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>> david: it's an honor. he remembers landing on that beach on d-day. >> the most dramatic time in my life. and i remember best and saw things that very few people would ever see. i would say the guys died within feet of me. >> david: he was just 18. >> i remember i had to pick up one guy's head, you know. because he'd been cut and so forth. and you almost took it as a -- the reality of where you were. you knew you had to do these things. it was just, take care of your friend. and that's what we all did. we were all americans. >> david: the letter he wrote home to his mother. >> "dear mom. i suppose i should begin this by telling you, i am somewhere in france." >> david: so many of those young american soldiers kept diaries. >> "june 6, 1944. invasion started." >> david: harold mcmurran's diary had no entries for the next five days. he was with the 4th infantry division, and he told us he watched the medics trying to save his friends. >> they were trying to perform -- sometimes they would be in worse shape th
>> david: it's an honor. he remembers landing on that beach on d-day. >> the most dramatic time in my life. and i remember best and saw things that very few people would ever see. i would say the guys died within feet of me. >> david: he was just 18. >> i remember i had to pick up one guy's head, you know. because he'd been cut and so forth. and you almost took it as a -- the reality of where you were. you knew you had to do these things. it was just, take care of your...
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Jun 1, 2024
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david: so it is behind us now. as will rogers once said, the country is never safe as long as they house is in session, right? so you never know, but it may never come back, right? sec. mayorkas: one would hope not. david: so let's us talk about the border. it appears there are a lot of people coming in over the border. this is obviously one of the subjects that some people want to impeach you over. is it that we are getting more people coming in over the border illegally or just the appearance of that? sec. mayorkas: oh, no, the number of encounters at the southern border is very high, but it's very, very important, number one, to contextualize it and number two, to explain it. from a context perspective, the world is seeing the greatest level of displacement since at least world war ii. i think a recent report was that there's 73 million displaced people in the united states. and so the challenge of migration is not exclusive to the southern border, nor to the western hemisphere. it is global. and when i speak to
david: so it is behind us now. as will rogers once said, the country is never safe as long as they house is in session, right? so you never know, but it may never come back, right? sec. mayorkas: one would hope not. david: so let's us talk about the border. it appears there are a lot of people coming in over the border. this is obviously one of the subjects that some people want to impeach you over. is it that we are getting more people coming in over the border illegally or just the appearance...
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Jun 23, 2024
06/24
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david: wow. so if someone goes into your store in india and buys a $5,000 personal computer, do they call you up and say we just sold somebody a $5,000 personal computer? they don't call you about that? enrique: this summer we were in india, so i went to stores without telling them who i was. you should see their faces when i go into their store, they look at me, i ask them about what products they were selling and at some point i said, you know, i am the ceo of the company. and they became white. [laughter] david: they didn't believe it? enrique: after a while, they believed it. some of them would look at the web to make sure it is me. [laughter] david: why should somebody want to join hewlett-packard as an employee? why is it better than working at apple or one of the other competitors you may have? enrique: when i became ceo, i defined four objectives for the company. one of the four objectives is to become a school of talent. our value proposition to employees is that they can join the compan
david: wow. so if someone goes into your store in india and buys a $5,000 personal computer, do they call you up and say we just sold somebody a $5,000 personal computer? they don't call you about that? enrique: this summer we were in india, so i went to stores without telling them who i was. you should see their faces when i go into their store, they look at me, i ask them about what products they were selling and at some point i said, you know, i am the ceo of the company. and they became...
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Jun 8, 2024
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david: any more sports teams? sheila: well, let's see -- [laughter] david: ok. shiela: no. david: where you are in life is where a lot of people would like to be. did you start out with a wealthy father and mother? sheila: there were not wealthy, they were middle-class. david: middle-class. so, you might describe what happened in your family growing up. you begin your book with a relatively sad, i would say, situation. you might describe what happened in that situation. sheila: it is a case. now, we are going to go all the way back to the 1950's, early 1960's, and this is the time when women had very little leverage and control over their own lives. my father was one of eight african-american neurosurgeons in the country. and that put us in a social status up here. he then decided one night he was just leaving. and he just left us cold. so then my mother suddenly went from here to here in society, in the eyes of society. her friends left her. she literally had a nervous breakdown. and i was coming in, i was working at jcpenney and i came in and we found her on the floor in
david: any more sports teams? sheila: well, let's see -- [laughter] david: ok. shiela: no. david: where you are in life is where a lot of people would like to be. did you start out with a wealthy father and mother? sheila: there were not wealthy, they were middle-class. david: middle-class. so, you might describe what happened in your family growing up. you begin your book with a relatively sad, i would say, situation. you might describe what happened in that situation. sheila: it is a case....
