tv Erin Burnett Out Front CNN June 27, 2014 4:00pm-5:01pm PDT
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you can follow us on twitter. you can tweet the show. please be sure to join us monday in the situation room and watch us live or dvr the show. that's it for me. thanks for watching, i'm wolf blitzer in "the situation room." erin burnett, "outfront" starts erin burnett, "outfront" starts right now. -- captions by vitac -- www.vitac.com >> 1,000 u.s. marines on the way to the persian gulf. we have breaking news. is it mission creep? new information about the missing detroit boy found in his father's basement. how did nancy grace know where he was before his father. and sheila brooke arrested at a broadway -- shia labeouf arrested outside a broadway show. what is behind this meltdown. "outfront" tonight many americans heading to the persian
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gulf. bara starr reporting tonight. the u.s. baton is heading to the gulf with 1,000 marines on board and armed american drones are flying over baghdad as human rights watch releases an image of what the terrorist group isis is capable of. two mass graves of iraqi soldiers, police and civilians killed by militants. barbara what are they being sent to do? we were told a few hundred advisers and now 1,000 marines. >> we are here every night talking about more and more fire power. 1,000 marines on board the uss baton headed to the persian gulf. now there is no word that the president is ordering air strikes or anything like that. but this just simply puts more fire power and boots in the region if they are needed.
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these 1,000 marines will join 2,000 marines already in the persian gulf area. seven warships already there. dozens of war planes and helicopters up and down the persian gulf. things are clearly being put into place if it gets worse. from was to be an order for air strikes or an order to evacuate hundreds of american civilians out of iraq. right now they say everything is on stand by but we do see more and more being assembled. >> what are you learning about the armed drones and -- i know they are armed but not actually planning on using them at this time but what are they going to target? >> hopefully they hope not to use them. but what's going on is now that they are 180 u.s. military advisers on the ground in baghdad, u.s. military personnel moving around baghdad it's very dangerous and these drones which have been flying unarmed to
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conduct reconnaissance are now carrying hellfire missiles on their wings. they will be protection for u.s. troops on the ground. if those troops come under fire and get into trouble clearly you have hellfire missiles that can move in and suppress any isis enemy fire. this is part of what they call force protection. if you've got u.s. troops out there in iraq, which we now do, you have to provide protection for them against the militant forces. erin? >> and "outfront" right now, rick francona and doug mcgregor. great to have you with us. once the u.s. baton arrives in the region you will have 1,000 marines in the region.
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>> is it a contingency force. this is a lot of fire power. that's a big ship with a lot of aircraft on it and marines on it. it can be used to put forces into baghdad, into any part of iraq they want to amphibiously. it is an upgrade in capability. you wonder why does he think he needs this capability. this looks like mission creep again. >> it sounds that way, colonel. the administration says they are making sure the right assets are in place should they need them? do you buy that? >> there are two possibilities. one is we put a band-aid on a gaping wound, this disaster we created when we installed mr. malaki and his government. but this could be to enlarge our engagement. one thing to keep in mind is
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marine infantry is at risk. they are not going to be able to do more than evacuate americans. >> lieutenant colonel, which of those scenarios makes the most sense to you. the president said he wanted out of the war and he got out of the war. the wanting to get back in doesn't really seem to fit with his policy thus far. >> i think what we're seeing is him putting a contingency force in place to evacuate americans out of there. this is not a heavy enough force to engage these forces in a meaningful way. they're not going to be able to take territory from isis. you need the iraqi army to stand up and go out into the field which i don't see happening. they ceded the country to isis. >> in terms of who the u.s. is fighting for.
