tv New Day CNN June 27, 2014 3:00am-6:01am PDT
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howard joins us live. >> your "new day" . good morning. a beautiful picture of the city. welcome to "new day," tgit edition, june 27, 6:00 in the east. a bizarre family drama, a 12-year-old boy in the middle of it all. so, today, detroit police once again plan to talk with this beautiful young man you're looking at charlie bothuell. he was missing for almost two weeks. new questions swirl around his father and stepmother. let's take a step back. this story became truly bizarre when the father was told live on tv by hln's nancy grace that his show had been found, missing for two weeks, found barricaded in his own basement. people have been questioning the father's reaction and investigators say they are not ruling out abuse, so now the
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police have arrested his wife, the child's step america not his biological mother, but on an unrelated charge. what does this all mean? alexandra field is in detroit with the latest. this has a lot of twists coming us very quickly. >> reporter: it really does, chris, and police are relying on this 12-year-old boy, charlie bothuell, to help them understand how he could have possibly wound up in this basement here in detroit. we know that charlie's been checked out by a team of child psychologists. he's also been speaking to investigators. they say they are getting good information from him, but there's a lot more that they still need to know. 12-year-old charlie bothuell is with his mother this morning after suddenly being found in his father's home wednesday, 11 days after disappearing. >> we have not done anything wrong to my son, nothing but to try to help. >> reporter: on thursday charlie's stepmother was taken into custody for a probation violation on unrelated weapons charge as the boy's father, charles bothuell, tells nancy
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grace over the phone, he has not yet seen his son. >> why won't police let you see the boy? where is he? >> you know, i'm breaking the no comment rule. i was briefly on the phone with him when he called my mother, and i need to go now pause i'm not listening. >> reporter: police found charlie in his own basement. the boy crouched down and barricaded behind a stock of boxes and a 55-gallon barrel. items so heavy, firms say he couldn't have construct it had himself. the 12-year-old seemingly excited to see police who say he was hungry. >> out to the father of the -- >> reporter: hln's nancy grace broke the news to bothuell that his son was found live on air. >> we're getting reports that your son has been found in your base me basement. sir? mr. bothuell, are you -- >> what? >> yeah. we are getting reports that your
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son has been found alive in your basement. >> what? >> we're getting that right now from -- from -- how could your son be alive in your basement? >> [ bleep ]. i have -- i have no idea. >> reporter: charlie's father says the basement was checked repeatedly. >> the fbi searched, the detroit police searched. we've all searched. god, they brought dogs, everything. everybody has searched. what -- oh, god, my son. >> reporter: police say a pvc pipe and bloody clothing were found in the home. they had not elaborated on the significance of that. police have not ruled out child abuse, but no charges have been filed. >> for anybody to imply that i
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somehow knew that my son was in the basement, it's absurd and it's wrong. i love my son. >> reporter: right now detroit police will not comment on whether or not they have seen any signs of physical abuse. they do want to speak to charlie more today. they say that whatever information they are able to get from this 12-year-old boy. they will take it and pass it along to prosecutors who will help determine whether and what kind of charges we could potentially see in this case. kate in. >> just more and more questions. alexandra, thank you so very much. let's turn now to another troubling story this morning. we're learning more about an internet search on a computer belonging to the father of a 22-month-old boy who died after being left for hours in a sweltering suv. the search, according to police, was, quote, this was an interset search, how long does it take an animal to die in a hot car? the boy's father, justin harris, is being held on charges of murder and child cruelty and does maintain his innocence. cnn's victor blackwell is live
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in marietta, georgia, with the very latest. good morning, victor. >> reporter: kate, good morning. initially there was initial public support with justin ross harris and with the latest revelation that appears to be fading. a startling discovery in the case of the georgia father whose son died after being left in the back seat of a blazing car for about seven hours. investigators now say someone searched how long does it take for an animal to die in a hot car on justin ross harris' work computer? a source tells hln's nancy grace that police found the search from computers seized from harris' office. harris is charged with felony murder and second-degree child cruelty in the death of 22-month-old and he pled not guilty, saying the whole thing was a horrifying mistake. witness esdescribe harris' reaction to his son's body still in the car as distressed, and police say he had to be physically restrained at the
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scene. >> you could feel his sorrow and his hurt because of the situation. >> he just screamed what have i down loudly. obviously it was a bit dramatic, hands in the air, looking up toward the sky, what have i done. >> reporter: police say on the david incident harris strapped coop near his rear-facing car seat after having breakfast at a local chick-fil-a. according to authorities, when harris arrived at work left his son in the car instead of taking him to the on site day care center as usual. investigators say harris returned to the car at lunch, opened the driver's side door to put something inside. after work police say harris left, and a few miles away he pulled into a local shopping center and called for help, but cooper was already dead. according to the medical examiner the cause of death is likely hyperthermoia. the temperature in the car potentially soaring above 130 degrees on that hot summer day. public sympathy for the father is waning as organizers behind a change.org petition urging
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authorities to release harris withdrew their petition saying, quote, i think that based on the recent developments this petition is no longer relevant. harris is currently in jail waiting on a hearing set for next week. in the meantime, a funeral will be held for cooper this weekend. let's talk more about this internet search. if this is true, that he conducted this search and if, as police say, justin ross harris is responsible for his son's death, consider what we've learned about him. he has a management information systems degree from the university of alabama. he's a web designer. he works in the i.t. department of the largest company in georgia, a fortune 50 company. would he not expect police to search his computer? would he not know that that search would be retrievable, and if anyone, he knows computers, if anyone could get rid of it, could justin ross harris not get rid of it as well? we've reached out to his attorney, and we've actually asked to speak with him, visit with him. we're told he's refusing visits.
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we're hoping to get more from his side, his family, as we follow this tragedy. kate, chris. >> victor, you're asking the right questions. the problem is the answers, and that's why we'll keep putting out information as we get it. nobody wants to get ahead of the conclusion on this one, especially when no one loses more in a situation like this than the parents. thanks for staying on it with the latest. let's take a look at what we understand, bring in mel robbins, cnn commentator and legal analyst. mel, i'm still plagued by what we do not know. victor was teeing it up well. what was this man's mental condition? was there a situation at work, a situation with his wife, anything that would lend creed tones a motive for this type of action, but most importantly at this point speak to the idea of timing. there was a search done. victor is all over that, but when? >> you know, chris, you've been really good about kind of cautioning all of us to not rush to judgment in this case, despite the fact that this new piece of information about the search is extremely troubling, but let me offer this.
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there is a scenario under this set of facts that he did mistakenly leave the kid in the car, chris, and at some point during the day realized his horrible mistake and went out to the car, checked, realized, oh, my gosh, did a search and it was in the cover-up of his mistake that he botched so terribly that he actually made it look like murder in the cover-up, so we don't know just based on the fact that this search was done. let's presume that the search was done. unless this search was done as soon as that kid was left in the car and he was trying to figure out how long he needed to leave the kid in the car in order to kill him, unless that's what the facts are here, it doesn't necessarily mean that this wasn't a mistake, chris. >> and that actually was going to be my question. how important is the timing of the internet search, if they can connect it to him, to the father
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himself? what if the search happened, just a shot in the dark here, what if the search happened two weeks before snnd does that mean it has nothing to do with this situation then? >> no. i think if it's beforehand, it's very troubling for the defense, kate, you're absolutely right. the timing of this search is going to be the most significant piece of evidence. the second piece of evidence that we're all waiting for, of course, is a toxicology report. you know, let's say there was something in the kid's system that might have knocked him out. that would go to intentionality here. so we've got to do exactly as chris has been saying which is to kind of sit back and to look at the facts as they come out. we haven't heard from the defendant. we haven't heard from the defense attorney. the family did make some sort of a statement, you know. yesterday we were talking about the mom and she hasn't come forward yet, but in the oteri it said very clearly that cooper was loved by both parents, and that is a statement to the
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public. >> also there's just this big assumption you're making -- not you, but it has to be made to forward this intentional argument about when he gets to the car at lunchtime, he opens the door and closes it almost as quickly so in that moment he realizes the mistake, initial reaction is to cover it up. what parent would do that, a long list of assumptions that have to be there. the breakdown is perfect on that, mel, so let's shift from a story about why something happened to a story about who made something happen. now we look in detroit. thank god this boy was found. we've all fallen in love with him and his smile and we can't wait to hear his story but who made him disappear to be found in his own basement that had been thoroughly searched by all accounts. what do you make of this latest twist of the step mom, not biological mom, arrested but on separate charges. >> this is a crazy case, chris. i mean, you're right. the kid is so darn cute, and what we do know, according to
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some of the reports out there this morning, is that when he disappeared or ran away it was after a fight with his stepmother over chores. the other thing that seems implausible is that he was in the basement for the entire time, guys. so we don't know at this point. do we have a situation on our hands where we've got a 12-year-old who can't stand his stepmother pause she's too strict, who runs away to prove a point, or do we have a situation of something much darker here in terms of child abuse or in terms of somebody trying to do something to this kid? >> we're talking about a very different age cognitivity. we're not talking about a 22-month-old boy. we're talking about a 12-year-old boy. should this not be not an open and shut case, but shouldn't the boy be able to lay out pretty quickly, what happened when and how he was down there and if he had been down thereto whole time. >> i'm sure he. is he was taken away from his father and stepmother.
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haven't even seen him yet and put into the care of other relatives? not at all. there were two other kids in the house this they took out of house. you've got somebody who is being arrested on unrelated charges that have nothing to do with this, and then you have a situation where this kid has been missing for 12 days, and there are other suspicions about whether or not there's child abuse. >> i don't get how the unrelated charges will wind up being unrelated because if they had other kids in the house taken out that believes they have an emergency situation, that they have a situation where they think those kids are at risk. if those kids are at risk how will it not be related to this kid? i think there will be a connection over time and in the other case in georgia, they reduced the charges, the prosecutors, gave me a lot of pause for understanding that and this one they seem to be stepping up the charges. >> do we have a second for this, too, because you a lot of people are making a lot of noise about the dad's reaction on live tv, and i want to put something in perspective here.
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first of all, if you listen to it closely. nancy grace tells him we found your son in the basement. she doesn't say we found him aliest first time so you've got a guy on remote camera who is not present with nancy grace hearing through an ear piece that they found the son after 11 days of searching for him. he's processing, wait a minute, what did she say? and nancy also doesn't make it clear that the kid is alive. it's not until the second time that she asks him, that she -- she actually specifically says he's alive at which point the guy exhails and starts reacting. >> sure. i don't necessarily think that his reaction on television is weird. i think if you understand how television works, particularly if he's on remote from detroit and the way she asked the question, that he's shocked by the news and also probably terrified that the kid might still be dead because she hasn't said anything, if he's not in
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it. >> and also worth noting you never know how you're going to react to something like that, a shock. >> true you. >> don't know how you're going to react in any of the situations you haven't planned for as well. >> fair point, strong point, but nobody ever gets to see this play out. that's why it's so bizarre and hypnotizing for an audience. >> amazing, thank you, yes. >> come back when you have more. >> great to see you guys. >> a lot of news this morning. right to mick for that. >> let's give you a look at your headlines. good morning, everyone. the crisis in iraq growing more complicates as iraqi officials are turning to russia for fighter jets and other supports saying the u.s. wasn't moving fast enough. secretary of state john kerry's headed to meet with the king of saudi arabia as part of a bold push to get nations in the persian gulf to rally behind iraq. meantime, the white house is looking to expand its role in syria's civil war in a major way as unrest bleeds into iraq. it is now proposing a $500 million program that would train and arm moderate syrian rebels.
