tv CNN Newsroom CNN July 21, 2013 1:00pm-2:01pm PDT
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beach. we're here every saturday 2:00 p.m., sunday at 3:00. until then, find me online. that's it for me. hello, everyone. i'm fredericka whitfield. a look at the top stories this hour. a suspected serial killer is in custody in east cleveland. police believe he may have murdered three women and there may be more victims. details straight ahead. investigators in texas try to determine what caused a woman to fall to her death from a roler coaster. we'll tell you why she was scared before the ride actually started and what you can do to stay safe on those rides. and lefty, takes the british open. see mickelson's huge comeback and tiger woods' big fall.
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our top story today. a gruesome discovery near cleveland. police find the bodies of three women in plastic bags and decomposing. it started friday with a foul odor. the first body was in a garage and then two more. one in the basement of an abandon house and another in a field. the officers are searching today to see if they can find more clues. they do have a man in custody but they have not charged that person. alino cho is following the story from new york. you spoke to the mayor of east cleveland. what did he have to say about this? >> reporter: this is a horrific story and the mayor called the murders atrocious. he added this is nothing short of neighborhood terrorism. so let me tell you exactly what we know at this early hour so far. over the course of two days over the weekend, friday and saturday, police in east cleveland, ohio, found the bodies of three women, all
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believed to be african-american and found within 200 feet of one another and all of the bodies found in the fetal position wrapped in four to five layers of black trash bags. that's how authorities knew that these murders were connected. the victims have not yet been identified by the medical examiner said the bodies are so decomposed it could take several days to identify them. in fact, aungss are being conducted right now. we can tell you that the mayor says it appears all three women were killed in a span of just ten days. police right now have in custody a man named 35-year-old michael madison. he was convicted of attempted rape back in 2001. he is still a registered sex offender. we are also told by the mayor that madison apparently was inspired by another serial killer named anthony sowell known as the cleveland strangler. this is a man convicted in 2011 of killing 11 women in the
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cleveland area. >> this is a sick individual who appears to have been influenced by another sick individual. it's absolutely horrible. it's atrocious. again, we believe that this individual that we're dealing with killed three women in a span of about ten days. that is insane. and we know that if he had been out for one more hour there's no telling what would have happened. >> given how fearful is the mayor that more bodies could potential be found? >> reporter: he is fearful, i have to tell you. the mayor says that he hopes and prays there aren't more victims, of course, but he said, quote, this is a sick individual so it's entirely possible. right now, incredibly, we are told about 100 community volunteers are actually scouring the area where those bodies were found. they're searching for more victims but, of course, the hope on everyone's part is that they
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don't find any. >> alino, thank you so much from new york. there could be some more dramatic moments in the boston courtroom as the trial of james "whitey" bulger begins. there was a tale of a young woman strangled to death by bulger because she had heard too much. susan candiotti is on the case for us in boston. >> reporter: compelling action inside the courtroom and a stunning development outside as the case of reputed crime boss whitey bulger wiped up the fifth week of testimony. setting their eyes on each other, ex-crime partners didn't hide their feelings. phlegmy mouthing an expletive at bulger beginning with the word "mother." >> they had their mouths washed out with soap. it sounds more like a locker
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room than a courtroom. at the end of the day they're all thugs and this is how thugs talk. they don't have the imagination to use anything that doesn't start with a "f" and end with a you. >> reporter: he called the relationship with bulger strictly criminal. he also detailed their work as fbi informants and some of the 19 murders included in bulger's case. one of those murders, deborah davis, his own girlfriend. he says bulger strangled her right in front of him. prosecutor, what did you do? phlegmy, nothing. why not? that was the plan. the victim's brother watched in horror. >> i've heard it before. it brings tears to my eyes but i'm learning how to deal and fight it. >> reporter: another drama outside the courthouse. a jogger discovering the body of alleged bulger extortion victim steven rakes wednesday. a source says they called it
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suspicious. rakes was set to testify but prosecutors said he was no longer needed to take the stand. >> it is tragic. it's sad. this case has had more twists and turns than the most creative novelists could come up with. i really don't know what a motive could be. >> reporter: as for bulger's ex-partner, he is expected to face cross-examination next week before the prosecution wraps up its case. then it's the defense's turn leading to one big question -- do you think whitey bulger will take the stand? >> i hope he does. his word went to great lengths last year to say he would take the stand and noticeably did not say he would in the opening statement. >> reporter: more mystery and intrigue in a case with no shortage of either. susan candiotti, cnn, boston. initially investigation showed no signs of foul play in the roler coaster accident in texas at the six flags.