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you have the prime minister of iraq giving an interview in which he criticized the obama administration for not providing u.s. jets. he said we were deluded when we signed the contract with the united states. if we have air cover we could prevent what happened in this country. we bought second-hand jet fighters from russia. you have iranian drones providing them intelligence and we are helping the same side. >> well, erin, you just asked the $60 million question. and listen, that's an important question that americans should be asking the government right now. last year, mr. obama wanted to bomb the syrian government and army. he wanted to bomb them on behalf of the sunni islamists backed by the saudi and turks and emirates. today he wants to align with iran which is also backed by russia and he wants to bomb the
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same people that last year he said he wanted to protect. there is no coherency to this. >> this is the complexity of the region right now. even the regional players are on the side of one guy and tomorrow on the side of the guy they were against yesterday. >> everybody is acting in their own interests and these are changing interests. they react quickly and move their forces to be there. you have the syrian air force bombing and iranians moving into baghdad. they are flying their drones over there and we have these second-hand russian aircraft in the air. >> why should americans care? if isis is a direct and pleasant threat to the united states of america. is it? >> it could be. this is a future threat. if the iraqi army is not going
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to go back out there and retake that territory. if they are going to set up in baghdad and let the isis have the western part we have the defacto petition of the country. what does isis become? they have the parts of government in syria. we saw the videos and you're going to have a jihady state out there. that's the future problem. but is this a tactical issue or strategic issue? >> erin, look, this place called iraq doesn't exist. the place is already partitions and let's keep something in mind, this is not new jockeying. the sides are very clear on one side are the shiites, iran, iraq, and hezbollah.
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they are all anti-jews and anti-western. this is good news for the west if they fight with each other to be perfectably blunt. >> a lot to think about there. new information about the detroit boy found alive in his father's basement. and $100 million is what bill clinton made in speaking fees alone. we drill down in the numbers. are the clintons out of touch. and president obama issues a warning to the rest of the world. >> 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. i make a lot of purchases for my business. and i get a lot in return with ink plus from chase. like 50,000 bonus points when i spent $5,000 in the first 3 months after i opened my account.
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mr. bothell. >> what? >> we have reports that your son has been found alive in your basement? >> police are speaking to that man's son and getting a lot of information about his ordeal. >> charles bothell bombarded with questions. >> if you are able to speak to your son what would you say to him? >> i have to say no comment. >> reporter: but the father's attorney is defending him saying that charlie was a troubled kid becoming upset after he learned he would no longer be home schooled. >> troubled how? >> he had been failing in school and kicked out of a couple of schools and he told his son, you have to go to school like everybody else and if you don't
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go to school and in the public school i have to send you to a military academy. >> reporter: the attorney says he doesn't know where charlie spent 11 days or how he ended up in the basement. as for charlie's father and stepmother he calls them caring and loving parents. when nancy grace broke the news that his son was alive, this was his reaction. >> your son has been found alive in your basement. >> what? >> police say the 12-year-old could not have constructed the barricade on his own. they haven't ruled out child abuse after finding a pvc pipe and blood-stained clothing. >> it seems like a family dynamic that may have been taking place. >> no charges have been filed. but moniquedy lard bothell was
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taken into custody. his step mom pleaded guilty to buying a pistol without a permit. charlie disappeared after being scolded for not doing chores and exercises. >> when he first got there, he was overweight, frankly. my client being an rn was acutely aware with problems of child obesity. he asked him to work out on the elliptical. >> was this boy in danger in his own home? >> never in danger in his own home. >> the attorney maintains that neither of his clients ever hurt or abused the boy. the boy has been checked out by doctors and has met with child psychologists and is speaking to police who will pass on information to prosecutors to
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determine whether we will see charges in the future. the boy is now with his biological mother. >> jean casarez is "outfront" now. people watch the interact with nancy grace and it seems like -- if that was your child and you didn't know what happened you would end the interview and jump away and the first time she said your son is found and she didn't say alive. and now he won't say anything to the press. >> he says his attorneys are telling him not to speak. but we are all saying to ourselves what would we do in that seat? and i learned long ago that everybody reacts differently. you don't know. what may be normal to you may not be normal to him. i would have screamed and we would have thrown off the mic and got out of the chair to see your son. he didn't do that. that is causing questions in a
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lot of minds. but only the boy knows the truth. truly, right? that little boy knows what happened. >> and now what about the people who are talking about child abuse? there are reports that he had shown up obese when he moved in and the lawyer acknowledged that. the other reports are that he was required to do 4,000 strides on elliptical without a break and there was an abusive environment in the home. >> child protective services is involved. we know. that and late today, the attorney that was in alexandria's piece, he has seen a court petition which says that the stepmother took the little boy and was the one who put him in the basement and told him to stay there and not leave. now of course what this demonstrates at the least is you may start to have the stepmother and father have divergent stories.
