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tv   New Day  CNN  October 9, 2013 3:00am-6:01am PDT

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>> announcer: this is "new day" with chris cuomo, kate bolduan and michaela pereira. >> i'm rolling my eyes at you. >> welcome to "new day." wednesday morning, 6:00 in the east. you heard elected officials say shutdown is undesirable but it's not that big a deal. senator john mccain summed up what many are thinking when he was on the floor of the senate. take a listen. >> i'm ashamed. i'm embarrassed. all of us should be. and the list goes on and on of people of innocent americans who have fallen victim to the reality that we can't sit down and talk like grown-ups. >> people are feeling pain but it seems to be no match for the pull of politics. as both sides basically stand their ground. there may be a new chance for hope. we'll get into that in just a moment. >> we will. plus, the shocking story out
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of san francisco for you this morning. for more than a month, the family of this woman has been searching for her, even asking the public for help. she vanished while being treated at a hospital there. now a grim discovery. she was found dead at the hospital. how could this have happened? >> we've seen cars that can help us park but how about a car that can help you find i parking space and then park in it? it will even park without you in the car so you don't have to squeeze out when you're in a tight spot with a giant suv on one side and your purse on the other. a carmaker showing off this new technology. >> that will be a good one to see. first up, did someone say compromise? president obama offering to sit down and negotiate with republicans. offering to even accept just a short-term increase to the debt limit. and all in the effort of ending the government shutdown. republicans seem to be hearing something else. let's get to senior white house correspondent brianna keilar live for us this morning.
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brianna, tell us, why is the president's offer being received by his republican colleagues as not what it appears to be? >> well, republicans are really looking, i think, for some way out. and it's really, i will caution you, it's sort of unclear 24i79 th at this point that this is a breakthrough. this may be a short-term way to avoid a default and end the government shutdown. day nine, the government shutdown is getting real. for families of troops killed in combat, they will not get automatic death benefits during the shutdown. $100,000 to help cover funeral costs and travel to dover air force base to witness the dignified transfer of their loved ones remains. in north carolina, food assistance for poor women and children cut off. >> furlough congress! >> reporter: and 27,000 furloughed government workers have signed up for unemployment as they go outpay.
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just eight days until the united states could default, president obama phoned house speaker john boehner, both sides indicating the divide is as deep as ever. >> we have to stop repeating this pattern. >> reporter: later, president obama appeared in the white house briefing room, opening the door to negotiations if republicans agree to a short-term solution to re-open the government and increase the debt ceiling. >> if there's a way to solve this, it has to include re opening the government and say america is not going to default, we're going to pay our bills. >> reporter: how long might a short-term measure last, four to six weeks, one source tells cnn. but it's far from a breakthrough, without a concession like a cut in spending, a stop gap measure may not clear the house. >> the long and short of it is, there will be a negotiation here. we can't raise the debt ceiling without doing something about
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what's driving us to borrow more money and live beyond our means. >> reporter: the house voted tuesday to create a congressional committee on government spending and the debt limit as well as pay federal employees currently working without pay. but the obama administration threatened vetoes. a stalemate still and the clock is ticking louder and louder. and if the debt creeling is breached, next thursday as we expect the date would be, not only would the u.s.'s credit rating be at stake but come november 1st there are tens of billions of payments due, social security, disability, medicare and to active duty military, chris. you can imagine that voters would find those payments sort of going by the way side, that that may be an unforgivable offense for them. >> true. the more people learn, the less they probably will like what's going on around them. appreciate the reporting this morning, brianna. we want to try and help you understand maybe by putting a face and giving a name to one
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example of what the shutdown is doing. sometimes one example is too many. 24-year-old cody patterson, you're seeing him there. an army ranger from oregon, one of four u.s. soldiers killed sunday in afghanistan by an i.e.d. his body, along with three others expected to arrive back today at the dover air force base. the families will have to pay for their own way, all funeral arrangements on their own. why? they've been denied the death benefits they're entitled to because of the government shutdown. >> that's unacceptable. that's the only way to say that. the effects of the shutdown, we're not seeing the face of the shutdown but we're seeing the impact of the shutdown on our financial markets, already starting to hit financial markets. stocks have fallen four of the last five days. threat of default threatening your investments. small businesses are some of the first to feel the pinch of the shutdown. now big businesses are speaking up, urging congress to simply get it together.
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christine romans is here. will their voice be loud enough to make a change. >> they're speaking loudly, trying to get the message across. they lived through the financial crisis of 2008. they know the tell-tale signs of what could become another great recession. stock markets are tumbling as the stock market deadline looms and the government remains partially shut down. you may start feeling the repercussions. lawmakers are talking to the country but that isn't helping ease wall street's concerns. >> we shouldn't have to get permission just to keep the government open or prevent an economic catastrophe. >> reporter: as the president spoke, the selling continued. the dow dropping 159 points or 1% by tuesday's close. >> we can't raise the debt ceiling without doing something about what's driving us to
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borrow more money and to live beyond our means. >> reporter: since the shutdown began, the dow is down 2.3% and with no solution in sight, america's top ceos are getting fed up. >> we have the most important economy in the world, the reserve currency of the world. payments have to go out to people. if money doesn't flow in, money doesn't flow out. >> the way forward is not easy. it requires sacrifice. it requires a lot of flexibility. it requires a lot of compromise. we expect the same will happen with the political architecture. >> reporter: starbucks ceo hour howard schultz has written an open letter saying he's disappointed with our elected political leadership. the debt ceiling debate is the biggest threat to your investment like your 401(k), mutual funds, your portfolio. >> the debt ceiling doesn't make any sense. it ought to be banned as a weapon. it should be like nuclear bombs. basically too horrible to use.
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>> reporter: the result of the government's inaction could be catastrophic while the world waits for a solution, your money hangs in the balance. >> so warren buffett, the bank ceos, big business leaders, the fed, chief economists, there's so much consensus, specifically on the debt ceiling and raising the debt creeling is a rare thing. it tells us they really fear what congress is brewing here. >> yes. no one knows how it's going to end quite yet. >> you're right. >> on a different topic, very important, we learned last night that president obama will be nominating, expected to nominate janet yellen, maybe the worst kept secret at this point. this will be the first woman to hold this role. >> she's an esteemed economist, incredibly well respected. she's the number two at the fed. she went and went to the lunchroom with edge else to eat, which was a surprise. she wants to be right there with the economists and the other people who are working there. she's likely to continue the policies of ben bernanke.
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that's why so many economists wanted to see her appointed to this position. she needs to be confirmed by the senate. this is a choice that soothed a lot of fears from people who didn't want to see a big change. one interesting thing about her, too, she was one of the very first to notice the bubble in the housing market and warning about the housing market bubble. she's esteemed for sure. >> lousy time to come into power. >> i know, right. >> if you're a real leader, she may relish the opportunity. >> she'd start february 1st. she'd have to to be confirmed. >> how do you get confirmation with the shutdown and the debt ceiling? i can't think about it. >> let's deal with what's in front of us. >> exactly. one thing in front of the president is the situation in egypt, making news the united states is preparing to cut some of its military aid to egypt. the decision comes months after president mohamed morsi was ousted from office by the military. months of turmoil have followed.
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ian lee is live in cairo with more. ian? >> reporter: well, there's really no official word coming from the white house yet, michaela. any cuts to the $1.2 billion the united states gives the military in egypt will strain already a delicate relationship between cairo and washington. now, aid that's applied to the israeli peace agreement is fate. this is to send a message to the egyptian government that the united states is unhappy about the pace of the transition to democratically elected government as well as the violence we've seen here. recently over 50 people were killed in clashes between security forces and protesters. michaela? >> continuing instability there, ian lee reporting in cairo. thank you. a second team of chemical weapons inspectors will be headed to syria to assist in the process of dismantling and destroying at sad regime chemical stockpile, it's not known how many extra will be
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deployed or when. the body found in a litt stairwell appears to be that of missing patient lynn spalding. that's what a law enforcement is saying. spalding went missing on september 21st. friends say she may have become disoriented because of the medication she was taking for an infection. just in to cnn, the nobel prize in chemistry has been awarded to three molecular scientists. michael leavitt of stanford and arieh warshel from the university of southern california and martin karplus take home the prizes. diana nyad, swimming in a two-day marathon, raising money for victims of superstorm sandy.
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as of last night she raised over $50,000. she's going to be joined by some friends, workout guru richard simmo simmons. i wonder if he'll wear the sho s s nadia liukin scheduled to swim with her today as well. >> remember the proof people had that said she didn't complete this great feat? nothing. let's go to indra petersons. >> it is cold. anyone feeling it? >> diana nyad. >> exactly. a lot of temperatures overnight, especially in upstate new york, vermont, fell to the 20s and 30s. deaf nuttily feeling the chill. you can see philly is better, 57, atlantic city 60. mount pillier, 30s.
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>> tomorrow we'll be cooling off further. low 60s across the area, the chill is here in the northeast. that's not the only thing. we'll be adding wind to that as well. it's not bad enough, right? maybe 15 to 20 mile per hour winds, nothing too strong but you are going to feel it all up and down the entire eastern seaboard. the carolinas, worried about beach erosion. thanks not only to the wind but that low. more rain, yesterday. today is another day of that. 2 to 4 inches in the carolinas and as you go up towards the mid-atlantic, you'll start to see 1 to 2 inches of rain over the next several days. you see the timing of the low by the end of the week, making its way into the northeast. big question, where is it warm? middle of the country and another storm in the pacific northwest as well. cold, windy, chilly, rain by the end of week. coming up on "new day," a
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surprise school bus strike in boston left 30,000 kids stranded. now it may be coming to an end. good news for parents? parents and students may not be completely in the clear this morning. details in a live report, next. the latest salmonella outbreak, turns out more dangerous than first thought, sickening hundreds of people in 18 states. we'll tell you what makes this strain special. i was made to work.
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and find the one that's right for you. creditcards.com. it's simple. so you want to drive more safely? of smart.t for you. stop eating. take deep breaths. avoid bad weather. [ whispers ] get eight hours. ♪ [ shouts over music ] turn it down! and, of course, talk to farmers. hi. hi. ♪ we are farmers bum - pa - dum, bum - bum - bum - bum ♪ welcome back to "new day." a surprise strike by boston school bus drivers left 30,000 kids stranded. parents waking up this morning not knowing if they'd be back on the road. but we've learned new developments just moments ago. cnn's pamela brown following this live in boston.
