tv New Day CNN August 16, 2013 3:00am-6:01am PDT
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new jersey governor chris christie is being pressured by the parents of this little girl they say she'll die if she cannot have access to medical marijuana. christie said he'd decide whether to legalize the drug for children. we all know judge judy, tough, great tv, she's even tougher defending her family. her son is a district attorney caught up in a scandal involving his personal trainer. she is speaking out about it and her son is here live to tell his side of the story. >> interesting. >> we've seen the videos of crash test dummies, check this out dummies for pets, a new push to make car restraints safer for animals. >> somehow it bothers you more when it's the dog getting mashed. >> that looks more life like than the other dummies. i digress. >> that was a good looking
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dummy. we begin with hannah anderson making her first public appearance since that dramatic rescue last saturday. here she is showing up at a fund-raiser as police release even more shocking details from inside suspect james dimaggio's home. cnn's casey wian is in san diego with the latest on that. good morning, krasy. >> reporter: good morning, chris. as she hurried past more than a dozen cameras hannah anderson looked like any girl who has been in a terrifying ordeal to look, she looked a little bit scared. hannah anderson's arrival at a fund-raiser for her family came as a surprise to her relatives and friends. >> this night was an unexpected reunion, honestly. all our friends were here. it was like we haven't skipped a beat. >> reporter: the media were invited to boll weevil restaurant in lakeside, california, but weren't allowed inside during the reunion. >> hannah sends her love. she's doing good day by day and
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we'll keep moving forward from here. >> reporter: wearing "hannah strong" and "pray for hannah" t-shirts, neighborhoods, friends and grandparents helped raise money for her mother and brother's funeral. >> i wanted to say thank you all for coming. this is a small community that we're a part of, and the community came together, put it on the street, fund-raiser for hannah and hopefully her future and healing. >> reporter: what has it meant to this community to have to go through this ordeal? >> it's horrifying that that guy did what he did. it's just sickening to me and i want to put them all to rest. >> reporter: the fund raidsing event drew a large crowd, raffle ticket sales, cash donations and 20% of the restaurant sales donated to the anderson family. >> we have a lot of expenses in front of us and right now we're just looking for her future and get her settled. >> reporter: a family hoping to help hannah adjust after she was allegedly kidnapped by her father's best friend. >> you keep hearing the term "uncle jim."
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he was like an uncle jim to them. >> reporter: we're still learning new information about what police discovered as dimaggio's burned down home. this newly released search warrant obtained by cnn affiliate kfmb says police discovered a handwritten note and letters from hannah. the detective say proves dimaggio had control over the house, police recovered incendiary devices leading them to believe the house fire was caused by human actions. once she was inside that fund-raiser, people inside tell us that she was much more relaxed, more comfortable, more like a normal 16-year-old girl and hannah's cousin tells us the family is trag to do their best to keep her busy like planning beach and shopping trips but it's going to be a long road toward an emotional recovery for hannah anderson. chris in. >> for casey, for right now it's all about feeling safe for this young woman. thank you for the reporting. later in the show we'll talk exclusive youly with two of hannah's friends about her
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recovery. also where her head and heart are now in the 8:00 hour. also new the nsa breaking the rules when it comes to your privacy. the agency violated privacy regulations thousands of times each year, this according to an internal audit of documents obtained by "the washington post" from none other than nsa leaker edward snowden. white house correspondent dan lothian is live from martha's vineyard this morning. dan, sounds like there are more big questions for the administration today. >> reporter: that's right, certainly more big questions, kate. you know "the washington post" revealing in this report that the lechl of detail and analysis they uncovered is usually more than typically shared with member of congress or the fisa court that oversees the nation's surveillance programs. >> a general impression has i think taken hold not only among the american public but also around the world that somehow
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we're out there willy-nilly. >> reporter: that was president obama just days ago assuring the american public that the national security agency was not breaching the trust of its citizens. but a new report out today by "the washington post" may raise new concerns. after combing through the trove of documents leaked by former nsa analyst edward snowden "the post" reports the nsa has broken privacy rules thousands of times each year since 2008. "the post" says most of the incidents involved surveillance of americans and foreign intelligence targets on u.s. soil in ways that violate the program's rules. of those incidents, "the post" report most were unintended and many involved failures of due diligence or violations of standard operating procedure such as when an area code mixup caused the nsa to intercept a
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large number of calls from wrau washington, d.c., instead of egypt. the nsa response was quick. overnight the nsa released a statement, "nsa's foreign intelligence surveillance activities are continually audited and overseen internally and externally. when nsa makes a mistake in carrying out its foreign intelligence mission the agency reports the issue internally and to federal overseers and aggressively gets to the bottom of it." now these revelations will no doubt anger critics who have been raising some deep concerns about privacy issues. i did reach out to an official at the white house overnight and so far no comment. >> thank you very much. let's turn to what's being called a tropical annoyance out over mexico's yucatan peninsula. forecasters say it could bring a whole lot of rain to the gulf coast over the weekend. let's bring in our meteorologist here indra petersons. i can't say it but i know she is one. what are we doing with this annoyance and maybe a tropical storm coming this way, what do we know? >> a lot of people paying
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attention to erin because it's named but erin still very far out there, just barely a tropical storm. the tracking of it is expected to strengthen for a day or so but then weaken. even a week from now in the middle of the ocean and weakening depression. there is still a potential for development over the yucatan peninsula. notice the moisture feeding into florida so we're going to have to be monitoring where does the moisture grow and how much rain can it bring to an area all summer long. the models switching from yesterday, we'll look at the moisture monday going through texas. however that's in the future. for right now this weekend, we still have the same stationary front in place. this alone bringing three to five inches of rain. we'll add the tropical moisture bringing heavier rainfall and the upper low will pull the stationary front farther backwards. it brings more rain into the area. you look at the totals, three to five inches, two to four inches in new orleans, charleston, two
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to four inches. here is friday, look at the moisture going into florida and even georgia, into the carolinas. by saturday as that stationary front pulls farther backward notice this tropical moisture can make its way up to the mid-atlantic. nothing as far as strength, we're talking about a couple scattered showers. here we're looking at heavy rain by sunday and monday, some of the moisture going through texas. summarizing all of that, two to four inches, two to five inches without the tropical moisture, put it together, eight, even ten inches of rain to be, that's just this weekend alone, places that had already 15 inches over for the summer. >> soggy weekend for everybody. let's head back overseas with egypt on edge. the muslim brotherhood calling for anger friday. cop tick christian churches have now become a target. bishop says more than 50 churches have been attacked
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since wednesday. reza sayah is live in cairo. i assume residents are bracing to find out what's coming next. >> reporter: that's right, kate. during this conflict we've had so many days where you can feel the tension and anxiety. this feels like another one of those days because once again the stage is set for more violence and clashes between security forces and supporters of the ousted president mohamed morsi and the muslim brotherhood. the brotherhood called for mass demonstrations, the soldiers are deploying on the street. this morning reports of unknown gunmen firing on soldiers in northern egypt, all of this part of a deepening criesiless inin that has this country on edge. >> reporter: a government building in cairo stormed and set on fire. dozens of churches throughout egypt attacked and torched. for islamist supporters of ousted president mohamed morsi a nationwide attack on state
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buildings and christian targets appears to be payback for wednesday's ruthless government crackdown that crushed their six-week long demonstration against the military-backed leadership. dramatic new video from the scorched earth attack shows armored veekds and heavily armed security forces pushing in. protesters armed only with rocks are no match. several are gunned down. the ferocious cairo turned a cairo mosque into a makeshift morgue where families mourned in disbelief. president obama stopped short of cutting $1.5 billion in annual aid to egypt, critical u.s. ally, but he canceled next month's joint military exercises with the egyptian army and delivered a sharp rebuke. >> while we want to sustain our relationship with egypt our
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traditional cooperation cannot continue as usual when civilians are being killed in the streets. >> reporter: egypt's leaders continue to defend the crackdown as a necessary step to stabilize the nation and transition into democracy. we should point out president obama offered his condolences to victims of wednesday's violence but remarkably egypt's interim president has yet to do that and that's why this country is as divided as ever, the muslim brotherhood is as angry as ever. they've called for mass demonstrations today. we'll be watching and tell you what happens. chris? kate? >> reza sayah in cairo, stay safe. let's get to michaela with the other news. >> the former nsa intelligence analyst who exposed the agency's secret service programs now distancing himself from his own father. edward snowden says his dad has
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no special knowledge of his situation and does not speak for him and he claims his father's advisers have been misleading the media. the cause of that deadly u.p.s. cargo plane crash in birmingham, alabama, remains a mystery this morning. investigators finding no evidence of engine failure or pre-impact fire and no sign of a problem with the airport's runway lights. two pilots were killed in that crash. investigators have recovered the cockpit and flight data recorders. they're hoping they will yield some answers. a dramatic day ahead in the court-martial of army major nadal hasan. pathologist on the stand thursday said hasan shot one of his victims 12 times while he was trying to rush him. he's charged with killing 12 people and wounding more than 30 others at a mass shooting. an actor in serious condition after he was hurt last night during a performance of
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"spider-man turn off the dark." his leg became pinned under a piece of equipment. after the accident the rest of the performance was canceled. this show has been plagued by injuries since opening in 2010 including this incident when an actor's harness snapped and he fell 35 feet. it is back to school for students in moore, oklahoma. classes resuming nearly three months after a devastating tornado destroyed two buildings and brought the school year to an abrupt and premature end. several elementary students were among the 25 killed in that tornado. meet the olinguito, a small mammal in colombia. it is the first new mammal to be discovered in 35 years, they are part of the raccoon family, two and a half feet long weighing about two pounds. john berman will have more on
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this amazing new discovery. i wanted to show you, because you asked, mr. cuomo, the latin name ing not pronounce it. do we have a graphic? there it is. >> that's what i thought it was. >> obviously the neblina, we'll short it. >> neblina, means cloudy. >> don't believe the things he says, always. >> check it. >> i hate when he's right. >> i can identify everything, there's like a million scien ti 'tises down there. >> sorry to be debbie downer but he doesn't look much different than other animals. it's kind of like a raccoon, a possum, i don't know. >> for so long it's been confused with the marmet. it's their time. >> that's the guy who wants to be the spokesperson. >> representatives and attorneys
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they'll have within two and a half days. >> and they'll be joining us live thank you so much. >> as soon as i learn a new language. we'll take a break and when we come back medical marijuana for sick children. we've been talking about this with sanjay gupta. desperate father tells governor chris christie don't let my daughter die. will chris christie the governor of new jersey sign that bill? we believe he'll make a decision today. car restraints for dogs, look what happens to your pet in a car accident. more video from these crash tests come up. when you realize you need to switch to verizon,
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♪ welcome back to "new day," everyone. it is "money time." investors licking their wounds after the worst day on wall street in two months. the dow shedding 225 points after two huge firms released gloomy sales forecasts so who do we go to? christine romans, what is going on, summer slump? >> a little summer swoon. we've had one earlier and now getting another one. the bull stumbled. 339 points for the dow in two days. in perspective, you've got stocks still up big time this year. the dow is up 15% still this year. nasdaq, look at that, and tech stocks have had a stealth run since march that has been very, very good. the s&p 500 up 16 so is this bull market still over? so many are worried about the fed. is the ged going to pull back that historic stimulus, is that going to drive up interest rates and hurt things? yesterday we got newspapers the
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job market is improving. that good news fed into the bad news. if the job market is improving the fed can pull back all of its support but we also heard from retailers who say the paycheck to paycheck customer is hurting middle class customers, seem to be careful with their money because they're still hurt so long if the fed pulls back, interest rates start to rise, will it hurt the economy overall, that's what the market is troubled with. >> investors taking a look at what they should do today and next week. chris teen, thank you so much. >> you're welcome. >> just to be clear the people who want the markets to be fair and not have the government get in their way are worried the government will pull back its artificial juicing of the markets for them and as a result they will then punish the rest of us. that's what you're saying >> do you have an opinion on this in. >> no, i think those are the facts as presented. thank you, christine romans. >> i'm waiting for you to go on. a tough swaigs unfolding in new jersey, "please don't let my daughter die" words from a father in new jersey challenging
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chris christie face to face. the man says his little girl desperately needs medical marijuana to survive, and a bill to extend its availability to children is sitting on the governor's desk awaiting his signature and that's the situation. rosa flores joins us with what's going on. this is a compelling story. >> i know and putting politics aside this is an emotional story. you're a dad, you know, as a parent what would you do to save your child's life? confront a governor? well that's exactly what brian wilson did. now i have to warn you, some of the video you're about to see is difficult to watch. >> it's been like two months now. it's well documented. >> these are complicated issues. >> very simple issue. >> i know you think it's simple. >> reporter: a heated exchange between new jersey governor chris christie and a concerned father over medical marijuana. >> have you heard from our doctors? >> i've heard everything that's been put in front of me. >> reporter: christie sitting on
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a medical marijuana bill that brian says could save his daughter's life. 2-year-old vivian suffers from gervais syndrome, a severe form of epilepsy with only 500 cases. her family says she suffers 20 to 70 minor seize yours every day, averaging major seizures like this one every four days. >> she has stopped breathing several times during seizures. she could also die of sudden unexplained death in epilepsy. >> reporter: she sleeps with a heart and oxygen monitor and wears an eye patch because certain patterns in the environment trigger more seizures. her dad says she's been on special different drugs and a special diet but nothing works. wilson wants to try a form of medical marijuana not available in new jersey because he says he's seen it work in other
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children, although the american academy of pediatrics opposes cannabis. governor christie says it's a complicated issue. for the wilsons, it's a matter of life or death. >> please don't let my daughter die, governor. >> new jersey governor chris christie is expected to decide by today whether to sign that medical marijuana bill, so what will the wilsons do if christie vetoes the bill? here's what they tell me, they plan to move to colorado, a state they say has more compassionate state laws. like we were saying this is a very emotional issue for this family because they're seeing the situation with their daughter, they've tried seven different types of medication, a special diet that's high in fat and nothing seems to work. >> and this really hits on an issue that sanjay gupta has taken on in his documentary, this is the exact same disorder that a little girl, charlotte that, sanjay covered and she had 300 seizures a week.
