tv CNN Newsroom CNN May 14, 2014 11:00am-1:01pm PDT
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involvement in ukraine. that's it for me. thanks very much for joining us. i will be back 5:00 p.m. eastern in the situation room. we're following all of the breaking news here. i'm wolf blitzer in washington. newsroom with brooke baldwin starts right now. >> wolf, thank you so much. hi there, i'm brooke baldwin. we begin with this heartbreaking wait op what could become the deadliest mining accident in all of turkey's history. >> that woman is crying is this, enough for the life of me, let this mine take my life, too. enough is enough. she is part of this mob of
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mourners and desperate loved ones gather there at this coal mine in turkey, about a seven hour drive southwest -- northwest of istanbul. the death toll at this hour, 245. 129 miners may still be alive and all eyes are on what rescuers bring up over ground. there have been moments of jubilation as well. [ applause ] at least 88 miners have made it out. some walking out of this mine on their own. it's really a miracle. a transformer blew and ig nighted a fire tuesday that has been slowing down the rescue today. let's take you to this mine site to cnn's ivan watson. there are more lifeless bodies
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being pulled out of this mine than survivorsment when is the last time there were cheers at that mine? >> reporter: you know, i have been here probably 12 hours and haven't heard any real cheers at all. the mood is quite grim down near the mouth of the coal mine. he said it was his duty to stand there and receive other friends that would be coming out. he told me he has no hope of seeing any of them come out alive that it's far too late for that. and i have watched a procession of lifeless bodies carried out on stretchers the scene there, he is quite grim. some of the rescue workers i
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have talked to managed to shut the doors. and get on tanks of oxygen and gas masks in time, there could be people alive. more than 24 hours after the fire broke out. it is a tragic and sad scene. as you drive around this province, flags are at half mass. the road in main street is line ed with police and protectors. the real sense of a major disaster.
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>> they are pumping oxygen into this mine site, are they not? >> we are told by authorities that they are pumping some air in and we see smoke puffing out from what seems to be an entrance to the mine. i talked to a couple of rescue volunteers who had been working overnight down there. they had retrieved the bodies of six miners they said. they said that the heat was pretty terrible. the air was also, you know, quite poisonous. dense smoke. and the distances that they are having to travel, they are saying that it takes 45 minutes. where these hundreds of coal miners are working. this fire erupted at a time when
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reportedly the coal mine was going through a shift. and that is perhaps why this has been so, so, so deadly. to top it all off, you have a locally elected lawmaker who had just put into motion asking for an investigation into the security standards at this mine and other coal mines around this very town and can you believe it? the parliament voted that motion for an investigation down. so this is becoming a big topic of debate and controversy even as the bodies still keep coming out. >> awful. we will stay in close contact with you, hoping for cheers in the coming hours instead of more bodies coming out of that mine. let's talk about, too, today, this potentially deadly mers virus. it has now spread to an 18th
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country. the netherlands is reporting a case of the virus that emerged from the middle east. two health care workers in orlando, both have tested negative even though both had flu-like symptoms. the number of people exposed to that man and the case in indiana are being kept in isolation and the cdc are trying to find the people who flew on the plane with the man currently in florida. and so, obviously, as we continue reporting this, we are hearing about signs in u.s. airports just giving people a head's up if they are going to the middle east. how concern should we be now? >> i would be worried about him.
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i would be worried about me and my children because we're in such close contact. i would be concerned if any health care workers had taken care of him and not using precautions but i don't think this is something that many, many people need to be concerned about. if you are not a held care worker, if you don't have close contact with a mers patient, which most of us haven't, this really isn't a grave concern. they are contacting people who flew on these planes with this mers patients because they want to be sure. these people spent many hours with this patient. >> i have heard you say, if you're a family member of this individual you should be frightened possibly. but if officials are trying to track down the folks on the planes who might have come in contact, maybe just shared the air, could it be as simple as
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that and somebody could be with the particular type of virus. >> in indiana, you have flights from london to chicago. that's hundreds of people on a plane together for hours with this mers patient and nobody on that plane got sick. now at the cdc here behind me there are people making phone calls as we speak for the florida patient who was on a series of flights. is it possible? sure it's possible. but the likelihood seems low. this is a new virus with a very high mortality rate, 30%. they want to take every precaution they can. >> as they should be. thank you so much. and just ahead here on cnn, a man searching for his biological father makes a disturbing discovery because he says his dad may be one of the most
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welcome back. a man's soul searching journey ends up with something that would shake anyone's identity because his dad could be a serial killer. that is what this man who wrote the book said. the man who abandoned him when he was four weeks old is the zodiac killer. >> seens from zodiac here, part of the string of films and books and articles on the string of killings. it is still an open case decades later. see this man, a louisiana business executive says his biological father bears a mighty strong resemblance to the
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sketches of the killer. look at that. plus, stewart could not ignore a letter puzzle from the killer that contained the words ev best and jr., which could be the name of stewart's dad. there is certainly doubt, my next guest knows her father was one. melissa moore's dad was keith jesperson, the happy face killer who admitted killing eight women in the 90s. she wrote a book, "shattered silence -- the untold story of a serial killer's daughter". >> thank you for having me. >> before we get to more specifics, i want to focus on you. tell me first about the moment when you realized after your dad was caught and you realized oh my god, my father is a serial killer. >> right, it was my fresh man
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year in high school. i was only 15 years old. it was shocking. my mom had called me in from the upstairs area of my house and called us in for a meeting. the next day i had to go to school like everything was normal. everybody else knew. they had watched the news, too. >> they knew it was your father? >> yeah. >> you say it was shocking but i read in parts of your book how your father had dark tendcies. tell me what he would hang from the clothes line? >> right, he would hang our -- well, my pets, for instance. in one case it was some kittens that i had found in the cellar that i was pretending. i was just a little girl.