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so it's possible then if it were the stepmother was involved the father may not have been. >> it's a good question. there was a shirt, according to hln and cnn sources, covered in blood and a pvc pipe in the bedroom. that was in plain view to the family, right? >> you think they would have seen that. >> jean, thank you very much. a bizarre story. at least that little boy was found and hopefully his life will improve. still to come, shia labeouf's latest public meltdown. does it pay to be gay? a former ceo says yes. is your baby getting enough exercise? when you run a business, you can't settle for slow.
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after shia labeouf has been released from jail after being arrested last night at a broadway show in new york. it has been a strange year for him. a paper bag over his head, charges of plagiarism and now an arrest. what is behind his bizarre behavior? >> reporter: a morning walk through a media gauntlet after a night in jail, shia labeouf has him facing charges of disorderly conduct and harassment. he is accused of standing up in the middle of the performance of "cab rate" on broadway and yelling at the actors on stage. they weren't sure if he was acting or intoxicated? >> he was quite a mess. he had a torn shirt.
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he had a cigarette. >> reporter: according to the criminal complaint he refused to leave theater. as police were escorting him out he allegedly cursed at the officer and resorted to creaming -- you know my life? do you know who the "f" i am? do you know who i am? officers also saleh buf spat at them while he was being processed at the precinct. the concern is he is following in the footsteps of other troubled child stars like amanda bines and lindsay lohan who have seen their careers derailed. >> it seems like a string of shia's crazy meltdown year. he is already not on anyone's list for kind of movies that made him a household name like the "transformer" films. >> reporter: the night after the premier of the newest
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"transformer" film "a," an event down the street from where he was arrested. he was supposed to take a role in a broadway play last year that fell through. he was caught plaj riegz his short film. >> i take it much more seriously. and his apologies for the plagiarism included sky writing and copying of other ploapologi. he followed up by culling it quits from public life. he walked the red carpet wearing a paper bag reading i'm not famous. why he is fleeing the creative community and hollywood he may find handcuffs and courtrooms make fame tough to escape.
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>> and "outfront" next, bill clinton earned more than $100 million in speaking fees alone. that doesn't count the books and everything else. so are the clintons majorly out of touch? and america's immigration crisis is costing taxpayers billions of dollars a year. thank ythank you for defendiyour sacrifice. and thank you for your bravery. thank you colonel. thank you daddy. military families are uniquely thankful for many things, the legacy of usaa auto insurance can be one of them. if you're a current or former military member or their family, get an auto insurance quote and see why 92% of our members plan to stay for life.
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built for business. the latest shot in a wealth of conversation for hillary clinton. student leaders are calling on the former secretary of state to rush the reported $225,000 speak fee that she is set to receive for an upcoming speech at the school. >> hillary clinton, your stance for education is committed to students and if she truly stands for that that $225,000 could go to a scholarship in her name to students instead. we ask that hillary clinton returns part or hold the money back to the university. we are seeing increases in tuition and asking students and families to come back to the table. it's time for private entities
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to come back to the table as well. >> a clinton aide says that the money will go to the bill, hillary and chelsea clinton foundation. but joining me now is sunny hostin and margaret hoover and david brock. okay. great to have you with us. sunny, that young manmade an interesting argument which, is it's a quarter million dollars, why not give it to the school to help. it's going to the foundation. >> it was a savvy argument. i hadn't heard it. there's something to be said that getting an honorary yum is not unusual. i don't get $200,000 but i get an honoraryium. we have a narrative that we're
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not that wealthy and she is out of touch. this doesn't bother me. the fact that her husband makes $100,000 doesn't bother me. but what bothers me is her reaction and inability to discuss the fact that they are wealthy. that bothers me. >> david you are in the position of defending her. this all started -- she commented on her and her husband being dead broke and how there are truly wealthy people out there when their net worth is north of $100 million. do you think those are unfortunate things to say? >> certainly, let's just take -- you and i could probably agree that, you know, talking about money makes everybody uneasy. it's a perfectly natural thing, i think. but this is less about gaffes than a game of got you.