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Jun 13, 2024
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david: have you done that? ruth: absolutely. david: it's safe? ruth: it's so safe that within 15 seconds people are so bored. david: you don't need a helmet? ruth: you need a helmet with many drivers on the road. ♪ [introspective music] recipes. recipes that are more than their ingredients. ♪ [smoke alarm] recipes written by hand and lost to time... can now be analyzed and restored using the power of dell ai. preserving memories and helping to write new ones. ♪ sales tax automatically. avalarahhhhhh what if tax rates change? ahhhhhh filing sales tax returns? ahhhhhh business license guidance? ahhhhhh -cross-border sales? -ahhhhhh -item classification? -ahhhhhh does it connect with acc...? ahhhhhh ahhhhhh ahhhhhh (♪♪) the road to opportunity. is often the road overlooked. (♪♪) at enterprise mobility, we guide companies to unique solutions, from our team of mobility experts. because we believe the more ways we all have to move forward. the further we'll all go. david: you have over a hundred billion dollars in cash, will you invest th
david: have you done that? ruth: absolutely. david: it's safe? ruth: it's so safe that within 15 seconds people are so bored. david: you don't need a helmet? ruth: you need a helmet with many drivers on the road. ♪ [introspective music] recipes. recipes that are more than their ingredients. ♪ [smoke alarm] recipes written by hand and lost to time... can now be analyzed and restored using the power of dell ai. preserving memories and helping to write new ones. ♪ sales tax automatically....
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Jun 17, 2024
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david? >> david: we're tracking it all, and it is only mid-june, as you point out. gin ginger, thank you. >>> in the west at this hour, that fire burning. multiple fires, in fact. the major one, just north of los angeles. kayna whitworth from california now. >> reporter: tonight, wind-driven wildfires scorching thousands of acres and forcing evacuations across california. red flag warnings up for much of the state. north of los angeles, the post fire burning more than 15,000 acres since saturday. conditions fueling its explosive spread. >> relative humidity at 15%. the winds were kicking out 30 mi-mile-an-hour gusts, and tn we had one hottest weekend that we've had in a while. so all those in alignment with this terrain, that fire took off. >> reporter: some 1,200 people evacuated. three hikers rescued, including a child. those on the front lines not catching a break. >> unfortunately, the fire fight here is going to be a tough one. 40-mile-per-hour sustained winds all the way through midnig
david? >> david: we're tracking it all, and it is only mid-june, as you point out. gin ginger, thank you. >>> in the west at this hour, that fire burning. multiple fires, in fact. the major one, just north of los angeles. kayna whitworth from california now. >> reporter: tonight, wind-driven wildfires scorching thousands of acres and forcing evacuations across california. red flag warnings up for much of the state. north of los angeles, the post fire burning more than...
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Jun 29, 2024
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david: cancer-related drugs. there are some cancer-related drugs -- and i guess you have some as well, but they tend to deal with cancer. once you have cancer, they try to ameliorate the side effects of it or the effects of it. what about something that prevents cancer? is that realistic in my lifetime? dr. narashimhan: that is something that's a heavy interest of the field, and at our company we just got great data on a breast cancer drug that can be given to women to -- given to women who have had their breast cancer -- and prevented from recurring. where there's a lot of interest right now is can you identify things in the blood, things that are circulating, tumor dna, that would show the cancer is starting to happen in the body but well before it would be detectable in any scan? if we can get those tests to an adequate level of precision and start to treat patients well before the cancer shows up, that would be the big opportunity. but that is still some time away. david: you produce medicines that presumably
david: cancer-related drugs. there are some cancer-related drugs -- and i guess you have some as well, but they tend to deal with cancer. once you have cancer, they try to ameliorate the side effects of it or the effects of it. what about something that prevents cancer? is that realistic in my lifetime? dr. narashimhan: that is something that's a heavy interest of the field, and at our company we just got great data on a breast cancer drug that can be given to women to -- given to women who...
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Jun 2, 2024
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david: this past month. but let's say since the beginning of the administration, is it millions of people? sec. mayorkas: it is several million people. david: well, there was legislation developed i think in the senate, bipartisan legislation, and it got stalled, let's say, in the house. would that have solved that problem had it passed? sec. mayorkas: it would have been transformative change in managing the number people we encountered. david: what is the main thing in that law that we don't have that you would have liked to have? sec. mayorkas: we would have taken a seven plus-year time period between time of encounter and final adjudication and reduced it to as little as 90 days. and that changes an intending migrant's risk calculus. because if they know they can stay for multiple years and work and make more money than they can, and safely so, than in their country of origin, they will decide to make that journey. if they understand that they have to pay their life savings to a smuggling organization onl
david: this past month. but let's say since the beginning of the administration, is it millions of people? sec. mayorkas: it is several million people. david: well, there was legislation developed i think in the senate, bipartisan legislation, and it got stalled, let's say, in the house. would that have solved that problem had it passed? sec. mayorkas: it would have been transformative change in managing the number people we encountered. david: what is the main thing in that law that we don't...