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they were going to put her on almost catemine, such harsh drugs. the only thing that was working for the parents' argument was medical marijuana. that's the question, is there another medication that can help. >> the little girl in that documentary was 6, this little girl is 2 and of course doctors are worried about the developmental stage of these children. >> the parents say -- >> it's a different level of dialogue. we're used to talking about medical marijuana in terms of it helping making you feel better but not as a cure. that's what this father seemed to be presenting. makes for different stakes in the law if there's science behind it as well. either way you got to feel for the governor, he's a family man himself and to have a father come up with desperation in his heart but politics is complicated. you don't get to do the right thing by one person often. >> this is father to father. it's tough. >> today he said he'll discuss
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it tonight and sanjay's special will air tonight again at 10:00. thank you. coming up on "new day" what do we have? >> coming up next more and more pet owners -- take a look at this video -- more are using car restraints for their dog but we have amazing video of crash tests to that put the safety measures to tests and they don't fare too well. >> that's a dummy, doesn't have the markers but that's a crash test dummy so don't worry about that. here is another one you might want to worry about a zoo in china is under fire? what do you see in that cage? clearly a lion, right? >> no. >> but they tried to pass off a dog as a lion and i ain't lyin'. it's right on the screen. i didn't make it up. ♪ welcome to the jungle
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♪ pour me something tall and strong ♪ yes, please. >> here i am. >> oh, sorry. >> welcome back to "new day," it is friday, august 16th. i'm chris cuomo. >> and i walked right into that. i'm kate bolduan here with news anchor michaela pereira. >> gave you a side eye on that one. >> deserved that time. coming up, dog harnesses in cars. we have new video of crash, i guess we call them crash doggy tests suggest the restraints you put your pets in are not keeping you as safe as you think they will in an accident. >> obviously not in the video. prince william is speaking for the first time since
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becoming a dad and he's speaking to cnn's max foster, that's happening monday on "new day," please make sure to tune in. lot of news for you right now, let's get right to michaela. >> good morning, guys. hannah anderson seen in public for the first time since the dramatic rescue from the wilderness. the media was invited, not allowed inside. hannah did not speak publicly. her father did tell reporters though his daughter is happy to be here and doing good. in the 8:00 hour of n nd we're going to speak exclusively with two of hannah's friends so tune in for that. nsa leaker edward snowden distancing himself from his father's legal team. in a statement he tells ""the huffington post"" that laun snowden "do not possess special knowledge regarding my situation." snowden says is he satisfied
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with his own national team of legal advisers. the massachusetts state trooper who leaked dzhokhar s tsarnaev pictures is getting a new job, serving the midnight shift and going back on patrol. spokesperson says this is not punishment but a new assignment. the mother of michael jackson's two oldest children breaking down in tears in court, debbie rowe detailing jackson's battle with chronic pain and overwhelming desire to be a father. she believes certain people need to be parents and jackson was one of them, she said. tom mesereaux will join us at 8:00 eastern. lisa kelly has been battling
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drug addiction and recently checked herself into a rehab facility. according to tmz she passed away in her sleep but the exact cause of her death has not been released. it is hempfest 2013 in seattle and police are seizing opportunity to educate attendees about medical marijuana, pot for personal use, calling it operation orange fingers, handing out 1,000 bags of dor o dorit doritos. each with a summary attached, more munchies, more education. >> you wonder why it's hard to take on as a medical topic. it comes across it's easier for legal use and sanjay gupta says that's not what it's about and that's why we're reairing the documentary. >> it's public perception.
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there are two very different views of this issue. let's move on now, political gut-check all the stories you need to know coming out of washington and around the country. the new report from "the washington post" challenging what we have heard so far from the national security agency and the administration on what data they hold on u.s. citizens, and the report finds since 2008 the nsa's broken privacy rules thousands of times each year. john king is here to break this down. john this is the latest information coming from the nsa leaker edward snowden and these violations we're learning from the "the washington post" seem to range from serious significant violations of law to some of them insignificant, unintentional typographical errors. regardless this is tough for the administration. they've said over and over in every way they can they are not targeting u.s. citizens and that they do this the right way and they are safeguards.
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this is a problem for the president. >> it is a problem for the president, kate. happy friday and it undermines statements the president has made and statements that the leaders of the national security raised. i don't think they delivered this to martha's vineyard but nsa repeatedly broke privacy rules. the agency said sure we make a few mistakes. this audit found thousands of mistakes, some simple hypos, but some of them listening in on the very things looking into the privacy, violating the privacy of american citizens, something they say they're not doing is happening way more often than it should. the other call you've heard the president say repeatedly we tell congress about this, there's this special court that has oversight over all of this. the chief judge tells "the washington post" we have to take what the agency gives us. they report to us and we have to assume that it's true so for those who say we need more transparency and oversight the story in "the post" is going to give them more fodder. the house came close to a vote reining this agency in.
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this will give critics much more ammunition. >> this is a real problem. i want to ask you about chris christie, he made quite a pep talk to some of his party leaders at the republican national committee meeting in boston saying everything from "we need to stop navel gazing" and took some pretty clear jabs at some other 2016 presidential hopefuls like bobby jindal and rand paul. what is chris christie trying to do here? >> he's trying to dominate a conversation where should the party go and who should lead it and he has that personality. if you talk to the reporters who were up at that meeting in boston most of the people in the private session were impressed by the power of his presentation, the passion of his presentation. couple of the state leaders the more conservative folks came out and called him pompous and added others i won't say on morning television show. he basically said stop whining
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and focus on winning elections. the republican party does have to figure out what should we say about immigration, what should we say about gay rights? where are we on cooperating with a democratic president for the next couple years of his term? those are serious policy questions for the party. i don't think chris christie is saying forget about them but he's trying to say republicans in this oh eeyore funk and need to be more optimistic. >> i'd say so. i want to get your take on this one, new issue of "people" magazine, george w. bush's daughter barbara bush says she thinks that hillary clinton is unbelievably accomplished and she wants to see hillary clinton run. barbara bush, she's smart. she must know she's going to stir something up being president bush's daughter. this isn't to say this is a guaranteed vote for hillary clinton. that must be interesting dinner conversation after that. >> how about uncle jeb? >> exactly. >> her her namesake, barbara bush said not that long ago,
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enough, no more bushes running for president. barbara bush says she didn't vote for her but says she's accomplished, she'd like to see her in the race. i'd love to pick up the phone thanksgiving dinner or the next family gathering to see what uncle jeb thinks about all this. lot of people think jeb bush/hillary clinton would be a great debate but you know what? her father says he's out of the limelight, george w. bush doesn't want to talk about these things, maybe the kids thought we'll fill that vacuum. >> she's often devoiding the spotlight but making news today. john king have a good weekend. >> mischief, misclaehief, misch. >> the bushes raised their kids to say not look at it in terms of parties but people. >> and be independent and form your own opinion. >> if anything the next generation is not big into partisanship anyway. we learn more and more both
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parties seem pretty much the same. we're going to take a little break. when we come back we have two stories that will leave you saying are you kidding me. gold medal winning paralympic swimmer barred from competing in the american championships, why, because officials say she's not paralyzed enough. does this look like a lion to you? if so, get glasses or a book on animals because it's not. zoo in china tries to pull a fast one, almost worked until this supposedly ferocious king of the jungle began to bark at the guests. >> that's a chow. >> as if that were the only giveaway. i think farmers care more about the land 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.
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cnn's mohammed jamjoon has more. >> a stronghold for militant shiite group hezbollah, a sunni islamist extremist group has taken credit for the bombing. many i had spoken with fear these types of attacks could continue to happen in the weeks to come. today has been declared a national day of mourning and last night's attack at least 18 people killed, close to 300 injured. back to you, kate. >> mohammed, thank you for that. and to china we go, a zoo in china has temporarily shut down after trying to pass off a very hairy dog as an african lion. more from aanimonita rajpal in kong. >> a zoo in china thought it could have this dog fill in for a lion.
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management got called out after the creature started barking. the zoo admits what it called the king of the jungle is a tib tibetan mastiff belonging to a zoo employee. the zoo has a real lion but it's been temporarily taken to a breeding facility. back to you. >> it's just a placeholder. that's it, just a stand-in. >> doesn't make any sense. i like how we're pinning it on the bark. that's why they didn't know. >> that's the only indicator. thanks, monita. with all the regulations about car safety you might be surprised to learn when it comes to pets there are very few car safety regulations. that may be about to change. the reason why is the increased use of pet harnesses in vehicles. new tests are putting those harnesses to the test. cnn's rene marsh is live in washington with the findings on these harnesses. good morning. >> good morning, chris. warning for those pet owners. one group says the car safety
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restraints may not offer the protection that you shi. the animal advocacy group's crash tests using stuffed animal depict a gruesome and for the test dog with potential head and spinal injuries. >> when i slammed on the brakes to avoid an accident maggie went flying. >> reporter: leslie walkos' cocker spaniel was injured when she got caught in the restraint. tests show what can happen when a dog is launched off the seat during a crash. her organize, the center for pet safety, started testing dog harnesses in 2011. all four tested failed. >> what we're seeing in the testing is even though the dog is attached the dog continues to launch off of the seat. >> reporter: crash tests done by the center for pet safety found the majority of the restraints on the market don't keep your pet on the seat at the point of impact, but manufacturers for restraints just like this one say they could actually save your pet's life. >> there's been a lot of
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innovation that continues and we keep on every day continuing to improve these. >> reporter: this company's video shows a brown dog restrained and a black and white dog untethered that goes flying. the owner says any harness that keeps a dog from becoming a distraction to the driver makes things safer. >> 85% of people are doing nothing to restraint their dogs. the dog is running around in the car, they're a distraction. >> reporter: he says not every manufacturer does testing and wants an industry standard. for now she says it's up to owners to educate themselves. you want to first look for the crash video, posted by the manufacturer to their website, if the dog launches off the seat there's a risk there. >> the group says this isn't just a concern for the animal's safety. if the dog actually launches off of the seat during a crash, that could also injure the people in the car. chris, kate? >> good points.
