tv New Day CNN October 14, 2013 3:00am-6:01am PDT
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good morning. welcome to "new day." it's monday, october 14th. 6:00 in the east today. we commemorate today columbus day, the discovery of the new world and equally perilous search. one for a deal on the debt ceiling. the hours like grains of sand continue through the glass. we are going inside the negotiations and inside what could happen just thursday. the site has been live for nearly two weeks. elizabeth cohen is trying to sign up this entire time and setting her alarm to avoid the high traffic times. was she finally able to log in and get an account?
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so now the global economy two old school senators. we have jim acosta with us this morning reporting live from the white house. good morning, jim. >> good morning. three days to go to d-day as in default day and senate majority leader and senate minority leader are still talking but they are still in search of that agreement.
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>> reporter: veterans and tea party activists dumped tell in front of the white house. before a rowdy face off with park police in riot gear 67 one man waved the confederate flag. others called for impeachment. >> i gave them back to president obama by pileing them in front of our house. >> reporter: while another tea party backed senator was calling for compromise. >> i think it's not a good idea to go through the debt ceiling deadline. i think we should go ahead and have an agreement in advanced. >> reporter: now as for the only deal struck in the last several day, that is one for state and federal governments to reopen parks. as for all that commotion outside the white house fence, kate baldwin, i can tell you
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things are back to normal. they are quite calm. >> we'll see how things are going this week. the market could be feeling the fear of a default this morning. u.s. stock futures are down. nasdaq and s&p 500 a far cry from the optimism when stocks rallied. an optimism for debt deal turned out short lived. allison dock sick is here with bor details. >> that's how it goes. today is columbus day. the bye markets are closed. the wall street will be watching rhetoric come out of washington t. market will absolutely give back all the gains it took last week. last week, there were big gains on optimism that lawmakers could come up with some sort of deal. after all the swings we saw, the s&p 500 the dow ended 1% higher. a different story as wall street may fire another warning shot, meaning a sell-off to washington saying, hey, get your act
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together. the u.s. is three days away from the debt ceiling deadline. the possibility of default, sparking concern of potential economic turmoil around the world. >> if there was a problem lifting the debt ceiling, it could well be that what is now a recovery would turn into a recession, or even worse. >> reporter: here at home, a default could mean a serious hit to your investment, like your 401k, wall street now waiting on washington to dictate the trades as banks are predicting the s&p 500 could see painful losses, as high as 45% if an agrow. isn't reached. >> here in chicago, we have seen the housing market really pick up in the last 84, like many places, that has been helped by low interest rates for people looking for loans. but all of that could change if the government defaults because interest rates could spike or even worse we could see another
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credit squeeze making it much 45rder to borrow. >> a default means interest rates for credit cards and student loans would spike as well and payments from the government would degree up. >> washington meets main street. we are outside a local benefits administration office near washington, d.c. could we be seeing woirld recipients show up at offices all across the country. roughly 58 million americans rely on those benefits, secretary treasury jack lew says if it isn't paid, there could be a problem paying them. >> reporter: the globe marketplace feeling the effects of the weakening dollar t. u.s. current debt limit sits just under $16.7 trillion. >> our systems were not designed to not pay our bills. >> reporter: despite cries of impending chaos, some say sounding the alarms is a bit sensational. >> i'd rather have a managed catastrophe which i don't think
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we'll be there. >> i think this is about the 11th time i have been through the subject of the sky is faa falling. >> reporter: closer to the debt ceiling discussion august 11th. the exact day when the u.s. government will run out of cash to cover its bills is really fought certain because even when the deadline hits, the revenue will be coming in. lawmakers are negotiating a plan to increase the debt ceiling. many critics say what we need now isn't a band-aid fix but a perm fant one. wall street would be happy if there was a band-aid in place, like a six-week deal we're leak the biggest procrastinators, aren't we, lawmakers, meaning. >> is there time to push through a band did a? i think we are getting to the pint of no return. >> something is better than nothing mode. >> isn't that bad the bar is really low at this point? >> it is. >> it is what it is. all right, we will take you to a mystery in eegypt an american man jailed after a car bombing
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turns up dead. an investigation is under way. let's go to cnn's ben kline wedeman. what do you know? >> reporter: we know in the after math of a car bombing in northern sinai. now, egyptian officials say when they arrested lundn, they found maps of vital installations and given the charged atmosphere in egypt at the moment. immediately, there were accusations that he was a spy. now, yesterday at noon, according to egyptian interior ministry lunn was found in his cell hanging from his black leather belt and his shoe laces. now for their part, american officials at the embassy here in cairo are seeing it is an apparent suicide. now, it's not at all clear what lunn was doing here in the first place.
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egyptian media is reporting in the course of his investigation, he told egyptian official he was on his way to the gaza strip. american officials, however, are not commenting on those claims. chris. kate. >> all right, thanks, ben kline, thanks so much. a lot of news this morning. don levin is here. >> good morning, making news, a fa to service man is killed after a man wearing a uniform. this is the 30 atake. they killed dozens of troops in 2012. sunday's shooting comes a day after john kerry met with afghan president karzai to discuss troops and a security agreement. seven aid workers reportedly have been kidnapped in syria. red cross officials say the team was trying to get medical supplies to people in northwest part of the country when a gunman opened fire on them. it's not clear who the
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kidnappers are. last month, a top u.n. official warned that syria is getting so violent that even humanitarian workers aren't safe. two men are now in custody after a frightenning shooting in tulsa. at lowest five people were injured when gunfire rang out at a new year's celebration. witnesses say hundreds were loining up to get their dinner when the shooting began. the alleged gunmen are likely to have some connection with the victims. dry ice in a plastic bought him shut down part of lax last night. the fbi says a chemical reaction set up an explosion in a bathroom. authorities tracked down the problem. no injuries to report. the terminal is back opened. no word on who might have left the bottle. the bathroom is in an area not opened to the general public. a 72-year-old hunter alive and well is dead after 19 days of
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missing in the wilderness. he became separated from his hunting partner in mendocino forest and suffered a head injury in a bad fall. he survived the ordeal by eating lizards, frogs, squirrels and algae from the stream. i have a report on this incredible survivor's story next hour on "new day." >> it makes you wonder how would you handle that situation? >> drog legs, a delicacy down south. >> impressive, covered themselves with leaves at night. a lot of details. let's get to karen mcginnis keeping track of the latest forecast. how is it locking today, karen? >> we are watching it closely along the eastern seaboard, kate, chris, good morning to you. our temperatures will pretty much remain above normal. be you the rainfall is desperately needed across the northeast. you are running about half of what you totally would for the
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total month of october. it will take a frontal system before you start to see that. high pressure dominates right now. as we go through tomorrow, those temperatures back up into the 70s. we think two next weather systems will knock those temperatures down. new york is 53. washington, d.c. 58. you would think it would be hotter pittsburgh reporting 62 degrees right now. there is a system that will produce significant snowfall, from billings, montana to the saltess mountain, front range of the rockies, the snowfall in those higher peaks as much as 12 inches, but a windy day expected across colorado. those temperatures only going to be in the 50s, so if you are headed to the west along that interstate 25, watch out. it could be gusty. 75 for dallas that, wet weather
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picks up again across north central texas in the next 24 hour hours. >> we'll take a break here on "new day," when we come back, big problems for obama care. why thousands of americans that want to sign up simply cannot. also an nfl super star playing with a very heavy heart. why adrian petersen decided to take the field sunday two days after the death of his 2-year-old son. build character through quality. and earn the right to be called a classic. the lands' end no iron dress shirt. starting at 49 dollars.
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you really love, what would you do?" ♪ [ woman ] i'd be a writer. [ man ] i'd be a baker. [ woman ] i wanna be a pie maker. [ man ] i wanna be a pilot. [ woman ] i'd be an architect. what if i told you someone could pay you and what if that person were you? ♪ when you think about it, isn't that what retirement should be,
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♪ save your coffee from the artificial stuff. ♪ switch to truvia. great tasting, zero-calorie sweetness... ...from the stevia leaf. >> welcome back to "new day." we are two weeks into the sputtering rollout of obama care, still few explanations for those technical glitches. some experts say fixing it could
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take long time. senior correspondent elizabeth kohn has been unsuccessfully trying to set up an account. how is it going? have you fixed it out yet? >> no, i haven't fixed it out, yet, chris. this has been a sec job for me since october 1st. i want to show you exactly how frustrating it's been. i put in my user name and password, it didn't recognize it. error messages, page not found, system down. it's been a tough nearly two weeks for obama care. >> there were error messages, that twirl leafing. i hate it, right? >> reporter: i have been trying since day one to get an account and log in on health care.gov. i failed again. >> you couldn't make this page work. >> reporter: again and again. >> it wouldn't log me in. it's not working. when i called the 1-800-number, the reps tell me volume is high
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and try again at offpeak hours. i tried at 7:30 at night, 7:00 in the morning. still it didn't work. so, finally, i set my alarm clock for 3:00 a.m. sunday morning. guess what, the system was down for maintenance. i'm not the only one having trouble. on facebook, people took to the health care.gov page to vent by the thousands and on cnn's i-report. >> i tried it hundreds of times, literally hundreds of times since october the 1st. >> reporter: the analyst says the problems go beyond higher volume and minor glitches. they say the field fails to follow basic coding. there is the old fashioned way of using the phone and snail mail. you do have time to be insured by january 1st, you have to complete the process by december 15th. now, just to be clear, this is a journalistic endeavor for me. i'm lucky enough to get
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insurance through my employer. imagine how frustrating it has been for people who do need insurance. >> journalistic endeavor, it looks like abject failure. what is the response? >> they cope telling me the volume is high, that's why we have these glitches. when i talk to experts, they say this goes way behind high vol youm. but that's not the cause for all of the problems we have been seeing. >> that stands to reason. when we think of all the high vol youm sites out there, millions of transactions, it's not just about software. it's something else they have to figure out. thank you for doing your part. we appreciate it. >> thanks. coming up next on "new day," your political gut check, there any hope for an 11th hour dole before the nation hits the debt ceiling. did you hear about this? macy's is ending a tradition, why many of their workers may
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not be spending thanksgiving with their families. d. ♪ load! we keep moving to deliver what you need. and that means growth, lots of cargo going all around the globe. cars and parts, fuel and steel, peas and rice, hey that's nice! ♪ norfolk southern what's your function? ♪ ♪ helping this big country move ahead as one ♪ ♪ norfolk southern how's that function? ♪
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time on thanksgiving in slive years. it finally came, folks, humped on the black friday band wagon or the expanding black friday band wagon. it is making a lot of people upset. we will have more on that ahead. first let's get to our political gut check. the political government on its 14th day, three days away from hitting the debt ceiling t. stalemate now over spending. democrats believe they have political advantage here, including senate majority leader harry reid, they are not budging. joining us now to talk about this, cnn political analyst an executive editor of "the daily beast." so the week last week ended on a high note. whispers of compromise, whispers of -- what happened over the weekend to get us back to what feels like square one today? >> and that's because it is. you should know better by now when things seem hopeful in washington. they'll find a way to screw it up. what happened saturday morning?
