now all business connected to the
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fulton county election interference case against former donald trump is on pause while he appeals to try to get the da fani willis kicked off the case. and in the case of accused gilgo beach serial killer, the man suspected of killing at least four women in long island is now being charged with murdering two more. plus, confusion and concern. the reality at the u.s./mexico border right now for those tasked with enforcing president biden's new asylum executive action. our nbc news reporters are following all of the latest developments. we begin with the deadly israeli air strike on an u.n.-operated school in central gaza. nbc's josh lederman is following that story for us. the idf says this was a precise strike on a hamas compound. what do we know? >> reporter: chris, the israeli military clearly knows the amount of criticism they're getting for this strike, coming a week after that other strike in rafah near that unrwa facility that killed dozens of
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people. the idf is clearly working overtime today to try to explain what they say are the circumstances of this incident. they say they were acted on specific intelligence that showed there were between 20 and 30 hamas operatives at this u.n. school, including some who they say were directly involved in october 7th. and they say they targeted the specific rooms or areas inside that school where they knew hamas operatives were holed up and that they actually had delayed this operation twice because of the risk of civilian casualties during earlier plans for an operation. but it is also very clear that in addition to those hamas operatives there were clearly civilians who were seeking shelter in areas of that u.n. compound as well. while the figures about exactly how many were killed are still not completely clear, authorities are saying a large number of them, possibly as many as half or more, were civi ans. our team on the ground in gaza saw the bloodied women and children showing up at the hospital, also the aftermath at the school, shrapnel and rubble
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surrounding makeshift beds. the u.n. said they are not in a position given the challenges on the ground whether israel's claim was correct that hamas was using this facility. we have heard today from a leading israeli human rights group calling this a war crime and saying even if hamas was using this facility, it doesn't justify a strike that was going to kill civilians. the question is how will this affect those delicate ceasefire talks. it certainly will not improve prospects for reaching a deal with new skepticism today coming from hamas citing contradictory comments about prime minister netanyahu about the proposal and also saying that they need to see more clarity from israel before they will sign any deal about whether this is really going to be a permanent ceasefire. they want to make sure israel is not simply going to use this as an excuse to get hostages back and then start bombing the gaza strip again. >> josh lederman, thank you. now to the georgia election interference case against donald trump which has been put on hold at least until october.
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nbc's lisa rubin is following this story for us. so why did a georgia court of appeals halt this case and what does it mean for the timing? >> reporter: so, chris, the georgia court of appeals halted the case because that is their standard practice where there is a criminal appeal, it is typical for them to halt all proceedings, but i should note for you that they have halted all proceedings only with respect to a certain group of defendants who are appealing judge mcafee's ruling with respect to fani willis staying on the case. the case continues with respect to a number of others, but where it comes to a trial before election day, it is almost a complete certainty that that won't happen. argument is not scheduled until october, chris, and so this is one more case that our viewers can count on not happening before november. >> lisa rubin, thank you. we go to long island now where two new murder charges have just been brought against the suspect accused in the gilgo beach serial killings.