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my dad had hung them on the clothes line and was torturing them. that was one really dark and horrible day for me. >> that is something you remember for the rest of your life. here you are as a grown woman and you're a mother. looking back, before we get to current day, your father, you know, sent letters with his own signature, sort of like this zodiac killer did. >> correct. it was a smiley face that he would put on the stalls of bathrooms, at truck stops.
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>> that is like a sign of serial killers. let me play you sound. he talked to cnn by phone earlier today. take a listen. >> i never set out to that my dad was a serial killer. mine was a journey to find myself by finding the other half of me in my father. >> the biggest difference between his story and yours besides the fact that we don't know he was abandoned when he was four weeks old. how has that -- do you think it's better to be older or younger or does it matter? >> well, as i have come forward with my story, i have had the privilege of meeting other family members that are children
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and even international cases to be the same place. >> sure. >> so -- >> we will follow this story to see if, you know, if gary's father is in fact the zodiac killer as well. >> thank you. coming up, is this zungen ship the long lost remains of a ship sailed by christopher columbus himself? our next guest says yes. he is the one who found it. also ahead, parents look on in absolute horror asbounce house is. we will tell you what happened to the children inside. yes, there were kids inside. next.
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>> a bounce house gets blown away. and thank goodness you're okay. >> look at this terrifying photo. that blue dot soaring high. right off the front yard. three children playing inside were sent flying two stories into the sky, soaring over a stretch of trees and this apartment complex. >> the first little boy came out, landed in the middle of the road. the other little boy came down and hit his head and then he
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. >> he is a man who is upset and he is reaching. he is reaching. he's trying to find something that he can grab on to to help him save his team and it's not going to happen. >> and the biebs is back. justin bieber and another brush with the law. this time accusations of attempted robbery. details next. i'm randy and i quit smoking with chantix. as a police officer, i've helped many people in the last 23 years. but i needed help in quitting smoking. along with support, chantix (varenicline) is proven to help people quit smoking. chantix reduced the urge for me to smoke. it actually caught me by surprise. some people had changes in behavior, thinking or mood, hostility, agitation, depressed mood and suicidal thoughts or actions while taking or after stopping chantix. if you notice any of these,
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>> bottom of the hour, you with watching krmp nn. more minors have been rescued today from a burning coal mine in turkey but as many as 120 are still trapped inside. the smoke is rising from the openings in the complex. anxious loved ones are offered comfort as throngs of loved ones are gathering outside of the mine. hundreds of people were believed to be inside the mine when a transformer blew up during a shift change.
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visit. he has vowed to investigate the causes behind what could be one of the most deadly mining disasters in turkish history. he went one step further to say that this mine had recently been inspected and it had a clean bill of health. the questions about who could be responsible will be resolved in the days and weeks ahead. >> that is ivan watson reporting from turkey. now to basketball. he says he is a god-fearing man and he's going pray for donald sterling. another exclusive interview with anderson cooper after sterling launched personal attacks against the hall of famer. and now that magic has spoken,
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the focus shifts back to steriling asteril sterling and his focus to hang on as owner. >> here we are in a league that is over 80%, at least 75% african-americans. he want us to play for him but he doesn't want us in the stands. he want us to help him win a championship but he doesn't want us in the stands. the players have rallied togtd. the only thing they're waiting for is to see what will happen with the vote and the board of governors. >> by the other owners? >> by the other owners. we can't have this kind of action in our league or in our society. >> sterling claims that push comes to shove, he can bide time. the players will play, sponsors will sponsor his team even if he stays there. that money talks and in the end they have got contracts, sponsors want to make money. he clearly believes that there
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is a root for him to remain owner. >> he can't buy his way out of this one. he has bought his way out of all the other situations. can't do it this time. >> here you have a majority black league. magic said sterling is fighting a losing battle. >> we are hearing from lebron james suggesting that people boycott next season if sterling is still the owner. is that realistic? >> it is talk at this time but it is realistic. and what what the players are stating.