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. >> david: it's an honor. >> david, nice to meet you. >> david: nice to meet you, too. jake knows how many heroes we lose every day, which is why he's on his way to a high school history class in downingtown, pennsylvania, to make sure their sacrifice is not forgotten. you didn't even talk about it for years and years? >> for years. for 67 years, i never talked about it. >> david: why do you think you didn't talk about it for so long? >> don't know. >> david: you all came home and got to work. >> we got home, came home, went to finish our education, and we -- and we went to work. >> hello, mr. ruser, how are you? >> david: the principal and the students, who are now nearly jake's age when he was sent off to the war. >> the world we live in today is no accident. the freedom we enjoy today is a result of the actions of heroic folks like mr. ruser. >> david: the students fixed on jake's words about the combat medics who would go out into no man's land, german snipers waiting. a lot of people don't realize that you were not armed -- >> we were not armed. >> david: -- when y
. >> david: it's an honor. >> david, nice to meet you. >> david: nice to meet you, too. jake knows how many heroes we lose every day, which is why he's on his way to a high school history class in downingtown, pennsylvania, to make sure their sacrifice is not forgotten. you didn't even talk about it for years and years? >> for years. for 67 years, i never talked about it. >> david: why do you think you didn't talk about it for so long? >> don't know. >>...
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Jun 29, 2024
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david: so, were you surprised? vas: i was shocked when they asked me to be a part of it, i had been the head of drug development. i had the opportunity to do so many different roles at novartis in developing vaccines, i worked in the vaccine division leading a little bit of our generics unit working at drug development for many, many years. i think part of the reason that they were interested is because i got a background in r&d. i think it was also not only my age, but the fact that i think no other major pharmaceutical company had an r&d head or development head as their ceo. david: your strategy has been different than the strategy you inherited. novartis was in many different areas. they had a generic drug business and you sold that. why did you get out of that business, it seems to be a reasonably profitable business? vas: as you know, when you have these conglomerates you have to , ask, is there value in the clunk la merritt, is there value in building these businesses together. and the question is, what are
david: so, were you surprised? vas: i was shocked when they asked me to be a part of it, i had been the head of drug development. i had the opportunity to do so many different roles at novartis in developing vaccines, i worked in the vaccine division leading a little bit of our generics unit working at drug development for many, many years. i think part of the reason that they were interested is because i got a background in r&d. i think it was also not only my age, but the fact that i...
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Jun 15, 2024
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david: have you done that? ruth: absolutely. david: it's safe? ruth: it's so safe that within 15 seconds people are so bored. david: you don't need a helmet? ruth: you need a helmet with many drivers on the road. david: so for our young women ♪ david: you have a challenge that many people would like to have but they don't have. which is you have over $100 billion of cash. are you going to invest that in private equity firms, or are you going to put it in new technology? what will you do with more than $100 billion of cash and, have you thought about that? do you have people coming up to you all the time with great ideas for that cash? ruth: we do, as you would imagine. we are continuing to invest in the business. there's a lot of extraordinary upside in the business. and we do make investments in acquisitions. so do all of our peers. there's a lot that's exciting going on in the world. and so we are looking across the board. it starts within the business, then it goes to investments and acquisitions, then obviously return of capital through a n
david: have you done that? ruth: absolutely. david: it's safe? ruth: it's so safe that within 15 seconds people are so bored. david: you don't need a helmet? ruth: you need a helmet with many drivers on the road. david: so for our young women ♪ david: you have a challenge that many people would like to have but they don't have. which is you have over $100 billion of cash. are you going to invest that in private equity firms, or are you going to put it in new technology? what will you do with...
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david? >> david: mary bruce leading us off tonight. >>> we do have a lot of other news to get to tonight as well. that fiery plane crash in a front yard just outside denver. two adults and two children were pulled from the wreckage by good samaritans. the pilot had been desperately looking for a place to land, coming down in that neighbor's front yard. >> reporter: tonight, smoking wreckage in a denver suburb. two adults and two children rushed to the hospital after their plane crashed in a neighborhood front yard. >> we are going to have multiple patients here. go ahead us and bring us another medic unit. >> reporter: neighbors scrambling to put out the flames in arvada, colorado, just after 9:30 this morning. >> there were a lot of good samaritans around either assisting those people out of the plane, or assisting them away from the plane, because there was a large amount of fire after the crash. >> reporter: erick garcia was with his 2-year-old son when he saw the plane wobbling and glidi
david? >> david: mary bruce leading us off tonight. >>> we do have a lot of other news to get to tonight as well. that fiery plane crash in a front yard just outside denver. two adults and two children were pulled from the wreckage by good samaritans. the pilot had been desperately looking for a place to land, coming down in that neighbor's front yard. >> reporter: tonight, smoking wreckage in a denver suburb. two adults and two children rushed to the hospital after their...