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the house gop got together effect e expecting a break through, instead, cantor and boehner said we are done, it's up to the senate. so the senate meets over the weekend trying to come up with a resolution, harry reid, mitch mcconnell, not much charismatic, deal makers, deal making happened because democrats are looking at this as an opportunity to roll back sequester cuts from last year. we're at square one, folks, 72 hours to go until the self inflicted debt ceiling. >> it seems we're back at square one because the target or focus continues to shift. this whole stalemate started over defunding changes, getting rid of obama care. right now, democrats are demanding and seemed to be holding up the government shutdown and debt ceiling over wanting to deal with forced budget cuts. what is behind this moving target is very confusing. >> what is behind it is poll numbers, republicans getting
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their butts kicked. democrats running the reach of overreaching, trying to get their own plan in place. the problem, of course, is the bottom line is people want the government to work. they don't want the u.s. to default on its debt. the president keeping things opened. democrats in the senate trying to get every little thing they can out of republicans and spuring bad blood as a result. >> republicans bob corker, he's a candid guy. he said yesterday to fox, it's not clear to me how this ends because there is such disarray. i think that's as honest an assessment one can have at this point. are there any more plays they can have left? i feel they've pulled out every play in the playbook, both sides. >> no, this thing has become a complete mess from the very beginning. you have 72 hours left. they probably bring in a closer at some point. joe biden, the closer. >> who has been remarkably quiet.
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>> he's off to the side, the fiscal cliff, joe biden and mitch mcconnell said that's probably if harry reid and mitch mcconnell can't get it done in the next day-and-a-half, that's when you bring biden in before we absolutely embarrass ourselves on the world stage by failing to pay our bills. >> without looking back at all the pool numbers from various organizations, is anyone going to ends up on this? i feel everyone is a loser in terms of the politics they all try to play here? >> everyone is loser, but the polls to date show when the republican party is at the lowest rate of any political party in history. you got a problem t. tea party loves the rating to date. you pla adangerous game if you try to exploit that with a serious die nam ec just ahead of us as a country. >> is there any question will is not time left to actually get a piece of legislation to the president's desk before we hit the debt ceiling?
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because, of course, what do we say? miracles can happen in washington when they're up against a dead lean? but if you have conservative members, especially in the senate, who could slow down that process, they could be hard up against that debt ceiling. >> it's close. at this point any individual can delay a resolution. there is still time if they got their act together. but why in the world would we feel washington will work efficiently. >> they say they feel the pressure. it doesn't seem they do. >> you can have the senator filibuster there this. you have to have the right threshold. they need to find religion, boehner needs to open up with a vote for centrist republicans. so there are serious hurdles even if they found principles they agree on. >> don't prepare for a big bargain. >> a big week ahead, serious stakes for the united states of america. >> find some answers, bring them
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to us. >> thank you. >> don littleen is in this morning. >> i thought you were going to do the james earl jones. >> i failed so miserably at the james earl jones. >> good morning, everyone, in egypt, a car bombing victim was found dead in what appears to be a suicide. james lunn was hanging by shoe laces and a belt on the bathroom door. lunn had been arrested in august after a security sweep after a car bomb near sinai station. they say he had a computer and maps at the time of his arrest. a cold case closed. the cousin of baby hope has been arrested and charged with the girl's murder after police say he admitted to sexually assaulting, smothering and disposing of the body. baby hope has now been identified as 4-year-old angelica castille. an official says he dumped the
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body along new york's henry hudson parkway back in 1991. police respond with pepper spray when an apartment party turns into a large intoxicated disorderly mess. take a look at this. >> aahh. >> hundreds of college-age party years riding near western washington university throwing bottles of beer cans at police. multiple arrests were made. no serious injuries to report, though. investigators in pittsburgh are still trying to figure out what caused a frightening home explosion. the blast injured two people saturday night. residents say it sounded like a plane crash and the house is gone. at least one neighboring home was damaged. a party in key biscayne near miami came to a scary end when the party boat sank. look at this. everyone on board is okay thanks to quick thinking rescuers and good samaritans, all 30 people and one dog are pulled out in
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minutes. it is not clear why it sank, officials think it might have been an illegal charter without a licensed captain. >> that can be a problem. >> yes. >> amazingly quick work there. one of the upsides of having a lot of boaters in the area. >> absolutely. >> good stuff. com coming up on "new day," adrian peterson played. you should hear why. world fa musz artists selling on the streets of new york. buyers don't even know it. >> you missed it this weekend. [ music playing ]
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in fact, fidelity gives you lower trade commissions than schwab, td ameritrade, and etrade. i'm monica santiago of fidelity investments, and low fees and commissions are another reason serious investors are choosing fidelity. now get 200 free trades when you open an account. . >> welcome back to "new day." it is summertime. many are calling it the breaking of trust. there are reports macy's will open on thanksgiving day and break a tradition. it looks like they want to grab some parade-goers on their way home. >> charge! like gold. come on. >> aalison kosic you are not
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glad about this tell us why? >> first of all, why do you have to charge into a store, falling all over everybody? flattening everybody? >> it's putting you in good position. >> now what is happening the insidious creep of the shopping hours are creeping into the holiday even more. what is reporting now, macy's could break with this 155-year tro digs of staying closed. what happened last year, macy's has known something was happening in new york city, when the traditional played was happening. >> they were going shopping. >> the flagship story has been closed. they noticed after the parade ended, everybody was migrateing to the rival stores and spending their money there, they're like what's going on here? >> it started 50 years to figure that out. shop on thanksgiving? >> what's been happening is this creep of the time going into the thanksgiving holiday started in 2011 where you saw stores opening at midnight just before black friday, black friday when the stores are considered to sort of turn a profit.
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then last year, you are seeing stores like wal-mart and other big stores like target opening even earlier, 8:00 p.m. on thursday, so now you are seeing macy's jump on the band wagon. it looks like they will be opened at 8:00 a.m. on thanksgiving. in the past years, it opened at 800 stores nationwided a midnight. no telling if the other nationwide stores will open at 8:00 t. flackship store reported in the new york post they will be opening. >> one would think after the macy's thanksgiving day parade, you want to go down, buy swag, things that lock like little animals and things. >> what's the calculation? obviously, this is a business. you can make big money. they do start making big money on plaque friday, how much money can they make by opening on thanksgiving day, elizabeth? >> would you look at last year total, retailers made something
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like $16 billion during the holiday shopping season, this is huge for retailers. it's really their time to finally make some money after they had a tough year. >> the flipside is black to them means making money, with the ploy i don't see, it will money this is bad. because they're going to have to be removed from their families. what about that aspect? >> they will have to take the pumpkin pie to go. >> our employees are -- >> don used to work at macy's that's how i paid my bills when i moved to new york. holiday relief, how do you feel about this, don? >> some people are happy about it. the people that want to make money can make a lot of money because they're opened around the clock. others say, i want to have time with my family. they want to keep theiromany say i need to work. >> work to live. live to work. >> shop. >> the balance. >> the balance. >> all right. or like to shop. there you go. that's a good balance. thank you, allison. all right, let's get another check with karen mcginnis with
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what you need to know before you head out the door. >> good morning. we do have a frontal system making its way towards the eastern seaboard. it's not going to be a big influence. it will be the next storm system that rolls in just about the middle of the workweek that will change up the weather across that i-95 corridor, where temperatures generally have been running above average. but the rainfall totals are just about half of what they should be for the entire month of october. this storm system, very vigorous, ejecting out of the west in towards the central plains. for today that, could spell out severe weather potential at lowest as we go in towards nebraska, also for kansas, that's when we are locking at big change, temperaturewise for this morning, new york city's 53, still sitting there. it has been for the past hour or. so boston, a chilly 44 and 38 degrees being reported in portions of new jersey. all right, for the next three days, look at this, for new york city, we got a few clouds off and on for today coming up
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tomorrow, wednesday, i think you stand the better chance for some moisture. the same goes for washington, d.c. and boston as well. i think you will start to see the bulk of your moisture, at least the next five days to materialize then. 60s for today going into tomorrow. temperatures in the 70s. high pressure dominates this region. but across the country, it will be texas that whole focus on. you could see that flooding rainfall continue even into tomorrow. chris. kate, back to you. >> all right. karen. thanks so much. >> all right, coming up on "new day," tragedy for nfl player adrian peterson. he wound up playing of the death of his son. finding art normally worth tens of thousands of dollars, getting it for only $60. that actually happened to some tourists in new york city and it is our must see moment.
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[ music playing ] >>. >> welcome back. let's go around the world to india, 14 years a cyclone made landfall this weekend. >> reporter: there was immense fear as millions of people in eastern india braved themselves for the most powerful cyclone in at least 14 years. a similar storm hit in 1999 when 10,000 lives were lost and the entire city was completely flattened. this time around, can you see people are back from the shelters trying to rebuild their lives and the damage and loss of life nothing compared to what it could have been. they have avoided immediate danger but they now face the long task of rebuilding their homes and their lives. >> back to you, kate. >> thank you so much.
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now to a horrific class of group, 51 people killed when a bus veers off a cliff plunging nearly 600 feet. a bus carrying 51 people fell off a cliff in peru over the weekend killing everyone on board including more than a dozen children t. bus fell off a ravine and fell some 600 feet. rescuers worked through the night hoping to find survivors. in the end, they had to give up. many people die on the high altitude highways of peru. more than 4,000 last 84 alone, back to you, kate. >> thank you. and a high-tech high rise fish farms are a hot trend in asia. an industry born out of necessity because of overfished waters. we have this story from hong kong. >> reporter: kate, here in hong kong, there is not enough fish in the sea because of years of overfishing. this has led to fish farming. now it's becoming more
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high-tech. this company operates a fish farm out of a high rise building. they use blue lighting to simulate the colors of the sea t. owner sells the fish around 45 wholesale. it's worth a billions of dollars a 84 in hong kong. back to you, kate. all right, playing through the pain barely describes what nfl star adrian peterson is doing two days a tf death of his 2-year-old son. the minnesota running back returned to the field on sunday. this is not the first tragedy for peterson and his family. not the first time he has turned to football to deal with it. this is a true coping mechanism for this athlete. athletes like all human beings have a couple ways they deal with tragedy, sometimes so distracting you can't do anything. other times they take solace and refuge in a routine that is an fl season.