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and not the sterling family. that should happen prior to the opening game of next year, opening season. and what league aspect this will bring, i don't know. when the board of governors will make a decision and they will make a positive decision to have mr. sterling removed from ownership, i think that it might have some legal ramifications that would ensue later. because of the fact that this could get ugly and nasty. it is a great time for the nba. the nba is doing and go thunder.
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>> let me stop you there. you have a unique position. you played with magic. what would magic the player, playing right now, causing a revolve, what would he do in that situation? >> he would be the same as lebron james at this time, which he has stated that he would not play next year. and magic is the kind of guy that is upstanding. and up front. during the time that i was playing with magic, i had a drug issue. magic and the players came to me and said we need you to walk away from this situation for the next three games. we were in the championship. and i was suspend ed and we won
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the championship and things worked themselves out. over the years i have worked hard and diligently to help us out to eradicate drugs and alcohol from our society and magic has done the same thing with hiv. >> raising awareness. >> he has traveled all over, raised awareness, millions of dollars. he has always done the right thing. so, i just think that this is an inopportune time for the nba, especially with our new commissioner adam silver, who is an upfront and forthright person that will do the best thing for all that's involved. there are some things that have to take place at this time. >> i say good on you and good on magic for everything that you both have done. let's talk about the series. i hear you, go thunder. but do you think -- do you think
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the clippers' loss last night, how might a clippers loss -- sorry clippers fans, how might a clippers' loss affect this at all? >> i don't think it has any effect. as a player you have to perform on the floor and you're going to have adversities that will arise during the season. the clipper players are going to have to just rise up for the next game. and i think this is a seven game series. oklahoma thunder is the super sonics. i love kevin durrant. >> we will also see how this plays out in la and oklahoma city and really it's a bigger story. pleasure having you on. >> and now to this 500-year-old mystery that may have just been
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solved but already the possible long lost remains are being looted. say it ain't so? we're talking to the man who found it as he makes a desperate plea for help. you have all heard carl rove's comments suggesting she may be suffering from a brain injury? now hillary's husband has something to say about it. bill clinton himself responding next. branches? 24/7. i'm sorry, i'm just really reluctant to try new things. really? what's wrong with trying new things? look! mommy's new vacuum! (cat screech) you feel that in your muscles? i do... drink water. it's a long story. well, not having branches let's us give you great rates and service. i'd like that. a new way to bank. a better way to save. ally bank. your money needs an ally.
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to pull the ship wreck remains off of haiti, remains that they are sure belong to the ship that was lost way back. we all remember what we learned in grade school, way back in 1492. so barry clifford. i have been waiting all day to talk to you. so, let's just reel back for a minute. you have spent a decade or so looking for this particular ship. can you just take me back to that moment when you said this is it? >> well, that was -- we actually discovered the ship in 2003, but based on some misinterpretation of some art facts the ship was dismissed. we went to another location and basically threw our hands up in the air and then in 2012, i came
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across documents that i knew at that moment that we had found what we were looking for. >> you thought you had the a-ha moment years ago. be special with me. i don't know if you have a tv where you are and see what we're looking at on the screen. tell me what we're looking at and tell me why you're so sure. >> that is charles beaker, and he is measuring the balice pile. there is the lawn barb. that is 15th century weapon. we found that and the same size pile that we would expect to find on a 15th century vessel. the precise distance from the
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shore in the precise distance from where columbus said it wrecked? >> is that how you knew where to look? >> columbus kept a diary and he wrote in it every day. >> columbus kept a diary? how about that? >> he did. it was my interpretation of the diary that led me -- basically it's the riddle. in solving columbus's -- in getting into columbus's head and understanding what he was going through led us to the position. when he gave us the position of where naf navidad was and the ship was a league and a half away, we put one end of the come pus and swung the other end out into the bay, went to that spot and found exactly what we were looking for. >> and here you are, you what? weeks later, from what i
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understand, you went back to haiti and you notice something was awry. what was different? >> a few weeks ago, i heard that rumors that the site may have been looted. and, based on that information, i put an emergency project together together with the history channel. we went down there. dove on the site where we had seen these things before and nothing looked the same. in fact, all of the art facts including what you are seeing right now were looted from the site. >> so they're gone? or just moved. >> they're gone. they're gone. and that's not to say that there's not a lot more there. that's why i'm concerned. of course in situations like this, there are -- it is obvious, a lot more under the pile. i have been working very closely
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with the haitian government and the president who is very concerned about this. it can be put on display for the public. >> that's what i wanted to ask you about. >> where would you like the public to see this? >> i think that this is an -- i am basically, you know, looking for the ship and we plan to excavate it. and hopefully it's such an important touch stone to this period. 14.92, the world is changing. a third of the population was wiped out with the plague.