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Jun 16, 2024
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david: ok. everybody wants to talk to you here because you have a lot of money, you have over $100 billion of cash to invest. so people want to see you. why do you come to davos? people will be bombarding you, give me money for this or that. is it worth the effort to schlep all the way here? or are you happy to come here and meet people you actually want to see? ruth: i have been coming here since i ran tech banking at morgan stanley back in the 1990's and was hunting for fees. it has become one-stop shopping. you make the trip and you get to see people from asia, africa, middle east, europe. it's a one-stop shop. david: let's talk about your background, now that you mentioned it. where did you grow up? ruth: i was born in england and mostly grew up in california. david: california. your father was a professor at stanford? ruth: my father was actually a holocaust refugee. my father escaped from vienna right after kristallnacht and made it to palestine. he had no high school education. he ended u
david: ok. everybody wants to talk to you here because you have a lot of money, you have over $100 billion of cash to invest. so people want to see you. why do you come to davos? people will be bombarding you, give me money for this or that. is it worth the effort to schlep all the way here? or are you happy to come here and meet people you actually want to see? ruth: i have been coming here since i ran tech banking at morgan stanley back in the 1990's and was hunting for fees. it has become...
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david? >> david: kayna whitworth tonight. thank you, kayna. >>> now, to the israel-hamas war, and tonight, the israeli military confirming four more hostages have died while being held by hamas. three of them had been seen pleading for their lives in a video put out by hamas in december. marcus moore is in israel tonight. >> reporter: tonight, the israeli military acknowledging, quote, difficult questions will be asked, after the deaths of four more hostages being held by hamas in gaza. according to the idf, new intelligence confirms chaim peri, yoram metzger, amiram cooper, and nadav popplewell were killed several months ago. >> we assess that the four of them were killed while together in the area of khan younis during our operation there against hamas. >> reporter: the idf has not said how they died. back in december, peri appeared in this hamas video, pleading, "don't abandon us." a lifelong peace activist, peri surrendered to hamas militants to save his wife, who was hiding in their safe room. we spoke with their son, li
david? >> david: kayna whitworth tonight. thank you, kayna. >>> now, to the israel-hamas war, and tonight, the israeli military confirming four more hostages have died while being held by hamas. three of them had been seen pleading for their lives in a video put out by hamas in december. marcus moore is in israel tonight. >> reporter: tonight, the israeli military acknowledging, quote, difficult questions will be asked, after the deaths of four more hostages being held by...
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david? >> david: terry moran back with us tonight. terry, thank you. >>> now, to italy tonight, where american amanda knox returned hoping to clear her name for good following the murder of her roommate 17 years ago now. instead, amanda knox was convicted of slander for blaming the murder on her boss at the time. she was given a three-year sentence today, but she will not go to prison, because of the time she's already spent behind bars. knox was ultimately acquitted of killing meredith kercher. he plans to appeal this slander conviction. >>> we are here tonight at the normandy american cemetery in france. tomorrow marks 80 years since thousands of brave american sons stormed the beaches of normandy. for more than five years now, we have been documenting their journey, their stories, their message to everyone at home watching. as they make their journey back. ♪ it is sunrise here on the beaches of normandy, where 80 years ago, in the early morning hours, thousands of brave american sons began storming the beaches of normandy. and th
david? >> david: terry moran back with us tonight. terry, thank you. >>> now, to italy tonight, where american amanda knox returned hoping to clear her name for good following the murder of her roommate 17 years ago now. instead, amanda knox was convicted of slander for blaming the murder on her boss at the time. she was given a three-year sentence today, but she will not go to prison, because of the time she's already spent behind bars. knox was ultimately acquitted of killing...