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nfl players lives are so much more regimented. so by playing in this game, you get the sense that adrian peterson was able to deal with escape to deal with the tragedy. >> was there a mixed reaction to, when you hear it on the surface, poem think, wow, was that some of the reaction? >> you know, there was little context in line. peterson, this is a total tragedy, full stop. nothing to be said about that. peterson had not met the boy until reports i read until he was in a coma. did not know of the boy's combins of that relationship. >> so any judgmental reaction means that context? >> we node to know, of course, peterson was unbelievably upset f. his way of dealing with it was to play football, how can we judge? >> that's the key. we have a text message adrian peterson put up on the screen to understand this. this is a man you see right there. my brother passed the night before combine. and i decided to go through with
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it. the same reason i will play this week. you may ask why? god wants good time to grieve. >> that knowledge gives me peace. i am still hurt and feel the pain of life. then you see, he continues there he is able to function because he know-se relying on his faith, also, contexttually. he loses one brother, another later on. now his son, through each of it in his life, he's used football that way. you have to understand that to understand the decision. >> what adrian peterson did is sort of like our societal decision ripped large after things like 9-11, after the kennedy assassination, there is always that debate, do we put it aside or get back to hue teen? >> many people deal with tragedy with their lives being as normal as possible. >> that is their coping mechanism. you can't judge him. >> there is so much unknown. football is the world of unknown for adrian peter son where he is
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in control. >> exactly. >> the other big story in football, a different story is the story of two different tales of records between two brothers, peyton and eli manning. so there is a lot of buildup to the broncos and jacksonville game. did it bear fruit? they didn't win by the spread they thought they were going to win, by 100 points. >> they won by 16. how good the broncos are. kind of disappointing. they won by 16. it wasn't close t. broncos are still good. peyton manning is on a pace to break every record. >> i am so teen peyton. it makes us old guys look great. he's incredible. >> what's behind the success this season you think? >> he is one of the best quarterbacks. the timing. the precision t. rapport he has with his receivers in that offense, doesn't have the strongest arm. is the strongest player. works harder on the mental aspects of his game. >> giving a nod to his brother
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t. key is in the phrase, what's behind it? he has a great line in denver. you a i in football the difference between a good quarterback and a bad quarterback is how goed the boys are in front of them. isn't that a fair analysis? >> he has been injury prone, we know that. behind the back line, intellicollecttually you say, oh, yeah, that's affecting his decision. you blame the quarterback. it is so often the fact that he's unsure, he is unsteady. he has no confidence now. he foleys he hfeels he has to d everything. he gave up seven or his line gave up seven sacks a game against carolina this 84. >> confidence is important. lock at tiger woods. >> imagine tiger woods with a toyota about to hit you every time. you love the game, you don't forgive these goes, that itself sport. we love the winners. there is nothing like a quarterback knowing a man the size of a refrigerator moving at
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the speed of a dog recalled to hit you every time there is a split second. >> dog, refrigerator. i think the dog phrase. >> the dog for everyone knows that, it's science. it's science. >> hat trick dog fridge. >> methodology. >> what do you think? what do you think of the dog-fridge thing? let us know. kweet e tweet us with the hashtag new day. what think of this, today's must see moment. people who purchased street art were in for a very big surprise. an artist set up a stand near central park south close to us. he sold pieces for as low as $60 bucks. it may not be a lot of money. it turns out the art, though, was done none other than the famous street artist banksy. his works normally sells for tens of millions of dollars. he secretly filmed the people. may that's why he was hugging
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everybody that came by. >> until maybe they saw it online. they were told after they purchased it, they had gotten like the steal of the century. >> any reason why he did snit. >> he put it on his blog, maybe he wants to give it away. i think it's a sell. serving for a reason. i'm sure he's making a movie or something. >> by the way, they say that's not bankcy in the video. they say he keeps his identity a se dret. i don't know who that guy is. >> that was a good moment. coming up next on "new day," pressure in washington on wall street and across the globe as the u.s. creeps closer to a possible default. can the senate come up with a last-minute deal? oh, if we knew, we would tell you. what a survival story, a 72-year-old man spends 19 days alone in the woods, has to physical out how to survive. boy does he do it? he drinks algae, he finds animals with protein.
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nthat's why they deserve... aer anbrake dance. get 50% off new brake pads and shoes. >> according to new research, elephants have the intent of pointing. if a human points, an elephant can turn and understand what you want. in fact the only elephants that don't understand what people want are the republicans in congress. >> the results of the shutdown could last until thanksgiving because no one wants to talk to each other. which is weird, my family starts the shutdown on thanksgiving. you shut up, you fat bass tard. >> it's good people stay say what they say at thanksgiving.
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>> that's a mild word for my family, by the way. this morning, fans in boston are feeling good. i'm a insuring fan, i will phrase it a different way. they had an amazing comeback. it proves that boston has to win by luck in any kind of big situation. andy schultz joins us, truly two phenomenal sports comebacks. tell us about it. >> reporter: what an exciting night in boston t. put as come back. it was so improbable the stadium was half empty when it happened. late in the game, brady throws an interception, so fans think the game is over. they head for the parking lot. the put as gets the ball one more time. brady drives them down the field. he makes an amazing throw to chembro thomp sins. it's the first loss to new orleans this year t. cowboys and redskins renewing their rivalry on sun night football. tony romo coming off an amazing
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game against the broncos. third quarter, he finds terrence williams for the touchdown. romo's only td pass on the night. it was enough. rg3 struggles. they continue. he completed less than half of his passes. the redskins a disappointing one and four this season. today the amazing comeback by the red sox last night down 5-1 in the 8th. bases loaded for big poppy t. first pitch, bomb. it lands in the bull pen for a grand slam. that ties the game at five. bottom of the 3rd, he comes through, jarrod saltalamachia. tonight cardinals and dodgers play, first pitch 8:00 eastern. >> that should be another good one. so far, each game has been decided by one run. a pretty exciting game. >> so far, very exciting. thank you, so much, an exciting
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game. though i have a very unhappy husband. >> that's all right. it has nothing to do with the game. >> that deserves a punch, that does that time. at the top of the hour, don lemon, it's time for the top new news. >> i think it's not a good idea to go through the debt ceiling dead loin. >> final countdown, only three days until the debt ceiling and it is all riding on the senate. there is a new deal in the works and new hurdles. we'll tell you the chance as it gets done . the suspect, new drawings released of man who may have taken mad len mccann six years ago. the focus now more intense than ever as police wrap up their investigation. a woman clinginging for her life when a draw bridge raises with her on it. how is she saved?
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your "new day" starts right now. >> when you need to know. >> it affects america's place in the world. >> what you just have to see. >> this is "new day," with chris cuomo, kate baldwin and mikaela per rer ra. >> good morning, welcome back to "new day." it's monday, october 14th. 7:00 in the east. with rethree days from the u.s. defaulting on etc. loan, two top senators are trying to find middle ground to reopen the government and avoid economic disaster. we will break down the negotiation, let you know what's on the table and give you the best chance of whether a deal will be reached. >> a remarkable story of survival. a hunter found after he was missing known days in the
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wilderness. wait until you hear he has managed to survive. we'll have a live report just ahead. first, it is now day 14. can i not believe it. of the partial government shutdown, now the debt ceiling is looming, three days away. we have a clock on your screen. why? the world economy is watching. a lot of people say bad things may happen t. key question is, can the senate come up with a deal so leave feel they got something in the negotiation. let's check in with cnn jim acosta live at the white house this morning. good morning, jim. >> a sign of how desperate things are coming in washington. the only movement is a phone call between the senate's top two leaders who haven't always gotten along but need to work together to avert a crisis. with the clock ticking down to debt ceiling day, it's come down to senate majority leader harry reid and minority leader mitch mcconnell who have started horse trading over a deal to avoid
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default. >> i had a productive conversation with the republican loader this afternoon. our discussions were stnttive and we will continue those discussions. >> reporter: the question is whether they can get there in time. >> both leaders realize how difficult default would be, the devastation it would cause to america. >> reporter: but talks over the weekend appear to stumble again as republicans accuse reid of overreaching by seeking additional successions in the sequester. >> now is the time to be magnanimous and sit down and get this thing done. >> reporter: the white house said president obama was standing firm in a call with house minority leader nancy pelosi, that there must be clean bills to end the shutdown with no strength attached. tensions are boiling over. >> this is the people's memorial. >> reporter: texas senator ted cruz led a protest over the closing of the world war ii memorial on the national mall that drew this verbal attack on the white house. >> i call upon all of you to
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wage a second american non-violent revolution, to use civil disobedience and to demand that this president leave town, to get up, to put the corrupt, to put the crime down to get up off his knows and to figuratively come up with his hands out. >> usa! >> reporter: veterans and tea party activists grabbed monument security barricades and dumped them in front of the white house. before a rowdy face off with police in riot agreement. one man waved the confederate flag. others called for impeachment. >> they gave them back to president obama by filing them up in front of his house, our house, sorry, our house. >> reporter: while another tea-party backed senator was calling for compromise. >> i think it's not a good idea to go through the debt ceiling dead loin. i think we should go ahead and have an agreement in advance. >> reporter: now the only deal that has been struck in the last several days is between the
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federal government and a variety of state governments to reopen some of the national parks around the country. but as for things here at the white house, they are back to normal. they're calm after all that commotion yesterday and the senate we should note is back in session later today, but, kate, it may take a dramatic drop in the stockmarket to really wake people up here in washington. they are nowhere near an agreement at this point. >> unfortunately, it seems that's what economists fear all along. it will take a dramatic action to get the act together. jim, thank you so much. let's talk more about all this, what happens if washington allows the country to hit the debt ceiling, joining us is time assistant manager. >> here we go again. >> exactly. >> so we ended last week on a pretty high note. stocks really rallying, surging thursday/friday with whispers of a deal a. breakdown over the
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weekend. what are you seeing? what are you expecting today? >> i'm expecting the markets to be jittery. this is what's happened in the past. we go back to august of 2011. we were in the same position. stocks went up and down on every whisper of a deal. eventually, things came to crunch time, stocks dropped 13%. that's worth remembering. we could be in for a drop as we get close to the date. >> over the weekend the pressure is mounting on washington. imf, talking about massive financial consequence, massive disruption the world over. we've talked a lot about kind of the rip him effects through our economy, which are very important. what are the rip him effects world wide that people need to remember? >> so the thing that's important is the dollar is the world's currency. this is what most of the world's business has done and most central banks around the world hold, aside from their own currency. so if the value of our dollar
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starts to drop. if people think we're not god for our word and our money. >> that really could start an international financial crisis. >> which can't be overstated? >> it really can't be. i want to say this is not going to happen all at once on thursday. >> that's an important part. >> if we go over the limit. there is a cushion in the treasury. we don't know quite how long it would last. it's not an exact science. within about a week, after that it gets iffy. >> do you think the markets will react? >> can you see the writing on the wall the government will run out of money if pay for its bills. >> i think by thursday you will see jittery markets, by the 25th/tuitionth, most economists predict the money to be depleted. >> where is the smart money today? is there any confidence folks are thinking washington is washington and brinksmanship will be just that, they will get their act together? is there any confidence? >> rather than confidence, i would say disbelief.