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and then columbus finds a path to the new world and rays of light start coming through this dark cloud. i think this touch stone to this period is so important that every fort must be made to preserve it. >> it makes my blood boil. i hope this is it. thank you so much for joining me. >> thank you so much. >> still to come here, bill clinton firing back at carl rove said. >> and we will take a look inside the 911 museum set to open soon. stay right here. ameriprise asked people a simple question: can you keep your lifestyle in retirement? i don't want to think about the alternative.
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♪ ♪ woooooah. ♪ [ male announcer ] you're not just looking for a house. you're looking for a place for your life to happen. zillow. >> got some news just into us. pretty big news in the world of media. "new york times" announced today that jill abrams says she is leaving as executive editor of the newspaper effective immediately. abramson, she was the first woman to hold this post. the next will be the first african-american editor for the "new york times."
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>> now to news from washington here. fum downed over suggestions. speaking today, the peterson foundation fiscal summit, clinton strongly came to the defense of his wife's health while also conceding that comments like that are just the beginning as his wife eyes a possible presidential run. >> i have got to give him cred. that embodies that old saying that consistency is the hobgoblin of little minds. first they said she faked her concussion and now they say she's auditioning for a part on the walking dead. i was sort of dumbfounded. look. she works out every week. she is strong and doing great.
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as far as i can tell, she is in better shape tharn i am. there is nothing too it. >> you have been running around covering hillary clinton. she spoke as well this morning. she did not specifically address remarks from carl rove. what do you make of that strategy? >> i think it leaves the politics to bill clinton. you really don't want to be political if you're thinking of running. right now hillary clinton still has state department kind of shine. so she really doesn't want that to be tarnished at all. we have been following her around. i will say on a fact check on
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this, she does appear to be very healthy. i spoke with one neurologist who said the schedule that she's keeping and the fact that you see her talking about complex subjects and that she does have stamina that that is a test in itself. >> thank you so much. great to talk to you. her husband speaking out about remarks from rove. >> and racing against time to find survivors. coming up neck xt, we will talk a man who knows all too well how dangerous mining really is. cnn takes you inside the new 911 museum for a preview coming up. those little things still get you. cialis tadalafil for daily use helps you be ready anytime the moment is right. cialis is also the only daily ed tablet approved to treat symptoms of bph, like needing to go frequently. tell your doctor about
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of the 911 museum, nearly 13 years after the attack that forever changed america. the memorial and museum will soon open at ground zero. and the museum, it is full of painful reminders like this pair of yellow bloody shoes belonging to linda lopez. she took off her heels and ran barefoot across broken glass to escape alive. and this evokes the brilliant blue skies. behind the walls, belongings that are unidentified.
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the brave captain, ten of his firefighters raced into the tower, trying to save lives. they never returned. here is more with a look inside the memories. >> throughout the museum, chilling reminders of the day. a cross emerging from the wreckage. everyday items simply left behind. >> we hope to tell the story of panic. >> one small exhibit has been the biggest source of controversy. its focus, the terrorists themselves including a film criticized for not making a clear enough distinction between islam and al qaeda. >> visitors will also walk alongside the survivor stairs.
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>> it seems very appropriate that you end here. >> it again goes right back to this, the messages of hope and remembrance on a very tall column that is still standing strong. >> and that museum officially opens to the public next week. here we go into hour two. we begin with just gut wrenching wait on what could become the deadliest mining accident in turkey's history. this woman, you can hear her cries, she is part of the mop of
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morners gathered at the goal man about seven hours southwest of istanbul. the death toll is at 245. 120 miners may still be alive and all eyes are on what rescuers bring up from deep underground. blankets too often covering the dead on stretchers but there have been a few cheers. [ applause ] at least 788 miners have made it out, some well enough to walk on their own. it's really a miracle considering what happened two-thirds of a mile down. joining me now on the phone is a former assistant secretary of the mine safety administrator. >> let me begin with the fact
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that we know these rescue workers want to remain hopeful. realistically given your experience, do you expect more bodies to be pulled out or could we really have more survives here? >> you always want to keep hope alive. but the length of time since the explosion occurred, the type of explosion that it is, with fire and with the carbon monoxide, the expectations are that it's pretty dim chances for people to come out alive. >> so as the chances may be grim and having covered a number of explosions at mines, i know that as in turkey there are emergency chambers. there is this hope that some of these minors could be inside these emergency chambers. can you explain to me what could
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be in there that could help preserve their lives so far? >> the emergency chambers are se up to try to -- for a period of time. that carbon monoxide develops because of fire and for that reason, it is hard to anticipate that there are going to be a number of people who have made it. that's going to be hard because you have got such a toxic atmosphere. it's my understanding that the fire is still burning. >> that's exactly right. the fire is still burning and
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then there are these reports that workers are pumping oxygen inside of the mine but you're seeing a lot of smoke coming out. with the fire still burning, wouldn't that just fan the flames? >> they reverse the air to get fresh air down there, but in doing so they would have fed the fire so you would increase the likelihood that the fire would grow. do not have a lotd of luck. in getting chambers to work to save lives. >> it's one thing when it's a collapse and quite another when it's an explosion with the toxic environment and carbon monoxide.