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pamela, what do we know. >> reporter: we just learned from the mayor's office that normal bus service has resumed this morning. we've learned that robo calls apparently went out half an hour ago to tens of thousands of families telling them that buss are back on the road this morning. but still these families had to scramble to find a contingency plan. they were told yesterday afternoon there could be a second day of strikes from these bus drivers. while this is an encouraging sign that buss are back on the road, boston public schools just tweeted out that some bus drivers are signaling that they may not want to work this afternoon. instead of driving their morning route, 600 bus drivers for the boston public school district shouted their grievances. on strike they say because their company treats them badly. >> the keys are in their hands. if they honor this contract, we will be driving tomorrow. >> reporter: they're unannounced
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walkout, leaving 33,000 students without their normal ride to school and raging parents who didn't have time to prepare. >> i'm late for work and then i have to leave early to make sure he gets a ride home. >> reporter: some students even hitching a ride with boston police who were out in force to help those stranded. because of the unauthorized work stoppage only 82% of the student body attended school on tuesday. those students won't be penalized for their absence. >> see you later, baby. >> great hassle. and we're late, almost late getting here because of the traffic. >> reporter: at the heart of the dispute, a boston public school spokesperson says drivers are frustrated with procedures put in place by the bus company violia and they're opposed to a gps app that allows parents to track their children's buses. >> i'm asking you to go back to -- >> reporter: this is still a developing situation. we don't know exactly why bus
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drivers have decided to go back this morning but we do know that their union, united steelworkers, says it does not condone the current actions, speaking of the strike yesterday morning, or any violation of the collective bargaining agreement. also we know that bus drivers in union has been in touch with boston public school system, the company, the vendor that runs them, trying to work out a resolution here. but, again, boston public school system tweeting out this morning that this dispute may not be over and that some bus drivers signaling that they may not be coming back to work this afternoon. so of course we will keep you posted and keep a close eye on the situation. >> all right, pamela, thanks so much. sounds like it could be changing throughout the morning. we'll check back in. >> yes. a major salmonella outbreak affecting hundreds. the cdc is calling back furloughed experts to figure out what's happening. and new information on what
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makes this outbreak more dangerous than others. >> these salmonella cases are mostly on the west coast. they started back in march and involve strains that are particularly dangerous. salmonella is a common problem with uncooked chicken. on average, the cdc says about one out of over 250 broiler chickens has the bacteria. but this recent strain known as salmonella hidelburg seems to be made up of multiple antibiotic resistant strains, making it harder to treat. >> it's a new thing we're able to track now is the salmonella that's making people sick, is that a response to the antibiotics you would use to treat it? it's happened more often recently. >> reporter: according to the cdc, nearly half of the patients who contracted the strain have been hospitalized which is a high percentage. although no deaths have been reported from this bacteria, the strain packs a real punch and can make you very sick. complicating the investigation into this outbreak is the
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government shutdown. the cdc is furloughed many of its scientists who track food-borne pathogens, some have since been brought back in but there was a delay in the exchange of information about the outbreak. the usda says many of the packages could still be in consumer's freezers. look for these numbers on the package, p-6137 p-6137a and p-613 p-6137-2. the reason why you don't have to technical throw it away, technically this isn't a recall. now i imagine that many people if they look in their freezers and find this chicken they will want to throw it away. the official recommendation is that you don't have to. chris, kate? >> that's the most confusing part about this whole thing, i think. thanks so much, elizabeth.
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>> recall or not recall? i say throw it out. >> it's bad. it could hurt you but there is no recall. the odd ways of government. we'll take a break. coming up on "new day," new york city cops arrested one of their own, a veteran detective. he denies he took part in an attack by motorcyclists. the investigators say the videotape tells a different story. we'll show you. and a possible slim glimmer of hope in the government shutdown? the president giving room for negotiation after congress acts, after congress acts is the key part. but will republicans agree? your "new day" political gut check is next. ♪ gs. ing us know who's coming. the carts keep everyone on the right track. the power tools introduce themselves. all the bits and bulbs keep themselves stocked. and the doors even handle the checkout so we can work on that thing that's stuck in the thing.
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welcome back to "new day." it is wednesday, october 9th. let's bring you up to date on the latest news. the white house said to be opening the door to a temporary solution to the debt ceiling standoff, a short-term spending increase. president obama says he is willing to talk, even on republicans' terms as long as congress acts first to end the government shutdown and raise the debt ceiling. months of turmoil followed in egypt. officials tell cnn funding to help egypt to uphold peace counterterrorism are expected to continue. the u.s. gives egypt $1 billion each year. eight democratic members of the house among 200 people arrested at a washington, d.c. immigration rally.
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police moving in to make those arrests after protesters blocked a main street near the capital. among those charged with crowding and obstructing, georgia congressman john lewis and new york congressman charles rangel. the father of the 9-year-old boy who slipped past security and hopped aboard a flight is now speaking out. the father who has concealed his identity. they have been trying to get help for his son's problems for years. surveillance video shows the boy sneaking past a distracted delta agent to board the plane. we'll hear from the young boy's father in our next hour. controversy swirling around the new tom hanks movie "captain phillips" about the 2000 takeover of the maersk alabama. they claim the film was flawed and phillips was no hero,
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insisting that he ignored warnings to steer further out to sea. hanks plays phillips and tells cnn's christiane amanpour he won't second guess the captain. >> the primary motive was to get the guys off the ship. he would never -- he would never use the word hero in regards to himself. i was waiting for the heros to show up. >> the film "captain phillips" opens in theaters on friday. i want to see the film. controversy or not but i want to see it. >> of course you do. >> that story captivated the headlines for a long time. >> controversy gets people to go see that movie. >> sure does. let's move to our political gut check. a press conference packed with words like negotiate, compromise, president obama said he's willing to work with republicans but of course he is still calling for a clean end to the government shutdown. and also raising the nation's borrowing limit. house speaker john boehner's response, that is not how the government works, especially
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divided government. cnn's national correspondent john king is here to break it down for us. good morning, john. these dueling media appearances seem to have clashed yesterday. we have talk of an olive branch, an opening for a short-term extension of the debt ceiling in order to allow for more negotiations to happen. how big of an opening is this? >> it's a tough one, kate. the house republicans don't want to vote once. if you do a short-term extension they'd be voting twice to raise the debt ceiling. it's a possibility, the administration opening the door saying let's avoid a crisis, let's extend the debt ceiling to a matter of days or a couple of weeks so we can continue conversations, negotiations on other issues. most of the conservatives who are dug in on this issue don't want to vote to raise the debt ceiling at all. i would say there's one significant thing yesterday as
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the president and the speaker talked past each other. the president even though he used the words extortion and says he would not negotiate, he did say, he was willing to have something passed with a written list of things they would then discuss. seasonally open the government, raise the debt ceiling and put in there a list of things we will then negotiate. potentially the seeds of something but they have to trust each other to get going forward. >> is that the way of having a compromise without saying you're negotiating or compromising on your values? because both sides have drawn such a firm line in the sand now. the question is, is it enough to pass the house? there's no guarantee there, right? >> no. no guarantee at all in the sense that number one in terms of opening the government shutdown by cnn's count if the speaker were willing to bring to the floor a clean bill that said re-open the government, fund the government at existing levels, we think, we're pretty sure some our reporting that enough republicans would support it. he's not willing to do that. he has that conservative part of his base.
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the question now is can the speaker move on to the debt ceiling, do this all in one big package, get the conservatives to drop their obsession with obama care and instead accept some other issues, changes on other issues like tax reform, medicare and social security, like spending cuts. >> the house budget chairman, paul ryan, been noticeably silent throughout this fight. now finally staking his claim and his position in this is an opinion piece in the "wall street journal" calling for an end to the stalemate, talking about finding common ground, calls for modest entitlement and tax reform. we heard that from him before. what you don't hear in this op-ed is getting rid of obama care in these negotiations. what do you make of it? >> could be, emphasis on could be. paul ryan has been a hero for
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conservatives. he's wanted to go further than the leadership in the past or the republican party. he's challenged president obama publicly. >> right. >> to do more on spending and entitlement. the question is can these tea party and other conservatives who have been hung up over the health care plan, will they look at paul ryan and say, okay, all right, we're willing to drop obama care. could you take this and say open the government, raise the debt ceiling and here's your list, mr. president or will they continue to say, no, we want the health care plan? is paul ryan still their hero or part of the establishment? that's the request he. >> it can also speak to the question of trust we keep talking about every day. clearly house conservatives do not trust the president. there's a question if they can trust their leadership right now to follow through on these things. maybe they trust paul ryan on this. >> yes. do those conservatives trust him? i know this, the president respects him. he disagrees with him on a lot of things but the president
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respects him. if you read the piece, there are a number of bipart son prisan proposals. there have been some healthy bipartisan conversations on all of the issues paul ryan talks about here. the question is could this be a circuit breaker or is it another thing that comes forward is the hope for a few hours like right now? and when we start to count the votes we say never mind. that's the question. >> it looks like we see that movie play out over and over again. >> that's the movie we don't want to see. >> we'll check in tomorrow and see if we're still living in ground hog day. see you later. coming up on "new day," a veteran off-duty police officer facing arraignment, accused of taking part in that violent attack by bikers of a driver an suv. we'll tell you what the case is against. what would you do if you were the only passenger on a plane and the pilot collapsed midflight? it happened in the uk and you're
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about to find out how it all turned out. la's known definitely for its traffic,
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congestion, for the smog. but there are a lot of people that do ride the bus. and now that the buses are running on natural gas, they don't throw out as much pollution into the air. so i feel good. i feel like i'm doing my part to help out the environment. but do you really? [ female announcer ] neutrogena® makeup remover erases 99% of your most stubborn makeup with one towelette. can your makeup remover do that? [ female announcer ] neutrogena® makeup remover.
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welcome back to "new day." let's get straight over to indra petersons in the weather center for what you need to know before you head out the door. first things first. >> it's fall. that's all you need to know. done. i'm done. going to walk right back, you guys. we're talking about 30s this morning, some places below freezing, especially upstate new york through vermont. right now we know by the afternoon we'll be talking about temperatures even cooler than they were yesterday. all thanks to that dome of high pressure that's hanging out there, bringing in that arctic air straight down from canada. so highs today, i guess so, it's fall. there will be temperatures into the 60s. d.c., your highs tomorrow are only going to be in the 50s.
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average just to prove my point is 71. even for fall, that is cold. definitely a little bit of chill, we'll be add something wind into the mix. we'll give you a breeze out there. that's the story up and down the entire eastern seaboard. by the time you get into the carolinas, you're looking at wind and cool temperatures but we'll throw in rain into the mix. this low will affect, again, the entire east coast, starting in the south and eventually making its way up to the northeast. where is it warm? right in the middle of the country. where we're cool those temperatures are going way up. they're talking about temperatures in minneapolis. they get to be into the 70s, 76 degrees in minneapolis, here we are in the 60s. that is wrong. that's all i'm saying. >> thank you very much. >> a lot of numbers on the board, not the ocean temperature, though, odd, odd. >> weird. see if i can do that for you again. >> the one thing we wish indra
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petersons would tell us is the ocean. >> the fishing forecast. want to tell you about something that's somewhat unusual in connection with the violent attack by a group of motorcyclists on that suv driver. all captured on video. here's the unusual part. one of two people being arraigned today is an nypd detective who was under cover and off duty at the time. he claims did he not take part but he knows there's a ton of video of the event. as susan candiotti tells us, authorities say they have all the proof they need. >> reporter: as we learn of even more arrests, online video like this, painful to watch. a biker seen kicking suv drive er lein laying motionless and bloodied on the ground before trying to get up.
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a 32-year-old rider, a camera showing an suv driver running over briccers after his tires were slashed. the off-duty cop is charged with two felonies. >> the internal affairs bureau is looking at this and they'll continue to do so. >> reporter: another biker also charged with gang assault and criminal mischief. a law enforcement source says police have video of the detective not yet made public, proving he took part. that same source says the veteran detective waited three days before reporting the incident. afraid of blowing his cover. cnn legal analyst and former prosecutor paul kallen says the detective could also lose his job even if he's not convicted. >> as police officers, they have an obligation under nypd regulations to break their cover if they're undercover and to
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come to the assistance of any civilian who's in danger. and having looked at this video, clearly, the civilians in that car looked like they're in danger. >> reporter: police also released photos of four other bikers in connection with the attack. the still frames were isolated from that video, showing lein getting stomped on. as for the biker holding that video cam, he said he saw lein throw a water bottle out of his sun roof, hitting a biker. the suv starting swerving and the biker smelled trouble. he's not expected to be charged. the police union representing the undercover detective has nothing to say for now. the worst may be far from over. a law enforcement official telling cnn prosecutors are considering charges against at least one more officer and more bikers. susan candiotti, cnn, new york. >> all right, susan, thanks so much. let's go around the world
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now starting in brazil where they're waking up this morning to stunning scenes of destruction in two major cityie. we have this report from sao paulo. >> reporter: protesters clash with riot police. banks were broken into and a bus torch as protesters ransacked the city center. this came after a day of peaceful protesters which saw at least 10,000 people take to the streets in solidarity with teachers asking for better wages and benefits. to libya where tensions are raising after a u.s. military raid. libyan officials aren't pleased. we have the story from tripoli. >> reporter: they are demand the immediate return of al libi. at the same time saying that may not happen. justice minister expressing conciliatory terms as well, saying that libya can work with
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the united states if they trust the american justice system. the wild card, the radical islamist that holds sway in some parts of the country, calling for tax on oil and gas installations as well as kidnapping americans here in tripoli. kate? to the united kingdom where a passenger had to take control of the plane after the pilot got sick midflight. here's erin mclaughlin with the story. >> reporter: every passenger's worst nightmare. the pilot falls ill and the passenger who has very little flight experience is forced to take the controls. the pilot later died but remarkably, they were able to call in two flight instructors to talk the passenger through how to land the two-seater cessna. he flew over the runway three times before finally getting it right. back to you, kate. the fact that he got it right at all, that's scary. when we come back, we need
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to discuss what do you think about this? hands-free parking. a peek at the car of the future. gets you into the tightest spot. finds a spot for you. we have a whole don't try this at home file. here's another one. don't try it anywhere. is this ping-pong stunt real or fake? we don't care. it's our must-see moment.