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Jun 25, 2024
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david? >> david: extraordinary image. melissa, thank you. let's get right to chief meteorologist ginger zee tonight tracking it all again for us. hi, ginger. >> hi, david. we just got a brand new severe thunderstorm watch a few moments ago. illinois back through southern iowa, over to sd, you're all in that severe watch. meaning tonight, you could see winds in excess of 70 miles per hour. you could see some of that hail get as large as 2 1/2 inches in diameter. an isolated tornado could happen, too. we'll take that right into st. louis by tomorrow morning. very ugly radar by tomorrow throughout parts of missouri. so, watch it in the overnight hours. then, this same front marrs to the east, so, west virginia gets it, washington, d.c. and baltimore, like you mentioned, in the drive, but also into the evening and late night, new york city, new jersey, all the way up to close to boston, rhode island included there. it's wednesday night for you. and some of that rain will be heavy at times. now,
david? >> david: extraordinary image. melissa, thank you. let's get right to chief meteorologist ginger zee tonight tracking it all again for us. hi, ginger. >> hi, david. we just got a brand new severe thunderstorm watch a few moments ago. illinois back through southern iowa, over to sd, you're all in that severe watch. meaning tonight, you could see winds in excess of 70 miles per hour. you could see some of that hail get as large as 2 1/2 inches in diameter. an isolated tornado...
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Jun 26, 2024
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david letterman. david, thank you so much for being here. >> david: it's a pleasure and thank you for inviting me. it's very nice. and i'm sorry it took me so long to get back. >> stephen: i think this is just the right timing. i don't think i would have been ready before this. so, david, you know. i was on your show ten times. you now have been on my show an& we've had a chance to talk off the air. we've done podcasts. even with all that experience, deep intimate experience, it's hard to get to know someone in a pure interview situation. >> david: i understand that. >> stephen: i do want to know the heart of all my guests, so we here at "the late show" labs have come up with something we call the colbert questionert which has been honed to aerospace tolerances to penetrate the defenses of any guest and penetrate to the core of their person and have them be fully known to the american people. are you ready, dave? are you prepared, do you have the courage to take the colbert questionert? >> david: i ad
david letterman. david, thank you so much for being here. >> david: it's a pleasure and thank you for inviting me. it's very nice. and i'm sorry it took me so long to get back. >> stephen: i think this is just the right timing. i don't think i would have been ready before this. so, david, you know. i was on your show ten times. you now have been on my show an& we've had a chance to talk off the air. we've done podcasts. even with all that experience, deep intimate experience,...
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david? >> david: so, this starts in just hours. rachel scott at the white house. rachel, thank you. >>> we turn now to those major disruptions for millions of ave t and t customers unable to make calls to other networks. at least 24 states and major cities, new york city, philadelphia, chicago, dallas, pittsburgh, and indianapolis among those reporting major issues tonight. abc's erielle reshef now with late reporting here. >> reporter: tonight, reports from across the country that at&t users are unable to make and receive calls from other carriers. the website down detector showing new york city, chicago, philadelphia, gladallas, pittsburgh, and indianapolis among those cities with reports of issues. at&t saying in a statement, "there is a nationwide issue that is affecting the ability of customers to complete calls between carriers." at&t says a notice they sent to 911 call centers that emergency services were effected but sent in error, and 911 calls are operating normally at this time. b
david? >> david: so, this starts in just hours. rachel scott at the white house. rachel, thank you. >>> we turn now to those major disruptions for millions of ave t and t customers unable to make calls to other networks. at least 24 states and major cities, new york city, philadelphia, chicago, dallas, pittsburgh, and indianapolis among those reporting major issues tonight. abc's erielle reshef now with late reporting here. >> reporter: tonight, reports from across the...
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Jun 10, 2024
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david? >> david: terry, thank you. >>> meanwhile tonight, former president donald trump's interview with a new york probation officer earlier today. the officer will now write a report to the judge who will sentence trump in weeks. here's our senior investigative correspondent aaron katersky now. >> reporter: tonight, former president donald trump taking his next step as a convicted criminal, meeting for the first time with a probation officer before he's sentenced next month. the purpose of this meeting, which was conducted remotely, trump at his mar-a-lago estate, is to help the officer prepare a report with a sentencing recommendation for judge juan merchan. trump was found guilty of 34 counts of falsifying business records to cover up a hush money payment to porn star stormy daniels. he has attacked the verdict and the judge over and over. >> i just went through a rigged trial in new york -- with a highly conflicted -- and i mean highly conflicted -- judge, where there was no crime. it w
david? >> david: terry, thank you. >>> meanwhile tonight, former president donald trump's interview with a new york probation officer earlier today. the officer will now write a report to the judge who will sentence trump in weeks. here's our senior investigative correspondent aaron katersky now. >> reporter: tonight, former president donald trump taking his next step as a convicted criminal, meeting for the first time with a probation officer before he's sentenced next...