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the half a billion dollar push is a larger amount than expected and a big about face for the obama administration which wanted to take more of a back seat role in the conflict. today, a congressional delegation will tour an overcrowded immigration facility in texas. it is one of the several swelling with thousands of unaccompanied children, mainly from central america. speaking with abc news president obama warned the parents of those children about the dangers of sending them north. >> we want to send the message do not send children to the borders and if they do make it they will be sent back. >> we have a special that will air the 9:00 p.m. eastern. jose vargas joins us live here.
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life was not a cabaret for shia labeouf last night, for being drunk and disruptive in the theater. he was escorted out and charged with criminal trespass and charged with disorderly conduct. members of the audience thought his output was an act. the 28-year-old is expected to appear before a judge this morning. the people probably not impressed. the actors of "cabaret" -- >> right. >> starting to cross over into the everything he does gets him a slap now. >> didn't even walk down the red carpet with a paying over his head and said i'm no longer famous. >> which made him more famous. >> drew him more attention. >> maybe i should try that. >> i think that's a good guy. >> the news guy with the bag over his head. i know that guy. >> we support that. kidding. coming up on new day, we lost and got shut out. hooray, how can these things be cause for celebration? welcome to the world cup,
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>> that's it. the united states will be playing in the last 16 of the world cup. the job is done, even though there is no reward today. >> as we said, best loss ever. welcome back. the united states may have lost the battle but could still win the war. team usa lost 1-0 to germany at the world cup but had enough wins to advance to the knockout round. germany controlled most of the game in those soggy conditions we heard about there. they had a big fan cheering them on, president obama, watching from air force one. back home americans exploded when the team advanced. >> usa! usa! team usa taking this selfie after learning they had survived. i think we're going to show it to you, there it is.
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they are now preparing to take on belgium. joining you go right now is greg lalas, editor-in-chief of mlssoccer.com. good to see you. are you excited or are you one of the poker-faced guys watching the game? >> i was shouting through the offices. it was amazing. >> never has a loss been so amazing. i think i'm going to get the highlights to play here a little bit. talk to me about some of the things we didn't see that you as a professional soccer guy saw during yesterday's game. >> the u.s. actually played a pretty good defensive game in this one. they were very compact. they dropped a little too far i think everyone would agree to that, but they were very compact forces the germans out wide which is really what we wanted to do, because that's not what their strong suit, is and we were able to cut off the crosses that would come in from the phalanx for the most part. even the goal itself, it came on a set piece, a broken play and a beautiful shot from muller so ultimately you give that one because ultimately this didn't matter, a victorious defeat and
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you accept that. >> is that a hard thing for a soccer? >> no, no. >> you're thinking down the road, not thinking just about this game. >> you look at this. this is a tournament and you just need to get through. it's the result that matters ultimately, and they knew exactly what was going on in the other game. >> all right. now we look forward to tuesday taking on belgium. i want to talk a little bit about what we're going to be facing with this team. >> well, we're facing what everybody calls sort of the everyone's dark horse. >> okay. >> you can't really be everyone's dark horse but that's what they are. they are a young team, a lot of talent. most of their players are playing on big clubs in europe, a lot in the premier league, in particular. man united, chelsea, arsenal, guys like, that and they have a lot of talent but they have sort of underperformed so far. >> interesting. >> three wins in a row but have not been convincing, 1-0 victories late that they have had to sort of squeak by. >> you say that and i think maybe they are just laying back in a cut to just pounce. >> their own players have said
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it's not been good enough. we need to play a little bit better. >> one thing on our side that we have to look at is the fact that we have one of our stars injured, jozy altidore, not looking like he's going to play or is it? >> not looking like he's going to play. i think they are being very cagey about his availability which is smart because you want the belgians to be unsure as well because of what jozy altidore could bring. he would be very helpful but i don't think we would see him unless the u.s. advances a little further into the world cup. >> what happens with these teams you fill in the gaps. see other players rise to the challenge. >> you do. you see other players rise to the challenge, and you see shifts in the way the team plays because if he were available they would play with two forwards. instead they are playing with one. >> given us a great idea of the people we need to watch form. let start with kyle beckerman. tell us about him. >> mentioned him a little bit earlier in the tournament when we were talking, and he's only gotten better and i think he's proven he's a world class level, not only at the club level where he plays for real salt lake,
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taken it international. his best game continues against germany and if he continues to improve in the defensive midfielder role he'll be very key in this game. >> this man right here is a beast. tim howard in our goal is almost unstoppable. >> he had a very good game against germany, probably the best game so far in the tournament, i think. he'll be important in controlling the back line. >> and you told us about clint dempsey, we've been watching him and he's been performing. >> great, the first two games really good. obviously got the goals. i think he was really tired going into the third game against germany. >> belgians, watch out for the midfielder. >> edin hazard, a player for chelsea, incredibly fast and quick and likes to get out wide on the phalanx and take on a defender. he's the most dangerous. >> don't forget about the forward. lukaku, plays in england, big, a little bit angry and pulled from a game and kicked the water bottle when he came off the field and had the coach and him complaining.
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interesting to see what he does against the u.s. >> all right. this is kate's favorite thing. what are the odds? i want you to tell us first off, what are the odds that the u.s. can beat belgium, give us our odds. >> most people would say belgium are the favorites. i'm going 50/50. they have as good a chance as belgium. >> kate, what's your odds? >> i'm a genius because i follow those who are smart. i'm going 50/50 as well. we'll put there you? >> mr. cuomo? >> either they win or they don't. >> they have a 50/50 chance to win. >> i believe that we will win. >> okay. >> 99%, i leave 1% for human doubt. >> human error, okay. >> and a blank slate when they go into the next group. >> me? >> what do you think? >> where's michaela? >> you know why, i'll tell you why. >> mickey is an america-can't.
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i believe belgium is a sleeping beast. >> did someone just say go back to canada. >> no. >> but some people were thinking it. just kidding. >> i know who you were. >> she is good looking but she's an american-can't. >> coming up next on "new day," a war of words not just happening here on "new day" but also happening between bill clinton and dick cheney over the iraq crisis and it's now getting person. our political panel will discuss. >> and then let's see what mickey has to see to team usa, solid wall, goalkeeper tim howard, team captain. >> you tell that to tim howard. >> he was a game-changer yesterday. >> i know they lost 1-0 but it could have been like 4-0 if it weren't for him. he's man. he'll talk about where the team is and what he thinks happens against belgium. we'll go live to brazil. >> brazil.
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welcome back. let take a look at your headlines. the ukrainian national guard base come under attack in donetsk. this took place despite cease-fire and efforts to calm the situation in the eastern parts of the national. four out of eight international observers that were captured over a month ago are being released. the mastermind of the attack
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in benghazi is nearing u.s. soil. he has spent about two weeks being interrogated by the phone aboard the "uss new york. " khattala was captured earlier this month. north korea's claim they fired missiles is being downemployed. officials described thursday's launch as a routine launch of short range missile. big shake-up over at abc on "the view." a string of host departures will leave whoopi goldberg as the only current host returning in july. sherri shepherd and jenny mccarthy both confirmed on twitter that they are leaving the show. network executives did not say if the two would be back when the show returns live next month. of course, you'll recall earlier this month barbara walters retired as host but stayed on as
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executive producer. let's talk about weather because it's friday. can i yell that now because it's friday. indra petersons is here. it's friday. >> i think you did the opposite. >> that's why i was whit perring it. >> i want to hear it, need a little bit of excitement here. >> let's start with words maybe not so pretty and that's going to be in the midwest. a lot of rain expected your way and all things in an upper level low cruising into the region. the next several days we'll watch what that system does. the threat from bismarck back down through dodge city. it does extend a bit farther so' affecting more you from minneapolis to oklahoma city. then we kind of shift the focus into the southeast. the gulf is wide open. what does that mean? all that humidity and moisture is still funneling into the region. every day even through the weekend it does mean there's a chance for an afternoon thunderstorm, hot and muggy. that is your story. but there is one place where it
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is oh, so nice where you're not going to be looking at these heavy rain totals and that's, of coursing right here in the northeast. this is what i mean by the good note. high pressure for you. you don't know what that means. it means dry, beautiful, sunshine in the forecast. temperatures right where they should be. 70s and even 80s, and that is what i say. scream it, michaela, cover your ears. >> a good weekend. >> too early. >> we haven't had enough coffee this morning. >> that's right. >> coming your way. >> thanks, indra. coming up next on "new day," the war of words between bill clinton and dick cheney. it's become rather unseemly, that's the word they are using. our political panel will discuss. plus, team usa now preparing for belgium as it enters the rarified air of the round of 16. anything can happen now. we're talking live to the keep captain, outstanding goalkeeper, tim howard.