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nbc's antonia hilton is following this story for us. rex heuerman was back in front of a judge today. what happened there? >> reporter: well, chris, he is now facing these two additional sets of charges for the killings of jessica taylor and sandra costia. these are killings that go back to 2003 and 1993 and that last date is important here because it really opens the window here, the amount of time, our understanding of how long this string of killings was happening here on long island that caused so much fear and concern for decades here. and we also learned pretty astonishing information about the information they had gathered while doing searches of his home, additional dna evidence that they have confirmed and really the most shocking thing we found out today, chris, was that authorities found a word document from the early 2000s in which rex heuerman had been
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keeping clear columns with mistakes he had made in murders in the past, ways in which he was going to improve going forward, dump sites where he might leave bodies in the future, even target names. so this is the kind of evidence that is frankly a prosecutor's dream because it speaks to intent, motivation certainly, and it appears he was almost spelling out what he was planning to do to these women right there on a document that they recovered on one of his computers at home. i mean, this is really what you would call ground breaking. take a listen to some of what was shared today in the da's presser. >> we said that the case was not over. we said we were going to continue to investigate the case of the gilgo four and find more evidence. we've done that. my office along with our partners are not going to stop. this case continues. >> reporter: the reality here, though, is, of course that is correct actually the majority of the killings have not yet been solved or even conclusively
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attached to this suspect. so that leaves the door open here. do they continue investigations? do they go back and do additional searches and keep adding one charge after another, or do they move to a trial now? as many of the victims' families want, get this guy officially behind bars. that's really the question here in the community. people have fought for so long for there to be this level of information, interest and urgency behind this case. many of these victims they came from low-income backgrounds, many of the women were sex workers. that is what left people to concerned that for a time authorities weren't taking this seriously enough, weren't taking enough action. the question is what happens next? >> antonia hilton, thank you for that. let's go to the southern border now and the confusion on the ground after president biden's new executive action. julia ainsley is reporting on that for us. i understand three border agents spoke to nbc news about this. what did they say? >> reporter: that's right, chris, i'm just back from south
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texas and there is a lot of confusion there about how exactly how they should deal with immigrants who cannot claim asylum since that ban went into effect at midnight on wednesday, but cannot be deported. as you know, we can deport about over 60 -- the u.s. has deported about 60,000 migrants per month over the past year, that is a high -- higher than anything they've soon in the past decade, but that is still less than double the amount of migrants who cross the southern border per month. so what will they do unless they can get more funding for planes, for detention space, and to get countries like venezuela and china to take back their nationals who right now they refuse in large part to take back. so there's a lot of concern about overcrowding because, remember, chris, this was supposed to come as part of that bipartisan bill that was negotiated in the senate, but since it wasn't passed by congress it doesn't come with more money, more manpower, more detention space or more authority and they're worried about what this will actually look like if those numbers get
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very high and could that lead to overcrowding, and if it does will they be allowed to just release these migrants even though they can't claim asylum? what will happen to those people? confusion among the migrants themselves wondering how this will affect them and whether or not this is good news or bad news. >> julia, thank you. in 90 seconds, the effects of global warming on full display as triple digit temperatures batter states out west and summer hasn't even officially begun yet. what more should we be doing to fight climate change? an expert will join me next. o fight climate change an expert will join me next. so, i didn't think i needed swiffer. until... i saw how easily it picked up my hair every time i dried it. it only takes a minute. look at that! the heavy duty cloths are extra thick
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a rare and deadly string of powerful tornadoes ripped through the northeast and midwest yesterday injuring at least five people in maryland and killing a toddler in michigan. high force winds uprooted an enormous tree, crashing it into a suburban home outside detroit where a 2-year-old was sleeping. he was pronounced dead at the scene. the child's mother was also injured, but his 2 week old sibling and grandmother were unharmed. more trees toppled in maryland where officials say one of the people they brought to the hospital suffered a traumatic injury. and today parts of nevada and arizona are scorching under temperatures that feel hotter than 110 degrees. this heat wave is just the beginning of a summer that the national weather service warns will be relentlessly hot. we're fresh off a year of
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record-breaking global heat with no end in sight and there is a new study out that warns weather-related power outages have nearly doubled this decade, compared to the last one. and in dangerously hot temperatures blackouts can be deadly. it all raises the risk of what one expert calls a heat wave scenario that keeps climate scientists up at night. joining me now msnbc political analyst basil smikle. full disclosure here, i don't know if it's the heat out west, a couple of the other people we were hoping to have on this panel we have not been able to get their signals together, but i do want to ask you about the politics of this. i was just thinking because we're doing this ceremony at d-day that when i was covering the white house and at the end of president obama's term there was a great feeling of accomplishment, the paris climate accords had been agreed upon. not a solution, but a huge step forward that now we've gone away
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from. do you think as more and more people feel the very real world effects on their every day lives something is going to change here? >> well, you would want that to happen, right, because what climate change does is touch multiple areas of policy in our lives. i had a conversation with transportation secretary pete buttigieg some months ago and we were talking about the challenges even for rails. there was an accident in new york where a commuter -- commuter rail line had to close down because of a landslide, a mudslide, after heavy rains. so when you think about how many areas climate change touches and how it will impact our lives quite considerably over multiple facets of our lives, it will become, i think, a bigger part of our day to day political conversation. what i would also say is that young people are very aware of this because we are, as an older generation, giving them something that they will inherit and have to maintain, so the key is let's not -- let's not screw
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it up and give them something that they can actually -- they can actually survive in. >> i think the reality is some of these studies is that people of a certain age, 50, 60, 70, thought, well, i'm worried about my children, my grandchildren, but it's not likely to hit me in the way that some communities frankly are already experiencing it, and when we talk about communities, communities of color, people who live in low-income communities are often the ones who are hit hardest. for example, let me give you just one thing, the cost of cooling your home is now at a ten-year high. so even if you have air conditioning, and many low-income families do not, it's going to be pricing out or we've already seen reports in some local newspapers in those communities where people are having to make a choice, right? you have to choose am i going to pay my rent or am i going to be able to cool my apartment? are we viewing this as a country with as much urgency as is required?