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wall street can never believe that washington is in this position. you know, they keep crossing their fingers and hoping. that's why i think you haven't seen a real market plummet. there is always the sense, with le get to the 11th hour and things will be okay. but if we don't get there, i think you can see a strong market reaction. >> last week they were talking business leaders, coes saying just that pushing for walk, feempb it is an unknown and there is a press dent for it. don't test this out. >> absolutely. >> any signs that that's had an impact? >> i don't think so. i really think wall street and the business community operate in a different spear than washington. which is fascinating the republican party is no longer the party of business in that sense. a lot of the agenda of business leaders is much more a left leaning agenda. they want investment. they want washington to get its act together, a stable currency. we wouldn't be coming together around these issues rather than worrying about the deficit, which will be increasing.
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it's not our biggest economic problem. >> please don't say that. miracles happen in washington when there is a deadline. let hope that miracles happen this time i guess. rana thank you so much. we will continue talking about it, it looks like. i want to move overseas. there was another green on blue attack in afghanistan. a man dressed in an afghan army uniform opened up fire on nato sources. what do we know? >> reporter: good morning, chris. this happened yesterday in eastern afghanistan. someone in an afghan uniform shot and killed a nato service member. the nagsally of that person not yet identified but we do know that most of the troops in eastern afghanistan from nato are american. so an investigation under way into this latest tragedy. now, not directly related, but this comes a day after secretary of state john kerry and afghan president hamid karzai apparently agreed on major issues that would allow u.s.
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troops to stay in afghanistan along with nato, the they agree, after 2014 when that deadline is up. this has been a big point of controversy for the u.s. and afghanistan to work out the details, but one big sticking point, immunity for u.s. troops if they get into some dispute with the afghan go. it's very standard procedure. it's happened in every country. the afghan government not agreeing, if they don't agree, very doubtful u.s. troops would stay. chris, kate. >> it's been a problem plaguing the symptom. appreciate it. don lemon is in for mikaela with more of the headlines. >> good morning everyone out there. the international red cross demanding 1e6r7b aid workers be let go unconditionally t. team was trying to deliver medical supplies in western syria when unidentified men reportedly
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kidnapped them. this happened in a province where a car bomb exploded killing at least 20 people. the nuclear program, now negotiations between iran and the five permanent u.n. security council members are planned for wednesday. the team will present a three-step plan skurk eastern's nuclear program while also assuring the country is not trying to assemble atom ec weapons. and this is just in to cnn this morning. a nobel peace prides i should say for economics awarded to three american professors. eugene fama and lars peter hanson and robert schiller honored for their imperric am asset prices. congratulations to them. a plastic bottle explosion
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stymied passengers at lax airport overnight. authorities say a plastic bottle packed with dry ice apparently exploded. no one was injured but the incident delayed handful of flights and the terminal was evacuated for a short period. all is back to normal right now. and the walendas. they can add another walk. i can't believe they do this nick and his sister leann na performed at the charlotte motor speedway 150 feet above the track. they started on the opposite end of a 464 wire, met in the middle. they kept going. look at that. the crossover the handover, the second consecutive year nick walked the speedway but the first time his sister did it. look at that. >> it is amazing. >> i can barely walk up the stairs without tripping. >> you know what you have here. kate baldwin did the walenda
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training. >> that's right, you did. >> like a little girl. >> you were like squirrel on a power line. >> very good. >> just love in this room. >> there is just love. it is amazing. the only perspective you need is trying to stand on the wire for second. it moves. it's supposed to move. and it's so amazing. >> there is a method to his madness. i watched his feet the shoes he wears. >> he also slides his fee. it's his process. he does it at unevan intervals because you don't want to create a bounce in the wire. >> you don't want to lock down? he looks down the whole time. >> he locked down over the grand canyon. >> he uses that balance stick. >> i was like, i got this. >> survival hut. >> survival. let's go over to karen mcginnis
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once again in for ingrid peterson. how is it going? >> we have a weak system expected to move across the northeast rather. as it does, those temperatures will go down a little bit. but then the warm front will start to swing in on the back side of this, so low temperatures warm up again as we go towards the middle of the workweek. then an even stronger system is going to really pack quite a punch on the back side of this snowfall. down to around 10,000 feet or up to 10,000 feet. you could see up to a foot of snowfall. temperature-wise, we are looking at 52 in new york. buffalo reporting 54. syracuse at 57. now this morning, you heard us talk about all that wet weather across texas, flooding rains an austin, i want to show you some pictures coming out of the area around austin. this is a commercial bus. it overturned. it was on a flooded street there just to the southwest of austin in ross county or hayes county. they were saying a wedding party
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was in this bus, but it tipped over and those flooding rain, it goes to show you, you just cannot estimate, it may be a little bit of water, a whole lot in this situation, they saw as much as 12 inches of rainfall there. no one injured in that accident. so that's the good news. kate. >> sure is. thanks so much, karen. coming up on "new day," we will check in on this race. that's cory booker. he was supposed to be a shoe-in for senate. what happened, the opponent gaining ground as a former alaskan governor in his corner. we will give you details coming up. a 72-year-old hunter lost in the wilderness for 19 days. how he stayed alive long after search teams have given up car insurance companies?rect r yes. but you're progressive, and they're them. yes. but they're here. yes. are you...? there? yes. no. are you them? i'm me. but those rates are for... them. so them are here. yes!
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>> a question, loung how long do you think you could make it in the woods? a day, a week? family and friend thought they would never see this man again? why? he disappeared on a hundreding trip. after four days, the search ended. over the weekend he was found alive at fine days? how did he do it? we have this amazing story. miguel, great to have you here. >> good to see you. >> how did he do it, my friend? >> this is absolutely amazing, he bumps his head, wakes up disoriented. it is a beautiful part of california, it can be unforgiving. he is literally in a deep fog in that part of california. he literally has to eat anything that moves. 19 days lost in the wilderness,
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injured and dehydrated this 72-year-old man survived. >> i knew that. >> reporter: gene vanished in the mendocino national forest in northern california. he was on a hunting trip, got separated from his partner and suffered a serious fall. >> in the process, i falling straight down. i thoughtny knee cap was broken, all that, after that, all that went dead. i pass out, i don't know how long. >> when he finally woke up, he was disoriented, suffering a head injury, stranded in the middle of nowhere, forced to eat lizards, frogs and squirrels just to stay alive. >> the process for days, three people were dead because of me. >> he skraf england water from a draining source. he huddled under locks to stay out of the snow and rain and kept warm making fires using leaves and grass, meanwhile, his
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family spent every single one of those 19 days praying he was still out there still alive. >> 19 days i knew was nothing for him. i knew he was there. >> rescue teams were searching for him for weeks. he was found at the bottom of a ravine by a group of hunters. he had to be carried on a make-shift stretcher. thankfully, miraculously, he is okay. >> what a tough, tough guy. absolutely amazing. this is a guy who is lucky to be alive. he did not think he was going to live. but he held on for that one lucky break. those hunters close enough they could hear him yelping for help. >> he had to have that vital combination the head to tell him how to do it and the heart. >> most of this was heart t. guy was getting extremely weak out there. >> we were talking, he had a gun. he couldn't use it well because of his injuries. he couldn't get around to catch the stuff in the area. he could only get the stuff in
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his immediate area. >> thank you very much. we will go from one horrible story of survival to a different type of brutal race for survival known as politics. isn't that right, kate? >> very good point. thanks, chris. things are heating up for the new jersey senate. popular newark mayor cory booker may have a lead. he watched it shrink. now in the closing days of the race, his much lower profile opponent getting serious gop star power. john burman joining us now with more. what's going on with this race? >> we didn't foe we were at election day. with edid, wednesday, a special election for a senate seat in new jersey, it really has become an all star affair. it hasn't played out exactly the way everyone thought. with political celebrity and twitter junkie cory booker on the ballot, the race for senate in new jersey has been high profile from the start. now his opponent is bringing his
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own star power to the campaign. just days away from the election, tea party favorite sarah palin headlined a rally for republican candidate steve lonergan over the weekend. >> you have the moment and with steve's campaign the rest of the country knows it, the media even knows it and that's why they're getting all wee wee'd up against steve. >> palin seemed to be responding to the controversy surrounding lonergan after one of his top advisers ridiculed mayor booker for having a twitter exchange with a stripper saying, quote, i don't know, it was like what a gay guy would say to a stripper. >> i can't be responsible for what all they say. i terminated the gentleman for his inappropriate comments. >> reporter: booker says his conservative backing does not represent main stream republicans. >> sarah palin, rick perry, rand paul, all the people he has been affiliateing with himself don't represent the main stream, they represent the far right tea party. so that's who he is.
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>> reporter: with over 1.4 million followers on twitter, newark's mayor has been all over the local news for years with tales of saving abandoned dogs and rescuing his neighbor from her burning home. >> i just didn't think, i grabbed her and ran. >> for months, booker has had a double digit lead over lonergan that, is dipping according to a poll last week. >> that is thanks in part to his opponent's aggressive ad campaign. >> cory booker, radical, liberal, extreme. >> there really hasn't been a lot of issue-based discussion, it's been much more about personality and the kind of things that often leave voters in the dark about who it is they are voting for. >> we should say cory booker returned to the campaign trail this weekend. he had taken a few days off after the death of his father last week. we also mentioned, kate, this race does appear to be tightening. still the polls show it at a 12-point margin for booker. that's a substantial gap. if you win by 12 points, that's
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a big win. >> not enough time left to make up ground. exactly. thanks, john. let us know what you think of this whole thing, this rails, generally your thoughts. give us your thoughts. make sure you tweet with the harn tag "new day.". >> when we come back, you remember madeleine mccann the little girl who disappeared in portugal six years ago. her parents asking the world for help. guess what? there is new evidence, new sketches of a possible suspect. we'll show you after the break. one woman, a florida woman walking for a good cause, next, dangling from a draw bridge. her dramatic rescue when we come back. customer's not happy, i'm not happy. sales go down, i'm not happy. merch comes back, i'm not happy. use ups. they make returns easy. unhappy customer becomes happy customer. then, repeat customer. easy returns, i'm happy. repeat customers, i'm happy. sales go up, i'm happy. i ordered another pair.
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. >> welcome back to "new day," everyone, coming up in the show, new leads six years after the disappearance of a 3-year-old british girl. so what really happened to little madeleine mccann? are they any closer to answering that question? >> and what an ordeal to tell you about down in florida this women, she right there is on a draw bridge that opened while she was on it. how did she get there? how did she survive? we'll tell you the whole story. first, don lemon is in with us. he has the headlines. >> good morning, everyone, disthey 14 of the partial government shutdown with the debt ceiling looming, senate leaders are talking, but no deal in sight. hope for a resolution rests with senators harry reid and mitch mcconnell, two leaders who often
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don't agree on much. reed said in closing rarkts on the senate floor-se optimistic about prospects of a resolution. nato led security force investigating another green on blue attack in afghanistan. a gunman wearing an afghan soldier's uniform killing a nato service member sunday t. latest of a series of insider attacks or infiltrators of u.s. and allied troops. one back in september killed three americans. an amber alert for nine missing teenagers in members ka called off this morning, all nine attend a ranch where troubled kids and when police received allegations of abuse last week, they tried to find the teens but couldn't locate them. an attorney for the ranch says all of them are safe with their families after taking a group trip. a very close call for a group of tourists in east china, dozens of them, look at this, plunging into a lake when their foot bridge collapsed. 18 people required medical
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attention, no one seriously hurt. authorities say the bridge was built to hold up to 40 people at a time, more than 100 tourists tried to rush across and collapse under their weight. my goodness. madonna, no longer welcome. a movie theatre chain until she apologizes for texting through a movie. during 12 years of "slave in new york" she was said to text relentlessly, the woman reportedly asked her to stop. she says it's for business the founder tweeted until she apologizes to movie fans, madonna is band at drafthouse. the material girl has not responded. that was one of the screenings. i was supposed to go to that screening. i missed it. i would be right there to see all the drama. >> the material girl. >> she cannot go back. uninvited. of all the things she has done.