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>> now to this potentially deadly mers virus. it has now spread to an 18th country. the netherlands is reporting a virus that has emerged from the middle east. in this country, two health care workers in orlando, both exposed to a man confirmed to have mers, both have tested negative. a number of people exposed to that man and to the case in indiana, they are being kept in isolation and the cdc, centers for disease control, trying to find people who flew on that plane on may 2 with the man currently in orlando. it was a series of flights that originated in saudi arabia. so think about the possibility of exposure there. health officials have set up a war room now at the cdc headquarters in atlanta.
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with us now from the cdc, the director for rez pyre tory diseases. thank you so much for joining me here as we talk about mers. it's a relatively new illness. what concerns you more? is it the fear of the unknown? or this mortality rate? 30%, which is incredibly high. >> this is a relatively new virus that does have a high fatality rate. it does not show itself to be easy to spread from person to person. we think it's critical to control this infection in the health care setting. that means we have to have a heightened suspicion of whether a person might be carrying this virus. have you traveled to any place recently when they are evaluating people with fever and
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seve severe res operatory illness. >> so before we think about all the planes and trains and cars people will be in in the summer months, as you point out, the cdc trying to track down those people on the planes that began in saudi arabia. just take me back a step. how is mers even contracted? yould you get it through air? how do you get this? >> we do not know as much as we would like to.
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we think some people may be getting this in the environment. a lot of interesting studies coming out about camel s camels see some people getting this virus when they are in close contact with another who has it. we don't have evidence that this is airborne but we're tracking it and trying to understand. >> we appreciate you coming on from the cdc. thank you so muff. coming up next, i want you to take a look at this man. he could be the zodiac killer. that was a sketch of him on the right. compare that to the one on the left. who is this man and why are police just now looking into him? plus the underwater explorer who
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murdered five people in the late 60s. >> the zodiac case has fascinated the public and hollywood for years. now in a book called the most dangerous animal of all, a businessman from louisiana says he has finally cracked the case. a search for his biological father led him to san francisco and to conclusively identify his father as the zodiac killer. stewart writes that he felt it was my and an old sketch of the zodiac. they do seem to bear a striking
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resemblance. over the years others have come forward proporting to name the killer and no credible leads have come from it. stewart points to a crytogram he sent. ev best jr. >> i feel the knife buried in my back. >> brian heart was one of two survivors who could give a description of the killer. he has rarely spoken pubically. >> he had some clip on glasses that were either fixed to the hood or affixed to glasses underneath. >> on his chest he wore what became known as his symbol. cross hairs and a gun site. at least five people were killed. the killer claimed responsibility in a series of letters to newspapers. he called himself zodiac. as the investigation continued different persons of interest
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would emerge. this film pointed to a suspect, arthur lee allen. but his fingerprints and handwriting didn't match that of the killers. allen died in 1992 and always man taned his innocence. >> i'm not the damn zodiac. officials are no closer to naming the actual killer than they were all of those years ago. >> you talked to one of the two surviving victims. what does he make of this? >> he doesn't like to speak too often about this case because there are so many theorys that have come out and most of them have proven false. what he wants to say is when he looks at that picture, he says that it's not inconsistent with
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what he remembers. you also have to remember that the zodiac was wearing a mask during the attack. so he didn't get a clear shot of his face. the high forehead, the shock of dark hair, it's not inconsistent. he wants to learn more. let me tell you what this author is saying about similarities. he says that the handwriting seems to match. he also says that the fingerprint samples that they got from one of the crime scenes seems to match his father's. but here's the thing. none of this information has been given to law enforcement. they are just hearing about this for the first time as well with this book. it is a bit curious that he didn't go to police with this identification. it will be interesting to see. >> now that all of this has comous. police are taking a good long look at this.