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Jun 12, 2024
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david? >> david: just an extraordinary scene playing out there in south florida. victor, thank you. >>> meantime, just about 100 miles from florida tonight, four russian warships steaming into havana bay, including a nuclear-powered submarine. the u.s. tracking this with a show of force. they are set for military drills, these russian ships, with cuba, for the first time in 16 years. abc's martha raddatz reporting tonight. >> reporter: tonight, a brazen display of russian military force just over 100 miles from florida's coast. russia's longtime ally cuba welcoming four russian warships, including a nuclear-powered submarine, with a 21 cannon salute, as russian military drills begin in the caribbean nation for the first time in 16 years. the russians say the ships have already conducted drills in the atlantic, simulating long-range missile strikes aimed at targets more than 300 miles away. although russian ships routinely dock in havana, this military exercise is a clear provocation that the
david? >> david: just an extraordinary scene playing out there in south florida. victor, thank you. >>> meantime, just about 100 miles from florida tonight, four russian warships steaming into havana bay, including a nuclear-powered submarine. the u.s. tracking this with a show of force. they are set for military drills, these russian ships, with cuba, for the first time in 16 years. abc's martha raddatz reporting tonight. >> reporter: tonight, a brazen display of russian...
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Jun 12, 2024
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david? >> david: aaron katersky with us tonight. aaron, thank you. >>> we turn next here this evening to the secret recordings of supreme court justices. justice samuel alito and chief justice john roberts, as well as the recording of justice alito's wife. and the woman who recorded them now defending herself tonight. here's pierre thomas. >> reporter: tonight, the new secret undercover audio and the revealing comments from two supreme court justices. liberal filmmaker lauren windsor allegedly taping conversations with justice samuel alito and chief justice john roberts while posing as a christian conservative at a gala earlier this month in an apparent effort to engage them in a culture wars debate. abc news has not authenticated the audio, and it appears the clips posted by windsor on social media have been edited. in one recording, windsor poses a leading question to alito, a staunch conservative and devout catholic, about the political divide in this country. >> i don't know that we can negotiate with the left in the way that ne
david? >> david: aaron katersky with us tonight. aaron, thank you. >>> we turn next here this evening to the secret recordings of supreme court justices. justice samuel alito and chief justice john roberts, as well as the recording of justice alito's wife. and the woman who recorded them now defending herself tonight. here's pierre thomas. >> reporter: tonight, the new secret undercover audio and the revealing comments from two supreme court justices. liberal filmmaker...
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Jun 25, 2024
06/24
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david? david: mike emanuel, thank you very much. let's welcome to to the show "the coming collapse of china" author and gatestone institute senior fellow, gordon chang. gordon, does it look like there's a cover-up by the dod here? >> i suspect that there is, david. you know, money always leaves a trail. and if they were really interested in finding out where their money went with, they could track it. i'm not going to say that it was easy to do it, but, you know, every grantee has a grantee, so really they can and they can just track money through bank accounts. so, yeah, they're covering up. david: i want to to broaden this because there was something during the trump administration called the china initiative that started in 2018 which basically realized or admitted the fact that we had been snookered too often by the ccp in all kinds of relationships whether it was on health or on defense sharing, defense information even though they're certainly not an ally, could even be called an enemy. that was scrapped by the biden administr
david? david: mike emanuel, thank you very much. let's welcome to to the show "the coming collapse of china" author and gatestone institute senior fellow, gordon chang. gordon, does it look like there's a cover-up by the dod here? >> i suspect that there is, david. you know, money always leaves a trail. and if they were really interested in finding out where their money went with, they could track it. i'm not going to say that it was easy to do it, but, you know, every grantee...
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Jun 9, 2024
06/24
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david: one vote was the right to build the hotel you wanted? sheila: that's right. david: ok. so you started building it, then but then what happened? sheila: then the recession hit. i got a call from the bank, and they said, you had better mothball this for a while, and we will give you the green light when to start it again. but the other thing i want you all to know, as a woman, even with all of my money that i had at the time, i could not get a bank loan to build -- i had to use my own money to build that resort. because i had -- i don't know. i was a woman. and i just could not get the bank loan. david: so ultimately, though, you went ahead. the recession went away and you decided to build it with your own money. sheila: yeah. then the bank called and said, you can proceed now. but i still had to use my own money to finish it off. david: so you build it, how many rooms was it initially? sheila: well, we started with 68 and then it grew and it grew and it grew. now it is 168 and that's where the town put the plug on me. that's what i do. however, i was able to get out and
david: one vote was the right to build the hotel you wanted? sheila: that's right. david: ok. so you started building it, then but then what happened? sheila: then the recession hit. i got a call from the bank, and they said, you had better mothball this for a while, and we will give you the green light when to start it again. but the other thing i want you all to know, as a woman, even with all of my money that i had at the time, i could not get a bank loan to build -- i had to use my own...