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get out of my dreams and into my car says billy ocean. it is money time. welcome back. mornings, early, lots of traffic. you have to find a parking space, unless your car can find one for you and then park itself. this is one of the features that ford is showing off in this new video for itself parking car. brett larson got here in a self-parking car. >> i wish. >> this isn't new. we've seen this self-driving cars. what is ford saying they're bringing to the self-driving world if you will? >> the ability to where you can literally get out of your car and say find a parking space for me and it will drive and find a parking space. as you can see here, pull in to
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said parking space for you. >> even if there's a handicapped placard. >> part of the technology is equipping the parking areas. >> there's smart parking spots. >> yes. >> it's a valid question. >> it's a smart car, too. like if somebody runs in front of it or if a car that doesn't self-park like has someone behind the wheel pulls in front of it -- >> honk the horn, flashes the light. >> has rage. >> get out of my way! >> what do you think? >> it's pro for it. i have concerns with this technology. >> i don't like it. >> i change my position. i am pro this technology and anybody who is against it is a fool in pink. >> i think it's good that people have this technology, it makes things easier, smarter car, better for driving, case closed. >> was that a question? >> counterpoint.
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>> did i end up on consider the cro crossfire? >> i enjoy parallel parking. >> did you grow up in california. >> no, indiana where the parking spaces are larger. maybe that's why. >> i miss parallel parking. >> i can do it on either side of the street, too. >> impressive. >> isn't there a market for this? do you think people will want it? >> i think there's a small market for it but i think it's a piece of a puzzle in a bigger picture where it's going to be, we're moving towards safer cars and technology that keeps us safe. >> at what point do you get jetsons and now you're not paying attention when you're driving. >> sully sullenberger proved no matter how much technology you have to help you, you have to have somebody who knows what they're doing. >> there's a need for infrastructure technology.
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ford and volvo say it's not expensive, it's not an expensive upgrade. there's a need for that. these things aren't going to drive with a gps. >> the fact is a lot of these things make their way to consumer models, some of the features. >> yes, absolutely. >> we're probably closer to this being a reality. i can't remember who was for or against it. >> i was against kate. >> five years out. >> self-parking. >> power windows and door locks. that used to be a luxury item. now it's common on every car. >> and the backup camera. >> and the backup camera. >> the must-see moment, stick around for this. this is a swedish group of extreme ping-pongers. their latest video stunt shows him using ping-pong paddles to hurl knives at his partner's
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body. he cuts the pineapple in half, over 500,000 folks have asked it online. >> it's probably not real. >> one response on the -- >> no way. >> there's no way. i think it's clever editing. >> one of the people said nice try, kimmel. we're not falling for it this time. >> after that twerking video, i'm not falling for it. >> clever editing and a fun piece of video. get in on this, tweet u us #newday. >> real or fake? that's our new segment. >> we pretty much know it's fake but it's still fun. >> i hold out. >> you think it's backwards. >> how do you throw a knife from a ping-pong paddle. >> because you play ping-pong. isn't there a song about it, ping-pong wizard. >> no. >> we know the discussion is over because they're screaming teases. >> coming up on "new day," president obama says he will talk to republicans, quote, about anything. once the debt ceiling is raised
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and the government re-opens, that's the catch. is it compromised? how is it being received? we'll tell you. the story we've been talking about all morning, a disturbing find at a san francisco hospital where a female patient went missing more than two weeks ago. we'll have live details on that story and where she was found. and the light comes on. i- it's our job to make sure that it does. using natural gas this power plant can produce enough energy for about 600,000 homes. generating electricity that's cleaner and reliable, with fewer emissions-- it matters. ♪
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baseball playoffs, they matter. the boston red sox beat the rays last night and are headed to the alcs even though i don't like that team. andy scholes is here with this morning's bleacher report. it's all about fairness. >> it is all about fairness. red sox nation rejoicing this morning. what a difference a year makes. last season the sox were the worst team in their division.
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this season, best record in baseball and now they are headed back to the alcs for the first time in five years. last night against the rays, boston scratched out three runs in the final three innings to get the win. they take the series 3-1. boston will meet the winner between the tigers and the a's. detroit trying to stay alive. a little controversy in the seventh inning. victor martinez sent this ball deep to right. check it out. josh reddick going up for the ball, two fans grab it before he has a chance to make the play. umpires review it. they give martinez the home run. game five is thursday night on tbs. the new york giants are off to an 0-5 start. a popular pub has a new policy, g-men, no. rick's cabaret says it will no longer be playing giants game.
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the dancers have actually been complaining that the boos are distracting. it's all about keeping a positive atmosphere. >> the silence is speaking volumes to you right now, andy scholes. thoughts? >> rick's cabaret, not happy for them but i'm happy about the news about the giants. we are at the top of the hour. it means it's time for the news. >> we're not going to pay a ransom for americans paying its bills. facing the pain. tens of thousands going on unemployment. the effects of the shutdown are on the rise. politicians' efforts to stop them, not so much. outbreak, nearly 300 people sickened in 18 states by salmonella. almost half of them hospitalized. now we may know what makes this
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particular strain so dangerous. speaking out, the father of that 9-year-old who thwarted security to board a plane without a ticket now talking. what he says about his son's shocking adventure. your "new day" starts right now. >> announcer: what you need to know -- >> i have to say, i was disappointed that the president refuses to negotiate. >> announcer: what you just have to see. this is "new day" with chris cuomo, kate bolduan and michaela pereira. good morning. welcome back to "new day," it is wednesday, october 9th, 7:00 in the east. boston thrown into turmoil. why? school bus drivers there staged a surprise strike. some 30,000 students were stranded. worse yet, parents and kids may be in trouble again this
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afternoon. we'll tell you what's going on. we have a reporter on. and how did a woman's body end up in a stairwell at a san francisco hospital? a shocked and understandably outraged family is looking for answers. details ahead. disneyland and disney world no longer allowing riders with disability disabilities a line to ride. first, the latest with the shutdown. it's no grand bargain but it could be a start. there's a hint of compromise that could end the shutdown and debt ceiling standoff for now anyway. president obama has opened the door, some say, for a short-term debt limit increase but the devil could well be in the details. senior white house correspondent brianna keilar following developments for us. what do we think here? >> reporter: chris, good morning. i will caution you, it's unclear this is a breakthrough but maybe a way possibly an opening to a
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short-term way to fund the government and avoid default. day nine, the government shutdown is getting real. for families of troops killed in combat, they will not get automatic death benefits during the shutdown. $100,000 to help cover funeral costs and travel to dover air force base to witness the dignified transfer of their loved ones remains. in north carolina, food assistance for poor women and children cut off. >> furlough congress! >> reporter: and 27,000 furloughed government workers have signed up for unemployment as they go without pay. just eight days until the united states could default, president obama phoned house speaker john boehner, both sides indicating the divide is as deep as ever. >> we have to stop repeating this pattern. >> reporter: later, president obama appeared in the white house briefing room, opening the door to negotiations if republicans agree to a short-term solution to re-open the government and increase the debt ceiling. >> if there's a way to solve
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this, it has to include reopening the government and saying america is not going to default, we're going to pay our bills. >> reporter: how long might a short-term measure last, four to six weeks one gop source tells cnn. they say if the president promises to negotiate. but it's far from a breakthrough, without a concession like a cut in spending, a stop gap measure may not clear the house. >> the long and short of it is, there will be a negotiation here. we can't raise the debt ceiling without doing something about what's driving us to borrow more money and live beyond our means. >> reporter: the house voted tuesday to create a congressional committee on government spending and the debt limit as well as pay federal employees currently working without pay. but the obama administration threatened vetoes. a stalemate still and the clock is ticking louder and louder.
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if the debt limit is breached next week as expected, not only is the u.s.'s credit rating at stake, there are tens of billions of dollars in payments due on november 1st. social security, disability, medicare and to active military. things that really affect millions and millions of americans. kate? >> there you go, laying out how it really is impacting millions of americans. brianna, thanks so much, starting us off this morning. there is confusion about what will happen if congress doesn't raise the nation's borrowing limit by next thursday. we want to dig into it to see what could happen if this unprecedented event does happen, how bad would it be? joining us now to figure it out, christine romans host of "your money" and a global economic analyst and assistant managing editor for "time" magazine. it is confusing. i think in this circumstance we can try to separate fact from fiction. what would the economic impact be of a short-term debt ceiling
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extension if they can pull it off. >> i think you would see still a lot of market reaction. i mean, frankly, the fact that we've pushed it this far to the edge, there's reaction. more and more interest rates are double on short-term treasury bills. if interest rates start to rise, by this the impact, people who borrow money, people who own homes, own cars, looking to get a mortgage. >> we talk about the markets and how short-term borrowing for the treasury department, twice as expensive now. put that in plain english. what does that mean? why does that matter? >> we're starting to see the cracks in the financial system of wall street realizing that congress could be stupid enough to actually do this. for a long time, when you talk to people on wall street, they would never do something like that. you're starting to hear the debt ceiling deniers who are saying
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it wouldn't be bad. we don't need to raise the debt ceiling, it wouldn't be a problem, we'd just prioritize our bills. something that the brainiacs are saying is not that feasible. you pay your bonds. you going to give grandma an iou, not pay the military? >> one side is saying catastrophic chaos if we default, go past this deadline. the other side saying just that, they don't believe it. the other side being some conservative republican specifically in the house. they don't think it will be as bad as expected, part of the things -- part of it is the fact that this is unprecedented. >> i don't think they believe it. >> they do not believe it. they know if they don't raise the debt ceiling we have serious problems. >> just to be clear, who's right? >> i think that anybody that says that this is a major event in the markets is right. we don't know how big it's going to be. we don't know exactly when things will happen.
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there is a small cushion in the treasury to cover some bills, probably until the end of the month. do you want to play chicken when three large bills come due at the end of october, early november with the country's credit and trust? >> here's another question, our capitol hill unit is reporting something interesting that white house officials are reaching out to business leaders, ceos, asking them to contact and call republican leaders to try to push them to negotiate. what do you make of that? >> what i make of that, it's remarkable. it shows you that you've got business completely agreeing that this is a really bad idea not to raise the debt ceiling. it also shows that the gop is losing its status as the party of business. the party that understands how the economy works. >> my favorite comment was the head of alcoa calling the debt ceiling a giant taser on the economy, freezing up confidence and spending. you're seeing ceos -- >> let's talk about janet yellen. we'll see if people, cooler heads prevail as they keep hoping will happen before the debt ceiling.