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rosy esparza died after falling off the roler coaster. witnesses on the texas giant say that the victim felt her restraint wasn't secure enough. the ride is closed right now pending further investigation. we'll have more on roler coaster safety later on this hour. a judge set bail at $250,000 for a man accused of abusing the elderly after several men claim he held them chaptermekapcaptiv. walter jones was in court. the men told officers that jones lured them with a promise of food. but then he locked them up and took their disability and veterans checks. firefighters south of los angeles are making progress on a wildfire that's destroyed at least six homes. the mountain fire as it's called is now 49% contained thanks to mother nature slowing the
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flames. the fire burned over 27,000 acres of land and an official expects the fire to be fully contained by friday. and relief apparently on the way for people in the northeast enduring an unbearable heat wave. meteorologist jennifer delgado has the details and look at the weather across the nation. >> there's good news to report. the heat wave is finally over across parts of the northeast. high temperatures today are going to be in the 80s. 86 for new york. take that. 88 in washington, d.c. and this is 91 in memphis and seasonal for this time of the year. very hot, out in salt lake city. 103 degrees. it's going to be above 100 for tomorrow, as well. you won't get the cooler air in the northeast. new york, temperatures below average for monday as well as in to tuesday and then for boston, well below average, as well. especially tuesday. high of 75 degrees. there's rain out there today and continues for tomorrow. some of these locations including the midwest, talking
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about two to four inches of rainfall and parts of northern virginia, that includes washington, d.c., we could see one to two inches of rainfall but out in the four corners, monsoon season in full effect and some locations in arizona two or more inches of rainfall with problems for flooding. of course, flood watches in the area and that's going to continue until tomorrow. but on a wider view for tomorrow, chance for severe storms pops up across parts of kansas and for the upper midwest as that frontal system tries to make the way down towards the south. more rain once again in the southeast. some of that will be heavy. looking for the sunshine, you know where to go. pacific northwest. back the you. >> heading west. all right. thanks so much, jennifer. phil mickelson, he's the winner of the british open. he shot an amazing 66 earlier today to charge through the field in the final round. this is his fifth major title. cnn's sports anchor rachel nichols joining us live from new
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york. he is no stranger to winning but this one makes it extra special for him, right, rach snell. >> absolutely. it was special because it's a first british open and a tournament he wasn't sure he could win and one of the toughest in the world and played what he called one of the best rounds of golf he's ever played. it's also special because just last month at the previous major, the u.s. open, phil mickelson finished runner-up for a record sixth time and after being always the bridesmaid, never the bride at that tournament, he was very open about heart broken he was and a low he was. he's on a high after all of this. take a listen to what he had to say. >> it's a huge difference in emotions as you can imagine and being so down after the u.s. open to come back and xwluz use motivation, to use it as a springboard knowing i'm playing well and push me extra to work
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and come out in top and a matter of a month to turn it around really feels amazing. >> we saw the amazing pictures of phil hugging his family, his wife amy who very publicly battled breast cancer. so special for them to be with him today and the embrace of all of the fans and over across the ocean because people fall for phil mickelson. he's brave on the golf course and sometimes spectacular and sometimes foolish. no matter what, it is never boring. fred, the nickname is phil the thrill and certainly thrilling today. >> awe, phil the thrill? that's sweet. you know, he looks good there, too. he looks very fit. you know, compared to previous years. one of the inspirations for him and the golfers is fitness of tiger woods. who by the way, you know, started the day in second place and then stuff happened. what happened? >> yeah. you know, he said that he had troubles reading the greens, the speed of the greens, slower than