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Jun 24, 2024
06/24
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david? >> david: erielle reshef, thank you. >>> let's get right to chief meteorologist ginger zee, back with us tonight with the forecast. hi, ginger. >> hi, david. it was the first 100-plus degree temperature in june in 12 years for washington, d.c. and baltimore over the weekend. and now, that heat is focused tomorrow mostly in the middle of the country. from omaha and the excessive heat warnings to greenville, mississippi, that could see feels like upwards of 116. a couple pockets of excessive heat for salt lake and palm springs. but the risk area is really focused along that florida panhandle, back to little rock, and a big part of that is not just the afternoon highs or the feels like when the sun is out, but when you are asleep and how warm it stays. we could see record overnight low highs, if that makes any sense to you. also, yes, riding along that ridge with some frontal action, a low pressure system tonight. you could see a der ray choe, or a long line of storms with imbedded or is
david? >> david: erielle reshef, thank you. >>> let's get right to chief meteorologist ginger zee, back with us tonight with the forecast. hi, ginger. >> hi, david. it was the first 100-plus degree temperature in june in 12 years for washington, d.c. and baltimore over the weekend. and now, that heat is focused tomorrow mostly in the middle of the country. from omaha and the excessive heat warnings to greenville, mississippi, that could see feels like upwards of 116. a...
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david? >> david: terry moran leadings off here tonight. terry, thank you. >>> meanwhile, there is a developing headline tonight involving the u.s./mexico border. sources say president biden is preparing to take tough executive action on immigration, including shutting the border when the number of asylum seekers reaching 2,500. it would trigger an immediate shutdown. it comes tonight as the new president of mexico, their first woman president, has already signaled she will work with the u.s. on immigration. rachel scott at the white house. >> reporter: tonight, president biden preparing to take his most aggressive action on immigration yet, with plans to issue an executive order to effectively shut down the border to asylum seekers when migrant crossings surge. sources tell abc news when daily encounters reach 2,500 between ports of entry, asylum seekers would be turned away. the move could have an immediate impact. migrant crossings have averaged 3,500 a day in recent weeks. the president,
david? >> david: terry moran leadings off here tonight. terry, thank you. >>> meanwhile, there is a developing headline tonight involving the u.s./mexico border. sources say president biden is preparing to take tough executive action on immigration, including shutting the border when the number of asylum seekers reaching 2,500. it would trigger an immediate shutdown. it comes tonight as the new president of mexico, their first woman president, has already signaled she will work...
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Jun 27, 2024
06/24
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david: this is my kitchen table and also my filing system. over much of the past three decades i've been an investor. the highest calling of mankind i've often thought was private equity. then, i started interviewing. i want your interview so i know how to do some interviews. i've learned from doing my interviews how leaders make it to the top. jeff: i asked how much he wanted, he said 250, i did not negotiate. david: i have something i'd like to sell. and how they stay there. but i feel inadequate now being only the second wealthiest man in the world, is that right? this is the ceo of a major swiss-based pharmaceutical company. the indian immigrant -- born in the u.s. to indian immigrant parents he chose not to practice medicine. he chose to go into the pharmaceutical industry and is leading the transformation of one of the most important pharmaceutical companies in the world. i had a chance to sit down with him in new york to talk about the transformation. many people know the names of the drugs they use but they don't know the name of the
david: this is my kitchen table and also my filing system. over much of the past three decades i've been an investor. the highest calling of mankind i've often thought was private equity. then, i started interviewing. i want your interview so i know how to do some interviews. i've learned from doing my interviews how leaders make it to the top. jeff: i asked how much he wanted, he said 250, i did not negotiate. david: i have something i'd like to sell. and how they stay there. but i feel...
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Jun 27, 2024
06/24
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david? >> david: gio benitez who covers aviation. thank you, gio. >>> there is a developing headline from texas tonight. the first criminal indictments stemming from the school massacre in yuval dee more than two years ago now. multiple reports tonight, a grand jury has filed criminal charges against two people for abandoning or endangering a child, a state felony. authorities found officers arrived at robb elementary school and waited 77 minutes before confronting the shooter. 19 fourth graders and two teachers were killed. uvalde school police chief pete arredondo is one of two potentially facing charges here, including to "the san antonio express news." no confirmation yet to abc news. >>> we turn now to oklahoma tonight, and the new ruling involving the bible in public schools. that state mandating teaching the bible in schools, effective immediately, calling it an indispensable historical and cultural touchstone. here's matt rivers tonight. >> reporter: tonight, the top education official in oklahoma directing all schools across
david? >> david: gio benitez who covers aviation. thank you, gio. >>> there is a developing headline from texas tonight. the first criminal indictments stemming from the school massacre in yuval dee more than two years ago now. multiple reports tonight, a grand jury has filed criminal charges against two people for abandoning or endangering a child, a state felony. authorities found officers arrived at robb elementary school and waited 77 minutes before confronting the shooter....