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one would think that now they would take a close look at it. >> this author actually talked today by phone here at cnn. >> i wanted to find out who my father was and it became very personal to me when i found out that he had abandoned me as a four week old infant and walked away. me being raised in a conservative christian home i wanted to extend that forgiveness to him for abandoning me. reportedly more than 1200 people have claimed to have known who the zoed yak killer is. jack, welcome back.
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and my goodness. hearing all of these people who have come forward over the years and hearing all the details about the handwriting and the crptogram, does that make you look twice at this? >> i would certainly take this seriously. i have to admit that i'm rather skeptical. there have been too many that have come fwrart with handwriting and dna and grifs and nothing has panned out. and i would like the police to take a good look at the fingerprints and the dna in this case and see if there is a match. there are millions of guys who fit a profile of a serial killer who haven't killed anyone. >> how so? >> they are sociopaths. they may sell you a bad used
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car, pathlogical liars. but killing is not their cup of tea. so they have a character disorder that makes them look like they could be a killer and in fact there are some who are copy cats and might actually collect the mem meal ya of a killer but they're not one themselves. you have this son going figure out who his father was and low and behold he's thinking my goodness, i think this guy was my father. he said listen, the most significant piece of evidence, this, you know, these these word symbol codes.
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it came out to say ev best and jr. >> is that significant to you? >> it is an amazing co-incidence if it is. >> i hear your skepticism. >> he's not the first person to say that his father or stepfather is the killer. there is evidence in the past that looks pretty much like this. i am not saying that mr. stewart is a liar. i think he really believes it and i think a lot of other people really believe it but that doesn't mean that it's true. thank you so much as always for joining me. it is one of the most famous ships in history and now a diver who says he found the santa
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maria says the ship is under attack by looters. you will hear straight from him, next. ♪ [ girl ] my mom, she makes underwater fans that are powered by the moon. ♪ she can print amazing things, right from her computer. [ whirring ] [ train whistle blows ] she makes trains that are friends with trees. ♪ my mom works at ge. ♪
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that they are sure belong to the ship that was lost way back in 1492. >> a few weeks ago i heard rumors that the site may have been looted. baeg r based on that information, i put an emergency project together with the history channel. and nothing looked the same. in fact, all of of the item that we documented were looted from the site. >> they are gone or just moved? >> they're gone. that's not to say that there is not a lot more there. that's why i'm concerned.
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of course in situation like this so i have been working very closely with the haitian government. >> he told me he plans to go back to meet with the government. >> coming up next, a stern warning for the league. get rid of donald sterling or lebron james and the rest of the players will sit out. that's right, miss the start of next season. could that really happen? we will discuss neck xt on cnn. in pursuit of all things awesome, amazing,
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>> you know, magic johnson wants donald sterling to know that he cannot win. another exclusive interview with anderson cooper, the former la laker spoke out about racist comments and scathing attacks ge ge against him. magic johnson says the nba players are rallied and waiting on the much anticipated owner's vote. here is just a preview. this is what the 80-year-old had
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to say when asked about possibly losing him team. >> you believe you will be able to keep the team? the advertisers certainly -- >> the advertisers are all coming back. the fans will all come if you have a good team. >> even if you're owner? >> what am i? frankenstein? i'm a good person. i say hello to everybody who comes to the team. >> there are some players who have talked about a boycott of the season. >> that's talk. the media pushes that. and suddenly they hate you? is that the way it is? what if a player said i don't like working? what would we do? i wouldn't do anything. i would ask you why i want to
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make you happy. more money? more attention in more love? >> that, by the way was the first time that sound has hit air. >> again it's unconscionable some of the things he has said. it's tough to see, physically, he looks a little like the cowardly lion. verbally, he sounds like a lost sad man. >> it has been a week since adam silver said he's banned for life. this would be an unprecedented move if the teams come together
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and say you're out. >> i would be shocked if this were not part of that business. if there were not -- if the vote didn't happen by then, that there weren't steps taken to actually remove from his principle ownership. the collective bargaining agreement is obviously just a piece of paper. but there is also a morality clause and some of it's not even written. if your players don't want a person who has said he doesn't want black people at the games or in the building, if the players want that person out of the league, there is no way that sterling will be the owner of this team.