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he expected. what he didn't talk about was confidence and that's really been the question mark of people watching him. he's a guy who used to win pretty much everything he touched. 14 majors. seemed invincible. now five years since he has won a major. he has improved in the past year. one other tournament. looked good at times on the golf course even in majors and we had seen his scores in those majors trend worse from the beginning to the end of the tournament. that's not something we're used to seeing with tiger and questions now of the pressure of these years since winning a major, getting to him. he doesn't seem to think so and no question of more questions as tiger woods goes in to the next and final major of the year. that's in just a few weeks in rochester, new york. >> we'll look for that. thanks so much. good to see you. >> thanks. all right. stand your ground-type laws in effect for at least 24 states
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said friday. >> i know that there's been commentary about the fact that the stand your ground laws in florida were not used as a defense in the case. on the other hand, if we're sending a message as a society in our communities that someone who is armed potentially has the right to use those firearms even if there's a way for them to exit from a situation, is that really going to be contributing to the kind of peace and security and order that we'd like to see? >> so as the president said, zimmerman's defense lawyers chose not to pursue a strategy based on florida stand your ground law but even so people think it played a part in the acquittal. let's show you why. before florida's stand your ground was enacted in 2005, the law said a defendant had to use all, quote, reasonable means to
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avoid danger before using force. under current florida law, the jurors in the zimmerman case were told the defendant had, quote, no duty to retreat. had the right to stand his ground and could meet force with force. so i'm joined now by dennis backsly who serves in the florida state house and was the sponsor of the stand your ground law in florida and dan gelger, a former state senator and prosecutor who led opposition to the bill before it was passed. good to see you both. dennis, do you agree with the jury's verdict? >> no, i don't. >> i trust the jury system -- >> wait a minute. yeah, dan first. >> okay. >> you want to start with dan. okay. i'm sorry. >> go ahead. >> thank you. i think it's pretty clear that the jury was impacted by the stand your ground law because even though they didn't use the
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pretrial procedure, very clearly the jury was given the stand your ground law. they went in to the jury room believing there might have been guilt in the case and then read the law that says no only no duty to retreat but no reasonableness exiting the situation so at the end of the day i think jurors said that they believed that the stand your ground law was something they relied on and given the stand your ground law which is the law in florida right now. >> dennis, how did you see the verdict? >> well, i didn't try to preempt. i believe in the jury system. i believe that prehad a trial and that we had to trust the verdict of that jury and i think it's inappropriate to second guess them. that acquittal should be the final say. on the other hand, there's no duty to retreat if you're pinned to the ground and the defense that they showed. that they went up in that position and he made a standard self defense you can make in any place in the country. had nothing to do withstand your
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ground. if you are in a situation to suffer severe bodily injury and you have to act or change tactic or use your life and he was able to convince them that that's the situation that evolved. i do think that what we have seen here is some dissatisfaction act not being able to bring a hate crime case and so they're attacking the stand your ground law and -- >> you think that's appropriate? >> this was unanimous. this was unanimous in the senate. it was -- he could only find 19 votes in the florida house to oppose it. if you empower people to stop violent acts, they can, they will and they have and i think we have been safer. i just looked at a study this week and in this cohort of h group of 10 to 24 at 30-year study in 2010, the 30th year of the study was the lowest number of victims of that kind of violence. and so anything we can do to reduce violence, i hold -- >> does it reduce violence?