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Jun 11, 2024
06/24
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david? >> david: terry moran interviewing those two jurors tonight. terry, thank you. let's get right to dan abrams, and of course, dan, everyone wants to know what hunter biden potentially faces here, and then what's the most likely scenario. >> facing up to 25 years, but more likely, would be no time at all, and it's going to be interesting to see whether the special counsel asks for prison time. when you listen to his press conference here and read between the lines, it sounded like he may not even ask for prison time. that will be a critical question, is, what does he decide to request from the judge? >> david: you said something earlier, while we were on the air for the verdict that was intriguing. you said you look back at cases, very rare there would be felony charges when the gun itself suspect used in connection with another crime. >> right, i haven't been able to find another federal case where the gun wasn't used in connection with another crime, there were no other crimes committ
david? >> david: terry moran interviewing those two jurors tonight. terry, thank you. let's get right to dan abrams, and of course, dan, everyone wants to know what hunter biden potentially faces here, and then what's the most likely scenario. >> facing up to 25 years, but more likely, would be no time at all, and it's going to be interesting to see whether the special counsel asks for prison time. when you listen to his press conference here and read between the lines, it sounded...
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Jun 27, 2024
06/24
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>> reporter: david, no conversations with aides or advisers. the candidates are not allowed to bring anything prewritten on the debate stage. they will be allowed to write notes once they are behind the podium. once this debate begins, it is just the two candidates and the moderators, all alone for 90 minutes. no studio audience to cheer them on. we'll see if the mock debates the president has been doing will ultimately pay off. and which version of donald trump shows up tonight? the former president, who is on the attack, or a much more measured version of the former president who wants to stay on message, david? >> david: rachel, thank you. let's get right to mary bruce, with me here in new york. it's impossible to overstate the stakes for the current president, the sitting president, joe biden, who is aware of the poll numbers, obviously, going into tonight. also aware of the questions of age and fitness. both of them 78 and 81. and on the economy, which has been such a difficult issue for him, created millions of jobs, inflation is easing,
>> reporter: david, no conversations with aides or advisers. the candidates are not allowed to bring anything prewritten on the debate stage. they will be allowed to write notes once they are behind the podium. once this debate begins, it is just the two candidates and the moderators, all alone for 90 minutes. no studio audience to cheer them on. we'll see if the mock debates the president has been doing will ultimately pay off. and which version of donald trump shows up tonight? the...
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Jun 28, 2024
06/24
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>> david: mary? >> can the president walk this fine line of landing his punches, going on the attack, also appearing to be a steady leader in the room? i've been told he's been practicing, rehearsing this. trump's going to try to rattle him. >> 1,344 days since these two were last in the same place, the same time. i want to see their reaction, are in energy toward each other. >> both have to go beyond that low bar everybody has set for them. just being chaotic or just answering the questions directly. they have to go beyond that and make people >>> president biden, former president trump. they both want your vote. and both want a second term. right now, live, they finally
>> david: mary? >> can the president walk this fine line of landing his punches, going on the attack, also appearing to be a steady leader in the room? i've been told he's been practicing, rehearsing this. trump's going to try to rattle him. >> 1,344 days since these two were last in the same place, the same time. i want to see their reaction, are in energy toward each other. >> both have to go beyond that low bar everybody has set for them. just being chaotic or just...
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Jun 20, 2024
06/24
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david? >> david: victor oquendo tonight. thank you, victor. >>> this evening, louisiana is the first state to require the ten commandments now be displayed in every public classroom from kindergarten to state-funded universities. 30 years ago, the supreme court struck down a similar law in kentucky, citing separation of church and state. louisiana's law could face a similar challenge now, but it would come become today's more conservative high court. >>> when we come back here tonight, justin timberlake's lawyer responding to timberlake's dwi charge, what he's now saying. >>> what's happened to stonehenge tonight. >>> and saving a baby moose, with that baby's very protective mother watching very closely, and you'll see it. down in the w♪ ♪ the prettiest tree, ♪ ♪ that you ever did see... ♪ ♪ now the tree has roots that need water to grow ♪ ♪ grow jobs, grow skills ♪ ♪ make the whole world go. ♪ ♪ make the green grass grow all around all around. ♪ ♪ make the green grass grow all around. ♪ at jpmo
david? >> david: victor oquendo tonight. thank you, victor. >>> this evening, louisiana is the first state to require the ten commandments now be displayed in every public classroom from kindergarten to state-funded universities. 30 years ago, the supreme court struck down a similar law in kentucky, citing separation of church and state. louisiana's law could face a similar challenge now, but it would come become today's more conservative high court. >>> when we come...