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words over the current turmoil in iraq. clinton taking a shot at cheney over his harsh criticism of the way the obama administration is handling the current crisis. then cheney fired right back. listen. >> mr. cheney has been incredibly adroit for the last six years or so attacking the administration for not doing an adequate job of cleaning up the mess that he made, and i think it's unseemly. >> well, i usually haven't looked to bill for advice, he doesn't call me very often, and he also warned about weapons of mass destruction and the possibility that if saddam had them, which they believed he did, that he would some day use them. >> joining us to discuss errol louis, anchor of new york up's "inside city hall" and john avlon cnn political editor and
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editor-in-chief of "the daily beast." when you hear that makes you want to scratch your head. clinton kind of finished that conversation with david gregory, i can give president bush a lot of credit for trying to stay out of this debate. why, oh, why, are they doing this back and forth now? >> i mean, you know, there's this impulse we have. i think we want to see a senior citizen death cage match between cheney and clinton. this would rate. i think we have an animal need. bill clinton is just so damn talented, haven't done an adequate job cleaning up the mess he made, boom, drop the mike. >> narrative matters. it's convenient to say don't look back, let's focus on the present but in politics this is being spun as the president now, president obama having messed up the situation in iraq. >> sure. >> and that's the needs for correction, right? >> there's going to be some of that. takes two to have a debate. it's fine to have a debate, a couple of old guys yakking it up
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in a senior citizen home. they made real life decisions that cost people lives. the fact is this country is divided over this, and these guys are the spokesmen for it. >> it is a serious debate to be having, for sure, but why does it go to the personal? this is what dick cheney then said. he said on wednesday if there's somebody who knows something about unseemly, it's bill clinton. >> yeah. >> so, look, i mean, it goes to personal because ultimate politics is personal. >> yeah. >> there's a lot of personal feelings that drive these relationships that can have massive impact. >> and why they are reacting harshly for so others, personal for dick chain and his legacy. >> if you don't have hard facts, you go at the person. that's one of the ground rules, you know, of argument in general and they don't have a lot to stand on here in terms of the background of iraq. >> and this isn't a deep debate
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anymore. vast majority of americans now think iraq was a mistake but it's an active debate because of colin powell's partnering fund rule, to what extent do we own the mess? we're ferreting out questions of responsibility and that's why it's still a vital debate. >> recess appointments, it is important, the supreme court, probably the biggest blow, many people think, to the obama administration in this session for the court, the supreme court ruling 9-0, really sending a message that the president's non-recess recess appointments were unconstitutional. >> the fact that all the justices were involved doesn't really make that much difference. they really stepped in and did some gap-filling. they basically created a standard. they looked back through the law and what had actually been done and then they said this is going to be the standard. ten days, and only after ten
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days can you do a recess appointment so that's going to be the new standard. on the other hand, they have given a green light to congress to stay in session perpetually, you know. every three days they show up for 30 seconds and say we're in session so they have sort of teed up the mother of all gridlock battles for sometime in the future. >> but there is an argument that the -- where this comes from, the constitution, kind of arcane anyway. can you have this debate over nominees pretty quickly because it's not like people are going to be gone for months and months on end and unreachable because you have to send the messages back and forth by horse and carriage. >> technology changes the conversation but recess appointments were first in place by george washington where 250 were done by ronald reagan. republicans didn't have a problem them. the gridlock is institutionalized. even when the senate is out of session for 20 days, they gavel in for 30 seconds. >> i don't see this decision as activism at all, not because i'm
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taking the other side from you. it's just -- think about it from the court's perspective. they don't want to make the rules about what recess is and what recess is not. that's a political issue which takes you right back to judicial review with marbury madison. the court always stays out of the political issue. ten days means recess. you go figure out though, we're telling you how long it is, you define what recess s.i don't think it's a blow to executive power at all. they don't even discuss executive power. conservative judges said you're bending over to give the president his power. >> the obama administration was done this. >> obama administration has done this the least so why come after him? >> looked what senate republicans wanted to do was cripple an agency, the national labor relations board and consumer financial protection agency and they were on the action saying that is what we're going to do. we don't want this agency to
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function. >> but that's a political matter. >> republicans have been playing king george iii with president obama for some time now and this decision, one of the reasons it's so impactful and the 9-0 sends a real message. the larger context here is war of attrition affecting washington, when both sides out of power are deeply invested in delegitimizing and blocking a president's appointments. as errol said, they weren't going to allow anyone to take over the consumer protection buro. what recourse does the president have to run a government and next time the roles are reversed the same fights will occur. >> and we'll be back in court. >> this won't be settled in court. a political issue and i don't think it's settled in court. i don't think congress has standing to sue the president over executive power. we'll take that up another day. >> happy friday. >> a quick break on "new day," a roller coaster of emotions at the world cup. the man, the berlin wall, goalkeeper tim howard's on yesterday's loss, yes, but it could have been much more than
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yesterday, but it did win because it advanced, thanks to portugal's win over ghana. germany in control most of the game. the goalkeeper was amazing, tim howard, and we'll have him on the show to talk to us live about what it was like going against what is probably the best team in the tournament, germany and what he thinks will happen against belgium but first a little bit of background of what happened hon that game. >> reporter: they say winning isn't everything, and for team usa that certainly proved to be true. losing to germany in a match filled with heavy rain and high drama, america now advancing to the world cup's knockout round. the anticipation and excitement reaching fever pitch. team usa defender omar gonzalez giving patriots something to cheer about. never backing down against germany's full force.
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>> we've always said we wanted to get to the next round and here we are now. i think we can get pretty far. >> reporter: even the heavy rain failed to dampen the spirits of fans in recife. >> millions cheering across the team across the country. >> usa! usa! >> reporter: at watch parties from new york to california, illinois to florida, painting the country red, white and blue. many playing hooky or taking an extra long lunch break from work to catch the big game. soccer fever right now heights this year. even president obama watched the much aboard air force one. our home team faces belgium on tuesday, a team with iron-clad defense this world cup, conceding one goal through their three matchups. >> we're in the knockout stages. doesn't matter what you do in the group stage. doesn't matter until the end of that day.
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>> that's right, clint dempsey and now let's bring in goalkeeper mr. tim howard. mr. tim howard, can you hear me? >> i can, yes. >> it is very good of you to join us with so much on your plate to get ready, but america is very hungry for your participation. we all watched the match yesterday. take me back to it. the conditions, terrible. rain coming down, the nasa-designed ball like a speeding bullet, you facing arguably the best team next to the team usa in the tournament. you wind up being berlin wall. where was your head facing this team in these conditions? >> it was focused. the conditions were tough. we played in nasty weather before. we got tlun for a loop a little bit and not being able to warm up on the field and that's happened and we've been in that position before so it was just trying to refocus and make sure that little things like that didn't throw us off. i thought we played well.
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although we lost, we played well. >> you had unusual intensity. is there an equivalent of being in the zone as a goalkeeper? did you feel you were on yesterday? >> yeah. i think there is -- the zone isn't sports specific. when you're a competitor and when the game starts to slow down and you read things quicker, i think i think you feel like you're in the zone. i felt like all season i've been in good rhythm, you know, with my club team, and i feel like that's carried over so hopefully it can last a few games longer. >> the best save of the day -- by the way, tony meola says you're one of the five best in the world, right, that's high praise, and he pointed out a goal where i think you were looking at besler, and the german player kicks the ball through his legs and you were somehow able to pick it up and make the save. were you impressed with yourself on that play.
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>> again, i was just focused and remembered the play. high praise coming from tony, one of the greats, so i appreciate that, but, you know, that was something that happened in the game and you see it 1,000 times and that's what happen when you're experienced or old like i am. you start to see things quicker. >> you didn't look old when you were jumping around like a puma in the goal yesterday for all the world's eyes to watch. let's talk about the one goal that was scored. you made a great save. you punched it back out in. did you see that shot from muller or was it just give him his due, a perfect shot? was it on you or on him? >> it was definitely on him. it was a brilliant strike to keep it inside, keep it low, hard, to the back post. it came through a couple of bodies as well but to finish that the first time was
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excellent and from a player of his caliber, no surprise. >> now when you look at belgium, how do you look at them, how do you think you size up against them? i think we match up really well with them. having said that, they are strong and powerful, defensively rock solid. in the attack they have some dangerous and very tricky players. very much like germany, so we'll have our work cut out for us, but we feel like we're strong, we're powerful and we've been playing some of the best soccer that this team has seen so hopefully we'll give as god as we get. >> are you aware at how you have won over the country? there's no question that soccer has embraced this world cup, this team in a way i haven't seen before. you have even old jocks like me loving you guys. >> may have lost it. people running in front of the camera. >> can you hear me, tim?
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so answer me by saying nothing if you believe you will beat belgium. if you believe that the u.s. has what it takes to go, just say nothing. i will accept that. tim has lost his line down there. you just get to see a little bit of the character and the poise that makes him, as tony moela, one of the greatest goalies in soccer history, says he's one of the five best out there, one of the reasons why the u.s. should feel good going into belgium, a real cool guy who played great against probably the best team in the tournament. germany ranked number two, the number one team is out. there you have it, one more reason to love u.s. soccer and one more reason we're so excited. i'm so confident that the u.s. is going to win, i will return to brazil to cover the game for you guys. thank me later. this is just one story that we're covering here as you start
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your "new day." there's a lot of news so let's get right to t. >> reporter: >> police found charlie in his own basement. >> there's no way he could have erected this makeshift area of concealment. >> the 12-year-old seemingly excited to see police. >> we have not done anything wrong to my son. president obama fired up about the partisanship that has defined his term. despite all that we're making progress. dempsey! >> we've always said we wanted to get to the next round and after that anything can happen. the nba selects isaiah austin from baylor university. >> one of the greatest moments of my life. good morning. welcome back to "new day." we begin this hour with new details on this bizarre family drama unraveling in detroit. today police plan to talk again with 12-year-old charlie bothuell, who you're looking at right there, amazingly found
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alive after almost two weeks mission, and her he was found equally interesting, barricaded in his own family's basement on wednesday. remember, charlie's father was told live on thln's nancy grace that he was found in the home, found alive, and since that people have been skeptical of his reaction. investigators are saying they are not ruling out abuse, but the father has denied any wrongdoing so what's the latest. his wife, charlie's stepmother, is now in police custody but on unrelated charges. what does this mean? let's bring in alexandra field. we have her in detroit figuring out latest. alexandra, what do we know now? hey, chris, the details of this case have been baffling to so many people but the latest is that this 12-year-old boy, carly bothuell, is in the care of his mother two days after being found in his father's baseman. his stepmother, as you pointed out, now in police custody but on an unrelated case. it's a probation violation for
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an unrelated weapons charge. meanwhile, charlie's father says he's not been able to see his son. here's what he told our nancy grace. >> can you just tell me whether you have seen little charlie t yet. >> i have not. >> i know that's got to be breaking your hear. why won't police let you see your boy? where is he? >> you know, i'm breaking the no comment rule but i was briefly on the phone with him when he called my mother and i need to go now because i'm not listening to the -- >> charlie, i understand. >> earlier this week bothuell was found in a basement, behind a barricade made of boxes and a 55-gallon container. police say this 12-year-old could not have put up this barricade by himself. he was excited when he saw police and he said he was hungry. the boy has been checked out by a team of child psychologists.