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>> so because of the myriad of things that sterling has said, we heard from a former teammate of lebron james saying if he is still setting as the owner of this team, lebron james is absolutely not going to play. how realistic do you think that is? >> the idea of a player boycott is something that you don't want to throw out in leverage cases for just anything. the fact that players are even talking about this means that they are thinking about it and i would be -- i would think that adam silver is going to call roger mason jr., the vice president of the players' association or lebron and they will get on the phone and say let's do this together. let's go my channels first. if things get really tricky in the legal proceedings, then you can do that. but i would think that this is going to be a cooperative effort to get this guy out of the
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league. if it comes to that, i would expect some of the players to sit out. >> thank you so much. i appreciate you coming on. we just played new sound from anderson. you can watch the rest of it tonight. his exclusive sit down, 8:00 eastern only here on cnn. coming up next we will take you to california. new pictures. look at this, the karls karls bad fire, it's a brush fire. getting new information
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honestly, the off-season isn't i've got a lot to do. that's why i got my surface. it's great for watching game film and drawing up plays. it's got onenote, so i can stay on top of my to-do list, which has been absolutely absurd since the big game. with skype, it's just really easy to stay in touch with the kids i work with. alright, russell you are good to go! alright, fellas. alright, russ. back to work!
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. >> we can show you some of the pictures, you can see the line of the brush fire along the greenery here and the massive plumes of smoke. here's what we know, 11,000 people have been contacted to evacuate because of what we're calling the poinsettia fire. i can tell you as far as schools go, if you live in this neck of the woods, middle schools are being evacuated to brighten gardens. we have learned that the death toll from the coal mine in turkey has risen again, up to over 274 confirmed dead.
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but as the number of miners who escaped rises, 88 miners rescued and 274 miners again declared dead. rescuers are racing. in situations like this time is of the essence to find and rescue as many miners as they can. >> tell me, set the scene. i imagine, equally grim since the last time we spoke. >> it's pretty unpleasant and pretty tragic to see the bodies of miners who were unfortunate enough to be in the bowls of the earth on tuesday. being brought out one after
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another, rescue workers one after another. bringing out these bodies on stretchers and carrying them to waiting ambulances. it's the faces of the people who are waiting. relatives who are performing this very grim vigil, waiting for news of their loved ones who have been missing now. again, you sited these figures. raising the death toll to what some had feared would become the deadliest mine disaster in turkish history. there was one who resulted there are coal mine disasters in turkey year after year.
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this is a dangerous job. but the sheer scale of this. it has shocked the nation which has turned out for three days of mourning as a result of this terrible disaster. >> we will stay in close contact with you as these numbers do change. i want to turn to the president. he is talking economy. we will take a listen. obviously he wants to push more money into roads and bridges. let's listen. we are announcing 11 more projects to accelerate to get moving fast. we are cutting bureaucratic red tape. we are launching a new national
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center to implement these reforms. we are aiming to put every major project on a dash board so everybody can track our progress, hold us accountable, make sure things are coming in on time. that's our goal. >> now all of these steps we can do without congress. all of these steps mean more good jobs. suddenly they wore off the job. that's why the recovery act back in 2009, 2010, included the most
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important public works jobs program jump starting more than 15,000 construction projects around the country. >> we have heard him time and time again trying to improve the economy, talking about putting hard working americans back to work, specifically talking bridges and roads and infrastructure. >> hear what the families are saying next. life with crohn's disease or ulcerative colitis
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>> take a look at the picture. you can see hunter biden's dad. he has been elected to the board of a private gas provider in ukraine. at least one report says that the firm that hired biden is run by a cronie of the former president of ukraine ousted by popular protest with being too tight with moscow. so no conflict of interest according to the white house. as you know, russia is threatening ukraine with military action.
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the white house is saying, again, no conflict of interest. that biden's son is running the legal department of ukraine's number one private gas supplier. we asked you to just help us. you reached out and you have heard from the vice president's office. what are they saying? >> the white house refers all callers to the vice president's office. the vice president's office has very little to say. that hunter biden is a private citizen and a lawyer and that the vice president does not endorse any company and has no involvement in this company. basically what they are saying is that this happens a lot more than people think. >> really? >> the relatives, brothers,
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sons, daughters, sons, spouses of people making important policy decisions often have financial stakes in things that are going on. >> it's a small an incestuous town here in washington, d.c. >> get out of here. it is? >> yes, this individual, devin aernlg was roommates and is business partners with chris heinz, secretary kerry's stepson. that doesn't mean anything regarding secretary kerry. we have no evidence that it does. it's a small town. there's a lot more of this than you think. >> i know it's a small town. you're calling the white house, they're referring you to the vice president's office. is this the kind of thing the vice president would have had to run it to the boss? >> i would suspect. and i have not been able to get through to hunter biden.
