tv New Day Saturday CNN July 27, 2013 3:00am-6:31am PDT
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thanks for watching. new violence explodes in egypt as protesters fight with morsi supporters in the streets. 1,000 injured and at least 75 dead. we will take you live to cairo. >> behavior i have gauged in over many years is wrong. >> another day. another apology but the san diego mayor facing sexual harassment charges says he is not stepping down. you're going to hear his solution and you're going to hear directly from one of his
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accusers. >> look who is celebrating a birthday. rolling stones front man mick jagger may have reached a milestone but still has those famous moves. i'm poppy harlow. thank you for starting your day with us. >> you got to love mick jagger. i'm suzanne malveaux. bad news in cairo. this is where violence exploded on the mysterious and it happened overnight over dozens of people who were killed. >> supporters of egypt's deposed president claim that security forces gunned down protesters. our senior national correspondent ben wedeman is in cairo. hello to you, ben. dramatic developments overnight. we are hearing the death toll has jumped to 75 from these
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clashes. tell us what is happening. >> reporter: i will get to the death toll in a minute. seems to be some confusion over that at the moment. what we understand out at the sit-in outside of cairo where the supporters has deposed the egyptian president morsi have been for weeks now apparently late past midnight, they tried to block a major road through cairo, the october 6th overpass. and there they clashed with security forces and, according to eyewitnesses, local residents as well. a battle ensued. now, the middle east news agency is quoting medical sources as saying that at this point, the death toll is 29 with 649 injured. earlier cliaims from the field hospital of the muslim brotherhood as many as 75 or
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more dead but those numbers have yet to be confirmed. we understand the health ministry doesn't report on bodies until they actually arrive at a state hospital. so those numbers still very unclear. but what is as clear as day following the massive demonstrations both before and against the muslim brotherhood that the tensions have spilled into blood, that the call by the defense minister for a public mandate to crash down on what he calls terrorism that they are obviously now starting to make good on their threats against muslim brotherhood. >> ben, this is just what we had feared. really the worse in this situation here. those two sides not able to keep them apart. in the meantime, you have morsi who is still in custody, i believe, with the military holding him there during a criminal investigation. what is his status?
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>> well, his status is really unclear. nobody seems to know where he is, how he is being held. the military insists or has insisted until now that it was for his own safety. now he is going to be officially held for 15 days while charges are investigated into the possibility that he conspired with hamas during the 2011 revolution to stage a prison break. he was being held at the time at a prison north of cairo. during that break, some of the prison guards were killed -- all of the prisoners escaped -- and, therefore, those are the charges that he is being investigated for. >> ben wedeman in cairo, appreciate the reporting. thank you so much. today is the 60 anniversary of the truce that ended fighting in korea. the war killed more than 36,000 american forces. president obama is going to mark
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the anniversary with an address at the korean war veterans memorial. cnn plans live coverage from the national mall in washington at 10:00 this morning. the man who held three women captainive inside his cleveland home for a decade will never be set free again. aerial castro has agreed to a plea deal of life in prison plus 1,000 years, no chance of parole. he is going to be locked up behind bars for the rest of his life just like those women were for ten years. lawyers say this deal is what his victims wanted. it's interesting, suzanne. i was out there covering this and, you know, we have heard from the three women in this that were just girls when they were abducted and they talked about the fact when they put out that youtube video that, you know, we are -- this is -- we are making our own path now and they didn't want to talk about him, but about their future. they didn't want to get on the stand and testify. they may have had to do that if
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that went to trial. so the fact that this comes to a plea deal means they are not going to have to get up there and tell their horrifying story but our gary tuchman has more. listen. >> reporter: with glasses on his nose, a shuffling aerial castro walked into a cleveland courtroom shackles on his legs and handcuffs on his wrists and with plea agreement details in his head. >> are you fully aware of the terms of the plea agreement? >> i am and i consent to it. >> do you understand by virtue of a plea you will not be having a trial? >> i aware of that. >> reporter: one of victims amanda berry gave birth to a daughter during captivity. castro stunned the court when he said this. >> i would like to state i miss my daughter very much. >> reporter: that daughter named joseline is now 6.
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the three year that castro victimized wanted to video testifying at the trial scheduled to start a week from monday. after the plea deal was reached, they issued a statement saying that they are relieved by today's plea and are looking forward to having these legal proceedings draw to a final close in the near future. the official sentencing will take place next thursday. >> i don't necessarily -- >> reporter: but on this day, castro is fairly talkative and appeared uninterested, none s nonchalant and down right strange at times. >> i told mr. dave, i said to dave that i was willing to work with the fbi and i would tell them everything. i know i was going to get pretty much the book thrown at. there are some things that i have to -- i don't comprehend because of my sexual violence during my whole years. i would like to state that i was also a victim as a child and it
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just kept -- >> those are issues -- that is certainly something you can bring up at your sentencing hearing. >> our gary tuchman there. that is the first time we have heard from him. he didn't speak in his other court appearance. >> he sounds he makes himself into a victim here. seems like the judge is getting annoyed with him because he keeps talking about the fact he is the victim in this situation. >> right. but he's not. it's all about these girls and now he is going to be in prison for the rest of his life so i hope that brings them solace and comfort to their families. let's talk to the mayor san diego. he says he'll get intense counseling but not stepping down from his post. >> plenty of women who want bob filner to take walk, as you can imagine. several women accusing him of outrageous behavior. casey winan is in san diego with more on that one. >> reporter: bob filner still disappointing his critics by again, refusing to resign. after attending a city planning
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meeting, bob filner arrived to the a hastily arrived news conference to address allegations by seven women who claim he put them to unwanted sexual advances. >> i apologize to my staff. i apologize to the citizens and staff members who have supported me over many years. i apologize to the people of san diego and, most of all, i apologize to the women that i have offended. >> reporter: he acknowledged inexcusable and intimidating conduct and says he will enter rehab. >> beginning on august 5th i will enter a clinic to undergo two weeks of intensify therapy. >> reporter: alleged victims say the apology and rehab are not enough. >> that tow moo is a very bogus waive handling this. by not resigning and doing what we thinks we will all buy that is he really insear he is going to go to rehab is just
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insulting. >> reporter: minutes before filner's news conference, a citizens group delivered a letter to the mayor's office demanding he resign by monday evening or else face a recall campaign. several of the mayor's party have also demanded he resign but filner is only talking about his future on the job. >> when i return on august 19th, my focus will be on making sure that i'm doing right by the city in terms of being the best mayor i can be and the best person i must be. thank you. >> what about all of the people who have called for you to resign, mayor? do you think this is enough to satisfy them? as filner again, refused to answer questions, the big question remains, can i hold on to his job? just before his announcement the san diego attorney's office received a subpoena on filner requiring him to testify at a lawsuit by hiss former
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spokeswoman. that testimony is expected to take place four days into the mayor's rehab. >> folks, in a few minutes we are going to talk with a woman you heard from in casey's report. morgan rose. wait until you hear she says what happened to her by filner in a san diego restaurant. two storms, one in the atlantic, one in the pacific sputtering up and bringing a little bit of sigh of relief to hawaii and to the caribbeans. how are these looking? not too bad? >> not too bad at all. they are actually looking pretty bad if you want to talk about it teblegly. tropical storm door dori is off from the leeward islands. you can see the maximum winds right now at 40 miles per hour. again, this is a tropical storm and what we are going to be looking at is the system getting into more convection and as it does, it's just really going to
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fizzle out. by 36 hours tomorrow, we are going to be talking about this just being area of low pressure. really this is going to be a storm that is much to do about nothing. now as we hop over towards the pacific another storm there. tropical storm flossie. i do like that name. winds under hurricane strength at 70 miles per hour. there is hawaii toward the west. briefly we could see this becoming a hurricane but, again, we are expecting this to pass to the mainland of hawaii. as we move into monday and with the winds weakening down to 40 miles per hour, this will be a tropical storm. again, bringing with it some rain, of course, some rough currents. as we move closer to home, here is our cold front that is bringing some rain through parts of the upper midwest and the ohio valley even down towards the south. what this is going to do is cool things off and we get to that in a moment. rain for the southwest as well as the southeast. you can see for areas like mexico we do have a floot threat but as i said to you with the cold weather moving from the north, this is going to bring
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some relief with the typical summertime temperatures. look at the highs for chicago. today, 71 degrees. almost 15 degrees below average. then for detroit, high today of 71. you should be at 83 and the same for the northeast. guys, we send it back over to you. >> last weekend we were sitting here plaining about how hot it was. >> hot and steamy and this time, it's cool. >> i'm happy. but i love the heat too. >> i love it too. >> hot is summer. enjoy the summer. >> jennifer, thanks. we are learning more about the investigation of this deadly train crash. this was in spain. why police have detained the driver now. what they are saying about the crime that he might have committed. just by talking to a helmet. it grabbed the patient's record before we even picked him up. it found out the doctor we needed was at st. anne's. wiggle your toes. [ driver ] and it got his okay on treatment from miles away.
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and sea food differently. ♪ good morning, washington, d.c. a beautiful shot of the capitol there. a lot of my family right in that area. good morning to them. >> good morning, washington. we want to take you to spain now. you know all about that deadly tragic train crash. well, police in spain are standing guard at the hospital
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bed of the conductor, the driver in this week's deadly train crash in spain. authorities tell cnn he is being investigated for what they are calling a crime. not a lot of details on what that crime exactly may be but they said it is a crime in connection with causing the accident. >> at least 78 people were killed in that crash, 81 people are still in the hospital. in the meantime, the mangled train, cars, they have been removed from the tracks. the rail track that once again is moving. >> i want to bring in our carl penhaul who has been covering this from the beginning and at the crash site. carl, tell us what the latest is in this investigation because we are hearing the word crime. what more do you know about that or potential crime? >> i think that is the question right now. i think we have to be very precise on this. yesterday, we heard the chief of regional police saying that
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francisco jose franceon the driver would be accused of crimes related to the accident and when reporters asked him what kind of crimes do you have in mind? the chief said recklessness. it isn't the police chief that presses charges and it's the judge and the judge, so far, has not talked to the train driver because he is still hospitalized and is not in condition. what they have told us from the supreme court is the judge expects to meet the train driver and question him any time between now and tomorrow night. just a few moments ago, the interior minister and the minister for transport were both here down at the crash site. i pushed them quite hard on what their suspicion was and what their working theory was of what caused this accident. both ministers said this is in the hands of the judge, the judge must investigate this. then the interior minister said, but, of course, there are reasonable indications that the train driver had a responsibility in this accident. when i pushed him and said what
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clear indications do you have, he cut me off and says, ask no more questions. so, right now, there seems to be a little bit of a dispute about who has control over this investigation right now. . the minister is making some political statements but court system is saying hold on a minute, the judge hasn't even spoken to the train driver. >> karl, i guess it's a political situation there on the ground but we have also heard from eyewitnesses. we have interviewed over the week. we heard from one of the victims of the crash that this train was going extremely fast and speed might be a factor in that accident. do we know if that, in fact, is the case? >> initially it was a junior minister that came forward and said he believed that excessive speed was a factor in this but his boss was here today and i put the same question to her and she wouldn't respond to that question but as you say, eyewitness have said they believe the speed may have been a factor in this and then the
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counterargument these are fast trains and these trains are supposed to be going fast. that said, there is a clear fact here and on this curve where the accident took place the speed rate there according to the rail company is 80 kilometers an our. when we saw the video the train appeared to the naked eye to be going faster than the 80 kilometers. speed is a factor to be investigating now but far from the only factor that could have at play here. >> could we get an update on the victims? i know a lot are still hospitalized. >> reporter: a lot are still hospitalized we are told in the region of 80 passengers are still hospitalized. about a third of those are still in critical condition. the death toll, 78. but there is still three body parts to be identified. they are going to have to go through dna testing because they are so badly mangled so that death toll could go up. most of the victims are spanish
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but we know there was an american that was killed and we also know five americans were injured and there are also a number of people across european countries and south american countries that are on the list of dead passengers. >> karl, appreciate it. i know you've been on this story around the clock. thanks for bringing it to us. embattled san diego mayor bob filner getting help, he says, but not getting out of office. now another one of his accusers speaking out to us. hear how she says he crossed the line in a meeting at a restaurant. back in 2009. all business purchases. so you can capture your receipts, and manage them online with jot, the latest app from ink. so you can spend less time doing paperwork. and more time doing paperwork.