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he's been interviewed by investigators. right now police say they have not ruled out child abuse but they won't comment on whether or not they were seeing any physical signs of abuse. what we do know is that investigators removed a pvc pipe from the home as well as bloody clothing. they say they want to talk to this 12-year-old boy later again today, the information they get from him will go to prosecutors who will decide whether or not there will be charges to file here. a lot to follow. >> thank you very, very much. we'll continue to follow that. also this morning president obama is in minnesota making a pitch for his plan to help the middle class. this also comes a day after the supreme court handed down a unanimous decision against him saying the president violated the constitution with a series of recess appointments back in 2012. the ruling could have a wide-ranging impact of bounce of power between white house and congress, a lot of political fallout as well. let's get to cnn's athena jones from the white house this morning. athena, how is the white house reacting to this decision? >> reporter: good morning, this was a closely watched case and
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the white house is deeply disappointed in the supreme court's ruling. it's a blow to the president's plan to try to work around a congress that he believes is bent on obstructing him. >> hey, hello, minneapolis. >> reporter: president obama fired up about the partisanship that has defined his term. >> i'll be honest with you, you've got a party on the other side that -- whose only rationale, motivation seems to be opposing me, but despite all that we're making progress. >> reporter: and white house efforts to get around the gridlock suffered a setback on thursday with the supreme court's unanimous ruling against the administration on recess appointments. >> the decision today is -- it's a big defeat for president obama. >> reporter: the justices sided with congress saying that while the constitution allows the president to fill jobs temporarily during a recess without congressional approval, he can't fill top government
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jobs when the senate says it's in session. >> the senate will come to order. >> reporter: to block these appointments, republicans have been gaveling the senate in and out every three days during breaks, conducting no legislative business. the administration argued these weren't really sessions. the court disagreed. justice stephen breyer saying we hold that the senate is in session and not in recess when the senate says that it is in session. republicans applauded the decision. >> it represents a clear, clear rebuke to the president's brazen power grab, a power grab i was bowed to lead the effort against. >> president obama's unconstitutional recess appointments are part of a pattern in which he thinks that if he cannot otherwise advance his agenda he can unilaterally thwart the law. >> reporter: they have long accused the white house of overreach. house speaker john boehner is even threatening to sue the president over his use of
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executive action. the white house says president obama is suesing his pen and his phone to get around the partisan obstructionism on capitol hill, and he's not going to stop. now republicans clearly see this as a wing issue for them. this focus on what they see as presidential overreach what, some call an imperial presidency so we can expect to see a lot more of this fight, especially since the white house says the president isn't going to back down when it comes to using his executive power. chris? >> all right. we'll following that, athen avrnlgt thank you very much and have a good weekend. so iraq. the country is in distress, you know this. human rights watch says new images suggest isis committed mass executions in the city of tikrit after they took control, and now the iraqi prime minister is saying they welcome syria's air strikes against extremists along their bothered, this as the country is readying for an election, so officials tell cnn the obama administration is unlikely to engage in military strikes against extremists until after the formation of a new
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iraqi government, so here are the major questions. can iraq hold off isis? can they hold together as a nation? joining us now from washington is iraq's ambassador to the u.s. thank you very much for joining us, mr. ambassador. we appreciate it. >> thank you for having me. >> let's deal with something that is urgent. we're hearing that iraq is planning to buy secondhand jets and the prime minister is saying you're doing this because it's too tough to get jets from the u.s. and the problem was air cover. is it -- is it proper, is it right, is it fair for iraq's prime minister to suggest that the u.s. hasn't been completely helpful to your country in preparing you for military exercise? >> well, chris, we have also a strategic framework agreement with the united states in which we talk about the integrity of iraq being protected and we talk about cooperation in vast amount of areas, including security. in that sense we already have a
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long list of requests which we have been waiting for delivery for some time. as you may appreciate, the country faces an immediate threat to integrity and therefore whomever is available to support us we will work on that. >> but are you able to appreciate that when you look at this situation, to hear the prime minister say it's too hard to get the u.s.' help when from the u.s. perspective we just watched your army, tens of thousands who have been given so much equipment and so much training literally rip off their uniforms and run away when faced with the threat of isis. how do you explain that? >> we're looking at the structure of the army. there has been vast amount of changes, more to could. however, as you may appreciate, we have an immediate threat to the country. we need to work together for formation of government to take place, but as far as united states we appreciate all the help we have had. however, we are at an extreme
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difficult time. we need an immediate help to deal with an immediate threat. >> the reason you're facing an immediate threat on some level is because your army quit and ran when it was confronted. where does the confidence come that iraq can hold together and do what it needs to do to defend itself? >> we just had an election. 60% of the people participated in. formation of the government will start next week with parliament sitting in, so we're -- we're rebuilding a country based on a dictatorship, based on saddam hussein's rules for long time. we have a lot of challenges ahead but we seek the united states as our strategic partner of choice. we expect the united states to support us. we appreciate that, but also, let me repeat it, we have an immediate threat. we don't have the luxury of waiting. we need support now. >> but the choices matter. you raise a couple of very interesting issues to deal with, mr. ambassador. the first is the u.s. is your
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strategic partner of choice. then why are you allowing iran of all countries to have presence and military occupation inside your borders and russia to move in? what kind of message do you think that sends to the united states, that you've now welcomed syria, iran and russia? >> the prime minister was clear we have not coordinated with the syrians but we said if syrian air force attacks isil, an enemy to both of us, a threat to the stability of the region, then that's welcomed. as far as iranians, they don't have any forces on the ground. they have a risk themselves with isil being next to their border in the diyalah province and as far as russia is concerned we have a strategic framework with the united states. we have been asking for some time now, for apache helicopters and others, and -- and we have a threat. i think you appreciate that. >> absolutely. i have been there. we understand the fragility of
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the country and understand that it needs to hold together, but it's about the choices that are made and how they are perceived, and i know that when you're talking, we're still understanding this in the u.s. isis or isil, it's all the same group that we're discussing with different names for it, but when you are saying we have an emergency situation, it's how you handle it. your army runs away. you invite in russia and iran. those are very troubling signals to the united states. you can appreciate that, yes? >> we have invited united states, our partner of choice. we have over $10 billion awaiting approval. we have been seeking apache helicopters for substantial amount of time now so in a way we have already chosen the united states. we have not chosen others, but we have an immediate threat. >> right. >> we have an immediate need. we have an immediate question to the integrity of the state. surely as a democratically elected government we have the responsibility to seek whomever is available to help us now. >> absolutely.
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that's the second issue that you raise. a democratically elected government. there is clear criticism that the government does not reflect your population and is a big reason, a motivation, for the problem with isis. the sunnis feel disenfranchised. they don't have the numbers in your government. they don't have the influence in your government. do you think that the prime minister, maliki, has to leave for there to be a confidence that iraq can truly be a unified government? >> as you may appreciate, i'm a diplomat. i do not talk about who should be the next prime minister. that's up to the iraqi parliament. we already have participation, high participation even from the sunni part of iraq or from sunnis which you mentioned. over 40% participated. we will have a reflective parliament next week. they will talk about the prime minister. if prime minister maliki seeks a third term and he gets the support that's democratically. if not, if others, i will leave that to the parliamentarians and to the political process.
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we are now in democracy. we're developing, but we need an immediate help to deal with a regional threat, and not just a domestic threat. >> right. but do you understand why the response of the u.s. is somewhat hesitant because of what you see on the ground there, that the army hasn't been doing what it needs to and you can't really make the argument that the government right now is inclusive because it's very clear that the sunnis feel disenfranced and say it all the time. i mean, those are fair point, aren't they? >> a parliament is sitting in next week. the united states have already provided some advisers on the ground. they have provided some assistance in counterterrorism. this is all welcome. this is all good news. we need to work together. the threat is immediate. the threat is coming to the region. iraq is an important country. the politics is developing, but let me repeat. we have a threat now. >> you have a threat now, but it is not a new threat. this is something that should have been seen coming. >> this is new. >> people were telling you about
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the threat for months and months. you had the kurdish leader who was saying trying to get maliki to understand this. other agencies had reached out to you and said you have to deal with this. i mean, doesn't iraq have to own some responsibility for failure in the current situation? >> it is our fight. we have partnership with the united states. we have chosen the united states. united states was there for over a decade so they have better understanding of the terrain more than anybody else. we have both fought against terrorism and have both shared in blood and treasure. i think we have to both work together. others are providing help. yesterday the british foreign minister was in iraq to have that discussion. we seek international support and the threat is regional and global threat and it's not just within iraq. >> you have the eyes and the ears of the american public right now, mr. ambassador. they spent a decade or more in your country. we've lost a lot of blood, a lot of families who are still
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dealing with trouble back here. the will for another fight for a country that doesn't seem to be fighting for itself is low here. what can you say to the american people? >> i think that's a bit unpair to say we don't fight for ourselves. for the last decade we suffered from terrorism more than anybody else. americans more than anybody else knows that, so i think we need to work together. the threat we face, let's not forget, came in from syria. that has an an issue that hasn't been resolved for a few years now so we have an international threat. this is -- you guys fought against them in afghanistan and elsewhere so they are not home grown within iraq. this is an international terrorist organization. it is threatening everybody. we have jihadists from europe and others who are fighting for their cause in iraq. they will go back home and they may cause damage back home so let's look at the situation
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realistically. let's learn from the lessons but let's work together. >> mr. ambassador, thank you very much. we'll all be watching the outcomes of the elections very closely and hopefully it does present a unified iraq. thank you for joining us on "new day." >> thank for having me. >> a lot of other news. over to you. >> certainly s.14 minutes past the hour. a look at your headlines. russian president vladimir putin issuing what may be his most definitive statement yet on bringing peace to ukraine. putin reportedly called for a complete termination of bloodshed in all of ukraine, including along their borders and emphasized the need for a lasting crease fire. mean time, four members of an international monitoring team were released by pro-russian fighters reportedly as some sort goodwill gesture. another four are still being held. a major reversal, meanwhile in, u.s. policy towards syria. president obama says it's time to send aid to the syrian rebels, the white house asking congress to approve $500 million to help train and arm moderate
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rebel groups this. request comes amid increasing concern that the civil somewhere spilling into iraq and could further destabilize the region. a change in military policy, the obama administration has announced it will start to phase out the u.s. stockpile of land mines. this was made at a conference of international treaty banning mines. it will allow the u.s. to join 161 other nations in the 15-year-old agreement. estimates put the u.s. stockpile of mines at more than 10 million. former tennessee senator howard baker is being remembered for his ability to reach across the aisle. known as the great conciliator, baker served as both majority and minority leader and white house chief of staff. as ranking republican on the watergate committee baker famously ask what did the president know and when did he know it? he died at his home just days after suffering a stroke. howard baker was 88 years old.
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police removed actor shia labeouf from a broadway musical last night. the nypd said "the transformer" star was drowning and disruptive watching a performance of "cabaret." he was charged with criminal trespass and disorderly conduct. members of the audience said he thought his outburst was an act. the 28-year-old is expected to appear before a judge this morning. one way to start your weekend. >> there you go. >> i support the beef. is that what his name means? >> i support him. seems like he's in trouble. >> sure he's a good person. >> so when i see the celebrities, they start to get hunted by the paparazzi and the entertainment media, i support him. >> he was in a theater. it wasn't the paparazzi chasing him around. it's the theser. >> i know. who knows what really happens. >> that's a very good point. we don't know. >> give him some support and give the guy a chance. >> all right, done. >> moving on, coming up next on "news day." team usa shattering expectations and moving on to round two of the world cup but what can we expect from their next opponent,
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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. alive and well. team usa will live to play another day at the world cup despite losing to germany 1-0 and they have portugal to thank just days after a stunning draw. it was the portuguese team that helped the u.s. advance after defeating ghana 2-1. team usa receiving a big congrats from president obama as
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well. >> i have to begin by congratulating our u.s. soccer team, team usa, for advancing. next round of the world cup. we -- >> usa! >> usa! >> usa, usa! >> absolutely. the real test, the team is in a must-win situation facing belgium in the single elimination round of 16. cnn's lara baldesarra joins us from recife, brazil, a much prettier picture today i must say. >> now it's extremely hot. i say bring back some rain now. >> you're not happy no matter what you get in your conditions in brazil. just kidding. let's talk about this big game. when it was raining cats and dogs, when the u.s. took on germany, how did the u.s. look in that game? we know germany is a great team, formidable opponent.
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how did the u.s. look in that game and what do you think it says about tuesday? >> well, i would say that it wasn't the usa's best game so far of the world cup, but i don't think it was completely horrible. i would say that it was a tale of two halves though. the first half the usa did a lot better. very tactically astute team and hold their positions very, very well. michael bradley, he's come under a lot of criticism. a lot of people saying he's mott performing at his best right now but to me in the first half he was involved pretty much in every play and every buildup. he was all over the pitch and really working. i was quite impressed with him. kyle beckerman ended up being the man of the match and beckerman continues to dazzle. this i go, he's defensively so aware of what's happening. just a brick wall. he breaks down plays. i really like the way that he looked and the way that they are playing. now on tuesday is when they play belgium, and it could be pretty interesting match, kate. >> so tell me about why -- i mean, it will be interesting
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regardless because everyone is endlessly fascinated with how the u.s. is doing in the world cup but what do we know about the belgium team? >> okay. well, this is a belgium team that is very, very young. their average age is just 26 years old and this team is really truly made up of future superstars. now right now it might be a little early for some of these guys. they haven't fully come into their own like edin hazard, a player on belgium's team that is comparing to lionel messi and you don't have to follow soccer to know that messi is the best player in the world. all the comparisons tells you it's going to be a very difficult match for the usa. belgium is a very quick team, a very physical team. they are a very defensively sound team. kate, they haven't conceded a goal -- only conceded one goal at this point through three matches, actually on a penalty kick so the usa are really going to have to depend on their strikers an maybe even captain america, clint dempsey, to find a goal to real be able to move on because now in the round of
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16, there's no question. you have to win to progress. none of this losing to germany and still being able to get through. it's win and move on. >> so it really does show you that they could really use jozy altidore back on the team, but it doesn't look like they will be taking the field with them. what do you think? how do you think it will look on tuesday? are you 50/50? where's your prediction? >> well, first of all, i have to say that i'm actually kind of happy that jozy altidore might not be back. >> why? >> i don't think that he's going to suit this game very well. i just think this is more of a midfield type of game that's going to depend on the midfield, not so much the strikers and jozy altidore, he's coming off a pretty bad year. always kind a question for me as to why he was really selected for this team anyway, but that aside, my prediction for this match i think it's going to be very tight, very close. i am saying a late goal by the usa to win 1-0, and i'm sure you'll hold me to that if i get it wrong. >> of course i will, and i'll
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also congratulate you when you get it right. let's think positively as we head into the weekend. >> enjoy the weather. it's not raining and your hair looks great. >> kate is sending me down there just to keep her accountable and i'll take that very seriously. from dead broke to seriously rich. the clintons have said they have done quite well since leaving the oval office which begs the question how well? one newspaper added it up and came up with an eye-popping number. you'll want to hear it, and we will tell you, and bigger than sport. what a moment. player loses his career before he even starts, but the league makes isaiah austin's dream come true during the nba draft. we have isaiah and his mom joining us live. ♪ they lived.