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>> not at all, particularly when, as you talk about the environmental justice impacts of climate change. when we think about, for example, the fact that, you know, we don't think about the united states as an imperialist country much but it does have territories, puerto rico, the virgin islands, and think about the weather concerns and rolling blackouts that puerto rico session experiencing because their infrastructure -- there are people that are sort of toying with their infrastructure and the united states not being really serious about strengthening that. when you also think about what's happening in our prison community, for example, across the country, the fact that as you talk about air conditioning in homes, what's happening in our prison system, for example, and how are folks who are incarcerated being treated in these extreme heats dealing with this extreme weather? >> and to be fair the staff, too, because when you look into this, because it's happened, for example, in texas where they were trying to get more air conditioning in and it didn't happen, the tensions it creates
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when everybody is, frankly, overheated. >> that's right. >> literally and -- >> that's right. >> -- metaphorically, it can cause real problems. >> i will say quickly i was just in new orleans, one of my favorite places on the planet, and i think about the impacts of katrina on new orleans and the fact that so many of my friends there, african americans, left because the infrastructure needed to be developed and strengthened, and have not yet returned. so it actually has an impact on changing the geography, but also the cultural sort of foundations of communities in which people of color reside. so these effects are wide-ranging. >> i also want to bring in jeff goodell he is author of "the heat will kill you first." you have been on the forefront of the warnings and storms since we were talking about infrastructure just moments ago killed power to over a million households just in houston last month and they didn't get all the electricity back until five
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days later. and you noted that it was really lucky that it was much cooler at that time. so i want to ask you based on your research if something like that happens, if the power goes out during a week like this one in communities where the temperatures are in triple digits, what are we going to see? >> we're going to see mass chaos and we're going to see a lot of deaths. my piece talked about a paper that was published a year or so ago by some well-known heat researchers looking at what would happen in three different cities, detroit, atlanta and phoenix, if there were a five-day power blackout, two days of complete blackout and then three days of restoring the power during an extreme heat event. the results, especially for phoenix, were really shocking. phoenix is a city that has 99% air conditioning, right, and so you would think it would be less vulnerable, but, in fact,
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because of the dependence upon air conditioning, if the power went out in phoenix for five days, there would be the study estimated -- and they made the point that this was conservative -- 800,000 emergency room visits and over 13,000 deaths, which is difficult to bend your mind around. but it really proves -- or shows the point that air conditioning for all of its sort of comforts that it brings us, it's also like a sort of dem a close hanging over the heads of these very hot cities. >> i'm also joined by msnbc medical contributor dr. vin gupta. vin, jeff -- you just heard him talk about this in those dreaded scenarios. hospitals wouldn't be equipped to handle it. hundreds of thousands of visits. we know heat-related deaths are rising, they were up 88% in 2022 compared to just 2000.
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look at these pictures. hospitals in vegas are prepping human ice immersion bags creating this new response protocol for the summer ahead but i wonder can we prepare enough? give us a sense of what this could mean for hospitals and public health, vin. >> chris, this is critical to point out and to talk about. these solutions aren't scaleable. the ice immersion techniques we're seeing in phoenix, seeing in places like las vegas as you pointed out, not scaleable. we can do it patient by patient maybe at the health system level, but the idea that we can -- this is a solution to what's happening in phoenix, it's not tenable. we're also seeing that there has been a 90% increase in heat-related deaths just in the last four years over what we saw at the turn of the century, coupled with now forecasts, chris, across the world, 370% increase we are forecasting in heat-related deaths by 2050. this is now something that we just have to contend with. there is no averting the worst of it.