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i would like to have seen don elbow his way through the crowd. the next morning, got exclusive video of madonna, i have filming of her texting as i film you. >> filming yes, teching no. there is new loads on the disappearance of madeleine mccann the little british girl who enwent missing in part gal at 3-years-old. you remember her face, you remember this investigation. now investigators say they have the clearest picture yet of what could have happened to her. cnn is in london with the very latest. good morning, erin. >> reporter: good morning, kate. well, there is new hope in the madeleine mccann case for the first time ever police relowsed a sketch of a man they say they very much want to talk to a part of a push to solve the mystery of this missing little girl. this is the face of a man who police want to find in connection with the disappearance of madeleine
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mccann. six years after the preschooler went missing while on a family vacation in portugal, scotland yard released these computer generated sketches of a man they say was in the area at the time madeleine vanished. witnesses describe him as a white male, 20 to 40-years-old with short brown hair and a medium build. >> he fits are cloemplt. i'd ask the public to look clearly at them. if they know who this person is, please come forward. >> it's a part of an appeal to the public for information. a clue of the reconstruction of the events that unfolded that tragic night. madeleine disappeared from her bed while her parents were eating at a neighbor restaurant. the appeal is now the focus of an exhaustive investigation that has spanned some 30 countries. they've analyzed phone records and interviewed over 400 witnesses. police say they now have a better understanding of the time line in which the kidnapping could have taken place.
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>> everything of value has been examined and looked at. things which weren't done before. there is no germany tee we will get answers to this. at lowest everything has been triechltd i think at the very least, we owe the mccann's that. >> madeleine's paempbts say they have never given up hope they will find their little girl alive. >> there has been a number of cases over the last few years of children and young women being phoned after been taken and held for very long periods of time. as parents, we want to see evidence cleared in the case. >> reporter: police say they plan to release more sketches of other individuals they would like to identify. meanwhile, madeleie's parents, kate and jerry mccann, plan to speak out in an interview tonight, part of an appeal to be prod cast in the united kingdom, germany and the netherlands. police say it's absolutely
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crucial that more witnesses come forward to help them solve the case. chris. >> all right. thank you. to help us break down these new leads in the case. let's bring in retired special agent steve morris. first i say new leads in the case. accurate description? sore this about everything being re-investigated? >> that's exactly what it is. the new scotland yard is going back to what it should have been looked at in 2007. they are essentially having to rebuild this investigation from the ground up. >> and when you look at this, jerry make as good as point there, jerry mccann, we do see cases in cleveland, those girls were kept those women ten years. j.c. did you gua j.c. dugard. >> a crime scene in an investigation. the crime scene is perishable. the investigation is consumer. it consumertimes time, it
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consumes evidence. the farther you get from the actual crime, the less chance you have. if anybody can do it, new scotland yard can do it. i believe it has been so badly botched by 'port goes, they can't even start with anything that they have. they have to rebuild it from the foundation. >> what was so wrong? >> they did a classic mistake. they decided on a conclusion very early on. plus you add to that basic forensic mistakes, you add just basic police mistakes. it's like the amanda knox case in italy. they screwed it up from the beginning. now, really, it has to be restarted. >> when you do a prosecution, it's one thing that forensic errors make it difficult to make the case. in terms of finding somebody, what difference does it make when things aren't done early on? >> it doesn't give you the right road to go on f. you do something wrong forensically, it
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send investigators off in the wrong tan gent. for instance the red herring they thought dna of the victim was in a rental car of the parents. that's completely felatious. now, investigators wasted years on this. >> so many kids, so many adults go missing. that i remain anonymous? what down combined here is the perfect storm of interest? >> the tabloids. the tabloids of britain took it. you have a beautiful little girl, educated, articulate parents and at first they took it with the poor parents. then they spun it to the parents are guilty. the tabloids ran this case and the tabloids are responsible in a way for it being screwed up. reviewing where they are now, how optimistic are you that they're on some type of road translator on going in a direction that's more favorable than not? >> oh, i'm very optimistic we're going in the right direction and i can't be anything but
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optimistic about finding her alive. i don't know what the chances are, but there are, there is a chance. >> we always say after 24 hours, the percentages all drop. but we do have those cases where years later people are find found. >> els meth smart. >> sure the women in cleveland, as we said j.c. dugard there. is hope. it would be amazing if she recovered and everything is okay. we appreciate it as always, kate, over to you. coming up next on "new day" three players have it. now some are wondering if this is putting the rest of the leak at risk. we're going to talk about it. also ahead, a dramatic rescue caught on video a. draw bridge opening up beneath a woman leaving her holding on for dear life. details ahead.
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. >> lip sync? you know the words? >> my 10-year-old is into it. a kid from new zealand or something like. maybe i'm wrong, tweet me hashtag new day. karen mcginnis is in with a check of the forecast. >> good morning. it looks like the rainfall is needed across the northeast, especially in that corridor i-95 in washington, d.c. although, last week you had your fair share there. >> that won't materialize until the middle of the workweek. we have another weather system out of the central plains. >> that system will be responsible from salt lake to denver. watch out for high profile vehicles. it looks like it could be responsible for an outbrake of potentially severe weather in
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the afternoon, from nebraska into kansas. mostly damaging winds, maybe large size ohio can't rule out an isolated tornado. certainly the potential for there, a lot of dye nammics in the atmosphere. in the meantime, in new york, temperatures from the upper 60s to low 70s, coming up for tomorrow, but by wednesday, i think that's when those rain chances really go up. at least somewhat significantly. they're about half the amount of rainfall that you typically see for the month of october. we'll be back in another 30 minutes or so to update you on the weather, kate, back to you. >> karen, thank you so much for that. so this is something we have been talking about all morning, stunning video of bizarre rescue caught on video, of course, a florida woman hanging on for dear life as she dangments from a raised draw bridge, friends, family, looking on in horror. what was she doing in the first place? we have more on this. good morning, john. >> reporter: hey, kate, i think everybody is asking.
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you know, we're not quite sure what she was doing up on the bridge? we heard everything from she was taking pictures, that she was looking for a shortcut to get home. >> that is the railroad bridge in question now. imagine you are up there, you know if you fall, either you are going to hit the railroad crossing below you or you are going to end up in the water. neither one not a good option. be you that was the predicament a local woman found herself in over the weekend. lock at this, your eyes are not playing tricks on you. that's a 55-year-old south florida woman dangling more than 20 feet up from a raised railroad bridge. >> i would have been flipping out like oh my goodness, oh my godness. >> she hung on, her legs locked, her hands tight to the structure. for about 20 minutes she hung there, below a crowd of onlookers snapped photos, some ended up on twitter. after a flurry of calls the fort
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lauderdale fire department hoisted a ladder and brought her down to the cheering crowd t. ordeal over, she was safe and apparently unharmed. sometimes you just get lucky. it is unclear what she was doing on the bridge in the first place. it is marked with a no trespassing sign and a warning siren when it is about to go up. there is another neighbor bridge for pedestrians to cross t. woman wearing pink had reportedly finished a chancer walk saturday morning called making strides against breast cancer the bridge went up with her on it. the bridge is remotely controlled. once she walked out on it and it started up, there was no way to stop it and no way for her to get off. now the city of fort lauderdale issued a statement late yesterday saying thatry thankful the individual involved in the life threatening incident survived, but the decision to trespass on private property was an unfortunate poor choice that
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endangered the trespasser's life and the lives of the first responders, so, kate, chris, city officials here not happy with what that woman did over the weekend. >> no, to say the lowest. all right, john, thanks so much. i think this is something, you know whenever you drive over a draw bridge or, you know, this is something everyone thinks about. >> what they would do if it were to open and cling on for life? >> what if it opened and i was on it? >> looking at the bridge, i don't know if we have a video picture. i probably would have turned around and scaled down. >> like you have done it before. >> i would have turned around. first of all, i wouldn't be on the morning bridge. for 20 feet. >> i have seen him fall from higher heights than that. >> seen him turn around like a ladder and gotten down to the base, maybe crawl somewhere else. >> scary. scary. >> she had impressive quadro
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cipial strength. she is holding on. maybe don is right, you turn around, you climb down. >> the honest answer is, aaahhh! >> this one i'm saying i can't judge. i'd be screaming like a little girl. >> as dave blaine told me once, he drives in the horizon, it's the looking down at heights. >> but a good point that john made there at the end, those first responders, they have to risk themselves. the worst stunt. it's not a good stunt. other men and women's lives at risk. life takes you along the bridge again. think about that on the brake. coming up on "new day," some nfl players coming down with a serious illness the league playing offense. can they contain a hard to boat infection? we'll tell you whether it is with challenges. plus a child murder case cold for more than 20 years. now that case appears to be close to. how did they figure it out?