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all right. it is time for "inside politics" on "new day" with mr. john king. unseemly, they had a word i don't think i'll ever hear you use, but it has been used and to great effect in the current political dialogue. am i right? >> you are right, sir. tgif, happy friday for "inside politics." >> one time, can always happen. >> with me this morning to share their report and insight, jackie kunes nick and let's start with the president of the united states who has been criticized by some republicans saying the reason 50,000 kids have been
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sent from guatemala and honduras, some have suggested there's an open border president and the president hasn't been tough enough. listen to these tough words here. >> our message is absolutely don't send your children unaccompanied on trains or through a bunch of smugglers. we don't even know how many of these kids don't make it and may have been way layed into sex trafficking or killed because they fell off a train. we have no way of tracking them, so that is our direct message to the families in central america. do not send your children to the borders. if they do make it, they will get sent back, more importantly they may not make it. >> what's the president trying to accomplish here? >> they are trying to stem this influx, and i think this took them by surprise, and you've seen them try to tighten other parts of their immigration policy. they have also postponed some plans to loosen the policies a little bit. they are really scrambling to deal with this, and this is just the latest example of trying to
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stem this flow into the country. >> and the president says they will be sent back, but there's a process they have to follow. u.s. law requires them to take care of their health issues and make sure you can reunite them with their families, from honduras or gaunt -- guatemala, that can take a long time. >> by the time you try to find responsible grownups to who they can be shipped and deported to, they have spent a lot of time in the united states, a lot of questions about some of these kids not showing up for court date and not showing up for the process and not going back. >> now there's a broader conversation in washington. some who are saying forget about it. immigration reform, many think big, including a debate and another vote about a path to citizenship for the undocumented or even path to legal status. forget about that. some are saying until we have a new president. we've got 30 months left of the barack obama presidency, is it really dead, or will republicans come in in 2015 and try to get it done before the 2016 presidential election? >> no way. i think it's dead.
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louie gutierrez, one of the biggest proponents, democrat, saying it's dead. republicans could try to make an attempt but it would be focused on border security and you wouldn't have the larger reforms because they are just not there yet, despite the fact that they immediate it for 2016 don't seem to be there yet. >> have the congressional leaders decided we'll be a congressional party. we'll keep our majority in the house hand hope to get a majority in the senate this year, but they do not have a prayer of winning the presidency if they do not begin to change their problem with non-white voters. >> there's definitely tension between the national republicans and the congressional republicans on this issue, as you pointed out. i think there's a credible path for the republicans, whoever they nominate in 2016 and come out and make a year long reftorekal push on immigration push and that might help to inoculate them a little bit but focused as a party more on 2014. >> wouldn't it have to happen after the primaries, if someone goes into the early cities and
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talks about immigration reform, best of luck to you, it probably won't. >> some of them already are. even though the establishment is winning most of these races, they are still afraid to take these votes. we'll see if lamar alexander has a primary issue in tennessee. his opponent has an amnesty ad on. >> the president is making up in minneapolis, a great thing for all presidents. they often complain about the bubble, being trapped in washington and all the security n.minneapolis, out there for a fund-raiser and doing a lot of real people event. listen to the president at a town hall yesterday saying these are the trips the secret service loves. >> all right. our agenda is still a little loose, you know. i might pop in for some ice cream or visit a small business, i don't know. i'm just going to make it up as i go along. with secret service i always tees them. i'm like a caged bear and every once in a while i break loose. one >> one thing we're seeing is
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missing yesterday were democratic senators, al fraken and amy klobachur. they said so they could stay in washington to cast a senate vote. senator klobachur made it out for a fund-raiser and senator franken will be in minnesota to spend some time, unquote, with the president, today his staff says. is the president that toxic? are they that worried about minnesota that we're trying to overmanage it? >> first do not harm when you're up for re-election and that's what you have with senator franken. he doesn't want to cozy up with the president and pay for it later. >> in minnesota, standing next to president obama? >> absolutely, and what we're seeing is the blueprint for how the president -- how the white house is going to tackle this whole campaign season. they said he can be most effective raising money, most effective making the case for middle class values, for a minimum wage, for women voters which is probably the biggest takeaway from yesterday's event, but, yeah, absolutely in minnesota. >> going to watch that picture to see if we see them together
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in public. if al franken will not stand next to president obama in this election year, tells you everything you need to know about arkansas and alaska and louisiana and we could go on. during one of the town halls yesterday in minnesota the president was trying to make the case you see republicans hammering right now, they say incompetence and corruption at the irs, incompetence at the v.a. the president is saying no this just happens in any presidency. >> are there some federal workers who do boneheaded things? absolutely. i remember the first week i was on the job i talked to my defense secretary bob gates who is older and had been there a long time. i said do you have any advice for me bob? he said one thing you should know, mr. president, is that any given moment on any given day somebody in the federal government is screwing up. >> i don't think the republicans are going to buy that one, although it's probably factual. >> yeah, and that's one of the things he was going to fix, and it may be one of those things that once you're there it's a lot harder to do than when you
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promised, but there's been some inconsistency. you know, you have on the irs. you have him saying this is a problem, oh, no it's a phony scandal, oh, no it's a problem and when you have those openings you're -- republicans are going to jump. now, it's up to the republicans not to overplay their hand, and they have been doing quite a bit of that. >> let's move on to how you go from dead broke to truly well off, borrowing some words from hillary clinton. from 2001 to 2013 the clintons made $105 million, bill clinton making that in speaking fees and 56.3 million from speeches overseas. she's tried to fix her comments about, you know, a lot of people saying she's detached and out of touch, olivier. will voters process that and say that's the market. people are willing to pay them that count of money and that doesn't count any money from the state department when she's made 5 million more. >> a little in column "a" and column "b" coming from the republicans is she's out of
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touch and she's helped them a bit with the stumbling answers about how they accumulated all this money, saying she was dead broke coming out of the white house. well, everyone knew they would go out and make a lot of money on the speaking circuit. that's a fumble and ties back to democratic criticism of the clinton that they are too close to wall street, a real problem. >> we'll see how that one goes forward but they are trying to clean it up. thanks for coming in. as we end, david letterman, about to give up his show, maybe he's auditioning to fill in for me on "inside politics." listen to this. >> guess what, dick cheney even now to this very minute believes there are weapons of mass destruction in iraq, even though we've looked, we've scoured it and all over the place, up and down everywhere of we've made known calls and done everything we can possibly do. he still believes there are weapons of mass destruction. and i still believe i'm going to get "the tonight show." >> i'm going to miss him. >> i am, too. i am, too. and it's those moments that he just -- he's just so funny.
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>> very talented guy. talented enough to take over for john king. i think that's a bit of a stretch. >> he can have this any morning he wants. >> what? >> that was unseemly. >> proper use. >> thank you very much. >> unseemly. >> unseemly. >> have a good weekend. >> have a very seemly weekend. >> i hope you have a weekend, john. i can't modify it other than that. >> he's made me upset. i think i'll go to brazil. >> and i'm going to go to break. coming up next on "new day" an emotional moment between the 15th and 16th pick in the nba draft. the league makes isaiah austin's dream come true naming him during the draft as a player who just found out a genetic defect will keep him from playing in the league. we'll to him and his mom ahead. ♪
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player from baylor university, was expecting to be picked during an early round of the draft. he found out just days before that he's no longer able to play basketball because of a genetic disorder. the commissioner adam silver found a way to make his dreams come true and brought down the house. >> it gives me great pleasure to say and with the next pick in the 2014 nba draft, the nba selects isaiah austin from baylor university.
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it gets you, that's for sure. joining us now isaiah austin and his mother, lisa green. thank you so much. it's so great to meet you. this is one of those stories when you talk about it, it breaks your heart and it also warms your soul in how you handled it. what was that moment like? let talk about that moment at the draft and you heard adam silver call your name. did you know he was going to call you up in. >> i didn't know he would honor me but i didn't know he'd make me a draft pick. >> i can tell, not a man who wants to talk about his emotions much but what was that moment like for you? >> it was really unbelievable, just for him to invite me and my family to the draft after everything that happened and shows how classy a man he is and i'm thankful for god to putting me in the situation for saving my life. >> even now thanking god. >> and your faust will be a big part of this journey just it's just starting for you. please, mom, tell us.
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what is the syndrome and what does it mean and who does it mean for your son and your family? >> i found out friday evening when the doctor actually called me personally and told me that the tests came back, the genetic testing came back positive and what that meant is he told me we're so lucky he's even alive at this point because of the fact that he's been playing competitive sports at the most elite level, collegiate level, for a couple years, and one sharp blow to the chest could have ended his life. >> you got in your car and you wanted to tell him personally. >> i had to. >> you didn't want your son to find this out any other way. >> i got home and told my husband and we packed up the car and our younger two kid and we drove nine hours straight to dallas. >> what did you say? >> you know, we gathered friend and family and we -- we had a great support system. coach drew, i said, coach, if you can bring a couple of the staff members down as well, we gathered his pastor and coach drew called back and said, hey,
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everybody wants to come. i said, okay. so i think, you know, the support system it was fantastic and he came in the room and our eyes locked and i knew he knew. >> you didn't need to say anything. >> you remember taking the test. you just hadn't gotten the results yet? >> yeah, as soon as i walked in the room i remember seeing her face and it was just tears and it's a moment that i'll never forget. it's one of those memory capsules that are just locked in your mind forever, but, you know, i just had to hold it together for my family, especially for my little brother and sister because i knew that they were in the room and them looking up to me, i want them to see me as a strong person so i want to be a great role model for them so i held it together as best as i could and i told them that we're going to get through this together. >> isaiah, how do you make sense of it, because in that moment you realized the path that you thought was yours, playing in the nba, that's no more.