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how do we contend with this? how do we make sure we have public infrastructure that's ready for what's happening in the southwest? that's one. and then, two, also the impact of heat on food. we now know 500 million people across the world will be at risk of starvation because of heat-related issues. so this is not just heat exhaustion, the impact of heat on the body, it's also what happens to our food supply. >> so let me go back, if i can, jeff, because in the lead in i said that one expert called this a heat wave -- said there was a heat wave scenario that keeps climate scientists up at night. you were the person who said that. what that we haven't touched on right now, real world, keeps you up at night? >> well, i think just the understanding of what's causing these heat waves. i mean, you know, these heat waves are being caused by our continuing to burn fossil fuels, putting c02 into the atmosphere.
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that is what's raising the heat, causing a more chaotic climate. and i don't think that, you know, we've got the message about that yet. i don't think that we understand the urgency of what we're talking about here, that there are literally tens of thousands, hundreds of thousands of lives at stake. so when we think about dealing with the climate crisis, what's really important is speed, is grasping the situation quickly, getting off of fossil fuels as quickly as we can, preparing for our infrastructure for this new climate that we're living in. >> well, let me ask you, then, dr. gupta, because there are going to be tens of millions of americans who are going to face this this summer, there are people as we were talking about with basil, the income inequality issue. we know that those most vulnerable are those often least able to watch out for themselves, the young and the elderly. so what does everyone need to look out for in these scenarios? >> you know, one thing i would
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say to everybody that's watching, chris, is empower yourself with the right information. spf greater than 30. 12% of people are actually using sunscreen appropriately. easy things that we can all do we should be doing. number two, in this era of wearable devices, i know maybe not everybody owns one, the one thing i talk about with my patients, chris, something that i think we have had conversations on is look at your heart rate. try to get a measure of your heart rate throughout the day. we need four liters of fluid now every single day in the heat and humidity, up from one to two liters in the winter. the way you know you are dehydrated is looking at your curve throughout the day. if your resting heart rate is increasing throughout the day you're probably not drinking enough fluid. it is one way to empower yourself with the right information to make sure you're doing all the things you can to prevent a heatstroke. >> thank you all.
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such an important conversation and thank you all. basil, you're going to stay with me. coming up, donald trump's fundraising frenzy, multiple mega dollar events in four days. can team biden keep up? we've got that next. biden keepp we've got that next. (aaron) i own a lot of businesses... so i wear a lot of hats. my restaurants, my tattoo shop... and i also have a non-profit. but no matter what business i'm in... my network and my tech need to keep up. thank you verizon business. (kevin) now our businesses get fast and reliable internet from the same network that powers our phones. (waitress) all with the security features we need. (aaron) because my businesses are my life. man, the fish tacos are blowing up! so whatever's next... we're cooking with fire. let's make it happen! (vo) switch to the partner businesses rely on. nothing dims my light like a migraine. with nurtec odt, i found relief. the only migraine medication that helps treat and prevent, all in one. to those with migraine, i see you. for the acute treatment of migraine with or without aura and the preventive treatment of episodic migraine in adults. don't take if allergic to nurtec odt.