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one flagrant omission by you, however. that dog, that dog in the shot, that was a beautiful little poochie. is that your dog in. >> yes, that's my little baby and she wanted to know what's the per diem from "new day." >> she gets none now because you blew her off. she should sue you. what's her name? >> paris. she made her debut on "new day" today. >> very exciting, big day for paris. >> good stuff. >> thanks so much, rene. coming up next on "new day" a new york prosecutor suing a local sheriff for claiming he interfered in a case and judge judy is involved here. she has the district attorney's back. she is his mother, after all, her son, adam levy, will join us live in the next hour. they're mad as heck and not going to take it anymore, we're talking sheep. who knows what they are protesting but they are speaking in one voice.
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or "put your feet in the sand at a waldorf astoria." never stop vacationing, dan. book during the great getaway for great rates at our ten top hotel brands. travel is calling you to hiltongreatgetaways.com. brown: on my third day as principal, i met with the state. students had fallen behind, and morale was low. my first job was getting everyone to believe... that we could turn this around. i needed my staff to see what was possible. turning around a school, is not some, mystical, magical thing. it does take hard, dedicated work each day. i was a chemistry major in college, and then... i joined teach for america. that's the reason i'm here.
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what about your mom? >> we actually had, i wish we had played it from the beginning because it's so good. >> how good could it -- >> a response from the sheepherder it's fantastic. >> they say the same thing every time. it's all about the question. >> this had me rolling on the floor in my office earlier this morning. maybe the hours is what did it to me. >> no, it's hilarious. here comes one sheep i'm going to get you. >> the guy in the front who has only distinguished himself. that's what sheep do is they follow. >> that's our must see moment today, watch it again on your own time. >> in new zealand they say "who's your daddy" i thought that was an american thing. the world is get so long small. good stuff. >> thanks. coming up next on "new day." >> did the nsa break the law. report based on documents supplied by edward snowden claims the agency violated
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americans' privacy thousands of times for years. we'll give you the details in a live report just ahead. also coming up hannah anderson spotted in public for at the first time days after being rescued from a kidnaper who allegedly killed her mother and brother. we'll find out how she's doing from two of her friends. meet the newest member of the quicken loans family: j.d. power and associates has ranked quicken loans highest in the nation in customer satisfaction... i say "family," because we've been blessed with this honor for 3 years in a row... rest assured we'll treat all of your mortgage needs with tender loving care. amazing client satisfaction: it's a quicken loans family value. call 800-quicken or go to quickenloans.com
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to experience it for yourself. delivering mail, medicine and packages, yet they're closing thousands of offices, slashing service and want to layoff over 100,000 workers. the postal service is recording financial losses, but not for reasons you might think. the problem? a burden no other agency or company bears. a 2006 law that drains $5 billion a year from post office revenue while the postal service is forced to overpay billions more into federal accounts. congress created this problem, and congress can fix it. a quarter million tweeters is beare tweeting. and 900 million dollars are changing hands online. that's why hp built a new kind of server. one that's 80% smaller. uses 89% less energy. and costs 77% less. it's called hp moonshot. and it's giving the internet the room it needs to grow. this&is gonna be big. hp moonshot.
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it's time to build a better enterprise. together. if yand you're talking toevere rheuyour rheumatologistike me, about trying or adding a biologic. this is humira, adalimumab. this is humira working to help relieve my pain. this is humira helping me through the twists and turns. this is humira helping to protect my joints from further damage. doctors have been prescribing humira for over ten years. humira works by targeting and helping to block a specific source of inflammation that contributes to ra symptoms. for many adults, humira is proven to help relieve pain and stop further joint damage. humira can lower your ability to fight infections, including tuberculosis. serious, sometimes fatal events, such as infections, lymphoma, or other types of cancer, have happened. blood, liver and nervous system problems, serious allergic reactions, and new or worsening heart failure have occurred. before starting humira , your doctor should test you for tb. ask your doctor if you live in or have been to a region
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where certain fungal infections are common. tell your doctor if you have had tb, hepatitis b, are prone to infections, or have symptoms such as fever, fatigue, cough, or sores. you should not start humira if you have any kind of infection. ask your doctor if humira can work for you. this is humira at work. get this one, a glimmer of hope is actually crushing the dreams of one 18-year-old swimmer, victoria arlen has been paralyzed from the waist down since she was 11. she had her bags packed for the paralympic trips in montreal and now she's being told to go home.
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why? andy scholes, make sense of this for me, please. >> this is very sad. basically what the international paralympic committee is saying since victoria arlen has a slight chance of walking again she's not allowed to compete in any paralympic event. right before the london games the ipc ruled her ineligible to compete but an arbitrator overruled them. arlen won four medals in the games but she has been banned once again, on her facebook page she said she is heartbroken by the ruling. soon major league baseball teams won't have to leave because of bad decisions by the umpires. commissioner selig said baseball will have an expanded replay. coaches will get one challenge in the first "360" innings and two more from the seventh inning on, great news for baseball fans, no longer will teams lose games because the umpires made
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the wrong call. >> do they get the cool flags like the nfl? >> maybe the manager also throw a red baseball on the field. >> some of those managers, throwing it a little too hard. >> chucking them. thanks, andy, have a great weekend. stop stealing my words. >> buy you a coke. >> it's time for the rock block. he leaves me every time. first up, michaela. >> so agreeable that cuomo. from "the new york times" big money from the city of brotherly love, forced to borrow $50 million just to open public schools on time. from the "l.a. times" new research reignited the debate over whether nasa's voyager 1 spacecraft left the solar system. there's no doubt it is the farthest manmade object from earth. in "the washington post" the national zoo on round the clock panda pregnancy watch. volunteers are monitoring live panda cams as they await the
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giant panda's gestation period. from pandas to bulls stock futures are higher this morning but investors are recovering from two big days of triple dingity losses. the dow lost 225 points but the dow still up 15% for the year. shrimp prices skyrocketing, all-time highs for shrimp, six bucks a pound, that's up 56% a year ago. disease hitting shrimp in asia. the producer is getting the blame. take a look at this skinniest home in new york city, just sold that skinny little home $3.25 million. it's 9'6" wide, three bedrooms, two baths, perfect starter home for $3 million. let's get to indra petersons with the weather. >> no problem, couple million. we're talking about tropical storm erin this morning, far out in the ocean even by the middle of next week. still expected to dissipate into a depression and stay in the middle of the ocean. we'll shift our focus to the
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tropical moisture in the yucatan peninsula, expected to combine with a front in the southeast. that means heavy rain stretching from louisiana all the way into the carolinas. couple scattered showers are possible in the northeast but generally speaking gorgeous. we're talking about 70s and 80s. temperatures below normal and i always want to end on a good note especially in the rock block. >> rocking into a beautiful weekend. thanks so much, indra. we're close to the top of the hour, time for the top news. right now we're just looking for her future and getting her settled. >> moving forward. hannah anderson stepping out in public for the first type since being rescued. new details on her captor as we hear from her father on how she is doing. too far, a blistering, new report says the nsa broke privacy rules of its surveillance program thousands of times each year, spying on americans it shouldn't be. new discovery and it's a
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cute one, meet the mammal who has been hidden for centuries just being found by mankind now. where has he been all this time? >> your "new day" starts right now. >> announcer: what you need to know. >> our traditional cooperation cannot continue as usual when civilians are being killed in the streets. >> announcer: what you just have to see. this is "new day" with chris cuomo, kate bolduan, and michaela pereira. >> all right, everybody. friday is here. friday is here. good morning. welcome back to "new day." it's august 16th, 7:00 in the east, i'm chris cuomo. >> good morning, everyone, i'm kate bolduan. we're here with news anchor michaela pereira. coming up in this hour chris christie taking shots at members of his own party. we'll have the latest from the new jersey governor who is laying out what he calls a winning strategy for republicans. this as president obama is speaking out on the chaos in
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egypt, what can and should the u.s. do? we'll have live team coverage coming up. then we've got some significant weather woes to talk about here. the southeast could get drenched this weekend again, rain the last thing the region needs with flash flooding warnings and a tropical system on the radar. the question is can they handle it? judge judy speaking out in defense of her son, adam levy, is he a prosecutor currently suing a local sheriff for saying he was interfering with a case with his personal trainer. he'll join us live this morning. first hannah anderson seen in public for the first time since her dramatic rescue. the 16-year-old kidnapping victim attending a neighborhood fund-raiser. at the same time police released shocking new details about what they found inside the home of her alleged abductor. casey wian is joining us live from san diego with more this morning. good morning, casey. >> reporter: good morning, kate. as hannah anderson rushed past more than a dozen news cameras, family members tell her she
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really wanted to make this appearance so she could thank all of those who supported her and are continuing to support her throughout this ordeal. hannah anderson's arrival at a fund-raiser for her family came as a surprise to her relatives and friends. >> this night was an unexpected reunion, honestly. all our friends were here. it was like we haven't skipped a beat. >> reporter: the media were invited to boll weevil restaurant in lakeside, california, but weren't allowed inside during anderson's reunion. >> hannah sends her love. she's doing good day by day and we'll keep moving forward from here. >> reporter: wearing "hannah strong" and "pray for hannah" t-shirts, neighbors, friends and the teenager's grandparents helped raise money for anderson's mother and brother's funeral. >> i wanted to say thank you all for coming. this is a small community that we're a part of, and the community came together, put on this great fund-raiser for hannah and hopefully her future and healing.
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>> reporter: what has it meant to this community to have to go through this ordeal? >> it's horrifying that that guy did what he did. it's just sickening to me and i want to put them all to rest. >> reporter: the fund-raising event drew a large crowd, raffle ticket sales, cash donations and 20% of the restaurant sales donated to the anderson family. >> we have a lot of expenses in front of us and right now we're just looking for her future and get her settled. >> reporter: a family hoping to help hannah adjust after she was allegedly kidnapped by her father's best friend. >> you keep hearing the term "uncle jim." he really was like an uncle jim to them. >> reporter: meanwhile we're still learning new information about what police discovered as dimaggio's burned down home. this newly released search warrant obtained by cnn affiliate kfmb says police discovered a handwritten note and dnc letters from hannah, the detective say proves dimaggio had dominion and control over that house. police also recovered incendiary devices leading them to believe the house fire was caused by human actions.