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that story is coming up in just a few minutes. you've known? we gave people a sticker and had them show us. we learned a lot of us have known someone who's lived well into their 90s. and that's a great thing. but even though we're living longer, one thing that hasn't changed much is the official retirement age. ♪ the question is how do you make sure you have the money you need to enjoy all of these years. ♪
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. >> how serious is this? three members of the team have it in this is a super buck. what are they dealing with at this moment? >> we are talking mrsa. this is a staff bug as you mentioned resistant to certain antibiotics. this is something we used to see in hospitals en route cropping up nationwide. really we need to talk about prevention, how it's also spread and things like that and how to treat it. it is something we see in concern environments. places where there is no environment. >> what is snit is it a
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>> you see the razors, sharing of towels. >> right. >> i want to ask you. it says here, this is the research that i have, about one in every three people carry staph infections in their nose, two in 100 carry mrsa strain. how rare is it, if it's rare? >> so, remember, we had back ter kra that just lives on us mpgs we are colonized with it. with mlsa or staph, we can be colonized with the bacteria. it doesn't cause problems at all t. way we track mrsa, is if we have a break in the skin, it can cause the bacteria to get in and cause an infection. >> i want to hear the kind of infections, i am very paranoid. but for the teams. because a lot of these staph infections wind up on the arms,
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it can spread to other players. they move around, need quarantined. what's the deal? >> mrsa can range hospital infections tend to be bloodstream. it can get into the blood strome and cause a pneumonia as well. sometimes we get infections at surgical sites, often for hospitalized people. then some people out in the community. we call this community acquired mrsa. they might be young people with no medical problems at all. >> that type infection manifests itself as a skin lesion. i have patients come in at least a couple times a month with these. oftentimes they describe it as a spider boy. i thought i got a spider basis point t. way it will look, locking like a boil or an abscess, painful. a pillple. often red, warm to touch and can start to drain. these can actually become quite severe. that's the type of infection we
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see. >> you remember back in 2006, we were reporting so much. it's been going on. we are seeing more of it. come out into the environment. remember, we get it from contact with an infected wound, sharing utensils. >> what does that mean for going to the gym, too? >> i tell you what the cdc says, this is important. it says it's okay to keep playing sports. we are talking multiple sports. remember, wrestleers get this. other sports players that have close contact t.cdc says it's okay to play once you keep the wound properly covered. no leakage, no drainage. the wound is not likely to get injured in playing the sport. i would add as long as it is not extensive or live spread. of course, you want for the take
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it on an individual basis. >> dangerous. thank you so much. >> coming up on "new day," will congress stop toying with the full faith and cred it of the united states and raise the debt ceiling? this morning, senate democrats may have some options at their disposal. are they real options? we will talk to one of them. west virginia senator joe man chun. >> a decades old case finally solved killed a little girl known as baby hope. we now know her real name. that's coming up in a live report. try campbell's homestyp brimming with farm grown veggies. .
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difficult default would be, the devastation it would cause to america. >> the closers, flurry of activity over the weekend, it's now up to the senate to bring parties together before the debt ceiling deadline. what's on the table and how close are they? true survivor, the man lost alone in the wilderness for 19 days, he's finally rescued, but wait until you hear what he had to do to survive. high anxiety, this woman clinging to a drawbridge as it raises up with her on it, clinging for dear life, how they saved her and how did she get there? your "new day" continues right now. >> announcer: what you need to know -- >> our systems are not designed to not pay our bills. >> announcer: what you just have to see.
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this is "new day" with chris cuomo, kate bolduan and michaela pereira. >> welcome back to "new day" it's monday, october 14th, columbus day, 8:00 in the east. we're three days away from potential economic disaster that could have enormous global repercussions. congress still has not reached a deal to raise the debt ceiling or fully reopen the government so where do things stand? we'll talk with democratic senator joe manchin, he's been working on a deal to do those things, reopen the government and increase the debt limit for three months. not all of his democratic colleagues are going for it. and while the government is pashtially shutdown so is the obama care website. our correspondent has been trying to get on for days at the all hours and she will tell what you she found. with each passing day there's still no apparent end to the government gridlock even as the
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potential stakes get higher. the focus did shift from the house to the senate so could that lead to some kind of progress? we don't know but jim acosta reporting live from the white house is watching us. what do we know? >> reporter: a sign of how desperate things are becoming in washington the only movement was between the phone call with the senate's top two leaders who haven't always gotten along with each other but have to work together to avert a crisis. with the clock ticking down to debt ceiling day it's come down to senate majority leader harry reid and mitch mcconnell to reopen the government and avoid default. >> i've had a productive conversation with republican leader this is afternoon, our discussions were substantive and we'll continue those discussions. >> reporter: the question is whether they can get there in time. >> both leaders realize how difficult default would be, the devastation it would cause to america. >> reporter: but talks over the
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weekend appear to stumble again as republicans accused reid of overreaching by seeking additional concessions from republicans over those forced budget cuts in the sequester. >> now is the time to be magnanimous, sit down and get this done. >> reporter: the white house said president obama was standing firm in a phone call with nancy pelosi that there must be clean bills to extend the debt ceiling and end the shutdown with no strings attached. tensions are boiling over. >> this is the people's memorial. >> reporter: texas senator ted cruz led a protest over the closing of the world war ii memorial on the national mall that drew this verbal attack on the president. >> i call upon all of you to wage a second american non-violent ref tlugs uvolutire difl disowe beesience and demand this president leave town, to get up, to put the koran down, get up off his knees and
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figuratively come up with his hands out. >> usa! >> reporter: veterans and tea party activists grabbed monument security barricades and dumped them in front of the white house. before a rowdy face-off with park police in riot gear, one monday waved the confederate flag, others called for impeachment. >> they gave them back to president obama piling them in front of his house, hour house, i'm sorry, in front of our house. >> reporter: while another tea party backed senator was calling for compromise. >> i think we should have an agreement in advance. >> reporter: now the only deal that's been struck in recent days has been between the federal government and a variety of state governments to reopen some of the closed national parks, things are back to normal here at the white house after all that commotion yesterday and we should point out the senate is back in session later today, so we do expect further conversations between senate leaders, but any deal that goes down to reopen the government and lift the debt ceiling if you
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can just go by the rhetoric in the piece we saw outside the white house yesterday is not going to go over well with everyone and that is not a good sign as to how things might go over in the house where obvio obviously house speaker john boehner has a conservative caucus to deal with. >> jim, thank you so much. the debt ceiling deadline hits thursday giving wall street a bad and understandable case of the jitters. stock futures down this morning, last week's optimism over a possible deal now just seems a distant memory. alison kosik is keeping an eye on your money. >> the bond market is closed but the stock market is open and what you'll wind up seeing is it a market trading on the headlines coming out of washington depending on whether or not there is a deal and washington may look to send a signal to washington d.c., if the u.s. defaults it could cause chaos in the global markets.
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the u.s. is three days away from the debt ceiling deadline, the possibility of default sparking concern of potential economic turmoil around the world. >> if there was a problem lifting the debt ceiling it could well be that what is now recovery would turn into a recession or even worse. >> reporter: here at home a default could mean a serious hit to your investments like your 401(k). wall street now waiting on washington to dictate the trades as banks are predicting the s&p 500 could see painful losses as high as 45% if an agreement isn't reached. >> here in chicago we've seen the housing market pick up in the last year and like many places, that has been helped by low interest rates for people looking for loans. but all of that could change if the government defaults, because interest rates on home loans could spike or even worse we could see another credit squeeze, making it much harder to borrow.
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>> reporter: a default also means interest rates for credit cards and student loans would spike as well as payments from the government would dry up. >> washington meet main street. we're outside of a local social security benefits administration office here in washington, d.c. could we be seeing worried recipients of those benefits show up at offices all across the country, roughly 58 million americans rely on those benefits but treasury secretary jack lew says that the debt ceiling isn't raised, it could be a problem paying them. >> reporter: the ripples of a default would be far reaching. the global marketplace feeling the effects of the weakening dollar. the u.s.'s current debt limit sits just under $16.7 trillion. >> our systems were not designed to not pay our bills. >> reporter: despite some cries of impending chaos some republicans say sounding the alarms is a bit sensational. >> i'd rather have a managed catastrophe now which i don't think will be there. >> i think this is the 11th time i've been through this discussion about the sky is
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falling and the earth will erupt. >> reporter: more recently the u.s. teetered dangerously close to the debt ceiling deadline in august 2011, where a deal was struck in the 11th hour. the exact day when the u.s. government will run out of cash to cover its bills isn't certain but when the deadline hits revenue will continue to come in. lawmakers are negotiating a plan that includes a temporary fix to increase the debt ceiling though critics say what we really need isn't a band-aid fix, we need a permanent one. chris? >> alison, thank you very much. joining us for more on the gridlock in washington is democratic senator joe manchin of west virginia. thank you for joining us. appreciate it. >> thanks for having me, chris. >> today we commemorate the discovery of the new world and columbus day. is that incentive for you all in washington to search for a solution? >> it sure is. we take a note to serve.
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i don't think a democrat or republican came here for that purpose. the good news is there are 12 of us, six democrats, six republicans, who have been talking for two weeks. we've got a good template. we believe the template we put together is something both leaders are looking at, leader reid and leader mcconnell. they need to put the numbers to it, basically put the dates on the cr and the debt ceiling but this is a good compromise that works well and basically can move our government forward and that's what needs to be done. >> you think you can get a short term deal done or is that too scary even to your own leadership? >> here is the thing about the short term. we need to get into a budget conference. we need to go back to regular order, to get a big deal to get rid of the sequestering and all of the things and operate the way we should to let appropriations operate the way it's designed to operate you've got to have a budget. we can't get to the budget conference. our republican colleagues have not allowed that to happen.