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donald trump is stocking up for the political fight ahead, cashing in on the heels of the guilty verdict that's rallying his base. trump is heading to the west coast, he will be raising money at four events in the next three
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days, with some spots going for hundreds of thousands of dollars each. tonight in the liberal heart of san francisco "the new york times" reports he's expected to raise north of $12 million. nbc's vaughn hillyard is reporting from phoenix, v nbc's deirdre bosa is reporting from san francisco, basal smikle is still with us. vaughan, donald trump appears to be striking while the iron is hot post verdict with his base as i said. where is the support coming from in this big fundraising swing? >> reporter: right. tonight it's going to be in san francisco. potentially upwards of in excess of $10 million. this is in the heart of silicon valley and for donald trump ultimately donors who are able to contribute potentially hundreds of thousands of dollars each. for donald trump this is going to be crucial here. after an enormous fundraising month in the month of may, especially in the days following his guilty verdict, when the campaign says it raised in
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excess of $40 million is the super pac hauling in tens of millions of dollars itself, this for donald trump is an opportunity heading into the summer not only to get on the campaign trail, this is his first stop in the state of arizona since october of 2022, he will be holding a rally in las vegas on sunday, but in between these two public events he has a fundraiser tonight in san francisco, he's got fundraisers lined up in newport beach, in california, as well as in beverly hills tomorrow and of course a fundraiser in las vegas as well. this is a crucial point in time here ahead of the summer before really the final months of the campaign and the time to be actually on the trail become all the more crucial. we are less than five months out here from the general election here at this point, so for donald trump and his allies being able to haul in and being able to attempt to catch up to the cash advantage that the biden campaign and the democratic party currently holds over the rnc and the trump
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campaign, these are crucial days and crucial stops out west for the former president, especially coming off of his guilty convictiones in new york, chris. >> deirdre, you are outside the house where tonight's fundraiser is being held. we think of san francisco as the bastion of liberalism, we think of silicon valley as a place where joe biden and democrats have done very well, so what's happening here? >> reporter: well, there's been a real shift, especially over the last eight years, and part of the reason for that is that the republican party is seen as friendlier or at least less hostile towards the tech industry. you can look at the biden versus trump administrations, biden and his regulators have been tough on tech, whether that be a crackdown on cryptocurrencies, lawsuits from the doj and ftc on big tech workers. the trump administration there were tax credits that helped the
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caps. he even carved out exemptions around the china tariffs. behind me is the house that belongs to david sachs and, you know, it is $3,000 a -- $5,000 a ticket, $300,000 for a vip ticket. as you mentioned, they are expected to raise some $12 million or more from the trump campaign, but some other folks say that it's just becoming more acceptable to be a republican in san francisco. in fact, we just saw someone walk by in full republican gear, which is truly not a common sight in san francisco. you called it a bastion of liberalism, of the democratic party, that is very true. so there is a shift happening. david sachs who is hosting the fundraiser tonight says he hopes this event will allow more supporters to come out of the shadows and support trump publicly and economically.
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>> basil, trump is in san francisco just 24 hours after vice president harris was there, that's her hometown, right? she told donors it's time we have to roll up our sleeves. i mean, obviously they're very aware of the number of big money donors, ceos who might have reasonably been expected to be in the biden camp who have made a decision, much to the chagrin and sometimes surprise of democrats that they're going to support donald trump. what's going on here from your political perspective? >> you know, there was an expectation that he would get some low dollar donations during the trial because he used it as a rallying point, right, but we saw an announcement from a number of big donors, including investment bankers, that they were going to start turning their attention to donald trump. one of the reasons that they did that was actually in response to what they said was this dei movement because you could see the language and hear what they were saying. they were talking about dei
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means did not earn it and this sort of backlash to that which i believe going to deirdre's point is what a lot of them consider as a regulation they have to do it, they feel it's mandatory that they do this. it's a response to that, among other things, because one of the other trends that we're seeing is the increased attempts at unionization in a lot of these big companies. think about apple, starbucks, amazon, for example, all of these companies that these tech companies in particular that are now starting to see more worker activity and organizing. so there's -- all of this is a response to a lot of opportunities that democrats have found a way to take advantage of to kind of mobilize their base. >> you know, brendan buck who was an aide to paul ryan and john boehner and has been extremely critical of donald trump was talking in the last hour about how he thinks the democrats missed an opportunity. they stayed quiet for too long.