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some of the other items recovered during that search, a box that once contained handcuffs, lots of ammunition and empty boxes of camping gear. chris in. >> casey, thank you very much for the report. hannah looks great but obviously with this kind of return to the public spotlight here raises questions, is this helping or hurting. let's get some take from an expert on this, we're signed by psychotherapist robi ludwig. >> thank you, great to be here. >> i know you need to sit with hannah and evaluate her to know what's going on clinically. >> right. >> looking at the outward manifestati manifestations, the appearance, the online interview, the instagram photos, too soon, therapeutic? what's the line. >> i think it's healthy and a sign of ego strength. she's a 16-year-old girl and wants to do what normal 16-year-olds do. i think it's really smart of her to talk, to try to put what happened to her in perspective
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and the way 16-year-olds do that, they turn to social media. she wants a support system, she's getting that when she's talking and interacting with people so that's healthy. >> the suggestion would be that when something like this has happened there should be quiet time, there should be isolation. it must be so difficult, who knows what happened to her. >> that's never the recommendation, by the way. i think people look at her, she looks great. she's a pretty girl, and people can't come to terms with this image, look at what happened to her. shouldn't she be in a corner somewhere crying and looking horrible. >> yes, and it fuels suspicions. >> right, so let answer not go there and judge because many people when they have horrible things happen to them, it doesn't show on the outside. they have scars on the inside that people can't see. >> important point actually to even make twice so two people, especially online, that's my concern about her being online, it can be a very unfriendly place. >> it can. >> filled with the boast
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baseless, dark speculation. is she at risk there that someone's going to say what was going on for real, i don't buy this. stupid things. >> she could but this might give an opportunity to share her story, to have a voice, to take control right now in a way that she hasn't been able to over the last several weeks or however long this was happening. now yes, that is the danger of social media. you never know what you're going to get but i think hannah's story is so horrible that the people she's talking to seem to be providing her with support and an opportunity to talk. >> could there be a little bit of a delay here also, extended trauma or shock from what has happened? >> yes, absolutely. >> things may change for her over time, that's something the family have to manage. >> this is a definite. this is a girl probably in denial and shock. what has happened to her probably doesn't even feel real yet and that really her grieving might take place down the road, five years down the road. this is not the most difficult
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time for somebody who is grieving because you have a lot of supportive people around you, a lot of attention. the difficulty comes when everybody forgets and you're left in your life one year, two years, three years down the road, and the people in the crowds are not there. >> important point, and instruction to the media, it's one thing for hannah to seek out the attention but to the extent that we can control ourselves the more space she has the better, yes? >> and let's get knowledgeable about what trauma victims look like. they're not crying in a corner necessarily and it doesn't mean they're not struggling. >> don't judge what you see on the outside. >> exactly. >> robi ludwig thank you. >> thank you, chris. coming up we'll speak exclusively with two of hannah's friends about her recovery so we'll get that perspective, coming up 8:00 a.m. eastern. also new this morning reports the national security agency has broken privacy rules thousands of times a year. "the washington post" is revealing this from new audits obtained from nsa leaker edward snowden. your information could have been intercepted due to some
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significant errors by the nsa. white house correspondent dan lothian is live from massachusetts this morning with much more. good morning, dan. >> good morning, kate. "the washington post" says the level of detail and analysis in these leaked documents is more than is routinely shared with congress or the fisa court that oversees the nation's surveillance programs. >> a general impression has i think taken hold not only among the american public but also around the world that somehow we're out there willy-nilly. >> reporter: that was president obama just days ago assuring the american public that the national security agency was not breaching the trust of its citizens. but a new report out today by "the washington post" may raise new concerns. after combing through the trove of documents leaked by former nsa analyst edward snowden "the post" reports the nsa has broken privacy rules thousands of times each year since 2008. "the post" says most of the
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incidents involved surveillance of americans and foreign intelligence targets on u.s. soil in ways that violate the program's rules. of those incidents, "the post" report most were unintended and many involved failures of due diligence or violations of standard operating procedure such as when an area code mixup caused the nsa to intercept a large number of calls from washington, d.c., instead of egypt. the nsa response was quick. overnight the agency released a poignant statement. "nsa's foreign intelligence collection activities are continually audited and overseen internally and externally. when nsa makes a mistake in carrying out its foreign intelligence mission, the agency reports the issue internally and to federal overseers and aggressively gets to the bottom of it." president obama has recently taken steps in an effort, he says, to be more transparent on
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these surveillance issues, including forming a high level, independent group to review the nation's surveillance technologies, but i'll tell you this latest revelation will no doubt anger some critics who have deep concerns about privacy issues and have been calling for greater oversight. chris? >> dan, appreciate the reporting from you this morning. we'll turn now to the weather, the last thing the people in the southeast need, more rain, but unfortunately, they're going to get it. even more flooding, a very real threat today. plus we're watching a storm brewing right now over mexico that could slam right into the gulf states. indra petersons our meteorologist has told me all of this. what is the insight into the situation? >> it is not a good situation or a bad situation expected to get worse. look at the reason why, talking about this moisture over the yucatan peninsula. it has about a 50% chance of developing, regardless of whether or not it does all of the that tropical moisture feeding into florida, expected to get closer each day.
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with that we'll talk about flooding concerns into the southeast. little change from yesterday instead of seeing that low, it's expected to go towards texas by monday, so we're going to be watching that as we get closer toward the end of the weekend but how about the weekend? we already have the stationary front in place. we'll add the tropical moisture and add a low, that will pull back the stationary front a hint to allow more rain into the gulf states. not a good thing considering they're really over the amount of rainfall already, adding two to four inches around new orleans, charleston, another two to four inches possible, some places eight or ten inches more when you combine the two. here's friday, moisture filling into florida, georgia and up to the carolinas. by saturday enough of that moisture will make its way up into the mid-atlantic. by sunday you'll see it get closer, you can almost see this starting to make its way toward texas. we're still talking about rain every single day into the gulf states and i want you to look at this. these are the numbers already for june, how far they've been
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above since june, tallahassee almost 20 inches above adding another 8, 10 inches to that, that cannot be a good thing. >> 20 inches my goodness, thanks so much. we'll be tracking that and a lot of other news developing. straight to michaela for the latest. good morning to you and good morning to you at home. fears of more deadly violence in egypt. the muslim brotherhood vows a friday of anger, protesting the military's violent crackdown wednesday on supporters of ousted president mohamed morsi, they killed nearly 600 people and injuring thousands. reza sayah is in cairo this morning. >> reporter: michaela, yet another explosive day is here in egypt, and a lot of people are bracing themselves for the possibility of more violence and more clashes between security forces and supporters of the oursed president mohamed morsi and the muslim brotherhood. there's no question with the bloody crackdown on wednesday the brotherhood was knocked down. they took a big blow but today they're going to try to pick
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themselves back up to show the world they're still fighting. they called for mass demonstrations throughout the country including here in cairo. some of those demonstrations under way. i believe we have live pictures of one of the marches taking place in the city of alexandria in northern egypt. here in cairo the meeting point for the marches, the final meeting point is a place called ramses square only a few miles away from tahrir square which has become the home base of the anti-morsi protesters. clearly the government doesn't want the pro-morsi supporters to get near tahrir square. that's why scores of soldiers have blocked every entrance to tahrir square. lot of concern about the clashes in the hours ahead. >> we'll be watching, thank you. the cause of that deadly u.p.s. cargo plane crash in birmingham, alabama, remains a
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mystery this morning. investigators finding no evidence of engine failure or evidence of engine fire prior to impact and they have ruled out any problems with runway lights. answers may be found in the cockpit voice and flight data recorders which have now been recovered. four people injured in two separate grizzly bear attacks. in yellow stone two hikers were attacked by a mother bear protecting one of her cubs and idaho's island park reservoir a couple of private contractors unknowingly surprised a sleeping grizzly. all injuries considered non-life-threatening. a 6-year-old great grandmother is the 16th woman who accuse san diego mayor bob filner of sexual harassment. she says he once kissed her and asked if she thought she could go eight hours in one night. she said she had butterflies at work wondering what the mayor would do next.
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area 51 the mystery finally revealed, newly declassified cia documents shine light on the infamous u.s. base in nevada, long thought by ufo enthusiasts to hold secrets about alien spacecraft but the documents show the secrets the governments held close to the vest had to do with the testing of different generations of spy planes including the u2 going back decades. a humpback whale is free after being caught up in a shark night off australia's gold coast. the 26-foot long wale got stuck in a net and took marine rescuers about 15 minutes to cut away the net and the whale was able to swim away. >> at least they were able to catch that one. >> it's a fine line trying to protect humidity from the dangers of wildlife and sharks but at the same time endangering other marine life. >> endangering them when they go
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to rescue, great work. coming up next on "new day" new jersey governor chris christie dropping some hints about 2016 as he weighs in on what the republican party needs to do to save itself. plus a john berman special, just as chocolate once met peanut butter so a radio khan meets a deadly bear -- a deadly bear, a teddy bear, but you don't eat it either. this is the cute little critter they just identified it, a new species. what is it? berman will tell us. ♪
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who have already called about this insurance. whether you're getting new insurance or supplementing what you already have, call now and ask one of their representatives about a plan that meets your needs. so, what are you waiting for? go call now! we'll finish up here. welcome back to "new day" everyone. republican governor chris christie has a new message for his party. he's a winner. speaking before a closed door meeting with republican national
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committee he rallied his base or i guess his colleagues in a campaign style speech and he had some pretty pointed jabs for some of his potential 2016 rivals, though not saying them by name. here ana navarro, cnn comment e commentator and republican strategist. hello. >> hello, darling. >> what do you make of chris christie, seems like a pep talk and case of top love. >> it is the epitome of chris christie. it's chris christie unvarnished, it's what you expect from chris christie. don't invite the guy over for lunch if you want some sugar-coated speech with subtle tones. we have to figure out and interpret the modern art. the guy will tell you exactly what he's thinking and what he's saying is i am growing the party and he's right. he's doing better in new jersey right now than most republicans do with women, with hispanics he's got great numbers w african-americans he's doing better than most republicans but those are groups that, if any
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republican national candidate was able to grow the tent, we would actually have a shot at winning the white house. it's nicer to be inside the white house than out. >> i think that is a good point. here is the thing, how do you go from it's great, you can give great speeches, can he give a great speech and he can make a big point. how do you go from speeches to executing something and creating change party wide? that's the tough thing. >> well i think winning the election strongly, with strong numbers this year is going to make a huge difference. you're talking about new jersey, okay? electing a republican statewide in new jersey is not easy and should not be seen as chopped liver politically. we're in the middle of a senate race in new jersey. nobody even knows who the republican candidate is. >> that's true. >> here we have a governor who is monopolizing, dominating in the election. >> segue, is he strong enough to beat hillary clinton, that's our next topic on the horizon, what
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do you see there? how does it size up? >> i think we have to wait and see. i don't think hillary clinton is -- first i'm not convinced she runs and second of all i don't think she's as unbeatable and invincible as people want to portray her. remember we've been through the clinton invincibility thing once before. didn't turn out all that well. >> you don't think she's as strong as she was running against then senator obama? >> i'd say she's rusty. being in the state department is different than being in politics. when is the last time hillary clinton debated. >> she had that nice senate hearing. >> what do you think of what barbara bush said in "people" magazine, latest issue, she thinks hillary clinton's incredibly accomplished and she wants to see her run. >> i think any time anybody named barbara bush opens her mouth, we should be in fear, whether it's the grandmother or the granddaughter, because they will say whatever they want to say. but i think barbara bush is