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they're looking at that differently. the 12 of us have put that as part of our compromise, you must go to budget conference to work out a bigger deal and a more fair number realistic of how we keep government moving forward. >> so we're told there are two big blocks, one is theoretical, someone practical. the theoretical one there is a significant faction of people mostly in the house but some in the senate who believe this is necessary steer continue to show that government is broken. are you dealing with any of that there where people are saying i don't want to make a deal, i want people to see this government is dysfunctional, i want it to stay this way? >> i will still say that is the extreme elements, chris. i understand that. the bottom line is there's enough of us still in the middle, common sense to know the purpose that we're here. i'm not here to call republicans names or to say disparaging things about them. i'm here to work with them and basically we have a divided government. i understand as a democrat in the majority party that basically you have to work with your colleagues, not against
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them, and that's what i've been trying to do as governor of west virginia my great little state. we work together, didn't put people in difficult positions or try to embarrass them. susan collins has been great to work with, been there, got people together and going to meet again this morning at 9:00, we've given a good outline in the template to the leadership, i think they received it and i think they received it in a positive manner. let's see what they do with it, it is the crux of having a bipartisan agreement, the only thing that has a bipartisan buy-in right now. >> let me ask you something else. up until this point the democrats have been saying the republicans are saying they want to sit down and compromise. we went to them dozens of times asking them to sit in conference on the budget. this is just talk. you come up with this deal and we're told in the deal is this provision to allow agencies to deal with the sequester cuts the way they want to. is this a sneaky political move at this time when you're
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supposed to be above board? >> not basically because we've said get flexibility, a normal accounting procedure so they can move from account to account so that the pain won't be draconian pain but they have to do it with the approval of congress so if we have a decision they want to move they have to send it back to appropriators, the appropriators will look at that and see if it makes sense and if they can agree with it. so we still have the oversight of congress. >> but are you concerned that it looks like you're adding something to it, that the republicans will see this as oh wow, you want us to give on obama care and now you want us to give on the sequester, too? are you asking for too much? >> i understand the concern they have. the health care law obama care is the law of the land. the only way any laws can be changed is through the congress. if we're saying you have to set down and meet and discuss you have to come back with us, two weeks prior to the debt ceiling whatever date our leaders agree
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on. are you changing the numbers so we don't have a readiness problem with our military so we don't cut head start from our children? these are the things we need to do and live within our budget. we've got to have a grand deal and bob corker, dear friend of mine, has been working with us very closely. we're looking at how do we get a bowles-simpson approach, where you look at revenue and spending and you look at reforms. it needs to be done. it's tough love. it's got to be done. >> senator, for those who got to enjoy their weekend and haven't been paying attention, give me the bullet points of what's in the deal as opposed. >> the bullet points in the deals proposed we look from the affordable health care act postponing for two years the medical device tax, not expending it, basically just postponing it, that's a compromise, also verification, verification of people signing up to make sure they're not scamming or frauding the system. we agree democrats and republicans, also agreed you have to go to conference, we cut' get them to set down in
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budget conference. we've done that. we've agreed to cr and the debt ceiling being extended out, that's up to the leadership. we've got a template that works. we've agreed on the template, just the facts as far as what the details are, needs to to be worked out by leadership and we want to help them >> what percentage do you think you are in terms of getting toward 100%, meaning you have a deal. where do you think you are right now? >> i think we're 70%, 80% there, putting the extra 25% to it. when should the cr come due, when should the debt ceiling come due and does that give that time for the budget conference, the budget committees to set down and work through this? those are the details that have to be worked out. we don't want these draconian cuts that might affect how we take care and serve the people of this great country. that happens january 15th. that's the law. can we meet before that, have an agreement and move forward? the cr, there's no reason, this is self-inflicted pain. there's not a person i know of,
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chris, that signed up for self-inflicted pain upon the people they took an oath to serve. if you have the extreme to say i just don't care, maybe they better have a gut check of why they're really here. these are people i know, have a gut check of why you're here. we're here basically as public servants to be the most honorable professions and we have to hold ourselves to higher goals than what we're expending now. i'm ashamed and i want to apologize to the american people. this is not what we signed up for. this is not what i'm going to sit by and let happen if i can help it. >> there's need for leadership and i remember as governor you helped your people through tough times in west virginia so thank you for joining us on "new day" and good luck getting it done. >> sclis, thank you. >> kate over to you. gunmen abducted seven aide workers in syria, a story developing this morning. the team was trying to get medical supplies to people in
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the northwestern part of the country when they were kidnapped. mow he mohammed jamjoon is following the story live. >> it is an extremely worrying development, seven aide worker, six for the red c ross, one a volunteer for syria's red crescent, in idlib province on sunday, ambushed by armed gungunmen and kidnapped. they were trying to distribute medical supplies and had been out in the field since october 10th. the red cross is calling for their immediate and unconditional release. we've heard from the syrian government, stated through syrian state television they believe that armed terrorist groups are behind this kidnapping, that's sort of the catch-all terminologies the syrians use when referring to syrian rebels. nobody claimed responsibility for the kidnapping. cnn sfoek with a spokesman for the international committee for the red cross, he says the red
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cross has no intention of shugt down their operations there, that it's of vital importance to make sure syrians can get humanitarian aid and medical supplies as the civil war rages out of control. >> mohammed takes an more than point, these are some of the folks trying their best to help with the massive humanitarian crisis unfolding in syria and continues to get worse day by day and now they're even under threat throughout this syrian civil war. we'll keep on it, thanks so much. >> a lot of other headlines, get to don lemon in for michaela. >> more news overseas, anothe deadly green on blue attack in afghanistan, a man wearing an afghan army uniform shooting and killing a member of the nato international security force. there are reports a victim is an american but that has not been confirmed as of now. the attack coming one day after john kerry and hamid karzai move
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closer to a zeal to keep some u.s. troops in afghanistan beyond next year. an american man jailed since august after a car bombing in egypt has turned up dead at a police station. officials say james lund was found hanging by shoelaces and a belt from a bathroom door. an investigation is under way. lund had been detained since august. he reportedly died the same day he learned he'd been detained for at least another month an investigation under way into a dry ice bomb at los angeles international airport. dry ice in a plastic bottle set off an explosion inside a bathroom. no one was hurt but officials shut down terminal two at lax. millions of social security recipients, disabled veterans and federal retirees will see a small increase in benefits for the sec. straight year. automatic yearly increases were
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adopted in 1975 and early estimates place next year's roughly 1.5%, among the lowest on record. officials say it's because consumer prices have been relatively flat. colombian wing suit flier jonathan flores crowned the winner of the wing suit flying world championship in central china. 16 fliers braving a 4,700 foot drop above sea level, flores completed his in 23.4 seconds. geez, this year's event was overshadowed by the death of victor kovatz who died during a trial flight tuesday. that is not easy to do. have you ever seen the guy when he went between the two mountains? >> we talked to him. >> crazy. >> one of the more terrifying hobbies. amazing to watch from afar. >> operative word. >> one of the reasons we're so
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excited because of how dangerous it is. unfortunately every once in a while you get reminded what the downside is. over to karen maginnis in for indra petersons for a look at the forecast. >> good morning, everyone. if you've got the day off it doesn't look like it's going to be too messy a travel day across the northeast, i-95 corridor fairly quiet. on the back side of this warm front means warmer air moves on in, towards tuesday into wednesday, but wednesday there will be another weather system that will bring in much needed wet weather, because only half of the precipitation in new york city that you typically see during the month of october. well for today in denver, 57 but some of the higher peaks in the front range all the way to yellow stone, into the wind river, the saw tooth mountains. we're looking at some substantial snowfall over the next 24 hours. here is the reason why, area of low pressure very big risk for this time of year but ahead of
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it, could see the threat for some pretty good thunderstorms. speaking of thunderstorms, in texas, they've seen a number of high water rescues but look at this. this out of haze county, hays county, texas, this commercial bus overturned and there were a number of people inside that bus. they were part of a wedding party. no one reported injured, but the bus did try to move over the flooded road there. some parts of austin saw as much as 12 inches of rainfall. that rain threat continues a little bit further to the north and to the west but nonetheless the next several days it looks like pretty soaking rains just about everywhere we look there. chris, zblooirng chris, thanks so much. a 72-year-old man survives in remote wilderness for not a day, not a weaniek, 19 days.
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welcome back to "new day." a california family feared the worst. 2-year-old went into the woods on a hunting trip but did not come back. searchers gave up after four days but he was found alive 19 days later, left alone in the elements for all that time, miguel marquez joins us here with more on this amazing story. >> absolutely incredible. this is a beautiful part of california but can be unforgiving. he was with a buddy hunting,
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fell down a ravine, he got knocked out, took a good blow to his head, woke up, disoriented, in a fog, literally heavy fog there, and he ended up having to eat anything that moved just to survive. 19 days lost in the wilderness, injured and dehydrated a 2-year-old man survived. gene penaflor vanished in the mendocino national forest in california. he was on a hunting trip got separated and suffered a serious fall. >> reporter: when he finally woke up he was disoriented, suffering a head injury. he was stranded in the middle of nowhere, forced to eat lizards,
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frogs and squirrels just to stay alive. he scavenged water from a drain source and huddled under logs to stay out of the snow and rain and kept warm by making fires using leaves and grass. meanwhile penaflor's family spent every single one of the 1 days praying he was still alive. >> 19 days i know was nothing for him so i knew he was there. >> reporter: rescue teams have been searching for penaflor for weeks. he was found saturday at the bottom of a ravine. by then he could no longer walk on his own. he was carried on a makeshift stretcher. thankfully and miraculously he was okay. this guy was incredibly lucky. he was growing weaker by the day, he saw helicopters but couldn't get their attention. luckily enough some hunters came along, able to get their attention and he survived. his son thought he could do 4
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days, when it got past that point he got concerned. >> even he had given up hope nap is real survival. you cover yourself up with whatever you can find, eat whatever you can eat, as long as he had water. >> water was the big thing. >> what a story. glad he is home with his family now. thanks, miguel. chris to you. a brand new poll from monmouth university showing cory booker's lead in the new jersey senate race is slipping. hold the presses. is he still ten points ahead of his gop opponent steven lonegan but it's sparking controversy days before the election. lonegan is getting big support from former alaska governor. >> the big guns are showing up as we get closer and closer to this election. lot of people may not have known it is election day in new jersey, coming up on wednesday, last second chance to get those voters out. with political celebrity and twitter junkie cory booker on
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the ballot, the race for senate in new jersey has been high profile from the start. now his opponent is bringing his own star power to the campaign. just days away from the election, tea party favorite shah rah palin headlined for steve lonegan over the weekend. >> you have the momentum with steve's campaign. the rest of the country knows it. the media even shknows it, that why they're getting owl wee-wee'd up against steve. >> one of the top advisers ridiculed mayor booker for having a twitter exchange with a stripper. i don't know, it's like what a gay guy would say to a stripper. >> i can't be responsible for what all of them say but i terminated him for his inappropriate comments. >> reporter: booker says his conservative backing does not represent mainstream republicans. >> sarah palin, rick perry, rand
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paul, all of them don't represent the main stream of the republican party, they represent the far right tea party so that's who he is. >> reporter: with over 1.4 million followers on twitter, newark's mayor has been all over the local news for years with tales of saving abandoned dogs and rescuing his neighbor from her burning home. >> i didn't think. i grabbed her and ran. >> reporter: for months he's had a double-digit lead over lonegan but that lead is dipping to 12 points according to a poll released last week, thanks in part to his opponent's aggressive ad campaign. >> cory booker radical, liberal, extreme. >> there really hasn't been a lot of issue based discussion. it's much more about personality and about the kind of things that often leave voters in the dark who it is they're voting for. >> reporter: cory booker is back on the campaign trail. he took a few days off his father passed away last week. we told but the new monmouth university poll showing book we
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are a ten-point lead, looks tighter than it was but a few weeks ago it was 13-point lead so not that much slippage and two days before the election ten points is big. >> as you get closer to election day polls tend to tighten as people get more serious in their evaluation. >> thanks, john. coming up next on "new day," a murder case that sat cold for more than 20 years could finally be solved. who police say killed baby hope ahead. and you see this picture this morning, florida woman goes out for a walk, finds herself hanging on for dear life from a drawbridge. how did that happen? my asthma's under control.
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i get out a lot... except when it's too cold. like the last three weekends. asthma doesn't affect my job... you missed the meeting again last week! it doesn't affect my family. your coughing woke me up again. i wish you'd take me to the park. i don't use my rescue inhaler a lot... depends on what you mean by a lot. coping with asthma isn't controlling it. test your level of control at asthma.com, then talk to your doctor. there may be more you could do for your asthma.