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joe biden potentially stayed quiet, the democrats, the dnc stayed quiet for too long while donald trump, under a gag order, was coming out every day, sometimes multiple times a day, at his trial and embedding this idea that this was an unfair prosecution, things that i have even heard democrats say. like why are they going after him on this? it doesn't seem like it's big enough. did democrats miss an opportunity and are they going to see that ultimately in the fundraising numbers? >> i don't know that they missed an opportunity. i mean, joe biden came out and challenged donald trump to a debate, said, hey, i think you're free on wednesdays, in part because they believe that if he is -- if there was any kind of conviction, even on a few of those counts, this is something that he would be able to bring up in the debate. so there was -- there was a -- i think there was a good strategy on the part of the biden campaign to sort of bait donald trump. i do believe that enough of the
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democratic surrogates were out there talking about it and raising money from it. there's still a biden money advantage and that money advantage goes to the ability of his campaign to be able to talk to independent voters, talk to disaffected republicans to actually outreach to more people so i do think there is still an advantage. i don't know that you would necessarily want to keep hitting on the trial because at the same time you've got to also talk about the good things that you're doing. so those two things need to be in place at the same time. >> basil smikle, vaughn hillyard, deirdre bosa, thank you all very much. well, there's new controversy on capitol hill, the one unexpected figures tapped to join one very critical committee and why it's prompting a lot of blow back. but first, if you think finding buried treasure only happens in the movies, think about. a couple of magnet fishing enthusiasts scored big time after finding a muddy safe filled with an estimated $80,000 in a new york city lake.
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40-year-old james kaine said, quote, i looked and it was just pure hundred dollar bills, humongous stacks of them. i said, i think life is about to change as we know it, but kaine and his girlfriend reported their findings, but authorities determined they could keep the money. so what do they plan to do with it? agostini says they plan to buy, quote, somewhere to call your own where you can have animals, chickens, goats, lots of dogs. that's definitely our little dream. we will be right back. that's a great photo. m. we will be right back. that's a great photo - so this is pickleball? - pickle! ah, these guys are intense. with e*trade from morgan stanley, we're ready for whatever gets served up. dude, you gotta work on your trash talk. i'd rather work on saving for retirement. or college, since you like to get schooled. that's a pretty good burn, right? what causes a curve down there? is it peyronie's disease? will it get worse? how common is it? who can i talk to? can this be treated? stop typing. start talking to a specialized urologist.
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house speaker mike johnson has now tapped two allies of former president trump to serve on the all important house intelligence committee. it's a controversial move and punchbowl news reports that speaker johnson didn't even tell the committee chair he was appointing them. nbc's julie tsirkin is on capitol hill for us. julie, what's been the reaction to these appointments? >> reporter: well, the reaction has been mixed, chris. if you look at allies of the former president they've been posting on x praising the move. you have to look no further than, for example, to congressman matt gaetz of florida's message, he said, quote, that president trump now has major reinforcements for his plan to obliterate the deep state. you also heard from lauren boebert and others praising johnson the speaker for making this move unilaterally. this committee, the intelligence
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committee, has worked very, very hard this congress to rebuild its bipartisan stature. long gone are the days of devin nunes and adam schiff even on the democratic side of the aisle that has sort of used this committee to prosecute their political opponents, one defending trump, the other going after him. in this congress when you have committees like the weaponization committee, ones that republicans are using to investigate the president, to investigate what they're calling a weaponization of conservatives, you have this sort of bright, bipartisan light that is the intelligence committee. now with these appointments of scott perry, who is the former house freedom caucus chair and ronny jackson who served in the trump white house as his medical doctor, this committee is going to skew a lot more to the conservative side of the aisle and that is exactly what these guys want. a little bit of what scott perry had to say. >> we want to make sure that the -- that the intelligence
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community is operating within the bounds of the constitution and honoring the civil liberties and the rights of american citizens. you don't go on that committee to just rubber stamp what the intelligence community wants. >> reporter: and perry, for example, most recently opposed the foreign surveillance program, the reauthorization of that, so it just goes to show you how this committee is about to operate very differently than it has, especially if we see former president trump retake the white house again. chris? >> julie tsirkin, thank you. a convicted january 6th rioter who was first arrested thanks to one woman's sting operation on the dating app bumble has now been sentenced to more than six years in prison for assaulting police officers at the capital with bear spray and a metal whip. ryan reilly is following this for us. tell us about this case, also what you've heard from the woman at the center of this i guess unofficial, right, dating app