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janet yellen. if she's confirmed, first woman to be said chairman. do you think there will be problems with confirmation. >> i don't think so. so many people are rooting for her. i think that the president knew he would have a problem trying to get larry summers through. yellen is a consensus builder, well liked and a brilliant economist, an early warning sign on the housing bubble. the people at the fed like her. she's been a steady, calm, brilliant hand for a long time. >> what's the big challenge she'll be challenging if, when she comes on the job? and the question of larry summers, so publicly there was speculation that he was the front-runner, the president's first choice. does that somehow cast a shadow on her tenure. >> i don't think it does. most of the economic community was always in favor of yellen. she's arguably the most experienced person coming in. i don't think she'll have a problem with senate confirmation. her biggest challenge is going to be when to stop the fed's program of asset buying. the fed is pumping about $85 billion a month into markets and
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one of the reasons they've been doing that is because of political chaos. >> the fed is the economic stimulator of last resort. >> true. >> a lot of people worry that market bubbles are brewing because of that. that will be her big challenge, how to get us out of that. >> that's what i would consider a huge challenge, especially when you know what we've been talking about all day. christine, ra in. -- rana, thank you. a developing story out of boston. the good news, most of boston school bus drivers are back on the road after a surprise strike. the bad news it left 30,000 students stranded and parents in the lurch. cnn's pamela brown is falling developments for us, live in bos boston. what do we know now, pamela. >> reporter: we know that acovereding to the mayor's office, normal bus service has resumed this morning. parents are encouraged to keep an eye on the situation, because even though buss are back on the roads, we simply don't know how long that's going to last.
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the bus and public school system sending out a cautionary tweet saying that while it's an encouraging sign that service is resuming this morning, some drivers are signaling they have not yet decided about the afternoon. now, robo calls were sent out this morning notifying tens of thousands of families that their kids were able to take the bus to school this morning. still these families had to put a contingency plan in place just in case a strike went on for a second day in a row. yesterday the unannounced walkout of 600 bus drivers left 33,000 kids stranded. at the heart of this dispute, grievances over a new company, a new vendor called violia. we learned that the company and school officials have been trying to work out a resolution. no word yet on whether a resolution has been reached. we'll keep an eye on this developing situation. kate? >> bottom line, sounds like a confusing day for families and school is just about to start
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for them. we have a lot of other things we're watching. let's get straight to michaela for the headlines. cnn learned that the obama administration is preparing to announce a cut of military aid to egypt, this decision coming months after a military coup ousted president mohamed morsi. some military issist aanassista continue. the u has been providing egypt with more than a million dollars in aid until now. a watchdog dprup suggesting the u.s. intelligence community missed an al qaeda plot one year before the 9/11 attacks. the conservative nonpartisan judicial watch says a defense intelligence agency report showed that al qaeda planned to hijack the plane leaving germany's frankfurt international airport sometime between march and august of 2000. getting to the source of the obama care website glitches. a federal official says a specific software component crashed, causing those issues.
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the component apparently couldn't handle the high volume of visitors last week. users who tried to enroll couldn't get very far. an outside analyst found a poorly written code and out of date web applications. officials say wojciech braszczok was part of the group that went after the driver. another man was also arrested last night, clint caldwell. he is the fifth person charged in that incident. with apologies to indra, quite a site coming down from the clouds in the florida keys. a giant wind tunnel over biscayne bay. they said, wow, check this out. that's an amazing site.
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mother nalt is really terrific. frost and freeze advisories, 30s in vermont, montpellier, freezing. philadelphia 58. d.c. currently 58 degrees. enjoy that. your high in d.c. expected to be 63. but by tomorrow morning, even more cold air fills in, that low you're feeling this morning will be your afternoon high. notice your highs tomorrow, just into the 50s, into the northeast, low 60s. that's the chill we'll be feeling below normal temperatures even for fall here into the northeast. the other story will be the wind. it's not just cold. the winds will pick up, again, all the way up and down the east coast. we're looking at those winds, maybe 15, 25 miles per hour.
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not that bad except it's kind of chilly as well. if that's not bad enough, we throw rain into the mix, too. it's all about watching this one low, making its way up the coastline which means by the end of your weekend, rain into the northeast as well. that's the guy we'll be watching. the west coast they're actually talking about snow, maybe around mammoth. i know you and i are here, michaela. i don't have a winter jacket yet. i'm stressing out. do you start with a moderate jacket? >> you layer. >> it's called seasons. >> take her shopping, kate. >> layers, all about layers. >> you teach me. coming up on "new day," a mystery for you at a san francisco hospital. a body is found and where will shock you. a live report, straight ahead. plus, hundreds sickened in the salmonella outbreak spread across 18 states. find out why this strain? particular is dangerous.
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♪ "first day of my life" by bright eyes ♪ you're not just looking for a house. you're looking for a place for your life to happen. welcome back to "new day." new details this morning about a widespread salmonella outbreak. it stretches across 18 states with nearly 300 people sickened. now officials say they might know why it's making so many people so sick. senior medical correspondent elizabeth cohen is at the cnn center with the latest this morning. good morning, elizabeth. >> kate, the problem here is that many antibiotics just won't work against this strain of salmonella. >> reporter: the cdc 1 out of every 250 broiler chickens has
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the strain of salmonella. but this recent strain known as salmonella heidelberg seems to be made up of multiple antibiotic resistant strains, making it harder to treat. >> it's a new thing we're able to track now is the salmonella that's making people sick, is that a response to the antibiotics you would use to treat it? it's happened more often recently. >> reporter: according to the cdc, nearly half of the patients who contracted the strain have been hospitalized which is a high percentage. although no deaths have been reported from this bacteria, the strain packs a real punch and can make you very sick. complicating the investigation into this outbreak is the government shutdown. the cdc is furloughed many of its scientists who track food-borne pathogens, some have since been brought back in but there was a delay in the exchange of information about the outbreak. the usda says many of the packages could still be in consumer's freezers. if you have chicken from foster farm, look for these numbers on the package,
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p-6137 p-6137a and p-6372. there's been no recall. here's the reason why. the usda, the government, they don't recall food when it comes to meat and poultry, instead, companies have to recall it. this company said we're not recalling our product. if you handle it and cook it properly you'll be just fine. chris? >> all right, elizabeth. appreciate the update on that. we'll have to watch it. it seems like it could move around, that story. here's another one. a patient goes missing at a hospital in san francisco in september. and was found at the hospital yesterday dead. her name is lynn spaulding. law enforcement is wondering how this could happen? dan simon picks up the story from san francisco.
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dan? >> reporter: well, good morning, chris. the medical examiner's office still needs to officially identify the body. our law enforcement says there appears to be a match at this early stage of the investigation. how the woman wound up in an outdoor stairwell remains a mystery but either way, the hospital it seems has some serious explaining to do. this area of san francisco general hospital is being treated as a crime scene. after a body is found outside on a fire escape. it's the same hospital where this woman, 57-year-old lynn spaulding went missing on september 21st. ever since, the search had been on to find spaulding. a mother of two who had been admitted for a serious infection. >> no stone has been left unturned by her friends and family. and the fspd to find her. >> reporter: david perry is a family friend and spokesperson. >> we have a lot of questions. did anyone see her leave the room. did she leave alone? is there videotape of lynn
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leaving the hospital or wandering the halls? >> reporter: authorities went to virtually every corner of the city to try and locate spaulding who some thought may have been dazed from powerful medication. after she went missing did the hospital conduct a thorough search of its own property to see if she might be found? >> i think it's a good question for san francisco general and how one would define the word thorough. if her body was found on site at san francisco general, using the word thorough would be a wild exaggeration. >> reporter: an employee found the body but it's unclear how it could have gone undetected for any length of time. >> that is all being investigated, both by the sheriffs from assistance from the police and the medical examiner's examination will provide more information. >> reporter: a spokesperson also says they're distressed about all this. they say they did conduct a search of the campus but as for that stairwell in question, they say it's rarely used. perhaps that explains why it took so long for anyone to
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discover the body. chris and kate, back to you. >> a lot to follow up on that. thank you so much. coming up next on "new day," maybe they should look up the word negotiate. the president says he's willing to talk but the house speaker says that's not what he was told. will they ever come to an agreement on the shutdown? almost an impossible question to answer but we will try. that is like a bad movie. another story is playing out like a great movie. remember catch me if you can? seems like that 9-year-old that snuck on the plane is living that movie. this is just the latest entry on his already full resume of capers. what else has he done? why? we'll tell you. when our little girl was born,
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>> announcer: you're watching "new day" with chris cuomo, kate bolduan and michaela pereira. >> michael jackson help out here on hump day. welcome back to "new day," wednesday, october 9th. coming up in the show, the father of that 9-year-old plane stowaway is speaking out about his troubled young son. the boy managed to slip through airport security in minneapolis, got on a flight to las vegas, just last week. turns out this is only his latest caper. we'll tell you the full story. disney backlash after its theme parks make changes to its policy that accommodates disabled visitors. are they being punished for the mistakes of a few? what's going on. the latest on the headlines and news. let's take a look at those. open the government and then we'll talk. that is the message from president obama to house speaker john boehner but a compromise could be emerging as a way out of the budget stanoff.
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the president says he's willing to negotiate with republicans if they agree to a short-term increase to the debt limit and end to the government shutdown. shattering the glass ceiling at the fed, president obama later today will nominate janet yellen as the next chair of the federal reserve. if confirmed by the senate, yellen would become the first woman to head the central bank. she's currently vice-chair. she's said to hold similar views on the economy as current chair ben bernanke who is stepping down in january. an ohio school district official charged in connection with a notorious rape case expected to appear in court today. william rinneman, the steubenville high school director of technology is accused of evidence tampering, beginning on the night two football players raped a 16-year-old girl. he's the first adult to be charged in connection with that rape case. the fbi offering a $25,000 reward for information on who attacked three power grids in central arkansas, leaving tens of thousands in the dark. those incidences in loanoke
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county date back to august. last month, a fire was reported at a different substation, then yesterday, two power poles were cut, causing that massive outage. and after 22 years of marriage, kris and bruce jenner separating. they managed to keep the split under wraps for a year. they say they're much happier living apart. the pair says they are still best friends and their family remains a top priority for the pair. the jenners have two daughters together, both have four children from previous marriages. just in case you needed to know before you headed out for the day. >> even with the matching vespas, couldn't make it work. >> matching vespas are not the glue that holds together a marriage. >> thank you for that. let's get back to the battle in washington over the partial shutdown and looming debt ceiling deadline. could there be a way out? >> let's hope. >> that's the question. let's try and get some answers, joining us, cnn political commentator, anna thnavarro and
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lamont hill. we are ganging up on you because that's how important it is. >> we're taking it out on you. >> let me ask you why, anna, here's what it is. the republicans are saying got to sit at the table, got to compromise, got to compromise. the president comes out and says i'll take short term, which he hadn't said before. has to be clean, don't condition it on anything. i'll even take short term. the response from leader boehner is, this is unconditional surrender or nothing. is that fair? >> no. >> is that the right way? you say compromise, boehner says he wants to compromise. at least there's something and it seems like a slap in the face. >> let's give it 24 hours, right? one thing is, the immediate reaction, let's give it 24 hours. i'm sure he's hearing from his caucus. i'm sure they're looking at what president obama said. i saw a little give in what he said. >> really?