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but you also have to realize in the same moment that you are lucky to be alive. this condition is so often we're talking about it before, so often we hear about the syndrome when it's too late, when someone has died from it. how do you make sense of it? >> it's tough, but my family, we've all grown up on a great faith, and it's one thing to have faith, but it's another thing to trust in god's word, and i know that he heel never forsake me and i know that no matter what he's going to guide my life. he always has a plan so i know maybe he close that had one door but he's opened many horfor me. >> i'm interested in finding out what led you to the genetic testing, first of all, because we were talking beforehand. people may have heard of the syndrome but i don't think it's that many of us know a whole lot about. did you feel like there was something wrong? was there a red flag? what led you to doctors? >> no, not at all. i felt fine. i never had any problems like
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discomfort with my breathing or anything or passing out. >> you look strong and healthy. >> that's the scariest part about it. >> yes, or passing out from a workout, but when i was in chicago they said that my ekg was irregular, and that triggered -- >> it's a physical you had to have before the draft. >> right. >> and that triggered all the doctors to -- to really take their professionalism and look at what's been going on with me, and they had an mri done with my heart and they still couldn't figure out what it was that made my ekg irregular so that's when they told me to get the blood test done. >> so the decision is what do i do now? >> what now? >> you have your family and you have your faith. you have your future. >> you're 20 years old. >> that takes us to your mom's shirt. what does it mean, dream again? what are we talking about now? >> go ahead, honey. >> make the pitch. >> it basically means, you know, i'm going to dream again. life for me is not over, it's just beginning, one chapter is
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over and another is starting up, so we have these shirts courtesy of the marfan foundation. all the proceeds are going to them, and we've really thanked them for being a support system for us. they are actually making me a new spokesman for them so i'm going to go around and i'm going to spread the awareness for marfan syndrome and we'll do our best to help and inspire and touch people around the world. >> you're going to be a support for so many other people, and beyond his brother and sister. >> you're not leaving basketball, right in. >> oh, no, not at all. commissioner silver has offered me a job with the nba somewhere. >> okay. >> and then also coach drew has offered me a coaching job at baylor. >> to be around the game you love. >> yes, indeed. >> and you're still learning like what restrictions there are and how you have to manage the condition going forwarding right, so you take your longevity into consideration? >> definitely. right now i'm going to go in for yearly heart checks to see if my aorta artery is enlarging each year, and if so i'll have to undergo open heart surgery but
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right now they are saying that my health is steady. >> take this moment and just appreciate that you're here. >> yes. >> thank you so much. it's so great to meet you guys. thank thank you so much. >> and you got the best medicine you have going, a family that loves you and a faith you're going to be okay. >> thank you. >> as big as he is, he's still a little baby. >> exactly. >> a seven-foot baby. >> big seven-foot baby. >> i look forward to the next chapter and hopefully tell about it here on "new day." >> thank you. coming up on the show, a major shakeup never night at e "the view." who is in, who is out? the longest running talk show is making changes. what's going ohappen? okay, listen up! i'm re-workin' the menu. mayo? corn dogs? you are so outta here! aah! [ female announcer ] the complete balanced nutrition of great-tasting ensure. 24 vitamins and minerals, antioxidants, and 9 grams of protein. [ bottle ] ensure®.
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♪ another one bites the dust that's one way to put it, another one bites the dust. huge shakeup on "the view." a string of host departures could leave whoopi goldberg the only current cast member on the couch in july. sherri shepherd and jennie mccarthy announced their departure of the show. earlier this year barbara walters retired. she is going to stay on as executive producer for the show. meanwhile, moving on, sherri shepherd joined the cast permanently in 2007. she tweeted this out "the number seven is god's number of completion and after seven seasons my time at the view is now complete. so grateful two everyone for
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their love and support." not to be outdone, apparently jennie mccarthy whose year-long stint at the show hasn't been without controversy followed out saying "if sherri goes, i go, t too. #sisters." she followed up "my view will be changing, too. thanks to your dedication and an amazing year." big shakeup on daytime tv with a big change at the desk. the ladies changing a little bit. >> huge surprise. thanks. >> the mccarthy one is, throws you a curveball. the question is why? i'm sure there will be another chapter. good folks over there at "the view." i can attest to that. >> yes, you can. coming up next the bizarre story of the missing boy found alive and well in his family's basement. we're going to talk with nancy grace who broke the story to the boy's father on her show. plus he's being called the berlin wall.
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-- captions by vitac -- www.vitac.com what did he know? new information in the case where his father was told on tv his missing son was found in the basement. his wife has been arrested and neither is being allowed to see the boy. what's going on? nancy grace joins us live. shocking new details in the case of the father charged for leaving his son in the hot car. was he searching the internet for how to do just that? best loss ever. team usa moving on to the next round of the world cup. the nation rallying like never before. the anchor of that team, goalkeeper tim howard joining us live this morning. >> your "new day" continues right now.
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eye. >> announcer: this is "new day" with chris cuomo, kate bolduan, and michaela pereira. >> good morning, and welcome once again to "new day." it's friday, june 27th, 8:00 in the east. an internet search providing possible new clues for georgia police investigating the death of 22-month-old cooper harris. he was left alone by his father for seven hours, strapped in his car seat inside a sweltering suv. on one of the computers seized from the father's office was this search "how long does it take an animal to die in a hot car?" so strange. cnn's victor blackwell is in marietta, georgia, with much more on the story. victor? >> reporter: kate, good morning. initially it was substantial public support for this father but with this latest revelation, that is starting to wane. startling discovery in the case of the georgia father whose son died after being left in the
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back seat of a blazing car for about seven hours. investigators now say someone searched "how long does it take for an animal to die in a hot car" on justin ross harris' work computer. it is unclear when the search was conducted or whether harris did the search. harris is charged with felony murder and second-degree child cruelty in the death of 22-month-old cooper. last week he pleaded not guilty saying the whole incident was a horrifying mistake. >> entering a plea of not guilty at this time. >> reporter: witnesses describe his reaction to discovering his son's body still in the car as distressed and police say he had to be physically restrained at the scene. >> you could feel his sorrow and his hurt because of the situation. >> he just screamed "what have i done" loudly. obviously it was a bit dramatic, hands in the air, looking up towards the sky "what have i
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done?" >> reporter: harris strapped cooper into his rear facing car seat and drove a half mile to work after having breakfast at a chick-fil-a. he left his son in the car instead of taking him to the on site day care center as usual. harris returned to the car at lunch, opened the driver's side door to put something inside. after work police say harris left and a few miles away pulled into a local shopping center and called for help but cooper was already dead. according to the medical examiner the cause of death is likely hyperthermia, the temperature in the car potentially soaring above 130 degrees on that hot summer day. public sympathy for the father is waning as organizers behind a change.org petition urging authorities to release harris withcrew their petition saying "i think that based on the recent developments, this petition is no longer relevant." harris is currently in jail waiting on a hearing set for next week. in the meantime a funeral will be held for cooper this weekend.
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we have tried several times to contact harris' attorney. this attorney has not called us back. we've seen asked to visit harris at the cobb county jail. that visit was refused, and thus far there's no indication that harris would be let out just to attend this funeral in tuscaloosa, a few hours away, although there is precedent. again, no indication there's been a request made to allow justin ross harris to attend. chris? >> i hope they figure out what happened here as quickly as possible, victor, because if they have the wrong guy, it would be really another layer of terrible tragedy. thank you for the reporting on this. we also have new information for you this morning in the case of a missing detroit boy, he's been found safe after being barricaded in his own father's basement. today, police want to talk to 12-year-old charlie bothuell again. the news he was alive came with a truly bizarre twist. charlie's father was told live on tv by hln's nancy grace about the situation and now some are
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questioning the authenticity of bothuell's reaction. we're going to talk with nancy live in just a moment about that and what she has learned since, because the father is certainly denying any wrongdoing. however, his wife, charlie's stepmother, is in police custody on an unrelated charge. we sent alexandra field out to detroit for the story. here is her package. >> reporter: chris, most importantly, charlie is in a safe place now. he's been checked out and also seen by a team of child psychologists but spending a lot of time talking to police. he's given them a lot of good information. now we'll see if prosecutors decide whether that information could lead to charges. 12-year-old charlie bothuell is with his mother this morning after suddenly being found in his father's home wednesday, 11 days after disappearing. >> we have not done anything wrong to my son, nothing but to try to help him. >> reporter: on thursday, charlie's stepmother was taken
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into custody for a probation violation on an unrelated weapons charge as the boy's father, charles bothuell, tells nancy grace over the phone he has not yet seen his son. >> why won't police let you see the boy? where is he? >> you know, i'm breaking a no comment rule but i was briefly on the phone with him when he called my mother, and i need to go now because i'm not listening to the attorney. >> reporter: police found charlie in his own basement. the boy crouched down, barricaded behind a stack of boxes and a 55-gallon barrel, items so heavy, officials say, he couldn't have constructed it himself. the 12-year-old seemingly excited to see police, who say he was hungry. >> out to the father of the -- >> reporter: hln's nancy grace broke the news to bothuell that his son was found live on air. >> we're getting reports that your son has been found in your basement. sir?
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mr. bothuell, are you -- >> what? >> yes, we are getting reports that your son has been found alive in your basement. >> what? >> we're getting that right now from -- yes. how could your son be alive in your basement? >> i -- i -- [ bleep ]. i have no idea. i -- >> reporter: charlie's father says the basement was checked repeatedly. >> the fbi searched. detroit police searched. we've all searched. oh, god, they brought dogs, everything. everybody has searched. what -- oh, god, my son. >> reporter: police say a pvp pipe and bloody clothing were found in the home. they have not elaborated on the
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significance of that. police have not ruled out child abuse, but no charges have been filed. >> for anybody to imply i somehow knew my son was in the basement it's absurd and it's wrong. i love my son. >> reporter: right now police here in detroit are refusing to comment on whether or not they have seen any signs of physical abuse. charlie's father and his stepmother have two other young children, both of those children we're told are now in protective custody. chris? >> the question is why they did that. alexandra, thank you for being there live for us on the scene let's bring in nancy grace right now. nancy, thank you for joining us this morning. >> yes. >> everybody wants to have a take on what happened between you and the father on tv. i'm more interested in your take on the situation. do you still believe the father with the newest information that we've learned? >> well, i still believe what i originally said, and that is that the father had nothing to do with the child disappearing.