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sting. >> reporter: that's right. so this all sort of started out on the night of january 6 when the fbi was putting a call out for any tips about anyone who flooded into the capitol and this young woman who lived in d.c. actually went back and flipped -- opened up her dating app, changed her political beliefs to conservatives and started chatting with a bunch of guys, she talked to about 12 of them, got three of them to admit they were on the grounds of the u.s. capitol that day and the most serious of them was andrew tokky who as it turned out had assaulted law enforcement with bear spray that day. one of the officers wrote a letter to the court saying that it was like liquid death when he got hit with that bear spray, it was the worst pain he ever experienced in his life and that's ultimately what led the judge to give a six and a half year sentence here. i spoke with the woman after this sentence was imposed and what she had to tell me was she was glad that at least one of the creeps i've met on bumble will get jail time, sort of jokingly there and added mostly
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i'm glad it's done. happy to hang up my witness one hat after this whole thing. she was witness one in that original fbi affidavit and more than three years after all of this unfolded it's wrapped up in a bow with a six-year sentence here, chris. >> ryan reilly, thank you. up next, the world's most powerful rocket launches into orbit. why this mission is such a critical milestone in the space race. but first, honoring the 80th anniversary of d-day. my colleague peter alexander spoke with legendary actor tom hanks who of course starred in ""saving private ryan"" at the normandy smet cemetery there. >> we have a few men and women who i see as being 16, 17, 18, maybe 25 years old and they might be in wheelchairs now, but they are represented by everything that is here. were it not for their choice to come and do the right thing 80 years ago, you and i would not be standing here. years ago, yout be standing here
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tell us what happened today. >> reporter: hey, chris. well, yeah, in the eyes of spacex this was exactly that. i want to take you to the moment that we saw in the mission control, people celebrating after one big major milestone. i will explain on the other side of it. >> you can see the water below. and we have splash down! an incredible sight. congratulations to the spacex team. [ cheers and applause ] >> reporter: so, chris, as you mentioned, that was the first soft landing splash down of the starship booster and there was another major milestone moment that i want to show you because it might be deceiving if you were watching the live feed as it was happening. this is the rocket after it was in orbit and it was starting to come back to earth what you see are pieces of the rocket essentially coming apart.
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you see on your screen you see the flap, you see the flames and at some point you see the camera lens breaking. this was part of another major win for spacex which was eventually it did make its return to earth. so even though, you know, elon musk himself posted to x saying even though they lost some tiles, we don't know what exactly the shape of the rocket s but it did make its return to earth and nasa administrator bill nelson also celebrating this as a big success. even though part of it was loss and kind of came apart this was the first time we've seen that. this was something we've seen in previous tests starship exploded minutes after it lifted off. so this is all a part of this major mission that nasa has to return astronauts to the moon. spacex's starship has been tapped to be a part of that mission and eventually the mission to mars. but, chris, this is all coming during a busy week for spaceflight. remember yesterday we were talking about boeing's starliner that is a totally separate mission.
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it was just about an hour ago that we saw those astronauts dock at the international space station and this was another historic moment, chris, because, remember, this is all a part of the effort to have another option to get to the international space station because spacex has been it, that's been the main way to bring astronauts to the international space station for the last four years and so now this is the first time that we have ever seen astronauts brought to the international space station through boeing and obviously we still have another eight days or so for those astronauts before they make their return back to earth, chris. >> marissa parra, thank you. one final thought on this 80th anniversary of d a day. robert brushetti witnessed the ma reaps raising the american flag on a mountaintop in ee would jet stream ma, captured in one of the war's most historic photographs is just one memory from his command ship on a
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pacific. he was on a ship last friday traveling down the coast of france to take part in today's event honoring his fellow servicemen who carried out the d-day invasion, but he didn't make it to normandy, he suffered a medical emergency on the way and was airlifted to a hospital in germany where he passed away at age 102. a friend who was traveling with him told a local news outlet he was not alone and the doctor put his favorite singer, frank sinatra, on her phone and he peacefully left us. had he made it to his destination, he would have heard speeches honoring his sacrifice and that of thousands of his brothers in arms, the courage, the tenacity that turned the tide of a war and built the world we all now live in. we honor robert brushetti and all those who served, offering some of today's profound moments. ♪♪
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[ playing the national anthem ] >> you saved the world and we must only defend it. gentlemen, we salute you. >> there are things that are worth fighting and dying for. freedom is worth it. democracy is worth it. america is worth it. the world is worth it. then, now and always.
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♪♪ good to be with you. i'm katy tur. if two impeachments, a half billion dollar civil fraud judgment along with multimillion dollar defamation and sexual ab

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