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shooter dead this morning and it happened at an apartment complex right outside of miami, florida in an area called halia, north of miami. >> police say they respond to do a call, this is a shooting, they found six bodies strewn throughout the complex here. the suspected shooter was holed up in an apartment with two other people. police managed to break in and rescue the hostages. they say the suspect was killed in the shoot-out with police. >> of course, we have a lot more questions about this, any motive, what sparked this, so we will get you the latest as soon as we have it. in the meantime, san diego mayor bob filner getting help but not getting out of office. he set up a press conference friday and then he spoke for just a few minutes. it had a lot of people wondering if he would resign. he said, no, at this point he is not resigning and he didn't each talk about that. he talked about a different kind
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here are the five things you need know this morning. number one. the justice department will not seek the death penalty for edward snowden and what is wrote this week to russian authorities. he told them saying the nsa leaker should not be given temporary asylum in russia because he would be tortured in the united states are not true. number two. defense attorneys expect a military judge to announce a verdict in the bradley manning court-martial as soon as tuesday or wednesday. closing arguments wrapped up in that case yesterday. the former army intelligence analyst could go to prison for life if convicted. he is charged with giving reams of classified intelligence to the website wikileaks. >> number three. swiss police are searching for a jewel thief who broke out of prison on thursday. he's a member the notorious pink panther game. he and another inmate escaped when two weeks rammed into the area where they were exercising and they used ladders to climb
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over the barbed wire while their accomplices held the authorities with gir. anyone casting in the ballot in the state to present a photo i.d. it is the latest in a slew of measures provoking outrage from some. demonstrators have rallied each week in what they call moral monday in protests against the gop-dominated legislature. >> number five. san diego mayor bob filner says he is taking a two-week hiatus what is he calling intensify counseling. several women have accused him of sexual harassment. he'll enter a clinic on august 5th and not resigning despite demands from fellow democrats to do. he is going answer questions at a deposition august 9th.
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we are hearing more disturbing details about what san diego mayor bob filner is accused of doing. i spoke with one of the accusers, morgan rose, a psychologist for the san diego school district. she says she met with him about a program to help children. he told her he could bring the program to the first lady. she also then described how their one-on-one conversation in a restaurant took a very strange turn. listen. >> it was in a public place. it became pod. he told me your eyes have bewitched me. yes. and later on, i thought about how he put the onus of the responsibility of what he was about to do on me or my eyes.
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>> then what happened? >> he got up. he came over. he sat next to me in the booth, pinning me in and i don't remember, because it was such a suspension of time and space in my life. this was so unexpected, that i don't remember if he directly asked for a kiss or tried to kiss me. but it was very uncomfortable. and i was saying to him initially what would your wife do if she was sitting here? and he laughed a very crazy laugh. then, for the next few minutes, i just remember him trying to get my face towards his to kiss me on the mouth and what we now know from the stories of the other women, it wouldn't have been on my mouth, it would be more likely in my mouth or down my throat. >> did you push him away physically? was this an encounter that did the people around you would have seen or been pretty shocked
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about? i mean, he's known in the area. >> well, and certainly known at that restaurant. >> right. >> as well. but, unfortunately, it was middle of the afternoon and the restaurant was empty and the wait staff had already come and said, did we want anything and then they had left. so i was alone with him in a public place, but that doesn't seem to matter to him very much. i don't remember physically pushing him. i do remember him trying to take my face towards his and he seriously attempted to kiss me four times and in between those times, i was trying to negotiate for my safety and i would ask him to please go back and sit on the other side of the table so we could continue our meeting, or please let me out. >> so you wanted -- >> and -- >> i just -- you asked him to go away to continue the meeting. you still had hoped that he would continue the meeting with you?
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>> well, absolutely. i wasn't going to let this opportunity for our children be compromised by what he was doing. i wanted to hear more about the obamans but each time i asked him to either move back or to let me out, his response was, "if you'll just kiss me, then i will." what stopped him was his phone rang and he took the call and said he had to go back to his office, so he picked up all of the materials on the table, my resume and such, and he left. he left me sitting there in just an absolute stunned state of fear and i felt insulted and very compromised, and it was -- it was all bizarre, just completely bizarre. >> i want to play some sound for you and this comes from a statement that mayor filner made on thursday about what he thinks should happen after allegations
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from you and other women have surfaced. listen. >> i would like the city to take a deep breath. take a deep breath. there's allegations, there's allegations of allegations. let us get this into a process where everybody has a -- everybody, including myself, has a way to make a fair statement to talk about their view of things. just take a deep breath. let that process work itself out. meanwhile, we got a city to run. >> i remember taking a lot of deep breaths after he had pinned me in and that he needs to do the city's business is absurd. the city deserves leadership. it deserves a statesman, and he obviously not that, and, in my estimation, he ran for mayor. we elected him as mayor, but, instead, we have gotten an emperor who is above the law and
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subjugates women in ways we never could have imagine three weeks ago before this broke. >> parties of the democratic party in san diego have called for filner to step down. should he resign or what do you think should happen to him? >> well, of course, he should resign. he is a fraud as far as i'm concerned, as far as putting himself out there as a leader and progressive leader. >> this alleged incident was four years ago and since then, he ran for mayor and won. did you think about coming forward then? and why are you coming forward now? >> i told quite a few of my friends that are in that circle, the political circle, about what has happened, and i think for all seven of us that have come
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out so far, that we didn't want this as part of our own story. why i'm coming out now is that when i first heard about this break, i was not in the least surprised. he is obviously -- you know, this is a pattern of his and not being part of the mayoral situation, i just stayed in the background, expecting more women to come forward and when they didn't, then i did start seriously thinking about is this my place? i am an advocate for women and wrote about empowering women and i've worked with domestic violence programs and i have a degree in counseling psychology specifically so i can support families and women. so i came out, but it took about two weeks for me to process how
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this would all happen with integrity and respect for me and my family. >> i appreciate your time very much, morgan. thank you for coming in and talking to us. >> thank you so much. we appreciate her sharing her story. it's not easy. it's not easy to come forward about things like that. she was telling me how difficult it was. we reached out to filner's office several times asking for a direct response to rose's allegations and we did not hear back. >> what did she think about his solution here, his proposed solution for two weeks of this intensify counseling? was she satisfied with that. >> no. >> was she convinced it would change his behavior? >> she is not at all. i talked to her on the phone after that happened. i want to read part of what she said. she said i think this is a man who has an extreme narcisstic profile. no, she not satisfied. >> i'm not sure a lot of people would be satisfied by two weeks
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of trying to completely change his behavior and thinking here. >> we have not gotten direct answers with these seven women coming forward with allegations and what we are waiting for. >> thank you, poppy. >> sure. pope francis is getting this rock star treatment. later this morning, we will be keeping our eye on that. what is happening in rio? that is coming up. ♪ that's me... i made you something. ♪ i made you something, too. ♪ see you next summer. ♪ [ male announcer ] get exceptional values on the highest quality cars at the summer of audi sales event. ♪
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first to moscow where nsa leaker edward snowden has not left the airport but the u.s. is trying to coax him out offering him a passport so he can return home and telling russia he won't face the death penalty. cnn's phil back is at the moscow airport. >> reporter: when edward sn snowden's attorney comes here he will enter this door and thought during the week snowden would come with him and it hasn't. snowden's application here, after almost five weeks he has no choice but to continue waiting somewhere in the transit snow. they say he is passing his time by reading russian literature. the pope will celebrate mass in a couple of hours. we have been following the pope and his rock star reception.