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now, that begs the question, why did the child disappear? we are also learning that the child reportedly said the stepmother was helping him, possibly giving him food. this is what else we have learned. we talked to the father, and when all of this was breaking, he said something which at the time i didn't realize was significant. he said that the stepmother had texted him the day the boy went missing and sent him a photo and that he was going to have to deal with it when he got home. you know what that was, chris? it was a photo of the elliptical machine. why? because allegedly the father had the little boy on a very strict physical regimen of 4,000 steps a day on an elliptical, and if the child didn't do it, he would be punished, and remember, the child was in his workout when he went to the bathroom and
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disappeared. so that is leading to the possibility and the investigation of child abuse. was the father just too hard on the boy? you know, they found the bloody clothes in the home, and the pvc pipe in the home. there have been some reports the father has stated that he would spank the boy with the pvc pipe, and then you've got the mother, the stepmother following along with it. sending the picture of the elliptical like look. >> you're saying that 4,000 steps on the elliptical abuse or not, i don't know. let's put that to the side for a second. but then it becomes the people pointing the finger at the stepmom saying that, oh, she's got the unrelated weapon charge, the kids are taken out of the house, must have been her. but you're saying it may have been the stepmom was helping the boy avoid the father's punishment? >> some reports are, yes, some
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reports are that the stepmother was giving the boy food. back to the stepmother, all these unrelated charges, i can tell you what the cops are doing. this is the unrelated charge. she was driving, she got pulled over for something and she said oh, i have a suspended license for a gun and i've got a gun in the car. they arrested her for that, fyi, word to the wise. that was her first arrest. then they come in the home to do the search, there's a gun in the home, and she is arrested on a probation violation. that's the whole story to that, but i'll tell you this. they've got her behind bars to make her talk. that's why she's behind bars right now. obviously she did not give them the information they're looking for and they're going to let her simmer behind bars until she's ready to talk. that's what's happening whether they will admit it or not. >> let's get back to the father because you don't spank with a pvc pipe, okay? >> first of all, i don't spank
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period, number one. >> but put that pc stuff to the side. you have pc and then pvc pipe. this takes us to an entirely different level about what we're learning if the kid did run. >> you and i should have seen that at the get-go because when the police say we've recovered bloody clothes and pvc pipe we should have put that together, what does that mean these two are seized together? we have to wait until it unfolds in court. the father has not been charged with child abuse. he had the backbone, guts or craziness to come back on my show last night and i learned this, he did speak with little charlie, but little charlie called his grandmother and then the dad got on the phone. i find that significant, that he did not want to talk to his father. >> so very interesting. >> why are the children taken out of the home? >> tell us. >> the 4-year-old boy and the
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little girl, they're taken out of the home because there's nobody, they can't see the father because he's under investigation, and the mom is now in jail. charlie is back with his biological mother, so there's nowhere for them to be. >> reporter: what about other family? >> that's why they're in custody or child protection? >> now that you brought it up, in the same townhouse, they're all interconnected is the uncle, the stepmother's brother is there, who coincidentally is running for office, did he know the boy was hiding out, and it begs the question, why didn't the dogs that the police brought in find the boy? so it's all a jumble this morning. i can guarantee you this. i am going to make sense of it. >> i think you're starting to get there. there are a lot of different clues here about what the situation is. the father also said something else. i'm not sure if it was to you or in his ad hoc press conference. he said "i love my son.
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we've done everything we can to help him." that's an unusual thing to say about your kid. does this kid have some type of issue that was something that was pending in the family? because just hearing that he had run away, in quotes before, a lot of kids at that age start pushing back against authority and do little things like that. >> he didn't really run away, chris, and that disturbi ins me. that's what i thought at the beginning, too. now i found out the previous runaway, we were told hours to days. it was just about two to three hours he was gone, and he was over by his mother's house, about two miles away, going to his mommy. i don't consider that a runaway. so i uncovered he's not really a runaway. he's not unruly. he's not a bad kid. the father took him away from the mother to home school him and put him on a physical regimen which i've never heard of putting a 12-year-old on an excessive physical regimen. i'd like to see you and me up there on an elliptical doing
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4,000 steps, chris, please. >> well, every time you use air quotes i know that means that you find something suspicious and you got plenty of use for air quotes in this story. we'll keep watching you. >> i stand by the fact that the dad did not know the boy was in the basement because i don't think he would have called in the fbi and the police, but i've always been extremely suspicious as to why that child ran, was hiding for two weeks when i heard about the bloody clothes, i'm fearing the worst. i'm hoping for the best, though. >> look, you can feel confident about the best, because the kid's alive and well and that's so rare already. >> amen. >> so we're dealing with that, but very interesting. so you shifted from, it's not a shift. you shifted my focus, not the father did it but was the father the cause of it in another way. we'll look for the next chapter of what certainly is turning into a novel of epic proportions except it's true >> thank you, chris. >> we'll check your show tonight. thank you for staying with us on
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it, we'll talk to you as we get the latest developments. watch nancy grace on hln weeknights at 8:00 p.m. eastern. mick? >> great conversation there, chris, thanks so much and our thanks to nancy as well. here's a look at more headlines now. the u.s. looking to strike a delicate balance as it tries to slow the isis surge in iraq. secretary of state john kerry is headed to meet with the king of saudi arabia, this is in part of a push to get nations in the persian gulf to rally behind iraq. this as we learn iraq is turning to russia for fighter jets, saying that the u.s. wasn't moving fast enough. the suspected mastermind of the deadly attack on the u.s. mission in benghazi is nearing american soil. ahmad abu khattala could arrive as soon as this weekend. he has spent about two weeks being interrogated by the fbi on the "uss new york." khattala was captured earlier this month in libya. police had to remove actor shia labeouf from last night's performance of "cabaret" on
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broadway. the nypd said he was drunk and disruptive while watching the musical. he was charged with criminal trespass and disorderly conduct. the 28-year-old is expected to appear before a judge this morning. members of the audience said they thought his outburst was some sort of an act. quite a tale here. look at this, five-time national champion alyssa montano competed in the 800-meter run in the u.s. field and track and field championships. it was a normal race for the 28-year-old other than the fact she is 34 months pregnant. >> weeks. >> did i say months? she had been running for days and the doctor gave her the okay to do the race. she finished 35 seconds slower than her personal best, considering she was 34 months pregnant. >> amazing. >> you clap. the crowd apparently gave her a standing ovation. >> as well they should.
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setting a new bar. >> you are a slacker. >> i am. and she ran that much faster than most people would be able to. >> yes, that is amazing. right now i can't remember how many weeks pregnant i am, because that's blowing my mind. >> she came in last but the baby didn't. >> the baby came in second last. >> and always will before her. >> absolutely, well played. >> and i'm back. off the rails. it's friday. coming up next on "new day," team usa will get us back on the rails, still alive in the world cup, thanks in part to the leadership of veteran goalkeeper tim howard. he's talking to us about the team's run so far. stop that paul! >> through the legs, still safe. ♪
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xfinity internet from comcast. double the speed. [ heart beats ] ♪ ♪ you can't stop the move welcome back to "new day" and indeed it is the new day team usa was looking for, after a 1-0 non-win to germany, the u.s. will advance to the knockout round on points. this is world cup, different rules and stuff. germany attacking from the start. they did all right, but the continued heroics of goalkeeper tim howard kept the first half scoreless as he made save after save in horrible conditions against arguably the best team in the world.
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earlier this morning, we got to speak to tim about the challenges ahead. here you go. we all watched the match yesterday. take me back to it. the conditions terrible, rain coming down, the nasa designed ball like a speeding bullet. you, facing arguably the best team next to the usa in the tournament. you wind up being the berlin wall. where was your head facing this team in these conditions? >> it was focused -- conditions were tough. we played in nasty weather before, you know. we got thrown for a loop a little bit, not being able to warm up on the field, but that happens and we've been in that position before. so it was just trying to refocus and make sure that little things like that didn't throw us off. i thought we played well. although we lost we played well. >> you had unusual intensity. is there an equivalent of being in the zone as a goal keeper? did you feel you were on yesterday? >> yes, i think there is, you
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know, the zone is isn't sport specific. when you're a competitor and when the game starts to slow down and you read things quicker, i think you feel like you're in a zone. i felt like all season i've been in good rhythm with my club team and i feel like it's carried over. hopefully it can last a few games longer. >> the best save of the day -- by the way, tony meola says you're one of the five best in the world and he should know, that's high praise, and he pointed out a goal where i think you were looking at beisler and the german player kicks the ball through his legs and you were somehow able to pick it up and make the save. were you impressed with yourself on that play? >> again, i was just focused. i remember the play. that's high praise coming from tony, one of the greats. i appreciate that, but that was just something that happened in the game, and you see it a thousand times and that's what happens when you're experienced
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or old like i am, you start to see things quicker. >> well, you didn't look old when you were jumping around like a puma in the goal yesterday for all the world's eyes to watch. let's talk about the one goal that was scored. you made a great save. you punched it back out in. did you see that shot or was it just given his due a perfect shot? was it on you or on him? >> it was definitely on him. it was a brilliant strike to keep it inside, to keep it low, hard to the back post. it came through a couple bodies as well, but to finish that first time the way he did was excellent and from a player of his caliber, no surprise. >> now, when you look at belgium, how do you feel about them? how do you think you sized up against them? >> i think we match up really well with them. they're strong, powerful, defensively rock solid.
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in the attack they have some dangerous, tricky players. very much like germany, so we'll have our work cut out for us but we feel we're strong and powerful and we've been playing some of the best soccer that this team has seen, so hopefully we'll give as good as we get. >> love it. >> i know. what's so interesting to me is the game has really been taken off the field. the u.s. has gotten behind socker in a way i've never seen it before, even in previous world cups. something special about this team. he's a big reason for it. they're getting a ton of support. >> so many of them have experience. they play in european leagues so they're playing against these very teams all the time, these very players. they have the experience and it's showing on the field. >> he was really cool about the game which is exactly what you want. not like we understand that everyone's watching but we can't handle -- >> tim is running low on socks. i said i will take some socks and head to brazil this weekend, hook him up with extra socks.
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don't want him to get any blisters and i will cover the game for cnn because i'm going to be down there anyway because of the socks. maybe i'll get him to pick up the tan. i will go, pay on my own dime, for the love of country. >> rubbing it in. >> no, i'll be there. yes, you stay here. it's nice. >> you stay there. you just stay. just kidding. >> it's what i do, dedication. thank me later. coming up next on "new day," he publicly revealed he was one of the millions of undocumented immigrants in the united states. he's now a pulitzer prize winning journalist. jose antonio vargas brings us an incredible story. we'll talk to him about the issue and why it's so important, ahead. the average person will probably eat something or drink something
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to meet with the 12-year-old boy found barricaded in his own basement of his father's home. little charlie had been missing for almost two weeks. he is now his biological mother. john kerry is headed to saudi arabia to meet with king abdullah, his latest attempt to get persian gulf nations to stand up in the fight against isis. a unanimous ruling from the supreme court backing congress against the president. at number five, team usa survives and advances to the world cup, in the world cup despite losing 1-0 to germany. the team goes to the round of 16. the u.s. will face belgium tuesday. we always update the five things to know. go to newdaycnn.com for the latest. let's turn to this week's cnn hero. in the los angeles public
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schools nearly one in five kids drops out before dwrad wags. karen taylor is helping teenaged girls in l.a. find their voice and their future. >> i've lost some with each pen mark. >> i found myself in the words. >> every girl has a story to tell. >> some of our girls are facing some of the greatest challenges teenagers could ever face. >> they need to be inspired about their own voice. >> life in the light can be so bright. nothing can be so pure. >> writing and self-expression can give them a tool for moving forward. say something that nobody else has said before, because you have your own way of saying things. we match underserved girls with professional women writers for mentoring and group workshops. i want to match you, krista, with christie. the moment you're asked to tell you something you're passionate about, the writing and the ideas flow. >> the senses are deluded by the
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sparkly things across their eye. thank you. >> we need to help girls see that their voice matters. you have' got a lot of good stuff here. i'd like to hear more about you. to give a girl tools to be able to be positive and thrive and rise above whatever challenges she's facing. >> never underestimate the power of the girl and her pen! woo! >> just amazing. amazing stories. if you have someone that you know that should be nominated go to cnnheroes.com. we love the stories. >> that was a really good one, the empowerment of these women. coming up on "new day" we'll take on the all-important question, what does it mean to be an american? why we're taking it on? a man who outed himself as one of the nation's 11 million undocumented immigrants is trying to answer it in a blockbuster cnn film. we're going to talk with him about the film and his journey. it is a unique one, right ahead.