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and the company he works for is not involved in this deal. so they didn't have anything to say. i would suspect it's the kind of thing that hunter biden keeps separate from his father and doesn't tell one way or the other so his father has plausible deany bny bl-- deniab. that's just a hunch. >> thank you, jake. >> thanks, brooke. straight is to california. breaking news. paul vercammen is on the scene. what do you know? >> reporter: we were in one of the leading flanks of the blaze burning in a neighborhood here in carlsbad. this is all brush. let me give you perspective. it burned all the way through here. you can see right down in this
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canyon, another flare-up. the blaze breaking out this morning. hot, windy, dry conditions. a wind-driven fire being whipped up right now. we're going to give you more perspective. one home so far destroyed. mo smoke indicating in that area that we have several flanks of flames. firefighters using roads and everything else possible to make a stand here. they've been able to hit this with helicopters. via the air. but, it's difrlt to gficult to of the crews and engines in the canyons. the firefighters have moved further on up the road to go into full structure protection. we think this is 1 of 4 fires burning now in a very dry, very hot san diego county. >> paul, is it windy?
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you said dry and hot. is it windy? >> reporter: yes, about the best indicator. these are thin eucalyptus trees slightly blowing. it's not so windy that they can't fly air support. so that's a good sign. but, again, they have to make choices between houses and canyons, such as this one. and so far, so good. we haven't seen mass destruction of homes. of course this is one of those cases where you're on the ground. it could be that someowhere off another half mile, there are houses destroyed. we have only heard of one house lost so far. another blaze burning near fa fallbrook. another down from yesterday, rancho san bernardo. we saw a truck catch fire on the way to cover this blaze. pins and needles here in san diego county today, brooke. >> that's frightening. i have family in that area.
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i know who i'm calling when i finish the show. paul vercammen, thank you so much. back after this. rs are impressi. over 400,000 new private sector jobs... making new york state number two in the nation in new private sector job creation... with 10 regional development strategies to fit your business needs. and now it's even better because they've introduced startup new york... with the state creating dozens of tax-free zones where businesses pay no taxes for ten years. become the next business to discover the new new york. [ male announcer ] see if your business qualifies. bget together for overss tostarting at $6.99.ionsyork. all part of olive garden's entirely new pronto lunch menu. choose from handmade sandwiches and flatbreads. paired with unlimited soup or salad. 70 lunch combinations starting at $6.99. at olive garden.
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chart and count down the ten most popular songs on the charts this week. >> the legendary deejay casey kasem is 82 years old. he has a form of dementia. he's missing. allegedly taken away by his wife. his children say their step mother may be trying to take him out of the country. his daughter plans to file a missing persons report. she's asking for your help to find her dad. >> we want as many people to know, be on the lookout for our dad. if you see him, know his whereabouts. please call the police. we want to stop her from moving. we think she's moved him quite a few times. this is terrible for his health. man in his condition should not be continue waally be moved.
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especially with a disease, he should not be moved. >> frightening. i watched your interview, bill weir. they were tipped off that the step mother might be trying to take their father out of the country. >> exactly. a cousin by marriage. i heard she's going to take him to an indian reservation with a single airstrip and be carried out of the country without scrutiny. it's an unbelievable situation of family dysfunction. casey married jean. you remember "cheers." s
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jean ca jean kasem was on there. she wanted nothing to do with his kids. there were times they would go visit their fair ather and thers an armed guard. this is a long, historic, deep, bitter battle. now they're trying to put out their own two-person amber alert. if you see casey kasem, with a tall blonde, call the cops. >> a manhunt for casey kasem. did you ever think you could see this? >> if he knows who we are, he was able to respond appropriately to simple questions or simple things we said to him. and it was very clear he was able to smile. able to say i love you. when we told him we'll be back, dad, we'll be back. he looked at us and said when? which was heartbreaking. any way, so, you know, it's -- there's so much more meaningful
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communication we can have with him. we want him back. >> that was something else. you asked them, when was the last time you saw your father. they said, last tuesday. clearly, by the daughters explaining, he said he loved them. wondering when he would see them again. it's heart-breaking. >> it is one of the daughters is a trained medical practitioner. she had no idea what he had. she thought he had parkinson's. he has a disease called louis body's disease. i don't know if you have the video of what jean case m lokas like now. >> we had it. >> that may be the best way to identify. >> on the left side of the screen, if you see this woman, call authorities. bill weir, thank you for joining me and for the interview last
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night. let's remind the viewers, you anchor cnn tonight each and every week day night. tonight, you're looking at the wave of sexual assault on college campuses. what schools are now doing. thank you, bill. thanks to all of you for watching. thank you, all. i'm brooke baldwin. thank you. is this the beginning of a global pandemic. jake tapper. this is the lead. 17 countries, make that 18 countries now, all with confirmed cases of middle east respiratory syndrome, including the u.s. everything you need to know about the deadly spreading virus that has no vaccine. the politics lead. >> first they said she faked her concussion. now they say she's auditions
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