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>> yes. what he's saying -- and there's nothing wrong with a little give. >> give from boehner? >> no. from what president obama said. >> okay. >> i saw a little give in what president obama said. he's saying with, yes, i will accept short term. he's saying i will talk about anything you want. if he doesn't want to negotiate about re-opening the government, then why don't they sit down and negotiate about what they're going to negotiate. put a little specific on the table. >> i think that's another thing to be upset about. >> another thing to disagree about. every time they have a conversation about specifics things get messy. >> they'll have to get there at some point, mark. >> i don't think the issue over tax reform, deficit reduction will be nearly as ugly as this obama care thing. what the gop has done masterfully is change the target. we've been talking about deuned iffing obama care. people like paul ryan are saying we an want to talk about reducing the deficit. when we get to the deficit, they'll smuggle obama care in. the short-term deal may be over with no progress. >> when it comes to the olive
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branch, the glimmer of hope, the itty-bitty opening we may have seen from the president, is that in part a response to something he may have backed himself into a corner and say he's not negotiating. republicans, how many e-mails can i get from every republican saying look at all of the times that the debt ceiling and government funding has been the impetus for negotiating. >> yes, it's not unprecedented for a president to be backed into a corner or forced to deal with negotiation. it's never been on a piece of legislation like obama care. that's the thing the president was standing firm on. he never had an issue with reform. >> i also think it's a result of public perception and public outcry. the longer this goes, the more impatient the american people become. and they are becoming impact with everybody. yes, the republicans taking a slightly bigger hit? yes. but that doesn't mean that the democrats -- you may laugh. >> they deserve a bigger hit. they've been completely
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incredulous. >> my point is -- yesterday cockroaches were more popular than congress. >> it's interesting to me, i think about the optics of it all. the folks at home are so frustrated. the pain is so very real. we've told stories here about how real it is. yet all of this keeps going back on -- >> when i walk into an airport, i'm just a republican on tv. people yell at me. so i pick up the phone and yell at them. i say, look -- >> they're just as frustrated. >> when i get on tv, when people say go listen to the american public, democrats say the public is saying this and republicans say they're saying that. i don't know what echo chamber they live in. i live in the actual world, not a red world or blue world. i can tell you that people are angry out there. >> are they that far removed that they don't understand or feel it? >> they think people forget. >> people have short memories.
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that's what they're banking on. what they're missing is the fact that people are suffering every day. we hear about a salmonella outbreak and the cdc isn't at full strength. if something should wake them up, that should. >> do you think paul ryan's piece in the "wall street journal" might be the beginning of that, he's so well respected, seen as a hero of fiscal conservatives. no mention of the elephant in the room, obama care. do you think -- he's been qui tote this point. do you think this is his moment when he's coming out to say, all right, we've had enough. let's get smart. >> yes. i i this it's a recurring role you'll see from paul ryan where he's not out there flapping his gums about the issue but he's working behind the scenes to get something actually done. and he is a very serious guy, respected by a broad base of the republican caucus. not one faction, not another. he's also been able to work across the aisle in the past. and that "wall street journal" piece, he quotes his work in the past with ron white and not
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exactly a red state democrat. >> yes. >> yes, paul ryan would be a perfect person -- >> two things have to happen for that to work. obama care has to stay off the table. "the wall street journal" piece doesn't mention obama care. if that becomes the focus and it's a solution through raising revenue and cutting spending, that's great. boehner has to stop looking over his shoulder for the tea party. >> you can blame boehner for taking into considering the full influence. the president has to do the same thing. plenty of his members of his party are worried about where this is going. that's politics. this debt ceiling, we're about to have dr. coburn come on here, the senator, he's going to stay stop talking about all this bad stuff that's going to happen. it's not going to happen. whether we raise the ceiling or not, we'll pay, we'll get into it on television. i'm just a reporter. what do you make, anna, of that theme bubbling up out of the party? this credit stuff, this is bogus, scare tactics.
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that's dangerous talk. >> look, i think most republicans agree that fiddling around with the debt ceiling and not needing the debt ceiling and deadline is very dangerous. >> one of your leaders is about to come on saying that's not true. >> we have seen diversity in the republican party. >> not diversity of facts. >> that's what i'm calling it. >> we don't pay our bills we'll still be okay? that is trying to manage a crisis. that is completely ridiculous. the bond markets haven't dropped yet because people are hopeful that republicans and democrats aren't entirely insane. if this continues we'll have serious problems. >> in paul ryan's tease that kate just mentioned one of the things he talks about is, negotiating about the debt ceiling in the past, including president obama who did it two years ago, including president clinton who did it, came up with an agreement with newt gingrich, including ronald reagan who did it with democrats.
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>> this is a real crisis. >> you hear me on the enormity of any crisis. >> i'm anticipating what's going to happen in a few minutes. >> stick around and watch. >> that's impressive. >> as always, great to have you on. thank you, thank you. >> the best mirror for this is what you think. tweet us with #newday. let us know where your heads and hearts are on this debate. >> tweet your congressmen. they're all on twitter. >> many actually read those things. coming up next on "new day," the father of the boy who snuck on to a flight to las vegas. he's defending his family and saying they don't have -- they may not have an angel for a son but we'll tell you where he thought his son was, ahead. plus, listen to this one. disney stops letting the disabled cut the line at rides. why would they do something like that? turns out some people were beating the system. was it really so bad that everyone had to suffer? we'll take a look. you decide.
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you have to move to the beat. >> this is injure jam. welcome back to "new day." let's get straight over to indra petersons in the weather center for more of what you need to know before you head out the door. >> did i hear you try to teach chris how to have rhythm? did i miss that? >> ouch. >> definitely looking at this cold arctic air still in place. each day will be cooler moving forward. take a look at d.c. this is the one that will feel it. 63 will be your high. average 71. tomorrow your highs are just into the upper 50s. by thursday, high of 58 degrees. that's pretty much the story in the northeast. down to the southeast, we have a rainmaker, a low hugging the coast. as it moves up the coastline, rain into the northeast by the
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end of the week. really affecting the entire eastern seaboard. by the end of the week in the northeast. high pressure still building in, temperatures well above normal into the midwest. out in the pacific northwest, another storm making its way through. maybe some snow at mammoth lakes, temperatures 15 to 20 degrees below normal. where it's beautiful, yes, the midwest gets to be the big winner. so it is nice somewhere today, just the middle of the country, like you said, for you. >> thank you. >> sure. we've been following a story about this 9-year-old stowaway. the boy found his way past mumple checkpoints, flew from minnesota to las vegas. george howell is in minneapolis with the latest. good morning. >> reporter: what a story. for more than six days he's been gone from home. whatever happens in vegas he will not stay in vegas. a source with knowledge of the
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situation tells many he that he will be returning here to minneapolis and his father who's anxious to see him says his son does have a history that he's no angel. >> i'm not giving up on my son. he just confused. >> reporter: an 'motional father of a 9-year-old boy speaking out for the first time after his son slipped through tsa security cracks and sneaked on to a delta flight from the minneapolis-st. paul airport to las vegas without a ticket. >> i don't have an angel, okay? i have a 9-year-old. to me he's got a behavior problem. >> reporter: the boy whose father says he's a charmer has been in protective custody in nevada for the last six days. >> i don't know what to do. i love my son. >> reporter: passing through the security checkpoints of tsa screening, an airport spokesman says surveillance video shows the child boarding the plane while the delta agent was distracted. the father claims he's been
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asking for behavioral help since his son was 5. >> anyone, please, help me. please. >> reporter: according to a report by the minneapolis star tribu tribune, the director of the county department says there have been four assessments on the family since 2012. the agency's director described the boy as, quote, challenging. and says he stole a car and was arrested on highway 35 just weeks ago. finally, there are allegations concerning a troubled past. moore in her e-mail wrote that the boy claimed his mother once held a knife to his throat and that his mother was, quote, stabbed and died. >> we're not bad parents. >> his mother has not spoken publicly yet but a source close to the investigation confirms to cnn that she works at the airport. we have been working to try to backstop some of that information you heard. cnn reached out to the county
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human services and public health department to try to confirm some of the information in that report but so far, they are not commenting, chris, kate, on the content of that e-mail obtained by the newspaper. >> a shocking story. george, thank you so much. let's talk more about this. what does this lapse in security tell us about the security at our nation's airports? should we be concerned? what can they learn from it? what can we learn from it? let's bring in cnn national security analyst fran townsend to talk more about it. we're learning more about how this played out. you see the boy talking to a gate agent. she seems to get -- they seem to get distracted and that seems to be the event right before he got on the plane. do we know who finally dropped the ball? this is the learning experience. >> it's unclear, kate. the gate agent gets distracted. there was another opportunity to catch up with this boy, because, of course, the flight attendants do a head count on the plane
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before, they match it to the manifest to make sure the numbers match. somebody didn't do that. even though the gate agent got distracted, there was not a head count with the manifest. we don't know where the mother worked in the airport, did she work inside the perimeter or outside? this boy, probably wasn't the first time at the airport. people may have been familiar with this little boy. sounds like he does have behavioral problems, right? so what sort of assistance have they gotten? why didn't anybody notice, why didn't mother or father notice this boy was missing over a long period of time? i have kids. when my kids are going some place, i talk to the parents. call me when you get there, call me when you're leaving. why wasn't more attention paid to this little boy when he went missing. >> dad describes him as charming. others might say cunning. if this child can get by several
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points of security, a distracted ticket taker, whatever, could a cunning adult do the same thing? that's where people are freaking out. >> i think that's a legitimate question. i think we have to be -- in fairness to everybody involved, tsa, the gate agent, the flight attendant, you tend to be more matern maternal, protective of the child unless they're suspicious. >> true. >> i think probably that worked to this kid's advantage. it's the right question to ask. >> even the maternal things seemed to fail. >> they wound up giving him a pass because he didn't trigger their suspicions but didn't do any favors by letting him go unattended. what's the problem with this situation? there's a lack of accountability. >> that's right. >> they're failing at rule one. you made a mistake. own it. the confidence in you is hurt, not by the perceived wrong but by the cover-up, the lack of accountability. it's embarrassing with wu we'll
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fix it. the kid is an entirely different situation. the father was quoted as saying i called the police, said help me with this. they said you need to discipline your child. if i discipline him any more, you'd be arrests me. here's a fundamental problem we deal with all the time, whether you parent. why is this kid doing this? discipline means teaching the kid to learn how to follow. this kid, nobody has connected with him. it has nothing to do with the tsa. this kid happens to be very smart. >> there are behavioral issues. >> do you think the tsa are taking a step back to re-assess or are they simply saying this is a one off that shouldn't have happened? there are other issues involved here. don't take this as something we need to learn from. >> that's chris's point. i think that's right. the tsa seems to be saying this is a one off. the gate agent missed it. that's delta's problem. it's a parent problem. and that's where people lack confidence in their government. they say, wait a minute, why don't you want to look at this
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an why don't you want to understand this. if it had been a cunning adult, could they have gotten past. i think it's a misstep on tsa's part. >> they're saying we've done everything we can. not our fault. disney tells disabled people get back in line. is that fair? we'll tell you where the real problem lies, straight ahead, and then you judge for yourself. ♪
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welcome back to "new day." ready for this? disney is telling disabled visitors to its parks to get back in line. they used to allow the disabled instant access to rides. okay. are they being mean? no, here's what turns out. some ethically challenged guests were abusing that policy. that's what disney says. so now disney is making it harder for everyone as a result s that fair? let's bring in elizabeth cohen at the cnn center with this situation. what do we make of this, elizabeth? >> you know what, chris? you can really see both sides of this situation. disney says dhoent want people cheating anymore. the families say this change in policy could ruin their dream vacations. >> reporter: for months the kill patrick family had been excitedly plabing a dream vacation for their daughter kyra. back in june, they bought tickets to the happiest place on
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earth. ♪ >> i like to give her a chance to remember disneyland. as a fun place. >> reporter: now they're worried it may not be fun at all. starting today, disneyland and disney world will no longer allow visitors with disabilities instant access to rides. and that's a problem for kyra who has a rare genetic scored called pcdh-19. that leads to seizures. and autism. >> i'm nervous. this may not be much of a vacation for us. >> reporter: long rides can be a disaster for kids with her condition. disney is making the change after widespread reports of able-bodied people abusing the policy including wealthy park visitors who hired disabled people to pretend to be family members so they could skip lines. disney said, "we're modifying our current program so we can continue to serve the guests who truly need it and for whom it
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was intended." >> disney is just saying, you know, we'll accommodate you. talk to us when you get here. trust us. and that's -- i can't plan for that. i don't know how it's going to work. >> reporter: the family says they're still worried kyra will get sick and have to leave. they're still going to give it a try. they already sunk $1500 in nonrefundable costs. they're hoping they'll see joy on kyra's face as they enjoys rides. >> disney says guests with disabilities will receive a return time for attractions under the new policy. families say, look, that's not very clear. we don't know what it means or how it will work. they say it sounds like big waits will still be in store for them. chris? >> all right. elizabeth, thank you very much. that's a tough one. coming up next on "new day," finally, maybe a sign of the compromise of the debt ceiling is reached. and the olive branch from
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president obama. it is real and is it enough? >> and we're staying on that vicious biker attack for you. there are new arrests, including a member of the nypd. he said he did nothing wrong. authorities say he's wrong. we'll show you why. stick with innovation. stick with power. stick with technology. get the flexcare platinum. new from philips sonicare. one more time, just for themselves. before the last grandchild. before the first grandchild. smile. before katie, debbie, kevin and brad... there was a connection that started it all and made the future the wonderful thing it turned out to be... at bank of america,
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we know we're not the center of your life, but we'll do our best to help you connect to what is. a man who doesn't stand still. but jim has afib, atrial fibrillation -- an irregular heartbeat, not caused by a heart valve problem. that puts jim at a greater risk of stroke. for years, jim's medicine tied him to a monthly trip to the clinic to get his blood tested. but now, with once-a-day xarelto®, jim's on the move. jim's doctor recommended xarelto®. like warfarin, xarelto® is proven effective to reduce afib-related stroke risk. but xarelto® is the first and only once-a-day prescription blood thinner for patients with afib not caused by a heart valve problem. that doesn't require routine blood monitoring.