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s shasta? >> hundreds are coming here and many other mob pope francis as down the avenue behind me to go to the cross. he created a bit of a security challenge when he forced the driver of his popemobile to pull over so he could get out and bless people seated in wheelchairs along the road. this is the end of a long day and meeting professionals and inmates and it's just no wonder that his aides are exhausted. back to you, suzanne. >> thank you. a massive state sponsored parade celebrated the 60th anniversary that ended the feet in contrary. cnn's ivan watson is in north korea. ivan? >> reporter: this is how north korea celebrates the 60th anniversary of the end of the korean war in a scorching hot day in pyongyang. they call it a victory over what
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they describe as u.s. imperialists based on the little bit of life we have seen here in pyongyang. it looks like the korean war is still an important part of national identity in north korea, as well as an important part of daily life. back to you, suzanne. >> ivan watson, thank you. south korea is celebrating the same truce that ended the fighting in korea six decades ago. ian lee is in seoul. ian? >> reporter: in a stark contrast in north korea's muscle flexing the mood here in south korea is one of remembrance. the president of south korea called for a peace to the cease-fire. over shadowing this 60th anniversary of the korean war are the heightened tensions here
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on the peninsula. making final peace and even reunification and near impossible dream. back to you, suzanne. >> ian lee, thank you. thanks, suzanne. who rocks like mick jagger? jer seriously. no one rocks like mick jagger. the rolling stones front man is up close next. don't miss red ls four course seafood feast, just $14.99. start with soup, salad and cheddar bay biscuits then choose one of nine entrées plus dessert! four perfect courses, just $14.99. offer ends soon, so come into red lobster and sea food differently. the most free research reports, customizable charts, powerful screening tools, and guaranteed 1-second trades. and at the center of it all is a surprisingly low price -- just $7.95. in fact, fidelity gives you lower trade commissions than schwab, td ameritrade, and etrade. i'm monica santiago of fidelity investments,
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he was lied to by ryan braun. >> these guys are the most famous football players and baseball players in wisconsin and they are friends and even business partners but you have to wonder if that is going to fall apart. 18 months ago after braun appealed a suspension for performance-enhancing drugs and w won, rodgers said he would bet his salary that he was sincere. now braun is accused of taking peds and rodgers is clearly not happy. >> it doesn't feel great being -- being lied to like that, and i'm disappointed about the way it all went down. the new england patriots would love to talk football as well these days but they are being bombarded with questions about former teammate of aaron hernandez who is accused of murder. one of the newest teammates is
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tim tebow who were teammates at the university of florida. tebow said they were asked not to comment about hernandez but he did give hundred comment on the top. >> this is heart breaking and sad and all of my thoughts and prayers go out to all of the families that are involved. after that, he shut down the questions. tarell brown firing his agent after he lost out on a $2 million bonus because his agent didn't tell him he had to show up for off-season workouts with the team. he said he didn't know about it until he saw people talking about it. he is going to ask harbaugh if any deal they can work out because that hurts a lot. >> jeff, thank you. rolling stones have been getting it started for 50 years. watch this. ♪
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>> i love this guy! can you believe it? mick jagger was only 38 when he was in that video moving. he looks great. he always looks great. rock legend is turning 70 years old on friday. cnn's nischelle turner looks back at the legend and life of jagger. >> reporter: in 2003, mick jagger celebrated bad boy, became sir michael jagger when he was united for his services to music. >> jagger, at 20, was a counter cultural figure and something of a revolutionary artistically and politically. jagger at 70 is a member of the establishment. ♪ >> reporter: although he is a grandfather four times over his charisma remains as timeless as his music and has even made him a favorite guest on "saturday
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night live." >> why don't you go out and do the rooster? >> reporter: stones in the 1960s and '70s embodied a fantasy that foy -- you can keep going at 70. you can not only be alive, you can keep doing what you love. ♪ >> reporter: nischelle turner, cnn, new york. so maybe, what? 70s is the new 50 or something? >> i don't think of 70 as that old but okay. >> that's my parents' age. can you imagine? >> sorry, mom, you're not 70 yet. >> young people think move like jagger. do they know this is who they are talking about? >> he can still move and he's still got it. coming up next hour, we will talk with veteran congressman charles rangel about the scandal that has engulfed the race for new york city mayor and there you see his picture. that is charlie rangel back when
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lisa kudrow. >> you are able to sure i'm not piers morgan. you tell that for sure i don't have a british accent or a name that sounds very pointy. about a month ago, i got a call from jeff sucker asking me to guest host for "piers morgan live." the first question was how did you get my number, jeff? the second was who is piers morgan? seriously. once i got the answer to those two questions, i thought this could be really fun. this could be exciting. brand-new. reminded me of the night i won my first emmy. the magical night. there were -- i'm sorry? oh, i haven't won a damn thing! that's right. i forgot. you know what? maybe i'll win an emmy for my performance here today. what's that? not a chance. who is talking in my ear? because their real gas is half
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empty. >> you got to love him. he is fantastic. >> i definitely could watch a talk show host like him. >> he is great. we know who piers morgan is. >> thanks for starting your morning with us. >> we have much more ahead on the next hour of "new day saturday" which starts right now. ♪ are you not voting for me? >> i would not vote for you, sir. >> all right. >> new poll show that anthony weiner has lost some voters' trust but what about his fellow democrats? congressman charles rangel tells us what he thinks. facebook shares soaring on the heels of a new earnings report. find out what is behind the climb. i don't want to do anything that i would have sort of a hard time telling my parents. >> a former nickelodeon star's stunning personality change. more paula dee allegations and aging rock stars.
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love them or leave them? that is coming up in our e block. ♪ good morning, everyone. i'm suzanne malveaux. >> i'm poppy harlow. it is 7:00 out east. good morning to you and happy saturday. this is "new day saturday." first up serious news. a deadly morning in cairo. reports vary widely from 21 to 75 people possibly dead, perhaps a thousand wounded. >> egyptians who backed the -- our ben wedeman is live in cairo. this is the worse. this is what we anticipated and predicted but the worse went down overnight. tell us what happened. >> what we understand is the pre-morsi demonstrators left cairo where they have been
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located three weeks and tried to block one of the major thoroughfares in cairo. there the story starts to get a little murky. just a little while ago a spokesman for the ministry for the interior came out and said what happened was as these muslim brotherhood protesters were going to try to block this road, local residents clashed with them. the security forces intervened using tear gas, in his words, to break it up. during that, he claimed the supporters of the deposed president opened fire with live ammunition. now, of course, there is the story we are hearing from the pro morsi crowd is that they were shot by -- shot at by the ministry of interior forces and what -- we have update numbers but take these with a grain of salt. the health ministry is claiming that 38 people were killed in these clashes.
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500 wounded. doctors at the field hospital that's run by the supporters of the deposed president are saying as many as 150 people were killed, 4,500 wound. so it's very difficult to figure out where the precise numbers are at this time. we understand clashes are still ongoing in that area. >> ben wedeman, thank you. we will keep a close eye on that in cairo. >> absolutely. very troubling there. i want to talk about nsa leaker edward snowden. his father is speaking out and he has written a letter to president obama. he wants the president to dismiss the charges against his son. this letter was penned on friday. snowden says his son's snooping on government phone and internet use was like an act of civil disobedience. in the meantime, eric holder says that snowden should not be given temporary asylum in russia
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and he wrote a letter this week to russian authorities. i want to read you part of it. the charges that snowden faces do not carry that possibility, talking about the death penalty. and the united states would not seek the death penalty if mr. snowden were charged with additional death penalty eligible crimes. that letter from holder going to russian officials. >> the death penalty also off the table for the man who held three women captive inside his cleveland home for about a decade. as you know, poppy, covering this story. aerial castro avoided the pocket possibility of a plea agreement put him in prison for life and without parole. >> our gary tuchman has more from cleveland. gary? the judge questioned aerial castro for a hour and 16 minutes to make sure he understood
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everything but he never indicated he was contrite. he never said he felt bad about what happened. with glasses on his nose a shuffling aerial castro walked into a cleveland courtroom shackles on his legs and handcuffs on his wrists. and with plea agreement details in his head. >> mr. castro, i understand from meeting with your counsel and counsel for the state is that a plea agreement has been reached in this matter. are you fully aware of the terms and do you consent to that plea agreement? >> i am fully aware and i do consent to it. >> you understand that by virtue of the plea, will you not be having a trial. >> i am aware of that. >> reporter: castro pleaded guilty to all the 900-plus counts against him, including kidnapping, rape and aggravated murder for the miscarriage one of his victims had when made pregnant by him. made this statement. >> i would like to state that i mice my daughter very much.
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>> reporter: the victims did not want to have to go through a trial, which was scheduled to start monday. the victims said they are relieved by today's plea and are looking forward to having these legal proceedings draw to a final close in the near future. the official sentencing will take place next thursday. >> but on this day castro was fairly talkative and appeared unemotional, nonchalant and down right strange at times. >> when i first got arrested and interviewed, i told mr. -- dave? i said to dave that i was willing to work with the fbi and i would tell them everything. i knew i was going to get pretty much the book thrown at me. there's some things that i have to -- i don't comprehend because of my sexual problem throughout my whole years. i would like to state that i was also a victim as a child and it just kept -- kept going. >> that's certainly something you can bring up at your sentencing hearing. >> reporter: the three victims will also be permed to make
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statements if they choose at a sentencing hearing and the hearing that will end the case of aerial castro. castro talked about how he misses his douaughter. that was a quote. the prosecutors say a zero percent chance he will ever be able to visit that girl. >> thanks, gary, for that. despite a lawsuit, demands from fellow democrats to resign, san diego mayor bob filner has other plans. >> seven women have come forward accusing him of sexual harassment after days of avoiding questions from us and all sorts of media, he addressed the issue somewhat yesterday. >> beginning on august 5th, i will be entering a behavior counseling clinic to undergo two weeks of intensive therapy to begin the process of addressing my behavior. during this time period, i will be at the clinic full time.
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this intensive counseling will just be the first step in what will be a continuing program that will involve ongoing regular counseling. >> he has now been subpoenaed during the process of his therapy so how is that going to work? >> that is the latest development, suzanne, in this scandal, that is surrounding the mayor. he has been spnubpoenaed by in e sexual harassment case. six women have followed after the first one has come out. at least seven so far. you know this. he was unwilling to address the allegations and he put together a press conference yesterday. his critics say arrogance is trumping good judgment for him right now. one city council member has blasted the mayor and take a listen what he had to say about the situation surrounding the san diego mayor. >> this kind of situation should not exist. bob filner should not put the city through this. to say i'm going to go away now for two weeks and things are going to get better, they are not going to get better. the mayor needs to resign. he needs to put this very sad
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and sorry chapter behind us and he needs to do it immediately. >> reporter: a local affiliate is reporting a poll taken in san diego has 70% of the residents in the city saying the mayor should resign. he is not taking those steps. another statement came out, you interviewed morgan blrose who i alleging wrongdoing. >> she said this after the press conference. he is addicted to power and control and he is not about to give it up. >> i think one of the difficult things is, yes, he addressed in the press conference he talked about inappropriate behavior but we haven't gotten any direct responses to these allegations. not all of these women filed lawsuits. i understand in lawsuits you can't respond because it's a legal process but no direct responses and a lot of people want that but a lot of these women that have these allegations want that. >> they want answers and he was unwilling to answer casey winan
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and unwilling to answer any questions from the media. he said we need to take a deep breath, the city of san diego needs to take a deep breath. right now, he is probably taking a lot of deep breaths himself thinking about his political future. >> there are folks in san diego are still supporting him. you said the poll showed 70% against by him hymn but one was talking about this is his personal life. >> he only has been married a year and had decades of political service in congress and relatively new mayor and wants to stick around it seems like. >> a lot of skepticism. how do you address this behavioral issue? >> he is 70. >> in a two-week period of time with this intense counseling? >> he is 70 years old and probably had this behavior for years in his life and how do you expect a 70-year-old to change? as you mentioned, after two weeks in rehab, we will see. >> we will see. >> thanks. appreciate it. anthony weiner hanging on,
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staying in this race for new york city mayor. some voters really angry. you see one of them right there. it's a pretty in your face confrontation. we will bring it to you next. you're watching "new day saturday." i'm the next american success story. working for a company where over seventy-five percent of store management started as hourly associates. there's opportunity here. i can use walmart's education benefits to get a degree, maybe work in it, or be an engineer, helping walmart conserve energy. even today, when our store does well, i earn quarterly bonuses. when people look at me, i hope they see someone working their way up. vo: opportunity, that's the real walmart. with diabetes, it's tough to keep life balanced. i don't always have time to eat like i should. and the more i focus on everything else,
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cool. ...or a few weeks young. ♪ [ laughs ] away beckons from orion's belt. away...is a place that's closer than you think. find your away. for a dealer and the rv that's right for you, visit gorving.com. getting ready and come to the place where eventually have guards and policemen and voting polls to turn people around. i think it's a possibility. if we are not careful, we could be going there. >> a frustrating end to north carolina's legislative session flee at least for the democrats. they passed a bill to that would require anybody to show a picture i.d. before casting a ballot. the governor says he will sign that bill into law.