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how do you define american? pulitzer prize winning journalist jose antonio vargas answering that question in a new cnn film called "documented." three years after publicly revealing he is one of the country's 11 million undocumented immigrants, he wants to give a human face to the nation's broken immigration system. listen. >> i was brought here when i was 12. i didn't know, i didn't have papers since i was 16. my grandparents who were american citizens didn't tell me
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so i've been here, paying taxes since i was 18. i just want to be able as you said to get legal, get in the back of the line somewhere. >> the journalist, filmmaker and founder of "define america" is here. >> thank you so much for having me. >> thank you for coming in. your story, when you first told it in that magazine feature in 2011 had a lot of people talking. this film is definitely going to do the same thing. why do you, did you and do you want to share such a personal story? >> first of all, i didn't want to do that. i really -- i'm a journalist. we're supposed to not put ourselves in the story. >> absolutely. >> that's like the cardinal sin is to do that so i didn't want to do that, but then i think we're looking at an issue that's been incredibly politicized. the fact that news organizations still refer to people as illegal tells you how politicized it is. i think it's important to put not only a human face but to be very specific about what we're talking about.
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for all the news that this issue takes, like immigration is the most controversial yet least understood issue in america. like the question i get asked every day is like why don't you just make yourself legal? i say if i can just go in the corner of 45th and broadway and go to an office and fill out a form and poof, i'm legal, does it work like that. most americans don't know what the process looks like. the film sunday night we go through that through the forms saying this is why i can't make myself legal. this is why i haven't seen my mother for almost 21 years. >> why do you think there is such lack of understanding? this is a nation of immigrants. going back many decades and generations. it's a nation of immigrants. >> we're also a nation that likes to think of people as the other. >> suspect that he just humanity? >> that is but in america it was think about what happened after
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9/11. after 9/11 we of course were terrorized during 9/11. illegal in america has been the largest targets of terrorism internally. the dwrks mac was introduced in august 2001. month later 9/11 happened and here we are now almost, what, 14 years later, we still have, what, about 2 million undocumented young people in this country. >> we have this balance of law and humanity. >> absolutely. >> you said they're called illegal because many are illegal, and people get caught up on that instead of seeing a way forward. i want you to address it and also something else. two things people have to know, you didn't sneak in the country. you were snook in. you didn't sneak in. there's a material difference. people will pick that up when they watch the documentary. it's not like you're throwing it in your face that you snuck in. second thing, normally i wouldn't ask you about this but your mom is made a relevants
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aspeblgt aaspect of the documentary and the estrangement. >> yes. >> you don't interview her but she is interviewed. can you explain that? you haven't talked to your mom for a really long time by choice, why? >> you know, like a lot of imgrabi immigrants in this country, i support my family in the philippines. >> you say it's transactional not emotional. >> it was much easier to -- how do you explain not seeing your mother physically for 20 years? i don't know how to do that. all i know is, as i got older it got more and more difficult to talk about it and to explain to my own friends why i can't spend christmas with her, why i can't leave this country, and so you start lying to your own friends, and then you start lying to yourself, and then you start lying to your employers. it becomes this very complicated thing and that's why this film in many ways, i sought out to document my life but i ended up documenting hers. >> interesting. that's an integral part of yours, isn't it? >> that's how you think about -- for example, think about the unaccompanied minors from
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central america. what about their mothers? what about their fathers? where are they? right? and what if these kids were germans or italians or irish who crossed here when the border was the atlantic ocean and they got here on ellis island? my border was the pacific ocean. for all the talk about border security, what, 40% of undocumented people in this country got here legally and overstayed their visa. >> right. >> yet all the conversation is because this border. >> what do you think we should do with the kids? >> you know, i have been somebody who was brought here when i was 12. i've been really haunted by this. i don't think there's any easy solution. i think the thing that i find most troubling, though, is that it seems as if we have really lost track of our own history. so what is happening in these countries, in el salvador, honduras and guatemala and what has been the role of the united states in all these past decades when it comes to civil wars and funding, you know, people in
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those countries and the kind of fight that they're having and why is there so much violence in these countries and what role does our country play in that? >> it isn't an easy answer. >> it's not. >> you pose the three questions and quickly, you ask this, what do you want to do with me? what do you want to do with us? how do you define american? what if when congress, the white house and washington decides to finally ask those questions and call for an answer, what if you don't like the answer they give? >> oh, i would -- as far as i'm concerned, we have been waiting for answers, any kind of answer would be great. congressman goodlack said immigration reform is dead. politically it seems to be that for them but for the 11 million people like us struggling every day, this is far from dead and this question again of what do you want to do with us, like what do you want to do with us? that is somethingc congressional leaders and the
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president haven't fully answered. >> not at all. >> not at all. so hopefully the film can spark conversations, right, and you know, i'm an incredibly, you know, what, i've been saying, this the most privileged undocumented immigrant in america. every day somebody gets detained or deported. i'm talking to you and made a film and my hope is to use the film and use the story to incite other conversations. >> you're going to try to reach the group, right? because you don't want to preach to the converted. >> no. >> you want to reach the group that has a hard time seeing past the law having been broken. >> again, that's the thing. people on twitter people are like, you lied. yes, i lied. to get jobs and to survive here and to pay taxes and social security, because people like me do pay tax and social security. now what do you want to do with us? >> that's the question. >> we can't all baby sit your kids, mow your lawns and serve you drinks so what do you want to do with us? >> tough questions. important questions. >> provocative. >> provocative questions. jose, thank you for being with
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us. we're going to have much more of jose's incredible journey and it's not over yet. >> no. >> catch "documented" a cnn film that's sunday at 9:00 eastern only on cnn. >> and i can answer what i want to do with you in this way. when this creates the heat that i know it's going to create, come back and let's start taking on the issues because a lot of them will be directed at you so we'll see you then. >> great. >> coming up on "new day," ultimate fighting for everyone. we're going to show you the latest workout craze, ufc in your living room. no cage required. really all you need is kids to make this happen. we'll show you what to do if you don't have kids. ♪ let me hear your body talk, let's get physical ♪ narrator: these are the tennis shoes skater kid: whoa narrator: that got torture tested by teenagers and cried out for help. from the surprised designers. who came to the rescue with a brilliant fix male designer: i love it narrator: which created thousands of new customers for the tennis shoes that got torture tested
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♪ all right, what is new? we're back with another edition of our summer series, we have drum major going over here, i don't know what's happening but anyway, what is new? what is next? we're joined by carlos watson, again you bring us this interesting stuff. we're talking social media and law enforcement. i've heard about this a little bit but i thought it was just sort of a way that they were getting more positive pr for their departments. you're saying they're using it to fight crime. >> they are, really interesting, one, most wanted, so in some cases we're putting most wanted felons on there. >> this was beyond like amber alerts and things like that. >> definitely beyond amber alerts, serious crimes, murder, rape, kidnapping, of missing
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children, they're putting on as well including the beginning of youtube videos. >> no more milk cartons. >> exactly. and you know what's interesting as well, the recruiting. the u.s. army was using pinterest to recruit women and began the police departments themselves in kansas city said that's not a bad idea and had more success. >> is this about outreach or also harnessing the upside of anonymity with tips and stuff? >> really thoughtful both, chris, and in fact the thing that i was most interested that they were doing was that a number of women who were in abusive relationships are finding the kind of help, including hotline numbers there, and frankly, in some cases seeing other women speak out about positively using this source in order to escape difficult situations. >> that is fantastic. i've heard about crimestoppers and things like that, maybe getting something happening in neighborhoods. all right, this is one i'm a little concerned that you might start trying this out. we all have our workouts that we try, and workout crazes seem to
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be a-plenty. ufc in your living room workout? talk to me about this. it sounds dangerous. >> it looks it. >> how is this legal? >> not only is it legal but if you can do aerobics and pole dancing can inspire things, p90x, insanity. they're saying ufc and mixed martial arts, the popular new sport, mike dolce, the fitness guru to many of the leading ufc fighters is coming forth with his video, saying move aside billy blanks and move asaid sean t. i got something for you. >> he got on p90x. >> he said look, do you want something that was started by a dancer or comedian or do you want a true fitness guy who has been doing this for 20 years or some of the top fighters in the world. >> one of your guys dried it? >> one tried it. >> was it you? >> do i look like i did it? >> yes, you do.
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>> i appreciate chris cuomo this morning. i do. 6% body fat. >> wow! i have that in my tongue alone. >> one last topic since we have time, we are in summer officially now, but wait, you're trying to tell me you folks at ozzy dot-c. ozzy. ozzy.com, summer is dead to us? what do you mean it's hot enough to constitute this summer. >> our deputy director found out americans are taking less and less vacation, not just schoolchildren but adults themselves, more stay indicatio indications. just to save a little bit of money and increasingly kids are spending more time in school and that even when they go on vacation, guess what? chris, kate, michaela is trying to reach me all the time, i might as well be at work, might as well get the paycheck. >> europeans criticized americans we can't take a break and all crazy. >> guess who takes all of their vacation and then some, which
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country do you think? >> i don't know. >> of course france. six good weeks a year. >> kids go to school more in a lot of developed countries than we do also. >> we go to school about 180 days a year on average and a lot of folks say that's not enough. >> it isn't. >> that we should go to school. in japan they go to school 240, 250 days >> split the difference. >> split the difference, a little compromise never hurt anybody. >> i say beat the difference. good to see you, carlos. >> good to be back here. >> thanks, carlos. enjoy summer. >> enjoy summer. >> keep summer. >> keep summer here in new york. >> when work is like a vacation you don't ever feel like you need to take vacations. >> of course you love the cnn "new day" folks. coming up on "new day," those who have the most go deep into their pockets to help out those who have the least. that's not the good stuff, if that's not, i don't know what is. hear the story and love it. what's your function? ♪outhn ♪ hooking up the country helping business run ♪
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most of the time people are shocked when we show them where they're getting the acid, and what those acids can do to the enamel. there's only so much enamel on a tooth, and everybody needs to do something about it now if they want to preserve their teeth. i recommend pronamel because it helps strengthen the tooth and makes it more resistant to acid breakdown. we want to be healthy and strong through the course of our life, and by using pronamel every day, just simply using it as your toothpaste, you know you will have that peace of mind. -- captions by vitac -- www.vitac.com in today's edition of the good stuff the big guys are helping out the little guy. executives at parkland hospital in dallas aren't waiting for the federal minimum wage to go up.
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they are voluntarily giving up their bonuses to give raises to all of their minimum wage employees. >> i love it. >> with this move that parkland has made, there will be no county employee in dallas county making less than $10.25 an hour. >> the employees are loving it. i think i've heard a couple cheers already today. >> it's not deferred compensation. there is no catch. they are doing what i just told you they are doing. the move will cost about $350,000 per year, will raise the base salary to $10.25 an hour, and all of that money is coming out of hospital executives' pockets. the employees hate it. i'm just kidding. they're overjoyed. >> i thought it was a joke. i'm not going to lie. because i have three kids so i won't have to work so much overtime for one, i can spend more time with them. >> can't complain about nothing right now. i'm just happy right now. >> happy you should be.
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it's one of the times where it's not too good to be true. that's why it is the good stuff. let's get you over to "the newsroom." >> executives, people are painted often in not the best light so it's good for them to do. >> not today. carol costello i wish you a tgif and much news. >> right back at you. thanks so much. "newsroom" starts right now. we have breaking news, i'm carol costello. thank you so much for joining me. as terrorists in iraq march closer to baghdad, the u.s. military has armed drones in the sky above the capital city. barbara starr joins us now more. good morning, barbara. >> good morning, carol. in the last 24 hours the u.s. military did begin flying armed drone patrols over the baghdad area. we know this is happening not because we are told that the u.s. plans any offensive air strikes into baghdad into iraq. that
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