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right. i think a lot of people want to see hillary run. i'd like to see hillary run. doesn't mean i'm going to vote for her or support her but i think she would make a great candidate and she's the one that got away, let's see what she's got to offer. >> another first lady in an upcoming "parade" magazine article says she thinks the world is ready for a female president. there's the cover of the magazine, is there a sense that i think women anecdotally will say yes it's our time. you know, we've had this conversation, chris cuomo but now we're going into chick talk. i think it would be great to have a woman president but the right woman president, same thing as an hispanic president. i don't want to vote forren is just because they're a woman or just because they're hispanic or just because they're african-american. i want to vote for them because they are the right candidate and that happens to be part of what they are but not define who they
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are. >> and it is the woman republican candidate, where is she i want to know? >> how about an italian catholic president. >> put them under contract for another two years. very tricky. >> well played. ana, thank you very much. >> you're still considering it. >> despite my exposure i'm still about 15% man although every day you guys are bringing me over to that side. >> i think your wife appreciates you getting in touch with the feminine side. you still have some work to do. >> if a wife appreciates anything about a husband you take it. >> ana navarro, thank you. >> have a great weekend, always good to have you on "new day." when we come back, judge judy, she does not mince words. she's going all out but guess for whom, her son, a district attorney, he is in a big lawsuit that's going on. we'll tell you about it. he'll be here as well to plead his case. it looks like a bear maybe, maybe a raccoon. i'm not sure but scientists
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identified a new i guess adorable species of mammal. ♪ norfolk southern what's your function? ♪ ♪ hooking up the country helping business run ♪ ♪ build! we're investing big to keep our country in the lead. ♪ load! we keep moving to deliver what you need. and that means growth, lots of cargo going all around the globe. cars and parts, fuel and steel, peas and rice, hey that's nice! ♪ norfolk southern what's your function? ♪ ♪ helping this big country move ahead as one ♪ ♪ norfolk southern how's that function? ♪
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a quarter million tweeters is beare tweeting. and 900 million dollars are changing hands online. that's why hp built a new kind of server. one that's 80% smaller. uses 89% less energy. and costs 77% less. it's called hp moonshot. and it's giving the internet the room it needs to grow. this&is gonna be big. hp moonshot. it's time to build a better enterprise. together. ingeniously uses radar to alert you to possible collision threats. and in certain situations it can apply the brakes. introducing the all-new 2014 chevrolet impala with available crash imminent braking. always looking forward. while watching your back. that's american ingenuity to find new roads. and recently the 2013 chevrolet impala received
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♪ welcome back to nld nd everyo"new day," everybody. it is friday august 16th, i'm kate bolduan. >> i'm chris cuomo here with news anchor michaela pereira. >> i like the dramatic pause. >> i'm trying to do james earl jones, never works. >> never will. tough talking judge judy is coming to the defense of the man you see her kissing, her son, the prosecutor from westchester
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county in new york. the question is why? a very heated lawsuit going on. the allegation, the prosecutor says the local sheriff there defamed him in the course of an investigation so he's saying you better put up or shut up, as his mom would say. he's here to tell us about the case. plus prince william speaking for the first time since becoming a dad to cnn's max foster happening monday on "new day." first to michaela pereira for the top news happening now. >> kidnapped survivor hannah anderson seen in public for the first time since her dramatic rescue from the idaho wilder patience. she attended a fund raiser in lakeside, california. cameras were not allowed inside the restaurant, though. coming up at the top of the hour right here a cnn exclusive, we will hear from two of hannah's friends who attended last night's fund-raiser. the nsa routinely breaks privacy rules thousands of times an year according to an internal audit and other documents
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obtained by "the washington pos post". many cases involved failures of due diligence or violations of standard operating procedure. a utilities contractor has been cited for safety violations in connection with an explosion at a kansas city restaurant in february. one person was killed, a dozen wounded. the federal government says an employee of the contracting company laying fiber optic cable punctured a gas line prior to the explosion and the contractor has the responsibility to make sure its employees are properly trained in hazardous work environment. a disturbing new report about security at the nation's nuclear reactors concludes more than ten years after 9/11 the facilities are vulnerable to terror attacks, theft of bomb grade fuel and sabotage that could lead to nuclear meltdowns. this report was conducted by the university of texas at the request of the pentagon. however the nuclear regulatory commission disputes its conclusion. two teenagers hitched a ride on the back of a tractor
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trailer. one eyewitness could not believe his eyes that the boys acted like they didn't have a care in the world. the driver of the truck was made aware, he slowed down and apparently that's when the teens jumped off and ran away. police say not only is this illegal, but incredibly stupid. we concur. finally, philadelphia eagles rookie offensive lineman lane johnson is huge but guess what? his kid has massive mitts on him. this is his newborn son, he's a week old! he looks like he could follow in his father's massive footsteps. they want that guy to catch just anything. >> his hands are already large. >>er this he the size of yours. >> one of the pictures is closer to the camera but the other one in the background, look at the size of his hands. >> look at his face, so cute. baby, i love ya! coming up next on "new day" judge judy defends her son with
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tough talk. we'll talk to him live, the district attorney, about the new lawsuit that he has filed against a local sheriff. we want to hear that. and also the list keeps getting longer, a great grandmother who works at city hall is accusing embattled san diego mayor bob filner of inappropriate behavior. got to show the animal again when you got a cute one you go with it. it is a rodent still a new species freshly discovered, some say raccoon plus teddy bear equal this is thing. we'll tell you about this. alert.
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lawsuit. but first cnn's pamela brown is joining us with more on the story. hi, pamela. >> hi there. don't want to mess with judge judy, the tough as nails tv judge had a few tough words for anyone who tries to take a zwab jab at her son's character. her son and new york district attorney filed a $5 million lawsuit filed a suit against the sheriff for local defamation. >> you're a 19-year-old zero. >> reporter: judy is the tough talking gavel-pounding judge you don't want to cross. >> listen to me carefully. >> reporter: the daytime tv court show "judge judy." >> you're an idiot! >> reporter: now she's weighing in on a legal matter involving her own son, a new york state district attorney who slapped a million-dollar lawsuit against sheriff donald smith for defamation. to read in the newspaper statements made by don smith that i interfered with, used my office and my title as district
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attorney to influence his investigation, i was outraged. >> reporter: smith has accused levy of interfering with a child rape case against his former trainer alexander hassou in march, accused of raping a 13-year-old girl on two occasions in 2010. levy accused himself from the rape case as soon as he learned hassou was under investigation and this 30-page complaint filed he alleges defamatory comments were made public. including "if he could have his own way mr. hossu would never have been brought to justice." he says the lawsuit is politically motivated. >> it's obviously intended to influence the outcome of the upcoming sheriff's election. >> reporter: in a statement judge judy said this about her son, "his moral compass is dead center." she added "when someone attacks his character professionally or personally, they best be prepared to back it up, shut up
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or pay up." it appears the two have a history of not getting along, prior to the lawsuit, on issues related to the county. the complaint alleges smith's outward hostility toward levy has intensified ever since 2011 but again the sheriff denies defaming levy. chris? >> all right, pamela, let's hear from the man himself, the plaintiff in the case, putnam county district attorney adam levy joining us now. good to have you, mr. district attorney. >> thank you so much, chris. >> putting your mom to the side, she's just the sizzle in this. love your mom, would never want to be in front of her bench but i'm here with you. forget about the merits of the suit. why are you doing this? why bring the attention to a situation that you believe doesn't deserve attention? >> well because the local sher any iff in put ma'am county don smith needed to be held accountable for what he did to me as the sitting d.a. by accusing me of criminal acts and quite frankly there's no greater
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harm to a district attorney, to his reputation, that i worked so hard to build than accusing me of interfering with, of influencing a serious child rape case to protect a friend and to violate the oath of office that i took in 2008. he's going to be held accountable. >> all right so let's go at what are the biggest allegations coming from the sheriff. he says he believes you were harboring an illegal immigrant who was part of this criminal investigation for rape of a minor. he does have his address, your address on his license. how do you explain the situation? >> the address is a red herring. the address has no issue with respect to the lawsuit. the lawsuit itself centers around the fact that don smith accused me after he arrested a family friend for raping a 12-year-old, accused me of using the authority of my office to influence the investigation and to obstruct his investigation to benefit my friend, and quite
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frankly, it's 100% false. he knew it to be false and he did it simply because he and i haven't seen eye to eye in the past with respect to law enforcement initiatives. >> when you read the complaint you take time to say there's not a lot of evidence about this and he should have known there was no reason for this case to go at this particular time. why spend any of your time defending the defendant in this rape case? >> chris, i'm not defending mr. hossu. keep in mind when i learned according to my suit, when i learned about this incident, about this case, the investigation was march 13th. i learned about it and immediately i did what i was legally, morally and ethically required to do. i recused myself and my office. i could not possibly prosecute a case against alex hossu, who was a family friend. i contacted the westchester county d.a.'s office immediately, made sure that we had an assistant d.a. available to assist the sheriff in his investigation. i then made myself available to westchester, made my family available and i provided westchester county, the d.a.'s
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office with additional information to investigate other potential victims, if they existed. i did everything i was required to do as a d.a., and it's because there's nothing more important to me than protecting children from sexual molesters. it's easy. >> that's why this gets so confusing. the other part of the sheriff's allegation is this guy's an illegal immigrant, this is the district attorney, he's putting him up in his house. >> listen it's nonsense. alex hossu was in the country for 12 years, had a valid new york state driver's license, licensed by the state of connecticut to own a business, he was married to an american woman. >> the feds are after him for being illegally here. >> the fed has issued an i.c.e. hold because he's not in the country legally. >> not in the country illegally or legally? did you no he that? >> of course not. don smith and his department responded last year to mr. hossu's house, not my house, mr. hossu's house.
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they went in to respond to a 911 call. they had mr. hossu right there, asking him questions, responding. they didn't know he was an illegal immigrant. how should i? it's impossible to know. >> well unless the guy is a close friend of yours and you would have that discussion. >> if he told me, which i never did. it's a red herring, it's not the issue. immigration has conducted an investigation. they have discounted all of sheriff smith's allegations. he's presented no evidence at all that i harbored, aided and abetted. once again it was just his attempt to tarnish my reputation. >> so this lawsuit is about your reputation and maintaining it in a public bay. there's $5 million attached to the suit. you say there's an explanation for that. you're not looking to get rich here. >> no, any money i receive from don smith i am donating to the women's center for battered women and the child advocacy center for children who have been sexually and physically abused. this suit is to hold don smith accountable for his lies, his manipulation, which in the end only adversely affect victims of sexual abuse. >> and worth the risk of making
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and giving it attention like this? >> if in fact i did what he accused me of, chris, would i be shining a light on myself? would i be bringing this lawsuit or trying to keep it down low? the fact i am trying to gain attention for what happened is to show what he said was absolutely false. think about it, don smith, the sheriff of putnam county, carries a gun, a badge and has the right to take away people's civil liberties. what he falsely accused me of would suggest if he did it to me he'll do it to you. be very careful about who you select as your sheriff. >> mr. district attorney, thank you for being on the show. >> thank you very much. >> appreciate it. kate? >> thanks, chris. you might think if you take one part raccoon, one part teddy bear you might have one hard to miss animal. this little critter seemed to go undetected until now. scientists announced this new species of mammal and it turns out it has been hiding in plain sight. "early start" anchor john berman joins us with more.