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it was one of several controversial laws passed. that provoked a series of protesters in the capitol dubbed moral mondays by the democrats. in the meantime, in new york, anthony weiner says new sexual revelations will not force him out of the race to be the mayor of new york city. here is one encounter he had with a voter yesterday. >> i don't quite understand how you would feel you would have the moral authority as the head administrator in this city to oversee employees when you're standard of conduct so much lower than the standard of conduct that is expected of us. >> are you not voting for me. >>? >> i would not vote for you, sir. >> earlier i talked with new york congressman charles rangel. he served in congress with weiner for years. he told me he is not supporting weiner for mayor but, at the same time, he doesn't think he should drop out of the race. i asked the congressman if new yorkers forgive quickly, he thinks. i also talked to him about why
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rangel thinks this won't be an issue for weiner come the september primary. listen. >> new york is a forgiving community but it doesn't mean that we are not sophisticated, and so while people being kind to weiner, i think, is forcefully being interpreted as supporting his candidacy to be mayor of the city of new york. listen, he's a nice guy. he has problems. have your fun, but he is not going to be the mayor of my great city. i know it and most all new yorkers know that. >> but you're saying that anthony weiner should not drop out of the race, correct? >> i'm saying he should do what he wants to do. the voters of new york city will take care of that final decision, but as far as he's concerned, it's a personal thing and the institution being what at in new york city, anyone can runs that files a sufficient number of petitions. >> the president of the new york
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state naacp says that weiner should drop out of the race saying, this is a quote. i do not understand how anthony weiner can show his face choosing the next mayor of new york city should not be a punch line. what is your take on that? does that alter your position, your stance at all? because you're saying he shouldn't drop out. >>ism i'm i'm a member of the naacp and don't remember ever going to them for political advice. >> you've dealt with scandal of your own over unpaid taxes and other financials issues. the ethics commission said you violated the rules and you refused to vote. do the fact you did not resign play into the latest about weiner's scandals? >> i have no idea what you're talking about, but as relates to me and the ethics committee, that issue is in the united states federal court at this
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moment and so i can't discuss the detail, but i guess you know how often i've won that race. as i said, new york is educated and sophisticated and proud. so if you think can you make a stretch between me and anthony weiner, i'm here for you to do it, but it sounds like a pretty silly analogy to me. >> what i'm talking about the willingness of voters to forgive. >> i don't know anything about forgiveness. all i'm saying is that in a race, a person wants someone they can best represent them. there's no question that i've been in the congress for over four decades and the people have so indicated by their vote, not forgiving and not saying anything as relates to my personal life. >> you are a decorated korean war vet. you received a purple heart and you're moopg the four remaining members of congress who served
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in korea. first, we thank you for your service. this is a very important day because it marks 60 years since the armistice. what is going through your mind? >> i'm looking forward to being at the korean war veteran memorial it the president. this has been called the forgotten war and when i think of all of my friends and people who died and others who were wounded and the veterans that came back and no one knew -- no one missed them. they didn't even know where korea was. but then to see out of the ashes of that war, a country that had been bombed down to ground level has grown to be not only one of america's best trading partners, but also a friend in that part of the world. so i'm proud of what i have been able to contribute no matter how small, but, more importantly, the tens of thousands of korean veterans who served and people
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never even knew they were involved in a war. >> our thanks to congressman rangel for that and our thanks for his service and all of those who sesked. he'll be joining the president today in the 10:00 hour which we will carry live for that memorial marking this important day. >> yeah. we will be taking that live. another story. taco bell making some big changes to the menu. the youngest members of your family, they might be a little disappointed! we are going to tell you why straight hid. plus that toddler who bought a car on ebay. that's right. she has two now. we will tell you how it all happened. ♪ norfolk southern what's your function? ♪
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let's take a look at the week on wall street. a squeaker. the dow jones industrials spent most of the friday in the red and ending a day with a gain just three points. that made a fifth straight week of gains for the dow industrials. investors maybe a bit cautious coming into this week. we got the big jobs report coming up at the end of this week. so they will be looking ahead to that. we are checking other top bis stories of the week. very interesting. taco bell eliminate something of the toys. >> you go there all the time for breakfast. >> i'm not a fast food gal, none of them really. now the toys and the kids. they are looking forward. >> no more kids meals. >> none of that. >> it's interesting. when you look at the numbers i guess only about 1% or less among 1% of their meals were kids meal so economically i guess it didn't make sense for them. >> they are targeting the 26 to
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30 something or so. they spend more money, right? >> apparently. >> they don't have to listen to their parents about nutrition. they can supersize anything, right? >> this is true. taco bell, no more kids meals and focusing on the millennials. >> maybe you bought into the famous ipo in facebook. investors are clicking like on facebook. the company's stock price soared this week after much better than expected earnings. it turns out the mobile market that was really the focus for facebook was all about can they do well with advertising on mobile. it's looking better than expected but a way to go because they ipo'd at $38 a share and now around $33 so still a ways to go but people had all of these questions about it after the ipo. you remember that. >> yes, yes. >> now they are doing a lot better so mark zuckerberg is getting increasingly richer along with the investors. >> i don't feel so sorry for them. are you a gamer? >> not at all. >> me either. we have so much in common.
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we don't eat fast food and not gamers. >> but i told you what i had last night for dinner but i'm not gamer. >> there is now a program where you can get a degree and actually learn how to create a game. >> wow. to build them from the ground up. >> to build them from the ground up. this is university of santa cruz offering a masters degree to get this done. it's a big business. >> i think it was really interesting is that, you know, a lot of criticism for those folks playing video games too long. this is a hugely lucrative industry globally so why not go to school how to work in the sector? a lot of jobs in that sector. computer science and it's a big, big business. >> maybe you and i ought to start gaming? >> can you imagine that? >> we won't have time for that! do you remember the 14-month-old who bought that car on ebay? a few weeks ago we told you she
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was playing on her dad's cell phone and bought a car. now she is getting her own set of wheels. apparently, ebay bought her a ride fit for a toddler. a nice gift and free publicity there too. a lesson for parents who let their kids play with their phones. >> she gets rewarded and gets her own hot ride. >> her father is busy restoring that car that she bought. she bought this old junker of a car and he is restoring it and i guess he will give it to her when she is 16. >> she has two rides now. she is doing something right now. >> hundreds sick across the country. the latest on this nasty and miss tier yaus stomach virus and people don't know how it's happening and why. rolling stones front man mick jagger, happy birthday. 70 years old and still wokki ir
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♪ [ male announcer ] the parking lot helps by letting us know who's coming. the carts keep everyone on the right track. the power tools introduce themselves. all the bits and bulbs keep themselves stocked. and the doors even handle the checkout so we can work on that thing that's stuck in the thing. [ female announcer ] today, cisco is connecting the internet of everything. so everyone goes home happy. bottom of the hour now. welcome back, everyone. i'm suzanne malveaux.
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>> i'm poppy harlow. thanks for joining us on "new day saturday." five things you need to know to start your day. in egypt, number one. very disturbing. supporters of ousted president morsi saying demonstrators fired into a crowd of protesters. what we are hearing somewhere in the range of 21 to 75 dead but, again, no confirmation exactly on those numbers. there are also reports that possibly more than a thousand people have been wounded in those clashes. number two. the justice department will not seek the death penalty for edward snowden, that is what attorney general eric holder wrote this week to russian authorities. holder say snowden should not be given temporary asylum in russian srussia because reports he would be sentenced to death are not true. number three.
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authorities say seven are dead in a shooting north of miami in hialeah. police say they found six bodies strewn throughout the apartment complex. the suspect was holed up in an apartment with two other people, a man and a woman. that suspect was holding hostage. the s.w.a.t. team rescued those hostages. the suspect fired at the s.w.a.t. team. they fired back and shot him dead. number four. a mysterious and ugly stomach virus is spreading across the country. the centers for disease control and prevention is still trying to confirm the source of this outbreak. today 321 cases of the illness in multiple states now. no one has died as a result of this bug but at least 18 people have now been hospitalized. number five. san diego mayor bob filner says he is taking a two-week hiatus for, quote/unquote, intensive
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counseling. he says he'll enter that clinic on august 5th and stay until the 19th. he is not resigning even from demands of his fellow democrats to do so. the city attorney's office has issued a subpoena for him to answer questions on august 9th by one of the women making the sexual allegations. let's turn to new york and talk about anthony weiner. we have been covering this all week. he says he will get through this and he will stay in the race to try to be the next mayor of new york city easement he says he is not going to quit but whether or not he can really win this democratic primary in september is the question. the polls now indicating that new yorkers, they are having some second thoughts about him. i want to go to alina cho. what is state of his campaign here? are they worried or concerned
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because, clearly, he can't escape more and more questions about this. we are learning mow about relations as more women come forward. >> reporter: that's right. privately i would think that anthony weiner's closest advisers are concerned. the lead he once joyed in one poll he has lost in another. at least among some voters it doesn't seem to matter surprisingly enough. weiner says this is all behind him and some people we talked to on the streets tend to agree. ask average new yorkers would you vote for anthony weiner? surprise, surprise. >> i do plan on voting for anthony weiner. >> i think he's got as good a chance as anybody. >> everybody deserves a second chance. >> reporter: what about this? >> he is a perpetual horny man. >> reporter: that is the woman who says weiner sent her e-mails.
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ever since the loot tweets in 2011. during a tour of sandy ravaged homes. after a soup kitchen event. >> would you vote for someone who has done what you've done. >> reporter: and at a mayoral forum when the candidates were asked facebook or twitter? >> reporter: this is an aspirational campaign about looking forward. >> the latest polls shows 16% of new yorkers would vote for him and nine-point drop from last month. his opponent christine quinn has 9%. you've not said weiner should step down. >> when he said he was going to run. it's a decision for him. it's now a decision for the voter. >> reporter: beyond the question of will he or won't he, there is should he bow out? >> i think he is hurting his brand. i think people would respect him more if he went away right now and made a comeback in a few
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years probably join the peace corps, you know? >> reporter: it's what have are calling the humiliation factor. some voters we talk to say they would support anthony weiner it is important to point out three of his democratic opponents, one a naacp and the editorial board of the "the new york times" and the "wall street journal" and new york daily news say he should bow out of the race. most say he is no longer credible and all of them say that this is a major distraction taking voters away from what they should be hearing about, poppy and suzanne, which are the issues. >> i know you've been on this literally on the street there in new york talking to voters the whole time about this. we will get to the question in the next hour because we are running out of time. alina, thank you. >> that's a lot of pressure he is under to bow out. i think the question really whether or not voters believe he is trustworthy and whether or not he has good judgment today, today now, yeah.