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such as kidney, liver, or bleeding problems. xarelto® is not for patients with artificial heart valves. jim changed his routine. ask your doctor about xarelto®. once a day xarelto® means no regular blood monitoring -- no known dietary restrictions. for more information and savings options, call 1-888-xarelto or visit goxarelto.com. the american people do not get to demand a ransom for doing their jobs. that's not how our negotiations work. >> true cost of the shutdown. families of troops killed in action not getting benefits. tens of thousands of furloughed
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workers on unemployment. will it force the two sides to start negotiating? historic shift. the u.s. set to pull much of its aid to egypt. the two allies drifting apart. what it means for the region. fear, parents, teachers and students believe this malibu school is giving them cancer. four diagnosed already. they speak out to us. your "new day" continues right now. what you need to know -- >> i certainly didn't come here to default on our debt. >> what you just have to see. >> we were transferred to the ambulance, they asked if we could drive it to the wedding. good morning. welcome back to "new day,"
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everyone. the effects of the partial government shutdown becoming very real and painful for every day americans. many are outraged how the political games are hurting military families, keeping them from the benefits that they need. but could a new chance at negotiations put an end to the nightmare? we'll talk about it. >> listen to this, a new york city police detective is arrested and seen on video pounding a range rover in that wild chase beating the bikers and suv driver. now six people in total are charged in the case. we'll tell you why the police say they're still looking for more. this story makes us crazy. a middle school is not letting children play with balls during recess. footballs, baseballs, soccer balls and even games of tags and cart wheels. those things need to be supervised. are they letting the pc police go too far? or should more schools follow their lead? we will discuss it later. first, how about a short
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term solution? how does that sound? the idea is picking up steam as a way to end with partial government shutdown and the threat of default at least for now. it's a bit of a double-edged sword. gets people back to work, could stabilize the markets. flip side, we koend up right back here in a few weeks going through all this all over again. brianna keilar down at the white house, you know you have trouble when kicking the can down the road sounds like a good idea. >> that's exactly it, chris. good morning to you. and also we should caution it's not even clear that this is really definitely a breakthrough. it may be an opening to a short term way to avoid a default and get the government back up and running. >> reporter: day nine, the government shutdown is getting real. for families of troops killed in combat, they will not get automatic death benefits during the shutdown. $100,000 it help cover funeral costs and travel to dover air force base to witness the dignified transfer of their
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loved ones remains. in north carolina, food assistance for poor women and children cut off. and 27,000 furloughed government workers have signed up for unemployment as they go without pay. just eight days until the united states could default, president obama phoned house speaker john boehner. both sides indicating the divide is as deep as ever. >> you have to stop repeating this pattern. >> later, president obama appeared in the white house briefing room, opening the door to negotiations if republicans agree to a short term solution to reopen the government and increase the debt ceiling. >> if there's a way to solve this, it has to include reopening the government and saying america's not going to default and pay our bills. >> reporter: how long might a short term measure last? four to six weeks one gop source tells cnn. republicans may agree if the president promises to negotiate. but it's far from a breakthrough without some sort of concession like a cut in spending, a
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stopgap measure may not clear the house. >> the long and short of it is there is going to be a negotiation here. we can't raise the debt ceiling without doing something about what's driving us. to borrow more money and to live beyond our means. >> reporter: the house voted tuesday to create a congressional committee on government spending and the debt limit as well as the federal employees currently going without pay. the obama administration -- a stalemate still and the clock is ticking louder and louder. and if the debt ceiling is breeched, not only is the u.s.'s credit rating at stake but very real effects for millions and millions of americans come november 1st at jeopardy -- in jeopardy, i should say, tens of billions of dollars in payments for social security, disability, medicare as well as for active duty military. something that so many people would feel, chris.
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>> that's right, brianna. we don't have to wait for hem them. question do it right now. right now, military families are being denied death benefits because of the shutdown. the families of four u.s. soldiers killed in afghanistan have to pay their own way to dover air force base to meet the plane carrying their bodies when it arrives today. 24-year-old corey patterson, one of the fallen, you're looking at his face right now, an army ranger from oregon who just learned that chuck hagel will travel to dover this morning for the dignified transfer ceremony. the situation exists every day people are paying the cost and that is unacceptable, especially to the members of the fallen. >> that is one example too many. but we're seeing many other examples of hard-working americans being hit by this. so today hard-working americans and corporate ceos they have something in common this morning. they're all being squeezed by the government shutdown. while your 401(k) is shrinking, corporate executives are sweating, calling on congress to
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stop with the irresponsibility and the dysfunction. the host of cnn's "your money" is here with more on this this morning. interesting twist. what are they saying? >> it's so interesting. the economy is too fragile. they well remember the business leaders. they do not want to see markets in disarray, consumers panicking. they know that the telltale signs of what could become another great recession. stock markets are tumbling as the debt ceiling deadline looms and the government remains partially shut down and you may start foelg teeling the reprecu. lawmakers are talking to the country. that isn't help ease wall street's concerns. >> the greatest nation on earth shouldn't have to get permission from a few irresponsible members of congress to keep our government open or to prevent an economic catastrophe. >> as the president spoke, the selling continued. the dow dropping 159 points or 1% by tuesday's close. >> we can't raise the debt ceiling without doing something
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about what's driving us to borrow more money and to live beyond our means. >> reporter: since the shutdown began, the dow is down 2.6% and america's top ceos are getting fed up. >> the most important economy in the world with a reserve currency of the world, payments have to go out to people f money doesn't flow in, then money doesn't flow out. >> the way forward is not easy. it's requiring a lot of sacrifice and flexibility. it requires a lot of compromise. we expect the same will happen with the political architecture. >> reporter: starbucks ceo wrote an open letter asking for an end to the gridlock saying he's disappointed by the level of irresponsibility and dysfunction with our elected political leadership. the debt ceiling debate is the biggest threat to your inve investmen investments. >> a debt ceiling doesn't make sense. it ought to be banned as a weapon. it should be like -- it should be like nuclear bombs, too
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horrible to use. >> reporter: the built of the government's inaction could be strat stro catastrophic. >> the major averages are posting huge gains for the year. we see, wow, the dow is at 12%. nasdaq, 22%. s&p 500 is up 16%. borrowing costs could get more expensive. people are more concerned that government can't pay its bills on time. that will be something that will filt near mortgage rates and other borrowing cost that's could increase for consumers. never been here before, chris cuomo. a lot of people trying to figure out what that fallout is going to look like. no one in business certainly wants to be on the other side of it. chris? >> all right. everybody in washington is not convinced that failing to raise the debt ceiling would mean economic catastrophe. one of those is a congressman who is going to join us now. thank you for being here. >> glad to be with you. >> no surprise to you, my first question is about your take that
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the debt ceiling isn't that important, that we can still pay our bills. a lot of people say that that is nonsense. are you holding to that position? >> well, who says it's nonsense? the fact is we're eventually going to make hard choices, chris. and the debt ceiling has never not been raised. so there is no debt ceiling. and by having a debt ceiling and then raising it every time, it allows the politicians off the hook for making the hard choices. >> you know, your kids and mine are going to suffer greatly because we failed to bring in spending that's not efficient, not effective and basically outside the bounds of the constitution. >> agreed. >> we've not done what the president asked us to do. he offered $435 billion in mandatory spending changes in this last budget. that ought to be included in any debt ceiling increase. in other words, we have to start making the transition to live responsib responsibly. and we can't continue to get an
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increase limit on our credit card whether we're not demonstrating any financial integrity in the way we run our government. >> totally agreed. senator, i agree with everything that you say. it's a great platform. few americans if any would disagree. however, where the disagreement comes is if you do not recognize what is at risk with the politics you're playing right now in terms of what bills don't get paid about it government, what it could do to the credit markets, what it could do to the american consumer, that's dangerous. i hear you on spending. >> what's dangerous is if we don't pay interest on our debt an we don't redeem bonds that are due. i agree with that. we won't do that. we won't -- force pors. >>. . >> it goes farther. >> tell me how. >> you have to start prioritizing payments. you don't have the money to pay everything that comes in. you'll have to start to make choices. ious in effect that could negatively affect the credit markets once the financial markets move, the american families pay the price.
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you can't fix it down in washington. a lot of economists, a lot of big shots in business say you can put us right back into a recession. bad domino effect. >> here's the wrong -- the thing i disagree with you. >> please. >> we can fix it if washington. we refuse to fix it. the assumption in your process is that we won't fix it. we won't make hard choices. and what i'm saying is we're going to eventually make these hard choices. now we may not make it this time. i may not win my battle for us to start making the hard choices now. but our country is going to eventually make the hard choices. and all you're doing and all everybody else is doing is by putting off the choices making them that much harder on the average american. so the question is, where's the leadership in our country both at the presidential level and republicans and democrats in congress to recognize the reality of our situation? we have $126 trillion of
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unfunded lie anlunfund ed liabilities and if you add the entire net worth of our country up, we're worth $93 trillion. so we're in the hole $40 trillion. and that is called bankruptcy. >> understood. >> my point is this. if not now, when will we start acting responsibly? >> is it responsible to make it worse which is what you will do if you prioritize payments. it couldn't be less my opinion. this is what everybody we talk to says. you see all the big business people coming out saying don't mess with the credit markets. don't mess with consumer interest rates. pay your bills. hey, make your cuts. please make your cuts for my kids, your kudz, everybody's kids. make your cuts. but don't jeopardize the credit markets and the understanding of the economy in the minds of the american consumer and the minds of the market makers just to gain political advantage.