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welcome back to "new day." it's monday, october 14th, columbus day. straight to don lemon with the five things you need to know for your "new day." >> michaela pereira, come on, i could never do it for her. i'm just here to bring you the news. harry reid and mitch mcconnell have afwreed keep communicating in an attempt to avoid a crisis. >> an insider attack in afghanistan under investigation. man dressed in an afghan soldier's uniform shot and killed a nato service member on sunday. investigators have released the first ever person of interest sketch in the six years since madeleine mccann's disappearance. the 3-year-old british girl vanished in 2007 vacationing with her parents in portugal. a star of "baseball wives" in court expected plead not
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guilty, anna benson accused of trying to rob former husband chris who played for the mets, at gunpoint. a new study suggests high levels of bpa a chemical found in plastics and canned food linings may raise the risk of miscarriages along with other health issues. go to newday.com for the latest. a breakthrough in a 20-year-old cold case. police arrested a man they say brutally murdered a girl they called baby hope. now one of the relatives stands accused. this is one of the cases this he thought would never be solved. >> at last a break a mystery that gripped the nation but with a combination of luck, frorn sick techniques and good old-fashioned police work some answers have been found. for more than two decades new
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york city police have been trying to find out who this little girl is, and who her heartless killer was. now, a huge break in this cold case. >> detectives from the bronx violent if el know squad apprehended conrado juarez, age 52, of the bronx also known as enadina juarez. in connection with the murder of 4-year-old angelica castillo, a child victim known for the last 22 years as baby hope. >> reporter: in 1991 the decomposed body of a 4-year-old girl was found stuffed in this cooler discarded by a highway. her body was folded in half and bound. she had been sexually abused. no one ever claimed the body. jerry giorgio was the lead detective on the case from the start. >> i always felt there were other people that knew about this. how could you not miss a 5-year-old or a 4-year-old? >> reporter: days turned to months turned to years.
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by 1993 the 34th precinct squad had given the girl the name baby hope and face recomputed by computer rendering. leads surfaced and petered out but police persisted and finally a break. >> i got the phone call, i got the news, i was elated. i was up on cloud nine. >> reporter: police recently got a call on their hotline the caller said she'd been told several years ago by a young woman her parents had killed her sister. that tip led place to exhume baby hope's body for bone samples. using advances in dna testing detectives found her mother and arrested the cousin who is charged with murder. juarez admitted to the crime. >> the justice raises his gavel and says "you're going to jail for the rest of your life." >> reporter: the detective also soon replace this plaque at baby hope's grave and set in stone her name, angelica castillo. detectives stress that advances
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in dna were crucial to find baby hope alleged killer and say the nypd didn't have a dna until 1998, seven years after angelica castillo was found. by ex-humaning her body in 2006 police were able to extract samples for extensive testing and that evidence cracked the case and after years finally led to an arrest. >> the families will tell you even though the news is dark that not knowing is the hardest part. so at least they got closure. thank you very much. appreciate the reporting. coming up next on "new day," thousands of americans trying to sign up for obama care online, only to be told try again later. our own correspondent elizabeth cohen showing the trouble she's having to simply try and make an account. so what is going on? she'll take a look. a walk for charity becomes a survival story when a woman steps on to a draw bridge and it suddenly starts to open. the rescue ahead. ♪
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♪ a little party never killed nobody ♪ that song will wake you up on a monday. welcome back to "new day." over to karen maginnis in for indra petersons with a look at the forecast. tell me it's beautiful. >> it is beautiful, temperatures running a little above normal. wednesday light business travel out of the airports for today because of the columbus holiday. tuesday looks picture perfect, going into wednesday different story new york, boston, washington, d.c., all expecting various rounds of showers. i don't think you'll see heavy rainfall, certainly not like you saw in the past week with the very stubborn area of low pressure right off the mid-atlantic coast, some areas saw as much as 12 inches but spread out all week long. temperature wise from 60s to
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70s, back to 60s again. we have a vigorous weather system ejecting out of the west on the back side of that plenty of cold air and ahead of it the potential for thunderstorms. if you live anywhere from north platte to grand isle to garden city, kansas, you might expect damaging winds and some large sized hail, possible for this afternoon but cooler behind this weather system, could see some heavy rains continues in texas. chris? >> thank you very much, karen. we are now two weeks in and obama care is dealing with some political problems, there's no question but dealing with practical problems as well and they're starting to overshadow the political ones. tech experts say it could take a long time to fix the glitches people are experiencing when they try to sign up online. elizabeth cohen has been trying to set up an account and she is getting nowhere fast. it turns out it's not about you, is it? >> no, it's not about me. i've been doing this just as a journalistic endeavor but many other people they really need
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health care insurance and they say they're really frustrated that this isn't working for them. >> i put in my user name and password and it didn't recognize it. error messages, page not found, system down. it's been a tough nearly two weeks for obama care. there were error messages or that little annoying kind of twirly thing, hate it, hate it. i've been trying since day one to get an account and login on healthcare.gov. i failed again. i couldn't make this page work. and again. it wouldn't log me in. and again. [ sighs ] it's not working. when i called the 1-800 number for help the reps tell me volume is high and to try again during off-peak hours. so i tried at 10:30 at night, 7:00 in the morning, and still it didn't work. so finally i set my alarm clock for 3:00 a.m. sunday morning, but guess what? the system was down for
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maintenance. i'm not the only one having trouble. on facebook, people took to the health care.gov page to vent by the thousands and on cnn's ireport -- >> i've tried it hundreds, literally hundreds of times since october the 1st. >> reporter: independent analysts tell cnn the problems go way beyond high volume and minor glitches. the site fails to follow basic protocols in coding. there's the old-fashioned way of enrolling over the phone and snail mail. you just have to complete the process by december 15th. now as we've been reporting, some people have had success so they've been able to go online and see all their different choices and actually buy insurance and we've heard from them, they're really thrilled about this. i just heard from an official at the department of health and human services and he said that some nights this week they're going to be doing maintenance from 1:00 a.m. until 5:00 a.m.
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and they hope this means there will be more happy experiences. kate? >> they can hope for more happy experiences. no matter what reasons the administration is giving this does not look like the launch they were hoping for. elizabeth thank you so much. >> thanks. think of this description, 20 minutes of shear terror, a 55-year-old florida woman stranded on a raised drawbridge holding on for dear life as firefighters race to save her. the dramatic rescue all caught on video. how did she get there? cnn's john zarrella live in ft. lauderdale with more on the story. good morning, john. >> reporter: good morning, kate. the big question is what was she doing out there? of course all kinds of stories circulating she walked out on the bridge to take picture, looking for a shortcut to get home. what you see behind me is the new river in ft. lauderdale and what you see there is the railroad bridge she was stuck on. here's how it all happened. the bridge was down for a train to cross it, and right after the
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train crossed it, she apparently walked out on it and then suddenly it started to open. look at this. your eyes are not playing tricks on you. that's a 55-year-old south florida woman dangling more than 20 feet up from a raised rail road bridge. >> i would have been flipping out, like oh my goodness. >> reporter: she clung on seemingly frozen to the crossing, her legs locked, hands pressed tight to the structure. below a crowd of onlookers snapped photo, some ended up posting on twitter. after a flurry of calls to the 911 the ft. lauderdale fire department hoisted a 20-foot ladder and brought her down to a cheering crowd. she was safe and apparently unharmed. sometimes you just get lucky. it's unclear what she was doing on the bridge in the first place, it's marked with a "no trespassing" sign and a warning siren when it's about to go up
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and there is another nearby bridge for pedestrians to cross. the woman wearing pink had reportedly just finished a cancer walk saturday morning called "making strides against breast cancer" when the bridge went up with her on it. the bridge over ft. lauderdale's new river is remotely controlled. once she walked out on it and it started up there was no way stop it and no way for her to get off. now you can see there's a no trespassing sign there that my camera man jerry simonson is on, one of the several signs that mark this bridge. about an hour and a half ago a train came over here, the bridge was down. after the train went by we timed it and it only took about a minute for the bridge to go back up after the train went by and the up position is the normal position. it's only down when trains are coming and crossing it. kate? chris? >> that's a little faster than i
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expected it to be, john. thanks so much, great to see you as always. >> adds to the question list why was she in the first place. more will come out of that. we'll take a break on "new day" and when we come back two seriously good deeds a group of really good people and one dairy queen at the center of it all. find out why this simple ice cream shop is serving up a big dose of the good stuff today. and attention all you actors out there, every single one of you, one of the most sought after jobs in all of hollywood is open once again. who do you think has what it takes to play christian grey? it's the short list coming up. >> chris cuomo.
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easy returns, i'm happy. repeat customers, i'm happy. sales go up, i'm happy. i ordered another pair. i'm happy. (both) i'm happy. i'm happy. happy. happy. happy. happy. happy happy. i love logistics. ♪ sexy back that's more than one way to begin it. actor charlie dunham has dropped out of at daptation of "fifty shades of grey." the search for a leading man is on again. zoraida sambolin is here with more. >> you were pointing to chris. >> i was just banging him on the shoulder saying you have an opportunity. >> you do indeed. that is right. the only spec indication isn't about finding a new christian gray. charlie hunnam's departure has many wondering what will happen to dakota johnson? he was supposed to play billionaire christian grey in the film adaptation of "fifty
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shades of grey." but the 33-year-old star of the hit series "sons of anarchy" is bowing out, in a statement universal pictures said, "the filmmakers of "fifty shades of grey" and charlie hunnam agreed to find another male lead giving hunnam's tv immersal. e.l. james the author of the erotic best seller tweeted "i wish charlie all the best." but was scheduling the real reason for the surprise exit? >> what the real speculation was that the tension he was getting for taking on this role, both negative and positive was just too much for him to handle and he had to get out of it. >> reporter: in a recent interview with "entertainment weekly" the actor admits there are so many fans of that book and i know on the surface i'm probably not what everybody imagined. dakota johnson signed on as
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anastasiya steele. now that hunnam is out there is speculation of johnson's future in the film. >> one of the reason he got because of the chemistry with dakota johnson. is she potentially on the chopping block? >> with filming set to begin in the few weeks the sudden hunt for hunam's replacement could delay the highly anticipated august 2014 release date. who will take on the leading role in the erotic trilogy? >> ryan gosling has already come up, henry cavill, alexander scarsgar the list goes on. >> you should see kate here. more than 70 million copies of the book have been sold, this happened worldwide, there is an online petition going to decide who is actually going to have this role. who do you see? >> i've read all three and i want it to live in my head. . >> the problem every woman who read it has a different image of that man.
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>> who that man would be. >> a lot of men are going to see no matter what is the man. >> they say matt boemer. >> you've done your reserve. >> you're a good looking man, too. >> ryan gosling has been bandied about, women think he is the perfect christian grey. i don't know that i agree. >> there's only a few descriptions in the book of what this person should look like, right, just the grey eyes, right? >> cuomo, there you go, bro. >> your steely eyes would make it. >> here is the one thing. i didn't read the book but how you talk about it incessantly, he's got a lot of character traits that i think make him somewhat undesirable. no? >> he's a bit of a tortured soul. >> aren't we all. >> stay with cnn newsroom, john berman and michaela pereira nilg if for carol costello. see you back here or "new day" tomorrow.
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good morning and thank you for joining us. i'm michaela pereira. >> and i'm her sidekick john berman. carol costello is off today. >> do not be fooled. we begin this morning in gridlocked washington with the sound and the fury. >> usa! usa! >> usa! >> frustrations go from a simmer to a boil outside the white house as conservative protesters pile up barricades that surrounded the world war ii and the lincoln memorials. >> shame on you! shame on you! >> reporter: these protesters say they are fed one the partial government
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