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>> we have a lot more polls still to come so we will see. two very different, but very public falls from grace. why the parents of amanda vine says she now needs help. >> new claims of racism emerging against celebrity chef paula deen. "with safe, experienced drivers." "we work directly with manufacturers," "eliminating costly markups," "and buy directly from local farmers in every region of the country." "when you see our low prices, remember the wheels turning behind the scenes, delivering for millions of americans, everyday. "dedication: that's the real walmart" ♪ hooking up the country whelping business run ♪ ♪ trains! they haul everything, safely and on time. ♪ tracks! they connect the factories built along the lines. and that means jobs, lots of people,
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blurred lines. check this out ♪ if you can't hear what i'm trying to say ♪ ♪ if you can't read from the same page ♪ ♪ maybe i'm going deaf maybe i'm going blind maybe i'm out of mind ♪ >> i love it. check this out as well. look what happened to beyonce. watch as this fan attacks the singer. we are talking about this electric fan. that does not look fun! her hair got caught in a stage fan during the show! this was in montreal this week. the fan not letting go. you can see it there. people were a little worried around her but ever the pro. beyonce she just kept belting out her halo. good for you. >> i love that. folks, it's the e block. you know what it's time for. entertainment news but stutough stories and tough things to talk about this this morning. thank you both for being with
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us. i want to talk about amanda bynes. she is undergoing a mental evaluation in a psychiatric hospital right now and on a two-week hold after getting caught setting fire to a gas can in thousand oaks, california. joining me to talk about this and other topics is sand tra dee and jim on star 94. amanda bynes this has been sad and difficult to watch. her parents have now asked for conservatiatorship and a judge rifg th reviewing this. this is a former nickelodeon star. >> i want her actually to be crazy because it will excuse the behavior we have seen within the last year. this girl has so many
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misdemeanors last year. allegedly throwing marijuana out at the police officer at her house. so i think she truly might have a mental issue, i really do. >> what is your take on it? >> absolutely. any time you're throwing marijuana at police officers. a situation where you want this poor girl to get help. you see all of the things and it's just so sad. we saw britney spears in this kind of shape five years ago. >> look how wow britney has come out of it. >> i totally agree, poppy. i'm not kidding when i say this. britney spears father james spears should start a company where he takes over the lives of these type of stars. lindsay lohan. he did such a great job with britney that he could show guidance to a lot of stars. >> that is what it seems amanda bynes parents are trying to do and see if they get that control. we put a call in but haven't had any answer from that but everyone is hoping for the best of her because it's tough.
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i want to talk about celebrity chef paula deen that is back in crisis mode now that one of her former employees is bringing allegations of some racist comments to the table. former cook dora charles tells "the new york times" that deen did the following. used racial slurs, wanted her to ring a bell in front of her restaurant yelling for people to come get it, to get dinner. also even asked other employees to allegedly dress up in an aunt jemima outfit for dinner services. these are all allegations. first of all, i want to tell you deen's pr team have denied the charges in this. they said fundamentally dora's complaint is not about race but about money. let's talk about this for paula deen. these are more allegations she is facing. >> can i just say it is he said/she said. if majority the african-american people that have worked for paula deen are saying the same
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thing, i don't think everyone is lying. this woman says she started with paula deen in the beginning and making $10 an hour. paul deen promised her riches and hoped she would have gotten in reality. if she says paula is a good woman and maybe i would but i know it's a he said/she said and i know it's allegations but i got to tell you i am believing all of these allegations, i really am. >> what but, jimmy? >> it's another sad situation because you don't want to be called the old racist lady. you don't want that to be the memory when you're dead and gone she is a racist lady. if i was paula deen i would say when people bring this up to her, do you believe anthony weiner? >> that is so true. i say this not jokingly but george zimmerman kind of saved paula deen's life. >> you mean taking the spotli t
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spotlight? >> yeah. >> when you look at her career a lot of her big deals she was dropped from a lot of her big deals. not all of them but a lot of them. what do you see in terms of career comeback? because there is that theory that some people really like a comeback story. >> she is going to come back because she has a value with the networks and i believe, i want to say one of the networks, maybe the food network, don't quote me, is already thinking about renewing her contract and bringing her back. at the end of the day it's about money. if she is missing and the ratings flow and go down they will bring her back a year from now. >> i agree with you but what i think paula needs to do, you don't want that to be known about. you wanted to rehabilitate that image and maybe go to oprah and say can i do a show? >> she needs oprah right now! >> she goes to schools and she tries to help kids, you know, bring kids together from different racial backgrounds. i think it would do her good to see racism from younger eyes. >> interesting idea.
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guys, thank you for joining us. >> thank you for having us. >> we were going to talk about mick jagger rocking it out and but he can still rock. >> i will see him until he is a hundred. >> i heard about his contract is being renewed. >> no, no, no. thanks for being with us. as always, appreciate it. >> that's a great segment there. next on "new day," awkward slide caught on camera. see what happens when a stranger actually falls asleep on her neighbor. yep, we have got it on video. then it is time for the good stuff! it may be about 90 degrees in north texas, but a little girl's dream just came true with her very own winter wonderland! that's up next. this week on the next list we talk to archie who is chief of ocean safety for the hawaiian island of maui. he used jet skis 25 years ago and he has been saving lives ever since. >> for us a lot of times the surf is way off shore.
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and sho it's all about the response time. you know, how quickly can we respond from point a to point b, or from a zone to the impact zone where the waves are breaking and back out of that. >> archie, he definitely puts other ahead of himself when it comes to game time where he has to save somebody. >> i started screaming help, help! and the next thing i know, this wonderful man has a little flotation device and was dragging us through the waves! >> reporter: today, his innovating new rescue techniques and equipment and training others to use them. , including the navy s.e.a.l.s. kalepa is also an elite athlete with the skill to serve the giant waves of maui. join us saturday, 2:30 p.m. eastern on "the next list."
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comfort moment. the woman started to fall asleep as soon as she sat down and things got more awkward from there. and what followed were several long awkward moments of that guy trying to get the woman out of his lap. i don't know if we can rerack. look at his face at the beginning. he takes his phone out and starts filming, and she fell -- i have not done that. >> i feel badly for her. >> yeah, i do, too. >> this is mama bear trying to rescue her cub from a dumpster. it's almost unbearable to watch. yeah, somebody wrote that. she tries to climb and bang on the lid, and an wildlife officer did that, and there is a little
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reunion there, a bear reunion. not going to get in the way of her and her cub. a big storm in the atlantic is headed towards the caribbean now. >> anything to worry about? let's go to the weather center and bring in our meteorologist, jennifer delgado. >> you always love animal mama bear trying to protect her young, but we are not that concerned about the two tropical storms. this is tropical storm dorian. and winds are at 40 miles per hour, and we are not expecting it to strengthen anymore, and we are expecting it to weaken, but it will move to the northern part passing to the area of
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puerto rico, and now as we look at flossie, just under hurricane strength. and this system is going to be moving over towards the west quickly, and it looks like it's going to be brushing across the big island of hawaii, and that's on monday. as a tropical storm with winds up to 40 miles per hour, and once again, the same thing, rough surf as well as strong winds. as we move across parts of the u.s., here is the cold front we are tracking, showers and thunderstorms from areas, and areas like the upper midwest. what this is going to mean, heavy rain for the south and some of the locations could pick up two inches of rainfall, and it's courtesy of the cold front and it's going to do great things. look at the high temperatures for today. hard to believe it's almost august, and today's high is 74 degrees, and chicago, 71, and
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you should be at 81, and temperatures are running 10 to 20 degrees below average and cool across parts of the northeast, like new york and washington, d.c. when it's summer i want it to feel like summer, and want to say, when is it going to cool down? >> thank you, jennifer, appreciate it. love this part of the show. it's time for the good stuff. in today's edition, 6-year-old mattie. >> she has a dream to see snow for the first time in her life and she also has cancer, an aggressive form of brain cancer. she lives in arlington, texas, and so there is not that much snow there, right? is this even possible? >> impossible. it's summer. >> look at that.
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of course, mattie any exactly what to do, and she got snow in texas, and she built a snowman and got into a snow ball fight, and courtesy of a group to a dedicated group, and they ordered 20,000 pounds of ice shaved and pumped on to her lawn, and it was needed relief for a girl that has been through two brain surgeries, and if you want to help more, go to her facebook page, fight for mattie. striving to bring insight to every investment, and integrity to every plan. we are morgan stanley. and we're ready to work for you.
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the behavior i have engaged in over many years is wrong. >> another day, another apology. but the san diego mayor accused of sexual harassment is not stepping down, instead he offers a different solution. he was a star football player, whose famous play resurrected the new orleans saints, but today he can't walk, or even talk, a victim of als. >> if you have no proof that he killed him intentionally, you can't find -- you can't say he is guilty. >> and juror b29 has broken her silence, but was her verdict based on a misunderstanding, and did peer pressure play into george zimmerman's acquittal?
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good morning, everybody. i am suzanne malveaux. >> i am harlow poppy. and thank you for starting your saturday with us. >> six people plus an alleged shooter dead in florida. this is in a miami suburb. police were responding to shots fired, found five bodies scattered around the complex and one across the street. they have found the suspected shooter holed up in a apartment with two hostages. first of all, how did this happen? how did it begin? it ended very badly. >> yes, bad for the shooter and six other people. it started late on friday when witnesses called and reported hearing between 15 and 20 gunshots, and when police got on the scene they realized there were more bodies and they realized the suspect barricaded himself in an apartment complex with two hostages. i got off the phone moments ago
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with sergeant, eddie rodriguez, and he told me about a very dramatic situation last night as the s.w.a.t. team made their way in the barricaded apartment. >> the s.w.a.t. team rescued the two hostages that were being held against their will inside of that apartment. we had several victims in the building, and we were able to make our way through the building, and we were able to advance quickly and mav our way up, and eventually locate him inside the apartment barricaded with two hostages, and the communication team was speaking with him and that communication crumbled and they had to come up with the idea to move quickly and they coordinated with s.w.a.t. and they went in and rescued both hostages that were inside and the subject was killed. >> the first two victims were
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the manager of the apartment complex and his wife, and we don't know anything about the shooter. >> was there a motive behind this? >> they don't know who the shooter is or the motive, and they don't know if he had any acquaintanceship with the victims. they are getting more information. >> seven people dead? amazing. >> thanks, nick. well it's another very difficult day in egypt's capital. doctors scramble to save people wounded in the latest violence rocking cairo, from 21 to 75. state media says perhaps 1,000 people have been hurt in the clashes, and the bloodshed support duelling rallies and those that support the president. it all spilled out on the street on saturday morning.
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and some claim security forces open fire on them and the military denies that saying it used nothing more than tear-gas on the crowd. edward snowden was not supposed to be at the airport, and he likely thought he would be in iceland or venezuela, at least anywhere instead of being stuck in the airport, and they say snowden's fears are overblown and it's time he be returned to the united states. and we want to bring in the foreign affairs jill doherty, and this is a nightmare for snowden and there has been pressure now from several fronts in the obama administration to get him back to the united states. >> as you and the viewers know, there is no extradition treaty between the united states and russia, and that's one of the issues. russia is saying he could be
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executed or tortured and the united states said that is absolutely not correct, and now the u.s. has made it official. >> i have a family, a home in paradise -- >> the u.s. is stepping up efforts to get its hands on edward snowden getting him out of the moscow airport transit area he has been holed up now for more than a month. snowden asked russia for temporariy asylum claiming he could be tortured. >> this person is a trader to the united states of america. >> eric holder says snowden's claims are not only not true but to address russian concerns, he is giving written assurances to moscow that if snowden comes back the united states would not seek the death penalty and mr. snowden will not be tortured. >> i have confidence in my son and i am absolutely certain that he is speaking the truth. >> at the same time, snowden's
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father went on nbc's "today" show to defend his son and complain about the way his son is being treated, and lon snowden firing off a letter to president obama calling the zeal to punish his son unconscionable, saying his administration has shown scorn for due process, the rule of law and the presumption of innocence, and he is calling on the president to have holder dismiss the charges against his son, and he is blasting the close congressional vote to kaept keep the nsa program alive. >> i am an angry citizen. >> and that's one of the bargaining chips you could say, here at the white house.