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you are talking about stopping violence in a violent manner and some point someone loses that battle. >> yes. and that's -- >> violently. >> stops a violent act in progress. >> no, no. >> go ahead, dennis. >> thanks. i'm dan. >> right. i was allowing him to finish your thought before you started yours. >> i got excited. >> okay. >> no. i think it's clear -- i think it's clear that's what's happened is the reaction is we want to do something. he has no professionally there's nothing there for a hate crime case. they want to do something and coming against the stand your ground. stand your ground has protected the black community from prosecution where they've had to act to stop violent acts. 33% of the stand your ground cases, they're real stand your
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ground cases were african-americans. >> well then, dan -- >> a lot of those people would have been tried and put in jail for stopping a violent act. >> so then, dan, in your view, if that is the case what dennis is saying, then do you continue to be an opponent of stand your ground? >> stand your ground devalues life and gives defenses to people who ought not to get a defense. understand something. before the legislature passed stand your ground you could use lethal force if you reasonably thought you needed to. the only difference was that before you used lethal force, if you could receive from the scenario safely you were obliged to do that so you could always use force. you could always use deadly force if you needed to. but all the law said was that if you can retreat from a escalan e escalating situation, you are obliged to do that. in the zimmerman case, by the way, mr. zimmerman was a
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neighborhood watch person who if you look at the neighborhood watch protocols, you are only supposed to watch. not stalk. not supposed to confront. you are not supposed to throw deadly force because you're not trained in the rules of engagement. so stand your ground has done nothing in florida. prior to stand your ground there were no travesties of justice that required us to pass it. all it's done is simply said if you act stupidly, if you act cravenly, and you could have walked away from the scenario before the need to use deadly force, you are going to get the benefit of that defense because you've taken a life. and that seems to me something that people in a peaceable society ought to try to aspire to. >> dan, dennis, thanks so much. we understand the governor has said that he doesn't see any need to review the stand your ground law but the justice department is inspired in many ways that it will be reviewing the stand your ground law across
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the country. thank you, gentlemen, for your time today. >> thank you. >> thank you. the man suspected of a killing three young women in ohio idolized a serial killer. who is this person? and what may have driven him to allegedly commit these horrible crimes? talking to a criminal profiler next. peoi go to angie's listt for all kinds of reasons. to gauge whether or not the projects will be done in a timely fashion and within budget. angie's list members can tell you
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following a grizzly story out of ohio. police in east cleveland found three bodies since friday, all women, all wrapped in plastic bags. the mayor said today there's reason to believe there's more victims an enthe man in custody apparently idolized serial killer sowell. he is on death row for killing 11 women and convicted back in
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2011. i'm joined now by james allen fox, a professor of criminology, law and northeastern university. good to see you. does this seem, you know, at this juncture to be a clear case of copycat killer? >> it would seem so. but let's also understand that this guy already had a criminal record. he was a registered sex offender so it's not that someone else -- some other serial killer can take someone who's perfectly harmless and turn them in to a serial killer. you already had somebody, he was already a predator and he would admire someone who in the same town, cleveland, killed 11. he perhaps wanted to outdo him. what he often see cases of serial killers who are challenged to try to outdo another serial killer. >> you know, and just some unusual things taking place in
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cleveland in recent years with the convicted serial killer sowell, you have this alleged case now and then the case of the young women who were held against their will. are you seeing in any way a link between all of these cases, just by virtue of geography? >> no. i mean -- well, there is some link is that anthony sowell got a tremendous amount of publicity in cleveland. perhaps some publicity elsewhere. but for this particular guy, for madison, he could get inspired by anthony sowell because anthony sowell was all over the news in cleveland. there's nothing special about cleveland. bad things sometimes happen in threes and here it certainly did but here nothing particularly wrong in cleveland but coincidence that they all happened there. but this inspiration that madison may have gotten from sowell is because they're both
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black, similar age, victims were similar age, black females. a guy that didn't distinguish himself any other way except through murder and oftentimes feel proud of what they have done and try to outdo other serial killers. i had a canadian serial killer brag i'm much more important, much bigger than charles manson. >> we have multiple murders it appears or at least three bodies found. does that in and of itself constitute the hallmarks of a serial killer? >> serial killer is man that killed at least three people over a period of time. these women seem to have been killed over the past seven to ten days. it is a serial killing case and if this guy madison is accurate in what he's suggesting, there may be more victims out there. unfortunate is that how often serial killers are able to get away with these sorts of crimes,
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particularly when the victims are black female. we as a society tend to marginalize victims of that sort and serial killers oftentimes prey on them without attention by the community. >> wow. sad details on that. all right. looks like we lost that satellite shot. james allen fox joining us there. norwegian woman sentenced to prison after reporting she had been raped. she sat down with cnn to tell her story and hear from her next. dad. how did you get here? i don't know. [ speaking in russian ] look, look, look... you probably want to get away as much as we do. with priceline express deals, you can get a fabulous hotel without bidding. think of the rubles you'll save. with one touch, fun in the sun. i like fun. well, that went exactly as i planned.. really? now save up to 60% during summer hotel sale. use code "summer" on priceline's.