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we can dispute the pronunciation of the name later. >> you call him a little critter and in the science community we call this mammal history. it has been more than 35 years since we last identified a new mammal here in the western hemisphere. it is safe to say this little ball of fur is a big, furry deal. grumpy cat might be gripping, cute dogs captivating but there's a groundbreaking development in the world of develop, meet the olinguito. we didn't know it existed. researchers announced the rare discovery thursday. it's long thought to be his sister species the olingo. >> you have not seen an animal quite like this. >> reporter: weighing in at two pounds with wide, big brown eyes, even the claws are cute. >> it is not dangerous. this creature the olinguito
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belongs to a group of mammals we call the carnivores but it's primarily a fruit eater or eating nectar. >> a cross between a house cat and teddy bear has been hidden all this time, spotted in the high tree tops in the tree forests of colombia and ecuador. it's active at night in trees surrounded by a dense fog. you can barely see this one leaping across the rain forest. >> so a rain forest or ocean habitat where we often find new species but we have discovered new species in the united states every year. >> reporter: back in 2010 the vooncera, a cat-like carnivore belonging to a family of mongoose type animals was discovered in madagascar. that was so 2010. we are now clearly in the reign of the olinguito. that corwin guy says it differently, we call it
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olinguito. they share about 9% of their dna with olingo. humans share 99% of our dna with chimpanzees and in case you are wondering there are already people trying to monetize on the cuteness, the zoo in north carolina zoo down there is selling little stuffed ones but doing it to raise money to protect the animals. >> seriously, am i the only person that does not find this animal adorable? >> not your type. >> not my type. anything associated with raccoon i get the heebie-jeebies. >> i'm fascinated they could find something new all this time. where was it? >> that was my thing, curiosity. >> you don't think it's new? >> a lot of you are ignoring me in our morning tease from "early start" to "new day" i was saying that. i've been told since they didn't just spot it. it takes time to classify. >> you want to know the fascinating thing about this? >> as opposed to what i say.
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>> my thing these things may have been in zoos in the u.s. over the last several decades but they did not know it was a separate species. they wondered why they weren't reproducing in zoos with the olnigos. >> we were probably saying we told -- >> in china they were on display as kangaroos. which was very odd. >> you're just trying to one-up me here. >> back to the early story. >> i got to finish this, got to have the last word. >> i have never beaten berman in any type of verbal joust in 15 years. >> i like to sit here like a tennis match, ba dong, ba dong. >> the tennis match where the ball hits the other guy in the face all the time. >> thank you, mr. berman. okay. >> i'm standing at attention. we're going to move on. coming up next on "new day" thieves in new york looking for a good haul are focusing on one park avenue building that's not going over too well with the residents to say the least. we'll bring you their story coming up.
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and these starp dreharp dre from "duck "dynasty"" aren't just good as catching ducks, big ratings for the season premiere. we'll tell you about it in our "pop four." la's known definitely for its traffic, congestion, for it's smog. but there are a lot of people that do ride the bus. and now that the busses are running on natural gas, they don't throw out as much pollution to the earth. so i feel good. i feel like i'm doing my part to help out the environment.
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nischelle turner. >> happy friday "new day" family. i feel good, it's friday. >> i like that. >> let's get to it. i didn't discover, but i do have four pretty good pop four stories. number four rapper coolio putting his collection up for auction. fund his online cooking show and to start a cookbook series. something about me loves that. the bidding starts at $140,000. i always wondered how he had his hair stand straight up like that. >> fuzzy pipe cleaners. all of a sudden sold out. >> how about if i came in. time warner facing a lawsuit over their fight with cbs. number three story. lawsuit has been filed by viewers angry that the channels they were promised were dropped thanks to a fee dispute.
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chris brown's hit and run case is dismissed. the victim reached a compromise with brown and said she did not want to go forward with the charges. the number one story today. listen up kate bolduan. massive ratings for "duck dynasty." 11.8 million viewers. >> that's why she didn't return my call on wednesday night. >> glued to the set. just for the reference, you know, that's more than the population of new york and chicago combined. >> i am telling people, i know stuff. my friends on twitter corrected me. i said earlier that phil, the patriarch of the family went to lsu i'm sorry he went to louisiana tech. >> isn't that where terry bradshaw went? >> confusing louisiana tech and lsu. >> look, i'm making a public apology. >> it's not enough. sometimes sorry's not enough. >> what do you want me to do? what should kate bolduan do
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for this gross error in collegiate alliance. coming up on "new day" the nsa under fire, once again. a new report says the agency breaks its own privacy rules thousands of times a year. each year. since 2008. and guess who leaked that little tidbit. i bet you know. kidnapping victim hannah anderson appears in public for the first time since her release. we have the pictures and the story.
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especially today, as people are looking for more low, and no calorie options. that's why on vending machines, we're making it easy for people to know how many calories are in their favorite beverages, before they choose. and we're offering more low calorie options, including over 70 in our innovative coca-cola free-style dispensers. working with our beverage industry and restaurant partners, we're helping provide choices that make sense for everyone. because when people come together, good things happen. ( bell rings ) they remwish i saw mine of my granmore often, but they live so far away. i've been thinking about moving in with my daughter and her family. it's been pretty tough since jack passed away. it's a good thing you had life insurance through the colonial penn program. you're right. it was affordable, and we were guaranteed acceptance. guaranteed acceptance? it means you can't be turned down because of your health. you don't have to take a physical or answer any health questions. they don't care about your aches and pains.
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well, how do you know? did you speak to alex trebek? because i have a policy myself. it costs just $9.95 a month per unit. it's perfect for my budget. my rate will never go up. and my coverage will never go down because of my age. affordable coverage and guaranteed acceptance? we should give them a call. do you want to help protect your loved ones from the burden of final expenses? if you're between 50 and 85, you can get quality insurance that does not require any health questions or a medical exam. your rate of $9.95 a month per unit will never increase, and your coverage will never decrease -- that's guaranteed. so join the six million people who have already called about this insurance. whether you're getting new insurance or supplementing what you already have, call now and ask one of their representatives about a plan that meets your needs. so, what are you waiting for? go call now!
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major league baseball expanding virtual replay. fouls and strikes will be subject to review. fishing for congrugnts. the pastor says the location is helping him reel in new worshippers. "seattle times" we'll soon be able to purchase merchandise clothes, a board game and a line of beauty products. how about that? list of christmas ideas for me. stock futures continue to stay positive this morning, but we'll have to see how things progress later this morning. the dow lost 225 points and the nasdaq and s&p also down big. one note to remember, the dow is still up 15% this year. companies keep paying their worst workers bonuses. a survey found that nearly 18% of employers don't set their et
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bonus levels based on an employer's performance. defeats the whole idea of pay incentives. money to burn, the government does, literally. the federal reserve is literally trashing $3 billion worth of new $100 bills. seem too much ink was used and the lines don't measure up to uncle sam's standards. let's get to indra petersons for the weather. >> looks like a tough weekend. from new orleans all the way to charleston combining tropical moisture with a stationary front and in the northeast, gorgeous. talking about 70s and even 80s this weekend. we may see some clouds this weekend, but all relative. temperatures below normal. we know what the southeast is dealing with. we are now very close to the top of the hour, which means it is time for the top news.
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>> community came together putting on this great fund-raiser for hannah and hopefully her future. trying to heal. hannah anderson making her first public appearance since being rescued. we talked to her friends on how she's coping. an nsa broken the rules of the domestic spying program thousands of times each year. how far did it go? a wake-up call on just how bad drinking too much coffee can be for you. a new study says it can increase your chance of death by 50%. dr. gupta here with what you need to know. your "new day" continues here right now. >> what you need to know -- >> she has stopped breathing several times during seizures. >> what you just have to see. >> this is the closest i've ever come to a bear. this is "new day" with chris
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cuomo, kate bolduan and michaela pereira. >> it is friday, august 16 rth, 8:00 in the east. i'm kate bolduan. >> i'm chris cuomo here with news anchor michaela pereira. a father pleading with chris christie, don't let my daughter die. he wants him to make medical marijuana available to children in the state. he says medical marijuana could save his daughter's life. the governor has promised a decision today. also michael jackson's ex-wife taking the stand for the second day in his wrongful death trial. she described paris' suicide attempt and how will her testimony affect the case? we'll talk to michael jackson's former attorney about that. a series of brazen robberies happening in new york city. more than $100,000 worth of jewelry has gone missing from one of the city's richiest
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apartment buildings. who is targeting the super rich and how are they getting away with it for months? let's get to the first on hannah anderson. making her first public appearance showing up to thank supporters in her hometown. this morning we're learning new and disturbing details about the ordeal she went through and the bloody events leading up to it. in moments we'll talk to two of hannah's friends live but first let's get to casey wian with the latest from san diego. good morning, casey. >> good morning, kate. hannah anderson rushed past a dozen cameras and once she was inside the fund-raiser what she wanted to do was thank those who have supported her both during and after this horrific ordeal. hannah anderson's arrival at a fund-raiser for her family came as a surprise to her relatives and friends. >> this night was an unexpected reunion, honestly.
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all her friends were here and it was like we haven't skipped a beat. >> reporter: the media were invited to boll weevil restaurant but weren't allowed inside during anderson's reunion. >> hannah sends her love and we'll coupe moving forward from here. >> reporter: wearing hannah strong and pray for hannah neighbors, friends and the grandparent helped raise money for her mother and brother's funeral. >> i wanted to say thank you, all, for coming. this is a small community that we're a part of and the community came together putting on this great fund-raiser for hannah and hopefully her future in healing. >> what has it meant for this community to go through this ordeal? >> that guy did what he did and i want to put it to rest. >> reporter: raffle ticket sales, cash donations and 20% of the restaurant sales all donated to the anderson family. >> we have a lot of expenses in
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front of us. and right now we're just looking for her future and get her settled. >> reporter: a family hoping to help hannah adjust after she was allegedly kidnapped by her father's best friend. >> you keep hearing the term uncle jim, he was like an uncle jim to them. >> reporter: what police discovered at dimaggio's burned down home. this search warrant says that police discovered a hand written note and dnc letters from hannah. the detectives say proves dimaggio had dominion and control over that house. police also recovered incendiary devices leading to believe that the house fire was caused by human actions. >> our thanks to casey wians. hannah and her well being going forward. two people will join us exclusively from san diego. they're alyssa and kayla. at the fund-raiser last night.
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how are you young ladies doing. you okay this morning? >> yeah, we're good. >> thank you very much for getting up so early. i know it's still dark out there but this matters to you, obviously. we all want to make sure your friend is doing okay. what can you tell us, she looks like she is great and has a lot of energy. how is your friend? >> i don't really know how she is. but from what she looks like, she's doing great, like normal hannah. >> and in the time you had to talk to her and speak to her online or text, what have you picked up about how how she's dealing with what happened, alyssa? >> she's like acting strong for everyone and i think that's more of just like for her appearance. but i could tell that there's something inside of her that's upset. when we're all like having a good time and once everyone stops laughing she gets this
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serious look on her face. i don't know. >> do you believe that having people around and having friends like you and family, extended family you think they're helping her right now that she needs that? >> yeah. >> do you know that the family is doing the normal things that you need to do to get help in these extreme situations? do you know they're taking care of their needs? >> i'm not exactly sure. >> that is part of what the fund-raiser was about last night. people pretty enthusiastic about making sure they have the money they need to get the help that hannah and her father will need going forward, right? >> yeah. >> and, did you guys see the online stuff she did. the instagram accounts. are you aware of what happened? >> i am not on ask, but i saw
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instgram. >> did you see the questions she was asked and the answers. >> i haven't seen those. >> it must be difficult, she's your friend first and you wouldn't ask anything that would hurt her feelings, but i guess you will just have to be there for her and if she wants to talk about it, you'll be there and if not you just keep things as normal as possible. >> one of the things that became really important here is why this happened, right? you were familiar with who this uncle jim was, jim dimaggio. before all this, what had hannah related to you about jim dimaggio. >> not a whole bunch that just, like a normal uncle. >> wasn't there something that had kind of changed, alyssa. that she found a little creepy.