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it appears the president would go to the g-20, and there was the separate meeting in moscow, and they are not saying what the president will do. it will all depend on what happens to snowden. >> and it seems like their patience is running thin at this point. is there a deadline or timetable we believe, we have to do something more aggressive to get him back to the united states? >> interesting the russians are playing this out, too. in fact, the immigration, their migration services they call it, according to the laws he could be at the airport another three months but that could be extended for another three months, and they are saying he could be there for six months. the defense attorneys epbg is that correct a military judge to have closing arguments wrapped up yesterday, and he could go to prison for life, and
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he is charged with giving reams of classified information to wikileaks. >> after calling 60 witnesses in 30 days, the prosecution rested its case against the mob boss james "whitey" boulder, and right now it appears 16 witnesses will be called to testify. we don't know if bulger is going to take the stand but he is facing 19 counts of murder. and anthony weiner says he will weather the race. >> we have that democratic primary coming up on september 10th. polls indicate new yorkers are having second thoughts, at least with the weinaepeineaepeiner po. >> the lead that he once enjoyed
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a little more than a week ago all but evaporated in another major poll. i want you to look at the newest nbc wall street journal marist poll. if you look at the screen there, you can see that weiner has taken a bit of a dive, dropping nine points to 16 support among likely voters, and his opponent, quinn, on top right now with 25% support. and look at christine quinn support kwrurdz, 37% strongly support her, and 52%, more than half, strongly support anthony weiner, and keep in mind strong supporters tend to turn up at the polls. the race is far from over just when you thought it might be. >> you have been talking to new yorkers about their feelings on weiner. when you also look at christine
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quinn, because they were neck and neck in the polls, what do they mean for christine quinn? >> well, i mean, for now they look good. listen, this latest poll came out on her 47th birthday, if you can believe that, so what a great birthday present. she is definitely the candidate to watch, but she was very careful about saying that anthony weiner should drop out of the race. listen to what she told me yesterday. >> well, when the former congressman weiner was debating to run, i said it was a decision for him and he made that decision and it's now a division for the voters. >> it's a distraction, isn't it? >> new yorkers are focusing on the issues, and what congressman weiner did is a distraction, and voters know what matters. >> well, voters know what matters, and the problem is at least among some voters and the
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editorial board, the wall street journal and the naacp, they all believe that this is distraction, a big one, and people are focusing on this so-called side show as the main show and it's taking people away from the real issues that are important to people here in new york city. we're watching this story very closely and will have more in the 10:00 hour, poppy and suzanne. despite a lawsuit and demands from fellow democrats that he resign, bob felner, he was subpoenaed over the accusations. >> i spoke to one of the women that is accusing him, and she met with him back in 2009 in a restaurant, and she says he
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offered to help her with a program she was working on and then the conversation took a strange turn, she says. >> then he told me, your ayes have bewitched me. he got up and came over and sat next to me in the booth, pinning me in, and i don't remember, because it was such a suspension of time and space in my life, and this was so unexpected that i don't remember if he directly asked for a kiss or tried to kiss me, but it -- it was very uncomfortab uncomfortable. later this morning, we will talk to the second woman that accused filner of harassment. what crime police say one man committed, and we will have that all for you straight ahead from spain. that's next.
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judge doesn't expect to meet the train driver until tomorrow, and so we are going to have to wait possibly 24 hours now to see whether the judge upholds the police's official initial findings and weather formal charges of reckless homicide of put to the train driver, poppy. >> officials said speed was a factor in this, and what can you tell us about what we know how fast that train was going when this occurred? >> reporter: there are some very interesting questions about speed. what we know for sure is according to the state railway the maximum speed permitted on this curve is 80 kilometers an hour, and that's 40 miles per hour. when we see the video, the chilling surveillance video of the crash, that train to the
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untrained eye appears to be going much faster than that 45 miles per hour. with that said, when we put it to the interior ministry this morning that some junior ministers and also a regional police chief blamed the driver for excessive speed, the interior minister said that he believed that there were rational indications to suggest that the driver was to blame, and then he wouldn't be pressed and he wouldn't go ahead and say speed was the only factor. later on in the day in the press conference that we just came from, the minister for transport and development also said we to keep an open mind, and other factors are also being considered. what are the other factors. technical factors and also budgetary factors, and was enough being spent on main taeupbg the line of all the security mechanisms in place, poppy. >> so many people died and so many people in the hospital. appreciate the reporting, karl,
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thank you. and then the train crash in spain and then the recent airplane crashes here in the united states, often the focus is on the driver. we are looking at the possible role of human error. >> watch this video of the train crash in spain, and you can see precisely what the investigators are scrutinizing, it's not the engineering of the tracks, it's the speed of the train, more precisely, the hand of the conductor, and the conductor is now being held, and reportedly bragged in the past about how fast he could drive his train, and we have two side by side images, and this is the train at natural speed, and look how quickly it crashed here, at the
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same time if it were traveling 50 miles per hour, it would have been way back here, and nowhere near this point. could there have been something wrong with the train? of course. with all the high-tech wizardry, it cannot survive with the speed there, and that's why they are looking at the driver. and look at the asiana flight, a clear day, and this plane landed short of the runway, and a crash, and we have had no reports that the pilots were having equipment troubles and we know they called to abort the landing seconds before the impact, and all of that says, look at the man more than the machine. in the southwest flight, ntsb said 30 feet above the ground, this plane's nose was tipped up
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a few degrees, and in four seconds it shifted enough to tilt down, so instead of landing on the back gear it landed on the weaker front gear and we had a crash. it is possible it was an equipment failure and is it possible there were weird weather circumstances involved? yeah, sure. but this is the sort of thing that has the investigators looking at the highly sophisticated machines and also at the men running them to see if there was some miss calculation that showed poor judgment or led to some perilous mistake. thank you, tom, appreciate it. shedding light on the forgotten war. today marks the 60th anniversary of the troops that ended fighting in the korean war. and while they celebrate with praise and dancing, south korea, and here in the united states, very solemn services are being held. the great outdoors...
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president obama will speak at the korean war veteran's amoral this morning, and it was 60 years ago today that a truce ended hostilities on the korean peninsula, and cnn has live coverage of the president's address, and that will happen at 10:00. of course in wartime anything can happen, veteran war vet, urban mayorice knows that firsthand. so in today's human factor, he reveals what saved his life and how that dramatically changed it. sanjay gupta has that story. >> 1968, and the platoon
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sergeant was on. >> i hear mortars coming in, and the machine guns going off. >> then something odd happens. >> then i feel myself falling face first into a rice patty, and that is it, and then i wake up and they tell me they found me in a body bag. >> yeah, urban was put in a body bag, presumed dead because he was unconscious, and a student had decided he was still breathing. >> he passed out from diabetes. >> if it was not for diabetes, i probably would not have been here. >> urban has been legally blind since the '70s, and lost his hearing and needed a kidney
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transplant, but sailing kept him afloat. >> when i came back from vietnam, and i never thought i would get into sailing again, especially with the eyesight loss, until i met two gentlemen in wheelchairs. >> the three of them together started challenge america, a the their paoutic program. >> urban's goal is to help the world see people with disabilities equals. >> you get front of line privilege eupblgs that i like to saeurbgs but that's not what we are doing, we want to be equal with you, and we want you to give us a chance to prove it, and you may be surprised. >> what a cool program. you can catch sanjay gupta md
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saturdays and sundays here. and then breaking her silence on the case. we will examine what she might have endured in the jury room from a legal as well as an emotional perspective ahead. and first christine romans has a preview of your money coming up in an hour from now. good morning, christine. >> good morning. president obama kicking off a tour to sell what he calls a bargain for the middle class, but big question, is this actually a bold economic agenda or just more speeches for the history, and how much can this president actually get done? we will examine that at 9:30 a.m.
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bottom of the hour now, and welcome back, everybody. i am suzanne malveaux. >> i am poppy harlow. five things you need to know to start your new day. >> demonstrators terp returning to the streets in cairo despite the violence. supporters of the ousted mohamed morsi says they opened fire on them. >> number two, pope francis is celebrating mass this hour in
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rio de janeiro. he is in brazil for world youth day and he has been received like a rock star. later this morning, he will meet with brazilian officials. at the top of the hour we will bring you a live report from rio. number three, the tropical storm still headed towards the caribbean, and expected to arrive early next week, but losing steam. right now the maximum sustained winds are about 40 miles per hour. number four, authorities say six people and their alleged shooter are dead in florida. they say six body were in and near an apartment complex and the suspect was holed up with two hostages and the suspect was killed in the shoot-out. holding captive three women in his home, ariel castro agreed to life in prison plus 1,000 years.
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he will never be allowed to have a parole hearing, and this deal is what his victims wanted and spares them to having to testify in court. and now legal bomb shells. and these are comments from a juror in the zimmerman trial, saying zimmerman, quote, got away with murder. she is the second juror to break her silence, and she said there was not enough evidence to convict zimmerman for the fatal shooting of trayvon martin. listen. >> i was the juror that was going to give them the hung juror. i fought until the end. i mean, it's hard for me to sleep, and it's hard for me to eat because i feel that i was for forcely included in trayvon martin's death, and as i carry him on my back, i am hurting as much as trayvon martin's mom s.
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because there is no way a mother should feel that pain. >> but you feel in your heart of hearts that you and the jury approached it and came with the decision and you stand by that decision to this day? >> i stand by the decision because of the law. if i stand by the decision because of my heart, he would have been guilty. >> joining me now to talk about all of this, cnn legal analyst, and columnist, jeff fisher. welcome. you heard what she just said. i want to play more sound from the juror that said she was going to make it a hung jury. listen how she came to that verdict. >> for myself, he's guilty. because the evidence shows he is guilty. >> he is guilty of? >> killing trayvon martin. but as the law was read to me, if you have no proof that he
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killed him intentionally, you can't find -- you can't say he is guilty. >> so paula, let's talk about the word intent. is that how the law reads in florida? >> well, no, it isn't. i think everybody should be careful about this interview. we have not seen the full transcript of the interview, and there is criticism that abc may have edited it selectively, and we don't have the context of the statement. on the issue of intent under florida law, on the manslaughter count, you don't need intent to commit murder. you only -- the law is very clear if there is an intent to do something that causes death and it was not justifiable, which would be in this case he was not acting in self-defense, that would be manslaughter, and there is nothing about intent that is required under the manslaughter charge, so her statement there wasn't what she was told by the judge in the juror charge. >> i want to go to dr. fisher
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now. let's talk about the psychology of this, she said that she initially voted in her first vote in the deliberation room for second-degree murder, and let's talk about the psychology of this. you are in the deliberation room, and you have only been with them for weeks on end because they were sequestered and talk about the dynamics of that and how this plays into it. >> there is a phenomenal that occurs called group think, when you have jurors together it's called juror think, and when you have people together and they are supposed to make a common decision, they can often begin to think alike. the thoughts or belief systems of the individual can be lost. in this situation there was a great deal of pressure on them to make a decision that was the right decision, and in group think there is a tendency for people to take a moral ground that sometimes isn't necessarily based in total truth, and it could be based on emotions. factors that contribute to this
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could be the strength of the jury foreman or other people in the jury with strong personalities and not wanting to be the only person dissenting and there could be group pressure to conform. >> you have dealt with a number of different jurors, and how common is it for a juror to express sadness like this after a verdict and to see emotions like this? >> you have to understand, this is very common with jurors when they second guess themselves especially in situations where there has been a death and there is a wonderful family, like trayvon martin's family, and they were hoping for a different verdict of what they thought was justice and they didn't get it, and there is juror remorse, and the doctor talks about the dynamics here, and there is a movie from the 50s where henry fonda turns the 11 other jurors to his way of thinking that it's a not guilty verdict.