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a norwegian woman is sentenced to prison in the united arab emirates after reporting that she had been raped. >> reporter: 24-year-old marty is a convicted criminal. she's just been sentenced to 16 months in prison after reporting to police she had been raped by a colleague in a dubai hotel on a business trip in march. >> i got to the police station. i told them my story and then he asked me when -- when i was done, he said, did you call the police because you didn't like it? and i said, of course i didn't like it. but that's also when i understood they don't believe me. >> reporter: she claims to have been held with no charge or contact with the outside world. four days later, she found out she was charged with having unlawful sex. sex outside of marriage is
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banned in the uae. on july 16th, she was sentenced to 12 months for that crime in addition to jail time for alcohol consumption. she says she was advised to say the sex was voluntary to get the charges dropped but when she did, police added a charge of making a false statement. uae thofrts have not responded to cnn's repeated request for comment. the norwegian embassy secured her bail. she's been staying here in dubai in the court proceedings but it's not been easy. >> first couple of months it was really, really hard. i tried to just sleep. i just didn't want to be awake. i locked myself in an apartment. closed the windows. i didn't want to talk to anybody. i wanted to be left alone. >> reporter: she had been working for almost two years ooze a designer for an interior company owned by a qatar billionaire and husband of janet
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jackson. the company fired her and the alleged rapist in april who was con viktded of unlawful sex and alcohol consumption. in a statement to cnn, the company expressed the sympathy in what it described as a difficult situation denying the alleged rape had anything to do with the determination of her contract. similar cases have been reported over the past few years and human rights groups have criticized the uae for the handling of accusations of sexual violence against women, going as far as saying the country condones this. they boast an issue of a westernized cosmopolitan city. strict islamic law and code of conduct still prevails. many countries warn their citizens who plan to visit. dalelv says support from norway and all over the world has been
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overwhelming. with tens of thousands joining a facebook support page and diplomatic efforts by the norwegian government. but for dalelv, it is hard to be optimistic. >> i don't dare to hope for anything so at least i hope -- i hope that a reduced punishment. i don't want to go back to jail. >> reporter: she will be appealing the sentence on september the 5th. cnn, dubai, the uae. actress lucy lui is on a mission to help syrian children in the role as a unicef ambassador. it's this week's "impact your world." >> hi, i'm lucy lui and we can make an impact for syrian children. syria is in a terrible situation right now. there's civil war going on that is creating absolute pandemonium
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and people are fleeing in to lebanon, in to jordan, in to iraq. 6 million people have been displaced and half of them are children. they're suffering, they have lice and ska byes. they're not getting the medical attention they need or the nutrition they need. there's going to be a lost generation of children if this continues. children deserve to have a childhood. what happens on the other side of the world isn't just their business. it is our business. because we share the same water. we share the same environment. if we understand that, we are actually one community. then it makes the world so much smaller, much more tangible for people to understand. unicef is desperate for donations for syria. it is our duty as human beings to give back. join the movement. impact your world. cnn.c cnn.com/impact.
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we're learning more about the boston bombing suspect who was killed and alleged link to a triple murder nearly a year and a half before the boston attack. a boston gym owner says he knew tamerlan tsarnaev. >> reporter: with the terror attack on boston three people in john allen's world were about to collide. three people who trained in boxing and mixed martial arts. all three are now dead. and key among them is bombing suspect tamerlan tsarnaev.