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>> will is nothing about political advantage here. i'm the most apolitical person in the senate. what mine is common sense. you can't continue spending money that you don't have on things you don't absolutely need and congress refuses to address that. the president refuses to address that. and so consequently, you're saying don't have this fight now. have it down the road. and the problem is we continue to kick it down the road and pretty soon everything is going to continue as it is until it doesn't. and when it doesn't, that's when the catastrophe comes. i'd rather have a managed catastrophe now which i don't think will be there. here's the thing that all the media does. they say it is default equals not raising the debt ceiling. that's not true. that is not true. those are two different things. i'm not saying we shouldn't pay our bills. what i'm saying is we should put ourselves in a position where we have to start making hard choices now. >> that's fine. i do think you have to say the first part a little more clearly, otherwise, we wonts be having this discussion.
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>> i said it every time i've been on. >> raise the debt ceiling, pay your bills, don't do anything to compromise the markets, but then let's have a real negotiation and show real leadership. i'm a senator, i'm going to fight for the cuts because we need to make them. i think that's great. >> the difference is i think you make the decisions before you raise the debt ceiling. >> but if you blow through the deadline and have resulting negative consequence os on the economy, you end up hurting the u.s. family. >> we're going to have positive to pay consequences one way or another if we don't do this. that's where we differ. >> i appreciate you laying it out. let me ask you about something that is important you to before you go here this morning. social security, disability in particular. you're investigatesing you're investigating it. found fraud within how disability payments come about with a certain law firm in connections to a judge. do you believe that this is widespread fraud that you see with disability payments and social security?
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>> well, probably not to the degree that we have. we had two reports on this. one is, as we know and social security agrees with it about, a quarter of all the case that's are decided are decided inappropriately at the judge level. that is number one. number two, you can't deny the fact that this trust fund is going to be out of money in about 18 to 24 months. if our program is really help those people who need disability, then we have to make sure we're not paying disability to those people who are not disabled. and my contention is anywhere from a quarter to a third of the people that are collecting it today aren't truly disabled. >> and we have good data to back that up. >> because you know it's coming under some criticism, the report that you're cherry picking here a little bit. >> you got to look at both reports. we did three other areas of country where we found 25% of the cases weren't right. and it's not -- about it way,
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social security agrees with us on this. so it's not our committee that -- by the way this is a bipartisan committee with some very strong leaders in it. senator carl levin, senator tom carper, myself, senator mccain and several others. so this isn't taking a shot at the disability community. it's to preserve our disability payments by not paying disability to people who aren't disabled. >> well, that's obviously going to be what the important prospect is, right? we want to make sure we protect the most vulnerable. that's what that program is all about. >> that's right. >> senator, thank you so much. i know you have important business there. i wish more of it was going on right now. i appreciate you coming on "new day." look forward to seeing you again. >> you bet. >> all right. over to you. new this morning, the obama administration is preparing to suspend some of the military aid to egypt. the country has been thrown into turmoil ever since the military coup that toppled mohammed mors
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in july. we have a live report from washington this morning. what are we hearing, jim? there is talk that this is new? >> right. this is a significant decision affecting one of the most significant relationships for the u.s. and middle east. the white house says an announcement is coming in the coming days and u.s. officials say that announcement will include the reduction of military aid to egypt. not all of it will go. some things remain like counter terror help. but still a significant reduction. that is a significant move. the egyptians rts going to like it. it's our information that the u.s. is not officially notified egypt yet either. >> so why -- what you are hearing about why the decision to suspend the aid is coming now? is there one event or one thing that finally triggered this move? >> well, it's something that the administration had been considering for some time. really since the july coup that wasn't. you remember they didn't officially call it a coup, the white house, and then the violent crackdown that followed. at the time, administration
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oeflz told us they didn't want to make any rash decisions about aid. they were thinking about it. we're also told they pushed the decision back a couple times. so my information is that it's the accumulation of events including the events in july that led to this decision now. but it also highlights how significant the decision this is. it took some time to come to it. >> absolutely. of course, along with that significant decision is the big question, what does this mean then for the relationship between the u.s. and egypt going forward? >> well, it's going to be damaging. you already have egyptian officials on the record when this come up before saying we don't need american aid. there are others who will fill in the void. and that's true. some of the gulf states, saudi arabia, et cetera, who are looking for greater influence there have offered to do just that. so it's going to be something that's going to have an effect. now to be clear, some of this -- a good portion of aid will remain. the u.s. gets about a billion and a half dollars a year, 500 of that is military. you still have nonmilitary assistance and so on. an aid relationship will
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continue. but still, the military aid a very important part of that. >> it sends a pretty big message. very significant decision. jim, this is developing throughout the day. we'll be talking to you. thank you so much. let's get to the latest headlines. >> there are signs of the government shutdown may have slowed the response to the salmonella outbreak. there was delay getting information about the outbreak. the outbreak likely would have happened the other way since food inspectors remain on the job as essential employees. an ugly scene happening in brazil. protesters clashing with riot police. they ran sacked the city center breaking into banks and setting a bus on fire. this violence followed a day of peaceful demonstrations which tens of thousands of people taking to the streets in solidarity with teachers seeking better pay and benefits. congressmen under arrest. eight democratic house members were among the 200 people
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arrested at an immigration rally in washington tuesday. those protesters blocking a main street right near the capitol in an effort to get republicans to vote on a stalled immigration reform bill. among those charged with crowding and obstructing, john lewis and new york congressman charlie rangel. "southpark" courting controversy as it starts the 17th season. there is a episode about the trayvon martin-george zimmerman case. in it, they track down token, the only black child. you know, of course, the show is no stranger to controversy having aired episodes about nsa and scientology and many others. so told you about it. some of you will watch it and of course tomorrow, the fallout. >> many of you the tweet about it. >> let's get to the forecast. >> we're looking at that chilly start today and rain being thrown into the mix. take a look at. this right now in pittsburgh,
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you're in the 40s. 46 degrees. new york, 54. d.c., 58 degrees. right now that's what you're feeling. you're not going to see much more warmth in that especially as we get in through tomorrow. toll you'll get to low 60s. we're throwing rain in the mix there as the low makes its way up the coastline. by tomorrow, the temperatures drop even more so that your eyes will only be where you're currently starting off the morning hours. tomorrow, d.c., the high is in the 50s. yes, more rain in the mix. so where is that rain coming from? the sustained low is making its way up from the carolinas. it is making its way into the mid-atlantic and it's going to cruise to the northeast and start our weekend here. new york looking forward to friday and into saturday. so hanging on a little bit. warmth, that's the middle of the country. the temperatures are good. 15 degrees above normal ragt into the midwest. and then the pacific northwest, our first rain maker for southern california and even snow. so, of course, i can't help but throw it out there. snowboarding season is very key. >> there you go. embrace the snow.
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>> that's right. >> all right. coming up next on "new day," a woman vanishes from her hospital room. weeks later, police make a terrifying discovery where they found her. details ahead. at a ford dealer with a little q and a for fiona. tell me fiona, who's having a big tire event? your ford dealer. who has 11 major brands to choose from? your ford dealer. who's offering a rebate? your ford dealer. who has the low price tire guarantee, affording peace of mind to anyone who might be in the market for a new set of tires? your ford dealer. i'm beginning to sense a pattern. get up to $140 in mail-in rebates when you buy four select tires with the ford service credit card. where'd you get that sweater vest? your ford dealer.
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welcome back to "new day". a disturbing discovery at a california hospital. lins balding vanished last month from her hospital room in san francisco general. this led her family and friends on a frantic search. now officials say they may have found her body. dan simon is live with more from san francisco. good morning, dan. >> reporter: good morning, kate. the medical examiner's office need to identify the body a law enforcement source tells us there appears to be a match at
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this early stage of the investigation. how the woman wound up in an outdoor stairwell remains to be seen. it seems the hospital has some serious explaining to do. this area of san francisco general hospital is being tre treated as a crime scene. after a body is found outside on a fire escape. it's the same hospital where this woman, 57-year-old lyn spalding, went missing on september 21st. ever since, the search had been on to find spalding. a mother of two had been admitted for a serious infection. >> no stone has been left unturned by her friends and family. >> reporter: david perry is a friend and family spokesperson. >> we have a lot of questions as her family and friends. did anyone see her leave the room? did she leave alone? is there videotape of lyn leaving the hospital or wandering the halls? >> reporter: authorities went to virtually every corner of the city to try to locate spalding who some thought may have been dazed from powerful medication.
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after she went missing, did the hospital conduct a thorough search of its own property to see if she might be found? >> i think that's a good question for san francisco general and how one would define thorough. if indeed her body was found on site at san francisco general, i think using the word thorough is a wild exaggeration. >> reporter: the hospital says an employee found the body but unclear how it could have gone undetected for any length of time. >> that is all what is being investigated both by the sheriff with assistance from the police and, of course, the medical examiner's examination will provide more information. >> reporter: the hospital spokesperson also saying they're very distressed about this. they said they did conduct a search of the campus but that stairwell is rarely used that's why it took so long for anyone to discover the body. it could have been there for as long as three weeks. chris and kate, back to you. >> still a lot of explaining to do to say the least. thank you, dan. coming up next, serious illness at a california school.
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teachers say recent construction and moldy classrooms are behind a rash of illnesses including cancer. is the school safe? what's going on here? another school story for you, what you are supposed to do if you run a school and kids get hurt at recess playing games? how about no more balls? that's the answer at one school on long island. is this a case of child safety run amok? ♪ great. this is the last thing i need.) seriously? the last thing you need is some guy giving you a new catalytic converter when all you got is a loose gas cap. what? it is that simple sometimes. thanks. now let's take this puppy over to midas and get you some of the good 'ol midas touch. hey you know what? i'll drive! and i have no feet... i really didn't think this through. trust the midas touch. for brakes, tires, oil, everything. (whistling)
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ahead on "new day," one cancer case then another then another. teachers at a california high school say something in their building is making them sick. coincidence? something more. we'll tell you. and remember this wild video that we showed you yesterday. it's part of a new trend called pra prankvertising. prafrpgs on video with the victims' winding up on tv without consent. are the marketing campaigns crossing the line? we'll see. >> all right. we'll get to that. time now for the five things you need to know. number one, president obama pledging to sit down and negotiate with republicans as long as they agree to a short term debt ceiling increase and an end to the partial government shutdown. the president expected to nominate janet yellen to lead the federal reserve today. if confirmed, she will become
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the first woman to head the central bank. the u.s. announcing a decision in the coming days on aid to egypt. u.s. officials telling cnn that military aid will be cut though not all of it. this announcement coming in the wake of violent clashes there. the cdc recalling workers furloughed in the government shutdown to respond to a salmonella outbreak that sickened 300 people in 18 states. strains of the disease linked to raw chicken are resistant to antibiotics. and number five, samsung got a bit of a twist up the sleeve. it is releasing a new smart phone called "the galaxy round with a curved display and a $1,000 pricetag. only available in south korea right now. you can't get your hands on it quite yet in america. we always update the five things to know. go to cnn.com for the latest. >> fascinating. a very serious health scare at a california high school has parents and teachers frantic this morning. they believe a 2011 construction project at malibu high school
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sickened up to a third of the staff with illness that's even include cancer. miguel is looking into it. >> reporter: this morning concern and confusion at this california school. parents speaking out. >> my kids are terrified. yes. absolutely. >> reporter: fear after 20 teachers sent a letter saying something at the school was possibly making them sick. their claim, three teachers diagnosed with thyroid cancer in the last six months, another with bladder cancer and others complaining of migraines, mysterious rashes, hair loss, and asthma. 14-year-old christian pierce had a brain tumor when he was 6. do you want to come back to school? >> not really. as long as i can stay away from school until this is done, i'll be happy. i'm scared. >> reporter: he's clear of it now but his family moved here for the healthy lifestyle. >> one of the reasons why we chose malibu is because we're by the ocean, the air is fresher. >> reporter: trouble in paradise
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the district saying. it doesn't know if the illnesses are coincidence or not. nicholas wiseman a junior has dealt with migraines, rashes and asthma for years. did you ever think it could be your school that could be causing this? >> no. no. i thought it was the season changing, like the weather changing. >> reporter: the family pulled out shrubs, even took out a wall for fear of mold. anything and everything to determine the root to the problem. this comes as a shock you to, obviously. >> it's appalling. i mean you think you're doing the right thing and then you have this total self doubt. >> reporter: this, the biggest problem for parents, inadequate information the school slow to react. >> i don't know what to do. i'm just a mother. >> reporter: for now, the school is closing one building, relocating students and conducting a full environmental review. cnn, malibu, california. >> that is scary. >> not just a mom though. moms are the most important
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thing. don't give up on yourselves. figure out what that situation is. stay informed about it. >> that was a really tough story. now the good stuff. today's edition, firefighters love them, right? save lives, safe property, save cats. but one company in fresno even saved a wedding. listen to this. a baker on her way to the ceremony with the cake and flowers and she started to feel severe chest pains. she called nfor help. as she is being loaded into the ambulance, listen -- >> she asked if we could drive it to the wedding. couldn't get any employees down in time for another hour and a half. they would have missed the ceremony. >> the flowers were a couple minutes late and then we saw a firetruck pull in. and we were like what's going on? why is this firetruck here? >> thank you! >> that is really cute. i love this. >> the firefighters were wearing pink in support of breast cancer
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awareness month, by the way. that's why they have it on. the ceremony, perfect. the baker going to be okay. firefighters dropped off the cake and went right back to work. just another example of our first responders, consider we love them above and beyond the call of duty day in and day out. >> remember my argument about the 9-year-old and humanity and someone should have had an instinct to watch out for him. the one that went from minneapolis to las vegas. they don't ever lose humanity, i love that. >> and baker, professional. the cake! >> exactly. >> good stuff. >> and you sent it to us. thank you so much. keep sending us the good stuff. we keep telling that you good stuff happens. >> coming up next, a long island school banning pretty much everything, baseballs, footballs, soccer balls and more. they're doing it in the name of safety. but is it too much?