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that very, very rarely happens. until you have a solid coalition, a group of jurors willing to fight for the not guilty position, it's very difficult for them to turn the majority of other people. here in florida, you only have a six-person jury. tough situation. >> i appreciate both of you coming in and your take on this. we have heard from two of six jurors now, and the question is will we hear from the others. thank you both. >> thank you, poppy. as ravages the body but not the mind. steve gleason is a big promoter of using technology to improve patient's quality of life, and he can tweet by linking his eyes. he is absolutely amazing. we will share his story up next. you really couldn't have come at a better time.
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...and we inspected his brakes for free. -free is good. -free is very good. [ male announcer ] now get 50% off brake pads and shoes at meineke. it's mysterious, frustrating and frightening. little is known about it. we are going in depth on a killer disease called als. and it kills more than 100,000 people every year. it moves very fast taking away peoples' abilities to control their muscles and causing patients to quickly lose their ability, to speak, swallow, breathe or move. and the disease hits close to home for me. my mother was diagnosed with als a year and a half ago, and although the disease forces her to breathe with a machine, she is in good spirits and getting around in her wheelchair and
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enjoying her family. technology is improving their quality of life in many different ways, and one of those people is nfl player steve gleason. he and others are redefining what it means to be alive. here is his story. it was the play that brought back the city of new orleans. saints' steve gleason blocking the punt that would send the nation to victory, and the win was sweet because it was the first home game in the superdome since hurricane katrina, and in that moment, steve gleason, the rock solid 212-pound safety instantly became a new orleans hero, but five years later in january of 2011, age 33, gleason got the shocking news, he was diagnosed with a fatal condition that would soon paralyze him and rob him of his abilities to speak, eat or breathe. >> it's a disease where the
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cells in your brain and spinal cord, the cells that control our muscles slowly degenerate. they die. >> when i met steve and his wife michelle at their new orleans home in march, i was struck by just how young and how beautiful they are. their playful relationship and his flirtatious smile. >> he was just like a big he-man strong guy, and he is still strong in certain places, but it's a huge contrast. >> two years into the disease, steve is paralyzed, and uses a sin they haddic voice to speak for him. >> it has not been easy. >> steve was thrusts into the spotlight after three atlanta radio deejays mocked him, using a vase as his own. >> the deejays were fired and apologized to steve later, and
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steve issues a statement saying received and accepted and we all made mistakes in this life, and how we learn from the mistakes is the measure of who we are, and steve says he changed, too. >> my capacity to love and been loved has been increased since my diagnosis. >> when steve first got the diagnosis, he and michelle were faced with the critical condition, whether or not to have a child. >> in reality i don't think i knew what i was getting myself into or what he was getting himself into, let's be honest, but it's the best decision we have made as a couple. >> when rivers was born, he knew he would soon lose his ability to speak, and he recorded bedtime stories. the other big decision steve and michelle made was to go public with the disease.
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>> this is the first time i have been in front of any cameras since we went public in september, so obviously i don't move or talk quite the way i used to. >> launching the no white flags campaign, and he teamed up with a mentor, a former linebacker, who also has als, and he recruited star nfl players and coaches to create the dramatic psa. >> you can't move your fingers. your mind keeps working but your body doesn't respond, and soon you can't hug your mother or pick up your child. >> while steve doesn't believe the head injuries led to the disease from football, researchers are looking into the possibility that they could be linked. but steve raised millions of dollars to build a state of the
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art facility for patience. >> control the ac, and turn on the lights and work on their computers. >> it's with that technology to give residents the ability to control everything around them, and even with all of this, michelle says they have their difficult days, and most recently as they prepared for a dinner date. >> he is in the suit, just mad at the world, and he drove into our office and drove himself into the closet and got stuck, and i started crying and ten minutes later after we both sobbed, we said, look, we are going to do this. >> and they are doing this. and steve marked his 1 year anniversary of als with a skydive, and he sponsors other adventure trips for other als patients. steve says most people live as this they will never die, and that's why he is living life to the fullest.
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i guess. did you download that book i sent? yah, nice rainbow highlighter. you've got finch for math right? uh-uh. english? her. splanker, pretend we're not related. oh trust me, you don't want any of that. you got my map? yeah. where you can sit can define your entire year. and what's the most important thing to remember? no face to face contact until we're off of school property. you got this. sharing what you've learned. that's powerful. verizon. get the samsung galaxy stratosphere ii for free. ♪ [ male announcer ] the parking lot helps by letting us know who's coming. the carts keep everyone on the right track. the power tools introduce themselves. all the bits and bulbs keep themselves stocked. and the doors even handle the checkout so we can work on that thing that's stuck in the thing. [ female announcer ] today, cisco is connecting the internet of everything. so everyone goes home happy.
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bringing you a special edition of politicians say what courtesy of anthony weiner. >> let's face it, the text weiner admitted to writing and sending are too lewd for us to read on air or show the photos on air, but apparently we are not the only ones that thought so and jeanne moos takes a look at politicians say what? >> the press is on weiner watch, and grilling weiner even in the middle of the street, and the only ones enjoying this more than the media, the comedians. >> anthony weiner, the peter tweeter is at it again. >> reporter: the latest revealed by -- >> the dirty. >> reporter: weiner's most damaging online chats are way too steamy for us to repeat, but some of the tamer exchanges had
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ca common taters in stitch pz that. >> you are a walking fantasy. >> i don't want to be just a fan saw tea, i want to take care of your every need. >> your mayor is carlos danger. >> this is weiner's way of getting more latino support. >> carlos dangler, and -- >> reporter: there was a commercial reporting to see weiner in all of his glory. and then there was a mystery man that kept popping up at weiner's press conference. he quickly became known as the
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cubicle guy, politico put cubicle guy prairie dog pop ups on music, and some compared him to music, and he brought back memories of kill roy was here, and turns out he was a wori radio reporter. >> he had no idea he was cubicle guy, and said he had nowhere else to stand, and he works in radio and he for gets that people can see him, and anthony weiner's alleged alias, carlos danger, has popped up on the t-shirt, but just don't fantasize while walking, a word of caution, from carlos danger. >> thanks so much for starting your morning for us.
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we have a lot of news straight ahead here on "new day saturday." [ crashing ] [ male announcer ] when your favorite food starts a fight, fight back fast with tums. trusted heartburn relief that goes to work in seconds. nothing works faster. ♪ tum, tum tum tum tums! thto fight chronic.r. osteoarthritis pain. to fight chronic low back pain. to take action. to take the next step.
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today, you will know you did something for your pain. cymbalta can help. cymbalta is a pain reliever fda-approved to manage chronic musculoskeletal pain. one non-narcotic pill a day, every day, can help reduce this pain. tell your doctor right away if your mood worsens, you have unusual changes in mood or behavior or thoughts of suicide. anti-depressants can increase these in children, teens, and young adults. cymbalta is not for children under 18. people taking maois, linezolid or thioridazine or with uncontrolled glaucoma should not take cymbalta. taking it with nsaid pain relievers, aspirin, or blood thinners may increase bleeding risk. severe liver problems, some fatal, were reported. signs include abdominal pain and yellowing skin or eyes. tell your doctor about all your medicines, including those for migraine and while on cymbalta, call right away if you have high fever, confusion and stiff muscles or serious allergic skin reactions like blisters, peeling rash, hives, or mouth sores to address possible life-threatening conditions. talk about your alcohol use, liver disease and before you reduce or stop cymbalta. dizziness or fainting may occur upon standing.
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the complex, and they found the suspected shooter holed up with two hostages, and those hostages were rescued by s.w.a.t. team members that then came under fire, and they then shot the suspect dead. >> this is cnn breaking news. we have this breaking news here. we know are learning that two people are missing. there are four others hospitalized with injuries. this is after a boating accident. this is on the hudson river in upstate new york. according to the coast guard this accident happened when a recreational boat crash into the a barge last night. wabc says one of the women is due to be married in two weeks and this is what -- this is how you are mother described what they believed happened. >> she lives just down here a bit, and some friends came to pick them up by boat. where they were going, i don't know. it was probably about 9:30,
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9:30, 10:00, from what we understand from her fiance, and they hit something. he called 911, and he was unconscious, he reached for his phone when they came to, and there were three people in the boat with him out cold, and lindsay and mark, who is their best man were missing. she is supposed to be married two weeks from today. it just can't end like this. >> and alina is following the story from new york. there are two people missing, and that is the bride-to-be and best man, and it's the groom that called the mother? >> the groom called 911, and he was knocked unconscious in this accident, suzanne, and it's developing at this hour. and actually, we should tell you we just learned a police news
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conference is expected to begin momentarily. we will bring that to you when it does. here is what we can tell you. two people missing, and four people survived, but injured this this beating accident. among the miss something a woman who was 30 years old named lindsay stewart. she was due to be married in two weeks on august 10th. as you mentioned the other missing person is said to be the best man in the beddiwedding. and here is what we know that happened, a 21-foot boat, a small recreational boat went on the hudson river last night at about 10:30 with six passengers onboard. apparently the boat hit a barge. if you know the area, it happened around the bridge, and a group among the survivors, and there was a three-hour search
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last night, but nothing turned up and they are searching again today. >> all right. thank you very much. we appreciate it. obviously you will be working on getting more information here. we want to bring a spokesperson from the u.s. coast guard on the line joining us on the phone here. what you have learned so far? >> so far we learned -- well, we suspended the search at 1:45 this morning, and we resumed it a few minutes ago at 9:00 a.m., and the work barge under the bridge, and the coast guard and the corresponding agencies are -- >> i'm sorry. >> can you still hear us? you are on with poppy harlow and suzanne malveaux, can you hear us? >> i can kind of, yes.