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>> i don't know. i don't really want to talk about that. >> because it's just one of those understandings of why her, why did he target her and why did he take her and do those horrible things to her family. that's why i'm asking. well, no one really knows why he did it. they can't really ask him. like no one could expect it. they just can't think that it's going to happen. i don't know. >> so, the good news is that even though i'm sure your friend has so much to deal with it and it will take a long time, you know that, right? >> yeah. >> that she does seem on the outside to be doing things that show that she's fighting through this and she's being normal. what does that mean to you to see your friend again and see that she's trying to live her life? >> very good. i probably wouldn't be doing the stuff that she's doing. >> no, she's really strong. like i couldn't see myself acting this happy right away.
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like, i don't know. she's just, she's just trying to be strong for everybody else. >> everybody has gotten to know hannah only through this horrible series of events that happened in her life. each of you tell me something about hannah that people should know about hannah anderson. alyssa, i'll start with you. >> she's always kind and that person to go to like if you have any problems and she'll help you out. she's always happy. she didn't deserve this. she's an all-around good girl. >> kayla? >> she's really like an outstanding person. she's always like putting others before her. she's so smily and like just cheerful and everything. >> great to hear. now, she's going to need her friends more than ever. great that she has people like you who care about her. good luck to all of you going forward. send our regards, please. i'll take that as a yes. thanks for joining us on "new
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day." it's early, it's early. thanks for being here. have a great day. kate? >> thanks, chris. all eyes back on washington because when it comes to your privacy it appears the nsa has been breaking the laws for years. the agency has violated privacy regulations thousands of times each year even ignoring court orders. white house correspondent dan lothian is live in massachusetts with more on this this morning. tough questions for the administration today, dan. >> that's right. this will no doubt add more heat to the ongoing debate over privacy versus security. the "washington post" reports that the level of detail and analysis in the leaked documents is more than is typically shared with members of congress or the fisa court that overseas the nation's surveillance programs. >> a general impression has, i
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think, taken hold not only among the american public but also around the world that we're out there -- >> reporter: that was president obama just days ago assuring the american public that the national security agency was not breaching the trust of its citizens. but a new report out today by the "washington post" may raise new concerns. after combing through the trove of documents leaked by former nsa analyst edward snowden, the "post" reports that the nsa has broken privacy rules thousands of times each year since 2008. the "post" says most of the incidents involve surveillance of americans and targets on u.s. soil in ways that violate the program's rules. of those incidents, the "post" reports most were unintended and many involved failures of due diligence or violations of standard operating procedure. such as when an area code mix up caused the nsa to intercept a
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large number of calls from washington, d.c., instead of from egypt. the nsa response was quick. overnight the agency released a pointed statement. nsa foreign intelligence collection activities are continually audited and overseen internally and externally when nsa makes a mistake in carrying out foreign intelligence mission, the nsa reports the mission internally and to federal overseers and aggressively gets to the bottom of it. >> now, president obama has recently taken steps to be more transparent, he says, when it comes to the surveillance issues such as forming an outside group, a high-level group to review the nation's intelligence and communications technologies. but i'll tell you based on these latest revelations, some concerns among some of the critics who have worries about privacy issues and want to see greater oversight. we did reach out to the white house on this, but so far no comment. >> dan, tricky subject.
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surveillance does a lot of good. appreciate the reporting this morning. heavy rains across the southeast and, i'm sorry to say it, but it could get a lot worse and soon. more rain is expected to fall today and there is a serious flood threat. forecasters are also monitoring a tropical system in the western caribbean that could soon drench the gulf states. cnn meteorologist indra petersons is tracking all this wet weather. what do we know? >> such a tough situation. the surplus we've seen in the southeast. take a look at this, tallahassee almost 20 inches above normal and that is just since june. how much rain they actually received in the area. anywhere from 20 to 30 inches just since june. you can see that as our starting point. the next system will bring a lot of rain to the area. all this tropical moisture right over the yucatan peninsula and that's going towards florida and as it nears closer, we'll add more and more of that moisture
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to a stationary front and a lot of heavy rainfall expected. little change between yesterday and today. that does develop into a tropical storm and push it to texas, instead, of the florida region. watching for heavy rainfall monday on texas. this is what we're looking at. the stationary front that continues to pound the area with heavy rain and more tropical moisture each day as we go through the weekend and the upper level low. what does that mean to you? pull the stationary front even further back and means more moisture allowed into the gulf state. let's talk about. two to four inches possible near new orleans and two to four inches as high as charleston. here we go day by day. today we're looking at florida, even georgia looking at heavier rainfall. by saturday and sunday we could see clouds into the mid-atlantic and, of course, we know that means anywhere from eight to ten inches of rain possible as we go through the weekend. very hard, especially with flooding concerns. >> thank you for the update. so here's one for you.
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please don't let my daughter die. those are the powerful words from a new jersey father challenging governor chris christie face-to-face. very interesting confrontation. the man says his little girl needs medical marijuana for his little girl to survive. awaiting the governor's decision to decide what to do. it's not that simple. rosa is joining us with more on that story. >> this little girl's father tells us giving a young child medical marijuana is never a simple issue, but he says it should be a conversation between a doctor and a parent not a politician. now, i do have to add that some of the video that you're about to watch is difficult to watch. >> it has been like two months now. very well documented. >> these are complicated issues. i know you think it's simple. >> reporter: a heated exchange
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between new jersey governor chris christie and a concerned father over medical marijuana. have you heard from her doctors? >> i read everything they put in front of me. >> reporter: christie sitting on a medical marijuana bill passed by the state legislature two months ago that brian wilson says could save his daughter's life. 2-year-old vivian wilson suffers from a severe form of epilepsy with only about 500 reported cases. that's according to national institutes of health. her family says she suffers 20 to 70 minor seizures every day averaging major seizures like this one every four days. >> she has stopped breathing several times during seizures. she can also died of sudden unexplained death in epilepsy. >> reporter: she sleeps with a heart and oxygen monitor and wears an eye patch because certain patterns in the environment triggers more
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seizures. her dad said she has been on seven different drugs and a special diet, but nothing works. wilson wants to try a form of medical marijuana not available in new jersey because he says he's seen it work in other children. although the american academy of pediatrics opposes cannabis. governor christie says it's a complicated issue. for the wilsons, a matter of life and death. >> the wilsons tell me they are willing to move to colorado, a state they say is more compassionate to children like little vivian. we should add, there is a medical marijuana law in new jersey and what this bill would do is massage it a little bit to make it available in the form needed for patients like little vivian. >> that tells us exactly what is at issue. it's a complex issue. >> very complex. >> the emotions in such a sad
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story and this big policy question before him. we'll wait and see what the governor decides. thanks so much. cnn following the medical marijuana debate very closely. you can catch dr. sanjay gupta's documentary "weed" tonight at 10:00 eastern. a lot of news developing at this hour, let's get straight to michaela for the latest. >> right now in egypt, supporters of ousted president mohamed morsi marching through cairo in defiance of an emergency order by the military. the muslim brotherhood has called on morsi's backers in what it calls a day of anger. the military is deploying across cairo. one police officer was killed at a checkpoint in a cairo suburb. wednesday at least 580 people were killed when the military launched its crackdown on morsi backers. edward snowden wants to make it clear. his father does not speak for him. in an e-mail message to "huffington post" no special knowledge regarding his current
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situation. the u.s. fudgeati atifugitive h advisors have been misleading the media. the state trooper who leaked those photos of dzhookhar tsarnaev is back on patrol. now working the midnight shift at a barracks in north massachusetts. he had been stationed at department headquarters. a state police spokesman insists the new position is not meant to be punishment. major pet food recall iams. fears a new batch of food may have been contaminated with salmonella. manufacturer says so far no reports of illness and the recall is precautionary. a family from naples, florida, surprised to find this uninvited guest sleeping on their back porch. the bear spent an hour hanging out after tearing through the screen and really, i mean, dug in for a nap. animal control officials are
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concerned that this bear could come back. that it seems a little too comfortable in human environment and it might not go as well next time. so, they're going to set a trap. i can't even imagine walking in on that. >> that would be terrifying. thanks so much. here's an intriguing mystery for you. there's been a string of recent burglaries at one of the richiest apartment buildings. to some it's starting to look like an inside job. cnn's alina cho has more on the story. a lot of intrigue and mystery. >> starting to smell like an inside job. when you look at this building, kate. a real who's who of new york. imagine having neighbors like vera wang, 740 park avenue is just that kind of building. the new york city address that says you've arrived. now imagine a string of robberies in that building and no sign of who did it. it sounds like fiction, but it's real. the story has hints of the ones
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you see in the film "tower heist." only this time the tower is 740 park avenue. new york city's most famous white glove residential building hit with a series of jewelry heists. four burglaries on four separate occasions in four different apartments while the ritzy residents were away on summer vacation. diamond earrings and necklaces, rolex and total valla nearly $250,000. and in all the thefts, no sign of forced entry. >> if you are that rich, this is where you live. it's a club. and it's a really small club because there are only 31 apartments. >> reporter: michael gross wrote a book on 740 park avenue. storeied home to the rich and famous. jackie o. grew up here. john d. rockefeller once lived here. today's residents include vera
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wang and cosmetic ronald lotter and steve schwartzman. >> 740 park means you've arrived and the only way you can buy an apartment in this building is if you have $100 million liquid. >> reporter: who could have pulled this off? >> i think it's an inside job. if they go back to the surveillance tapes and cameras, they'll see they'll recognize anybody that doesn't belong there. it's either construction or a new maid that came on or a carpet cleaner. somebody inside the building. >> that's from a former career thief. now one thing to consider is that buildings like this always have a key box. this is where the master keys are held. it's entirely possible it was unlocked and somebody went into that key box and went crazy. something else to keep in mind, yes, a considerable amount of jewelry stolen but at 740 park
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avenue, a rolex is like a teaspoon. kate, if you just look at someone like ronald lotter he owns his own museum and somebody said, the better stuff, probably inside his home. >> when you said that money of how much money they need to get into that building, talk about how the better half lives. coming up next on "new day" another accuser coming forward claiming bob filner harassed her. the mother of two of michael jackson's children taking the stand in the wrongful death trial. the testimony that brought debbie rowe to tears. what are you doing back there?
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welcome back to "new day" everyone. 16. that's the number of women who now accuse san diego mayor bob filner of harassment. the latest to come forward. she said filner made unwanted advances on a nearly daily basis and now she's adding her voice to the people calling for his resignation. more on this. >> reporter: walking slowly, assisted by a cane, 67-year-old great-grandmother peggy shannon said mayor bob filner harassed her for months on the job. stopping by her desk in the lobby of city hall. she alleged she once grabbed and kissed her on the lips and even told her, think i can go eight hours and one night. >> mayor filner i am a mother, grandmother and
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great-grandmother. i have four sons, two grandsons and two great-grandsons. as our mayor you should be but are not a role model for any of them. >> reporter: shannon is the 16th woman to publicly accuse the mayor mayor. >> a grandmother doesn't surprise you? >> at this point nothing surprises us. >> reporter: leading an internal investigation on filner. goldsmith says he may have found a way. laid out in his memo to the city council a used section about firing city officers for unauthorized use of city money. cnn obtained the mayor's credit card statement showing charges at a san diego hotel, restaurants that are, indeed, says the city attorney, personal expenses. >> somebody so brazen and abusive and personal often,
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often that translates into the same type of conduct in financial affairs. >> reporter: cnn, san diego. next up on "new day" emotional testimony from debbie rowe. what she said about her daughter's suicide attempt and struggle to deal with her father's death. also coming up, do you start your day with a cup of coffee and maybe end your day with a cup of coffee, too? a new study says too much coffee can take years off your life. sorry to bring you that news on a friday. dr. sanjay gupta will bring the story to us. [ all ] fort benning, georgia in 1999. [ male announcer ] usaa auto insurance is often handed down from generation to generation. because it offers a superior level of protection and because usaa's commitment to serve military members, veterans, and their families is without equal. begin your legacy, get an auto insurance quote. usaa. we know what it means to serve.