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and imagine being a witness to a murder then finding out just a prafrpnk. you wind up on tv helping a company selling products. the latest trend known as prankvertising. >> works for me. acid erosion. there's a lot of fruits and drinks that have acids in them that you might not know about. salad dressings, raspberries, strawberries... they all have acid in them, and it's working at your enamel. once the enamel is gone, it's gone. you can't get it back. i would recommend using pronamel as your regular toothpaste. pronamel will help to re-harden the enamel that is softened by the acids in our daily diets. knowing what i know about pronamel, i use that every day twice a day. and i know that i am protected.
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let's head over for another check of the weather. >> i stepped it up a notch talking about cold. how about rain? just what you want to see on the map, right? all about the low and where is it going to go over the next several days? you can see the current radar. it is starting to make its way into virginia south of maryland. and this will be the story the next several days. it is beginning to make its way north. it is cold.
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temperatures are going to be a lot milder than they have been the last several weeks. all thanks to cold arctic air. the dome of pressure is hanging out. we'll talk about the temperatures. notice as they continue to drop. d.c. today, your high, only 63. average is 71. tomorrow your high expected into the 50s. it ask expected to drop down to 60 tomorrow. so that is the low that's going to continue to make its way into the northeast for the start of the weekend. so by friday and saturday even we'll be talking about rain in this region. there is some good weather in a few places. of course, that will be in the midwest. the rest of us will be talking about 2 to 4 inches in the carolinas. 1 to 3 inches in baltimore and d.c. 1 to 2 inches in new york as we head through the weekend. so a nice fall weather. i know you like it. >> we'll take what we can get. thank you. you know, we all want to protect kids from injury, obviously. but how far is going too far? that's a question that is facing webber middle school on long
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"land, new yor -- long island, . they banned balls and any equipment that can hurt children. also cart wheels and tag can require supervision from a coach. soft nerf balls are allowed. we've been watching some of the response online. it seems to me that you got feedback from both sides of the issue. is this throwing the baby out with the bath watter? >> you can get which side we heard more from? we said that this is ridiculous. we heard stupid. we heard crazy. we heard, you know, so many parents say that our kids are so structured these days, they get so little time to just play, to just be. we have an obesity crisis in this country. this is the wrong way to go. on the flip side, there were people who said, you know, injuries are injuries. and an injury, a head injury could be serious. and there is also concerns about liability for the schools. so we did hear from some people on the other side who said that.
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>> you need to say that part twice. that's what's really driving this on the school side is liability. fair? >> the superintendent in a local interview said that these injuries can be unintentional but then they can get to be very serious. the school we should know has issued a press release i think in part to kind of clarify on its part saying that there is construction going on at the school so there is a more limited area where the kids are playing. and if kids are in close proximity to each other, having hard balls thrown or rough games of tag is not the way to go. so they're trying to say it's temporary at some point it will be lifted. >> this is happening. it is happening in schools. they're reducing because of liability concerns. they get sued a lot. >> is there an increase in injuries at schools? >> that's what i -- >> i think someone needs to tell me that from when many, many, many years ago when i was playing. we had concrete on the playground. we didn't have the rubber foam
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and all the play sets had rusty bolts. >> right. had there been that dra mat being an increase? you see numbers more increases in injuries in terms of overall sports related injuries. how much of that is because more kids are playing in sports at younger ages. kids are getting bigger and maybe that's a question of better equipment or better coaching but not necessarily restricting the play. >> this is the part that makes me crazy. isn't the job of adults, whether parents or teachers or what have you is to teach kids how to do things appropriately? you know, one of the things about when you fall is they teach you to get right back up and avoid those things that bring you pain. it seems to me that just making a swipe -- you're not going to have any balls -- >> subject to what you say, litigation. liability. teachers teach less. they stay out of behavior. that why bullying is so hard to control. they don't want to coach the kids on the playground in case the kid gets hurt, they're going to get sued. this is happening in washington. it is grate community. >> i think it is a huge point.
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i think what we're starting to see is a shift. i think parents are saying, enough is enough. this is crazy. we need our kids just as you said, we need them to learn. learn how to negotiate, conflict resolution. you get hurt, you get back up. we all did that. >> we turned out okay. >> clearly, there's been a lot of outrage. >> so the school got a lot of heat fwor th heat for this decision the do you have any indication that they're dialing back sh. >> a frantic person on phone this morning say a lot of this information is not correct. they say there is this construction but we know construction takes time. so they're sort of saying when the construction is over and there is more space the kids will be able to go back to the normal play. the question is whether is that time? and right now they're not able to play the way they like to play. >> tweet us. we want to hear your thoughts. >> and if it's going on.
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>> yeah. all right. thank you, kelly. >> my pleasure. >> very interesting. >> we'll take you outside right now and i'll beat with you a football. there is more on this on cnn living on our cnn website. you can look up the information there. kelly, always a delight. >> stick around, we have a little human factor story. a young race car driver is forced to change his lifestyle after learning he has type one diabetes. you hear about it all the time. but now ryan reid is back on the track and using his experience to change lives along the way. here's dr. sanjay gupta. >> reporter: against all odds, ryan reid is living his dream. >> i've been a race car driver since i was 4. >> reporter: he was just 17 when one of nascar's top drivers recruited him for his development team. >> it was like everything was falling in place in my life. nothing could stop me. >> reporter: but something did. >> i was thirsty a lot. i was using bathroom, losing a
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lot of weight. >> reporter: one of the first thing his doctors checked, his blood sugar. he was diagnosed with type one diabetes. >> they're like, you'll never race again. >> reporter: reid found a doctor willing to help him get back on the track. there had been adjustments. a new diet, a wired censor is implanted if his abdomen that trans ferz blood sugar readings. there is a blood sugar mounter and his fire suit sports a bulls eye. >> we have a guy trained to reach in the window and give me an insulin injection should i need it. >> reid made his debut april 26th and last month he finished in the top ten. cnn, reporting. >> fascinating. >> right. >> wow. coming up next, advertising starring you without you knowing
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about it. more on a growing trend and i will not repeat the word because it is too difficult coming up. i was made to work.
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it's always party vote now. so she could take her dream to the next level. so we talked about her options. her valuable assets were staying. and selling her car wouldn't fly. we helped sydney manage her debt and prioritize her goals, so she could really turn up the volume on her dreams today... and tomorrow. so let's see what we can do about that... remodel. motorcycle. [ female announcer ] some questions take more than a bank. they take a banker. make a my financial priorities appointment today. because when people talk, great things happen.
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welcome back to "new day."
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remember this video that we showed you yesterday? it was part of a viral campaign for the movie "carry" and part of a new trend called prankvertising. they're generating a lot of buzz and getting a lot of attention. >> that would make me mad. >> and also a lot of cash. surprising. christine romans is here. >> this is an elaborate marketing strategy. it's the impact that every movie studio dreams you have. an ad becoming the number one most watched video on youtube. part of a new viral ad campaign that pranks real people to promote products. sounds great unless you're one of those people running for your life. watch. >> oh, my god! >> it's the video prafrpg we can't stop watching. it turns out that's the point. and argument over spilled coffee escalates to a girl's throwing a man against the wall with a wave of her hand.
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mysteriously pushing table as cross the floor and knocking pictures and books off the walls. unknown to the unsuspecting customers, they were taking part in an advertisement for the upcoming remake of the movie "carry." it was a success. the video went viral garnering more than ten million views since posted two days ago. this isn't the first time we've seen elaborate pranks to get publicity. in this beauty parlor, screams and hor yoz as a girl goes through the salon to promote the movie "the last exorcism 2" and two actors stage a murder in progress while hidden cameras capture people's reaction as they walk into this elevator. >> with an ad you know you're exposed to something that people are trying to sell you something. you watch it with a filter on. with that individual yvideo, yo
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what it s people watch and enjoy and laugh and like it. the message comes in. >> it's not just the movie industry utilizing the tactic. in this ad, the beer company orchestrates a fake poker game where players in debt must reach out for help testing the lengths their friends will go to to come to their rescue. and ordinary airport passengers find themselves in newspapers and on television as wanted suspects in this ad for nivea. the company's word of mouth is generating millions of dollars for publicity. >> it doesn't go nationwide, it goes global. it is an international news story. >> are they crossing the line? the co-founder says no these are a montage. it takes a lot of this to boil down into one ad. >> here's my actual concern. what about the notion it will desensitize people so if you see something happening in an elevator and you think i'm just
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being pranked. that is a real concern. >> it could be viral and something as outrageous as a murder in an elevator. >> reality tv. this is like candid camera on steroids. >> what would you do? it wound up being a really big deal. it's also putting people in the situations and seeing how they react. what i like, see how the women trying to help that guy getting killed in the elevator and the guys are leaving? >> watch it here. >> there you go. we'll be right back.
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from us to you, thank you for watching "new day." we now gift you carol costello with cnn newsroom. take it away. >> it's like a christmas present. thank you. have a great day. "newsroom" starts right now. happening now -- >> shuouldn't be embarrassed about this? shouldn't we be ashamed? appalling. frightening. >> families of troops killed in battle denied their benefits because of the government shutdown. >> the list goes on and on of people of innocent americans who have fallen victim to their reality that we can't sit down and talk like grownups and address this issue. >> plus, an illegal work stoppage. >> i want to follow the rules. that's all. >> the keys are in their hands. if they honor this

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