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>> okay, please continue. >> and the four people were transported to the hospital, and the injuries are currently unknown as well as the identities, and -- sorry, one moment. the rockland county police department are the agency on scene, and we are trying to recover the people. >> and they are having a news conference any moment, and we will try to bring that to the viewers live, and what is important is to take care of those in the hospital, and those missing. and the mother of the bride-to-be said they were praying for a miracle, and you have or the police been able to talk to those on the boat to get
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a sense of what the two missing may have sustained and are they able to give you any leads? >> i was not able to receive that kind of information. i know detectives are working hard to conduct interviews with the injured persons, and we are awaiting toxicology reports on who was involved in the accident, and everybody is doing all they can to successfully recover these people. >> and if you know the island of manhattan, the hudson river is on the west side of the island and it goes passed manhattan and all the way up past the bronx and up north, and it's up north there a few miles past manhattan where the tappen sea bridge is, and then can you talk to us, alley, about how long somebody can remain in the water given the temperatures outside, you know, and this is not the middle
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of winter, but how long can they stay in the water alive? >> you know, we actually had a case similar to this, a man went missing, and he was in the water for a good 12 hours, and he survived. so because of the temperatures and just the way the water is, i am sure that the survivability rate is higher than normal. >> you mentioned that the search was suspended last night. can you tell us why? what were the conditions in which they stopped searching for those two missing? >> to be honest, i don't know the reason that they stopped searching. i would say that it's too -- honestly, i am not going to speculate. i don't know the reason they stopped searching, and they continued the search at 9:00 this morning. >> can you talk to us about the injuries sustained by the four
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others? >> i do not know the injuries that were sustained. >> what kind of resources are out there, do you have out there right now searching for them right now? i know you had crews in the middle of the night and resuming this morning, and what kind of resources are we talking about? >> the coast guard actually has a rescue boat on scene, and the new york state police, nypd and westchester have aviation kwraouunits out, and westchester marine and others are assisting in the search as well as the nypd dive team, and we have a lot of agencies out there covering ground to search for the people. >> in light of the fact that the search was suspended overnight in which the search was not taking place, and it since has been resumed as you mentioned,
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is there any kind of assets, anything out there in the water that would allow them to hold on to something or to rescue themselves if they had to in this situation considering the search had been suspended? >> if they were wearing life jackets, which is unknown, that is always a positive sign for survival, and like i said, that is unknown at this time. hopefully that is the case. if perhaps the current pulled them towards the shore or a stable object, they could have grabbed a hold of that. >> do we know if the four hospitalized, were they wearing life jackets, do we know that? >> i do not know, i am sorry. >> we want to let you get back to what you guys are doing, and the search for two missing people to bring our viewers back up to speed, we are talking about breaking news, a boating accident, a tragic boating
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accident on the hudson river just north of manhattan happening at some point last night, two people, including a bride-to-be, and supposed to be married in two weeks, missing at this hour and four people injured at the hospital, and the extent of their injuries unknown, and the coast guard working along with police, and a lot of resources trying to relocate the two missing people and we will bring you the latest as soon as we have it. we will be right back. i think farmers care more about the land
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than probably anyone else. we've had this farm for 30 years. we raise black and red angus cattle. we also produce natural gas. that's how we make our living and that's how we can pass the land and water back to future generations. people should make up their own mind what's best for them. all i can say is it has worked well for us. with so much competition, finding the right job is never easy. but with the nation's largest alumni network, including those in key hiring positions, university of phoenix can help connect you to a world of opportunity.
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support the deposed president, mohamed morsi. and those backing morsi claims military forces opened fire on them, and that is denied. and to spain where police accused a rain driver of reckless homicide now. this is wednesday's deadly train crash. jose francisco garzon is being held at police headquarters, and police are trying to decide whether or not to press charges in that crash that killed 78 people. pope francis is wrapping up morning mass. he is in brazil for world youth day, and quite frankly he has been received like a rock star. later this morning the pope expected to meet with some of brazil's most powerful citizens. >> and we have our miguel there covering the pope for us.
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hello to you on the phone. and what will be the pope's message this morning? >> reporter: it's much of the same. he had a very interesting remark this morning to young people about to go out as young priests, and he said we have to stop the culture of exclueson, and we have to get off facebook and get on the streets and get busy, and we encouraged people alonghe way to shape things up, and to not do things the old-fashioned way. what is amazing about him, he has a sense of the modern cultures and the pressures that people have on them, and he is not talking about the political leaders and telling them, your decisions have to be practical and simple and realistic, and he wants a very, very activist church, and he is certainly laying down the law of a very new and different catholic
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church, and what it does -- >> miguel, i am very sorry to cut you off. we will get back to you. we have breaking news. thank you, and you are listening to the chief of the sheriffs office on the boating accident. let's listen in. >> we are here today because there was a tragic boat accident in new york, and we got a call for a distressed boat vessel at 10:30, and the first call for severely injured people, and the fire department and police department, and the marine unit, we were assisting in the search for the injured people and the missing boaters, from the yonkers police department, and the new york city independent, as well adds the westchester
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county marine unit. i don't have a lot to share with you this morning. we have four people taken to four area local hospitals and still have two people missing, and we are beginning the search this morning to go back out and try to attempt to locate the two missing individuals. the boat as you can see behind me is severely damaged and i wish i had more for you right now, and it's still an active investigation, and our focus right now is finding the missing boat kwrursz. >> do you have the identity of the people missing? >> not as much yet. we have that but we are not ready to release that just yet. >> which barge did they hit? >> it was 200 feet south of the tappan zee bridge. >> it's the barge on this side of the bridge? >> is that search being conducted this morning? >> right, yes, yes. >> can you talk about if there was a wedding party on the boat? >> i can't comment on that right
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now, i am sorry. >> could describe where the barges are? are they lit? what is on them? are they very big? >> they are new construction barges. i have to introduce everybody behind me. this is the chief of the fire department, danny gauzewic, and mike owe share, and our agencies are involved, and if you have individual questions you can ask them, and this is an active investigation right now and our focus is on finding the two missing people. >> do you have the ages of the missing people? >> yes, yes, i do, but i am going to hold off on that. anything else? >> can you talk about how severely the injured were injured? >> i don't know that part. does anybody else know? >> say your first and last name again, i am sorry. >> there were four people
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remaining on the boat when the boat was located south of the tappan zee bridge, and they had head injuries and one party was unconscious. and those individuals were transported to the peer phaupbt, and they were evaluated and transported to area hospitals. >> they were on the boat and not in the water. >> these four were on the boat? >> it's safe to say the four were on the boat and the other two were ejected from the boat. >> that's what the investigation will look at but that's an assumption that one could make. >> are they well lit, the barges? >> the barge that we believe was struck, they are three barges tied together and they are part of the tappan zee bridge construction project, and they have building materials ore materials on the deck of the barges. >> are they lighted? >> they do have lighting but it was dark and difficult to see the barges in the water.
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>> do you know how fast the boat might have been going? >> no, not at this point. that's all part of the investigation. >> do you know where they were coming from? >> they were headed towards tearytown. >> have the survivors, the people in the hospital, have they been able to give you information, and are all of them conscious to give interviews? >> the investigation is on going and we don't have any information we can release about the content of the conversations they have had. >> this happened right after the pulled out of the dock or pretty much? >> the barges are obviously between here and the tappan zee bridge. >> were they having dinner here? >> hopefully the investigation will reveal all the facts and right now we don't have that. they were coming from peer mont. >> the barges are lit, but for your average boater, how would they know? is it marked on a map or is there information for people?
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>> no, the barge -- >> there is a marker light on it. >> and it's visual, you are supposed to be able to see it? got it. >> and we have multiple -- >> we have been learning from various officials about how this might have happened, this tragic accident, the fact that it was the tappan zee bridge construction project, very dark last night and it would have been difficult to see that barge, learning the very latest information here that there are four people who were injured and taken to area hospitals, and two people still missing, of course, the bride-to-be, and the best man, and they believe that those two were probably ejected from the boat, and remain missing. they have just started to resume the search, but they had discontinued the search for hours overnight. >> that's a big question as to why did the search stop? i am hoping for the best and we will bring you the latest when we have it. we will be right back. huh...anybody?
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julie! hey...guess what day it is?? ah come on, i know you can hear me. mike mike mike mike mike... what day is it mike? ha ha ha ha ha ha! leslie, guess what today is? it's hump day. whoot whoot! ronny, how happy are folks who save hundreds of dollars switching to geico? i'd say happier than a camel on wednesday. hump day!!! yay!! get happy. get geico. fifteen minutes could save you fifteen percent or more. just by talking to a helmet. it grabbed the patient's record before we even picked him up. it found out the doctor we needed was at st. anne's. wiggle your toes. [ driver ] and it got his okay on treatment from miles away. it even pulled strings with the stoplights. my ambulance talks with smoke alarms and pilots and stadiums. but, of course, it's a good listener too. [ female announcer ] today cisco is connecting the internet of everything. so everything works like never before.
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...and we inspected his brakes for free. -free is good. -free is very good. [ male announcer ] now get 50% off brake pads and shoes at meineke. president obama will speak at the korean war veterans memorial this morning, and 60 years ago today a truce ended hostilities on the korean peninsula, and cnn plans to go live with coverage of the president's wreath laying and his address. the ceremony beginning in the next hour. and this week in an unprecedented move, north korea welcomed western journalists inside its borders, and our ivan watson is there. >> reporter: north korea is well known for the hrafic patriotic displays, and that's taking place in a country that has had a rough time over the course of the past 20 years.
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>> cnn goes inside north korea, and that's coming up at the bottom of the hour. forecasters are tracking two storms, one in the atlantic and one in the pacific. >> fortunately, there is a good chance that both are about to weaken. let's go to our meteorologist, jennifer delgado. how is it looking? >> well, things are pretty quiet if you are talking about the storm dorian, and that's good news, because it looks like it's going to weaken. you are going to see on the satellite image, it is not that impressive, and maximum winds at 40 miles per hour. looks like it's going to make its way to the west, but by tomorrow at 2:00 p.m., there will be an area of low pressure and it will brush to the northern part of the ly word islands. and tropical storm flossie, it's moving towards the west and we are expecting it to brush parts
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of hawaii, and as we move into monday, it looks like it's a tropical storm. something to watch. we will send it back over to you guys, but certainly very rough waves. >> good for surfers. >> yes, indeed. thank you for watching today. we will see you back here at the top of the hour. "your money" starts right now. but there are a lot of people that do ride the bus. and now that the busses are running on natural gas, l.a. is known for traffic, and there are a lot of people that ride the bus, and now that the buses are running on natural gas, they don't though out as much pollution to the air. [ male announcer ] don't miss red lobster's
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i spend long hours with her checking her heart rate, administering her medication, and just making her comfortable. one night britta told me about a tradition in denmark, "when a person dies," she said, "someone must open the window so the soul can depart." i smiled and squeezed her hand. "not tonight, britta. not tonight." [ female announcer ] to nurses everywhere, thank you, from johnson & johnson. president obama says she seeking a better bargain for the middle class. a bold economic agenda or another speech for history? i am christina roman. this is "your money." investment in intra structure and a secure retirement, and this week at the college in tkaeulzburg, illinois, the president laid out the corner stoerpb of middle class security. >>
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