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we did it. welcome back to "new day" everyone. it's friday, august 16th. i'm kate bolduan. >> i'm michaela pereira. chris cuomo is on assignment and had to leave early. >> he's given up on us. let's be honest. emotional testimony at the michael jackson wrongful death trial. debbie rowe, breaks down on the witness stand and we'll talk with jackson's former attorney, tom mesereau the impact on the case and what it means. it has dragged on for so long. also, prince william speaking for the first time since becoming a dad. he's speaking to cnn's max foster. that's going to happen monday on "new day." be sure to tune in for that. but, first, let's get you started with the five things you need to know for your "new day." at number one, hannah anderson seen in public for the first time since her rescue. the teen kidnapping victim attending a fund-raiser thrown for her family.
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mohamed morsi now under way in egypt and a state-run newspaper reports one police officer was killed and another wounded in an attack at a checkpoint in suburban cairo. children in moore, oklahoma, returning to the classroom for the start of a new school year. many will attend class in a temporary facility. much of the town was destroyed by a deadly tornado back in may. jennifer capriati is accused of stalking her ex-boyfriend and punching him. what makes it worse, it happened on valentine's day. pleading not guilty to those charges. operation orange fingers under way at seattle's hemp fest. the attendies are given a bag of doritos along with a printed summary of the new marijuana law. be sure to visit cnnnewday.com for the very latest. an emotional day on the stand from michael jackson's ex-wife, debbie rowe.
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testified for the second day in a row. rowe broke down as she described her 15-year-old daughter's recent suicide attempt. paris is devastated by her father's death. >> reporter: in the second day of testimony, jackson's ex-wife debbie rowe mesmerized jurors talking about her life with the king of pop. his addiction started after this horrific accident in 1984 that burned michael jackson's scalp. rowe also talked about the good times. he wanted to be the best parent he could be. photos of her, jackson and their children shown in court. this photo was taken when she picked jackson up on her motorcycle from a movie set. rowe broke down in tears while this concert video was played from 1996 in munich, germany.
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munich is where rowe testified she saw doctors administer propofol to induce jackson's sleep. a drug that eventually killed him. she said she told her boss, jackson's dermatologist, that she was worried that jackson was addicted to propofol. aeg lawyers say that's why they called her as a witness. >> i don't know how she could do anything but help our case. worried about his propofol uses. >> reporter: the most dramatic moment came when she was asked about how jackson's death affected the children. she referred to paris jackson's recent suicide attempts saying "she's devastated. she tried to kill herself. she doesn't feel she has a life any more." ted rowlands, cnn, los angeles. >> thanks so much, ted. now, i want to bring in criminal defense attorney and michael jackson's former attorney tom mesereau to talk more about this. tom you heard there in ted's piece a very emotional day on the stand for debbie rowe.
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she was called by the folks representing aeg live. they are trying to prove that jackson had a long history with prescription drug abuse. what did we find out from her, do you think? who did she help taking the stand? >> first of all, this was davau view for me because in michael jackson's criminal trial in 2005 the prosecution called her thinking she would help them and she came across as very sensitive and emotional of j michael jackson and this seems like similar testimony. her love and care for michael jackson and her children is absolutely evident, if you're in front of her. she takes over the courtroom. i think she ended up helping the plaintiffs because these children are the plaintiffs and they're suing along with the grandmother. i think she showed michael was a very loving person, kind person and taken advantage of, a tragic person and i think she added a
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lot to the plaintiff's claim that aeg had every reason to know that he needed the right doctor to deal with these prescription drug issues. >> debbie rowe also spoke emotionally about the plaintiffs. paris jackson her daughter had attempted suicide after michael jackson's death and she was really talking about the horrible impact this death has had on paris jackson. while emotional and horrific for them to have to go through, does that have any legal bearing in this case, do you think? >> well, a lot of people have wondered why katherine and the children are going through this lawsuit. but i always respond to those inquiries by saying this. look, unless you've lost your son, unless you've lost your loving father. you don't know how they feel about this entire thing. it is stressful and it's lengthy and it's demanding. however, they want justice for their father. and i think debbie's testimony,
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i think it helped the plaintiffs. i know the defense thinks that anything they shove another direction when it comes to propofol and michael's prescription drug use will help them, but i don't believe that's true. i think in the end the jury will find that aeg assumed responsibility for michael's physician, conrad murray. they paid him and reminded him he was being paid and failed to do so and i think debbie emphasized the tragic loss through these series of events. >> now, tom, if you're not following this day-to-day. this is one thing that surprised me. they are now in the 70th day of testimony in this case. this is a civil trial that started back in late april. why is this dragging on so long? >> well, i think the stakes are very high. let's face it. the plaintiffs, katherine and the three children, are suing aeg claiming they negatively caused the death of michael jackson. michael jackson was the greatest
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superstar on the planet and probably never be equal when it comes to dance, choreography, music. he never took a dance lesson in his life, the greatest dancer ever. fred astair said that. because the plaintiffs will ask in excess of $1 million, nobody wants to leave any stone unturned. they want to call every single witness they think might be plausible to their case. >> at the end, at the very basis of this, is aeg liable for michael jackson's death. it's not over yet. tom mesereau, great to see you, thanks so much. next up on "new day" if you drink a lot of coffee you'll want to hear the results of a new study that says too much java could be deadly. dr. sanjay gupta is here. we'll have a discussion about coffee. the guys from kiss have certainly spent plenty of time in sports arenas, usually on
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stage, though. soon they could watch their own arena football team. wait until you hear the team's name. ( bell rings ) they remind me so much of my grandkids. wish i saw mine more often, but they live so far away. i've been thinking about moving in with my daughter and her family. it's been pretty tough since jack passed away. it's a good thing you had life insurance through the colonial penn program. you're right. it was affordable, and we were guaranteed acceptance. guaranteed acceptance? it means you can't be turned down because of your health. you don't have to take a physical or answer any health questions. they don't care about your aches and pains. well, how do you know? did you speak to alex trebek? because i have a policy myself. it costs just $9.95 a month per unit. it's perfect for my budget. my rate will never go up. and my coverage will never go down because of my age. affordable coverage and guaranteed acceptance?
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cup of joe. we americans drink it by the gallon but a new study says it's too much, too much of it, in fact, can actually increase your chance of death. cnn's dr. sanjay gupta joins us from cnn center. this kind of bad news on a friday, how much is too much? let's talk about that, first off. >> that's a good place to start because they're talking about a lot of coffee here. about four cups a day. 28 cups a week. that may not be that much for some people, but a lot for most. they looked at 44,000 people, michaela, over 16 years looking at their coffee drinking habits and what they found is there was an increased mortality by people who drank the most. pronounced in people under the age of 55 and particularly pronounced in women. four cups per day. the average is about three cups per day. so we don't know how large a population this is overall in the country, but for reasons
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that you're mentioning, it got a lot of people's attention. >> this is the thing i'm concerned about. i can't keep up with all these studies. first they tell us it's bad and then it's good and the antioxidant properties and it can lower risks of prostate cancer or liver or colon cancer. i understand you were a little skeptical? >> for the same reasons, michaela. first of all, this study, a little perspective. we talked about this before you and i, but this is not a cause and effect study. and you're right, coffee is actually our top source of antioxidants for most americans. we know it can lower insulin levels. and when you talk about an association, michaela. it opens up a wide range of possibilities. the people who are drinking four cups of coffee. who exactly are they? are they having potential health risk factors.
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people who drink coffee are more likely to smoke. it may be hard to control for something like smoking because it is so linked to disease. i think you have to be skeptical when you read something like this. >> exactly your point. if you add smoking and moderate to heavy drinking to the mix, that will increase your mortality rate there. >> again, who are the people who are drinking four cups of coffee a day? >> my producer. >> a lot of people on the show, i'm sure. but the study authors point out, are these more driven, type a, the people who carry around higher levels of stress and those things can be confounding factors, as well. >> bottom line, moderation, as they always say. >> really dose dependent. if you have the low four cups a day, they did not find the increased mortality. i don't know if there is a magical number here in four cups per day, but moderation is key. if you can cut it below that amount, that's important. also something else, a lot of
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coffee, coffee drinks especially the ones that start with the word frap have more than 500 calories. i try to sneak that in, but that may be a bigger issue than some of these other things. >> most certainly, the good doctor. dr. sanjay gupta and to be fair, miguel says he only drinks two or three. >> during the show two or three. that's the problem. welcome to our hours. now, we want to introduce you to cnn's hero. he is saving the environment at the same time. >> housekeeping. >> on a day-to-day basis there are tons of items that are thrown away. it's shocking to understand how much hotels have in excess. i was doing a lot of volunteering and i saw how desperately in need people were for all those types of things and i thought to myself, i could be that connection, that matchmaker.
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>> he does. >> in his free time. >> this is all about to change. the newest team in the arena football league are going by the name of the l.a. kiss, as in those guys kiss led by the famous legendary paul stanley and gene simmons. among the new owners of this new arena team. >> we are welcoming our newest member of the arena football family, the l.a. kiss. >> faster than the speeding bullet and more powerful than a locomotive. we're proud to be part of the entire afl family. >> no one does like gene simmons. unclear if the players will have to wear spandex or armored spike things. what is your favorite kiss song? "dr. love" "rock 'n' roll all night." >> i am not a kiss offician
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auto. >> they are my close friends. we went on tour. there is me with my friends. >> is that photoshopped? >> i am not humble about it. i went to two cities with them and flew on their private jet. here's what you don't know about kiss. they do their own makeup. they do their own makeup and sit back stage and do it all by themselves. >> he might have come on set with a little -- >> wind up looking like that, because they do their own makeup. >> they taught me a lot. to my friends, i give you the already better than the jets award. too bad cuomo's not here. whatever l.a. football team you have. whatever nfl team you have. they're already better than the jets. this is a trivia fact right here. over the last 40 years kiss has won the same number of super bowls as the new york jets. zero.
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>> they would argue in l.a. that they don't need a professional team, they have the trojans. >> here's the lingering question. what is arena football? >> it's indoors. the rules are different and what is it -- >> indoors, smaller field with walls. >> i'm a purest. >> called the colts and it's amazing. we will be back in a moment. ♪ [ male announcer ] the earth moves around the sun. ♪ but man moves the earth. ♪ with best-in-class torque and best-in-class towing, these are some of the bold, new ram commercial trucks -- built to tilt the axis of capability. guts. glory. ram.
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welcome back to "new day" a reminder on monday that prince william is speaking for the first time since becoming a dad. he hasn't spoken a word until now. cnn's max foster. be sure to watch right here on "new day." from the clips i've seen it's adorable and fascinating. you don't want to miss it. all right, that is it for us on
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"new day." "cnn newsroom" with carol costello begins right now. >> all right, great. have a great weekend. "newsroom" starts now. happening now in "newsroom" new accuser. >> mayor filner grabbed me and kissed me. >> 67-year-old peggy shannon. she works as a senior center and uses a cane. >> i am a mother, a grandmother and a great-grandmother. >> she's accuser number 16. >> bob filner needs to resign now. also -- day of rage. egypt on edge and america closely watching. the conflict getting critical as both sides now criticizing the united states. plus, a major nationwide dog and
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