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seen working without days before the attack. were you surprised at his demeanor 72 hours before those bombs wept off? >> unbelievable. just him entering the ring. i mean, you know, like jumping over both legs, feet at his shoulder height. >> reporter: right. >> clearing the ring, hopping in, jumping rope. like, yeah, he was on top of the world. >> reporter: allen trained tsarnaev and another russian speaker. >> there were a few times they prayed to mecca in the gym and not unusual for ibrahim to do it. >> reporter: they were getting closer? >> seemed so, yes. >> reporter: he says they trained together in 2011. that same year, tsarnaev's friend brandon mess was murdered in a near beheading along with two pals.
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tsarnaev was never interviewed by state troopers in connection to the friend's murder or the murder of the other two victims. did tamerlan ever tell you that police had come to speak to him about what -- >> no. >> reporter: about anything? >> no. you know, i mean, around here they call it -- we call it nhi. >> reporter: which is? >> no humans involved. >> reporter: okay. what means? >> there were three drug dealers murdered over drugs and money. >> reporter: that at least was the perception. even though only one of the victims faced drug-related charges. shortly after the murders, one moved to florida. tamerlan lost boston and traveled to where it's believed he became radicalized. was it weird he disappeared after the murders? >> no. because we had been in serious dialogue about him becoming a professional boxer. he was disillusioned and he was
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very hesitant to do it. >> reporter: allen says he gave fbi agents the name, he was shot by a fbi agent after allegedly implicating himself in the murders. what questions do you have over the death of ibrahim? >> i think everybody has questions. that's a bizarre story and situation. it's very hard to believe. >> reporter: a seemingly bizarre kons dense of two unthinkable crimes and a cast of characters all connected to tamerlan sta tsarnaev and his dais of working out at a boston gym. the middlesex district attorney's office which headed the investigation in to the triple murder case says it conducted a thorough investigation from the start which is active and ongoing. we'll be right back. all business purchases.
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all right. millions of people around the world are waiting and wondering when the duchess of cambridge will have her baby and queen elizabeth is among them and scheduled the leave on vacation to scotland just five days and she's made it very clear she would like the baby to be born before she leaves. cnn royal commentator victoria arbitor joins us now from new york. what's the likely the queen would leave on the vacation, you know, before this baby is born
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which could be any day, any moment now? is she kidding? >> the queen's plans are firmly in place. yes, she will definitely be leaving the end of this week. there's a lot of organization and prepation that goes in to not just the queen leaving but also her court so we're certainly hoping there's a baby before she goes and same way of princess beatrix, the queen was already there and royal plans do not change. business as usual. hopefully we'll have a baby first. >> wow. you have to wonder if just for the sake of being, you know, serene and calm if perhaps, you know, any protections are in place for the duchess to not hear all the media attention, to not hear all the hype to go in to this as stress free as possible. would they be shielding her in my way from kind of all of this talk about her? >> i think it's probably quite difficult to miss all this talk.
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there's a huge media presence, not just across london but also outside the hospital where kate was born and a lunch press presence. international media giving their view with a look at kate's hometown. so i think it would be impossible to miss. kate is very good about shutting out the media invasion of her life. william and harry tend to look at, read everything. they pay very close attention to what's being said. kate doesn't. i think she's very sensible and probably serving her well right now. >> what a pretty expectant mom. you look at the pictures. i feel like some of the images i'm seeing first time and looked good throughout knowing at the beginning was terrible bout with morning sickness. what do you know about the whole protocol of delivery? in terms of where she will be whisked off and what point will she be sent to one of the couple of hospitals she could end up in? >> the palace, they give you as
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much information as they believe they believe you need to know. they don't give the nitty-gritty specifics but we'll be told once she is safely in her room and not told she's in labor. then there will be a baby and see a royal aide walk out carrying announcement we have news and police escort to buckingham palace and placed on an easel and all found out at the same time. really in terms of when kate's going to go to hospital, that continues to be the million-dollar question an i find it quite extraordinarily that we don't know where she is. she is believed to be at kensington palace but given the people watching out for them, she is not seen coming or going. kate is managing really to give us the slip very well. >> well, she's looking dashing throughout but who would expect it otherwise? victoria, thank you so much from new york. appreciate it. >> thank you very much. and here's another programming note.
quote
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it's guest host week on "piers morgan live." matthew perry filling in for piers and interviewing, matthew perry will, former "friends" costar lisa kudrow and sharing his struggles with addiction monday night here on cnn and probably talking about all the royal baby madness. more after this. a typical week for a child in central city is to see at least one dead body. there was a shooting here. they haven't cleaned up the blood. 5-year-olds in two shootings. 16-year-olds with colostomy bags. i just decided i had to do something. my name is lisa fitzpatrick an my mission is to teach rez conflict resolution skills. there's an undercurrent of
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hopelessness. who can tell me what their sign says? >> peacemakers. >> everything we do here is to build positive social relationships. our motto is reconciliation. never retaliation. >> i was on the verge of getting ready to seriously hurt somebody. but miss lisa stopped us. she definitely taught me to be able to control myself. >> one of the things that makes us unique is our pier mentoring empowering our young men and women to be the messenger. >> when i come here, i'm like a big brother. the way she influenced me is the way i feel like i'm influencing them. >> the successes are not necessarily going to harvard or getting out of the neighborhood. >> full trash bags. love it. >> when that kid comes back and makes a conscious effort to spread the message of nonviolence, that's the success. >> i love you.
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ready? happy birthday! it's a painting easel! the tide's coming in! this is my favorite one. it's upside down. oh, sorry. (woman vo) it takes him places he's always wanted to go. that's why we bought a subaru. (announcer) love. it's what makes a subaru, a subaru. i don't know. how did you get here? [ speaking in russian ] look, look, look... you probably want to get away as much as we do. with priceline express deals, you can get a fabulous hotel without bidding. think of the rubles you'll save. with one touch, fun in the sun. i like fun.
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a look what's happening in the week ahead now. on monday, a benefit concert for 19 elite firefighters who lost their lives in an arizona wildfire last month. proceeds from the event called country cares will go to the families of the squad known as the arizona hotshots. on tuesday, president obama almosts the louisville cardinals to the white house. expected to attend, kevin ware who suspended a severe leg injury in a game leading up to the finals. wednesday, ex-nfl star aaron hernandez heads back to court. he is accused of killing his
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friend last month and pleaded not guilty to murder. ozzie osbourne fans, get ready. thursday, black sabbath hits the road. they'll kick off the north american leg of the reunion tour in texas. finally, friday, happy birthday to rock legend mick jagger. the lead singer of the rolling stones celebrates his 70th birthday. copd includes emphysema and chronic bronchitis. spiriva is a once-daily inhaled copd maintenance treatment that helps open my obstructed airways for a full 24 hours. you know, spiriva helps me breathe easier. spiriva handihaler tiotropium bromide inhalation powder does not replace fast-acting inhalers for sudden symptoms. tell your doctor if you have kidney problems, glaucoma, trouble urinating, or an enlarged prostate. these may worsen with spiriva. discuss all medicines you take, even eye drops. stop taking spiriva and seek immediate medical help
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if your breathing suddenly worsens, your throat or tongue swells, you get hives, vision changes or eye pain, or problems passing urine. other side effects include dry mouth and constipation. nothing can reverse copd. spiriva helps me breathe better. does breathing with copd weigh you down? don't wait to ask your doctor about spiriva. [ male announcer ] you wait all year for summer. ♪ this summer was definitely worth the wait.
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i'm fredericka whitfield. much more with my colleague don lemon. >> fred, don't go. come on. >> i'll hang out. >> it is your friday. enjoy. have a great weekend. okay? >> you, too. >> always a pleasure. hello, everyone. i'm don lemon. thanks for joining us. here's what's coming up this hour. police in ohio have discovered the bodies of three women they believe may be victims of a serial killer. we'll tell you why. we're continuing the conversation on race relations taking place this week in the streets, in the white house and now on capitol hill. >> we have made significant progress but i think that recent events have obviously highlighted the differences that remain. >> trayvon! >> what's the status of race relations in our country and what needs to be done to move the conversation forward? plus -- >> talk about a close call, we'll show you
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