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if you look at the interview they didn't publish the full answer. she told the right story. the clintons are from everyday america, nobody gave them anything and i think it's a little bit of an odd tack for republicans to take to hold people's success against them. this is money that is being earned honestly in the free market and i think the bottom line is the republicans know what we all know is there is not a republican who is going to survive a debate with hillary clinton on the broad issues. >> you want to turn the conversation. >> a lot of this is about money and she did want to point out. certainly -- to your point, david, a shame no one wants to talk about it. i'm not truly wealthy. most truly wealthy people probably think the same thing. but could she get past that? look, i actually think the problem isn't republicans attacking her. >> republicans have no problem
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with people getting wealthy. she earned it fair and square. we want economic freedom and people to benefit from the system. we don't stigmatize success. that is the democratic party that stigmatizes success economic success. it's the democratic party that has more problems with her earning wealth and not being in touch. >> i don't think -- >> it is. look at bill de blasio. the left flank is uncomfortable and talk about inequality. it's excessive wealth and they say a solution to inequality is by taxing the super rich. she is saying i'm not one of the super rich people. she is -- >> she -- >> to his point. bloomberg did an interesting report on their estate planning. they do what anybody who has money and means in this country does. they have done estate planning
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and life estate trusts and real estate trusts. but she publicly supported the estate tax applying -- >> she was against the repeal. >> so even as she is against it she is protecting her own money from pay it. that is a rational thing to do but it calls out that perhaps the hypocrisy of the vote. >> i think the system is what it is. they are paying their fair share of policies. she has advocates tax cuts for the middle class. but it -- and bill clinton has talked about it. they would be hurting themselves. so i think she is not going to take a backseat to anybody on these issues. people know her values. look at the record from rural education in arkansas to health care for low-income kids. >> i think that's right in the sense that, i look at this not as politician or a political pundit but just as an average
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voter and a democrat and a middle class person. i think that people aren't going to be uncomfortable with the fact that her husband made a lot of the money. and she's following his, i think, diagram. now she is make money in the same way. i don't think people will be bothered by. that i think people like the i'm still hillary from arkansas thing. >> that's the problem you have. it's hard to believe that. it doesn't feel authentic or credible. >> she has to convince people. she has to convince me and other voters she is still hillary from the block. >> and the democratic party that is increasingly uncomfortable with the super wealthy. you are splitting hairs at that point. and she has to figure out a way to talk about it. >> change the narrative. >> talking about income and equality a long time before these other folks came about. read her speeches from 2008 where they talk about the
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excesses in the market. >> the republicans are talking about the excesses. but what do you do about it? the left wing solution is tax the wealthy. >> the laws are the laws and people have every right to inmize their tax bill. but when you are saying that wealthy people's taxes should go up, she is not saying i'll write you the extra check, washington, she is taking advantage of the same loopholes. >> framing this argument about the left of the democratic party. that's -- but. >> but there is this trend. >> do you think that bill de blasio -- >> the core -- >> the campaign. >> and she spoke at his inauguration. >> that's right. >> where is the -- >> before we go, one other clinton controversy to weigh in. bill clinton versus dick cheney. cheney writing about president obama's approach to iraq saying rarely has a u.s. president been so wrong at the expense of so
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many and bill clinton was asked about that and responded with this. >> mr. cheney has been incredibly adetroit 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 unseemingly. >> and now, dick cheney has responded. here you see him. >> there's somebody who knows something about unseemingly, it's bill clinton. >> well, they're in the sand box. >> sure. >> but that's -- forgive me. that's not funny. it's not funny what dick cheney did. it's an insult to the men and women he put at risk all these years. cheney was criticizing obama for not having the right exit strategy in iraq when it's clear
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that cheney's exit strategy was not to have one. >> we'll leave it there. thanks to all of you. appreciate it. tens of thousands of central american children are flooding the border in the southern united states. and president obama had this to say. >> our message is don't send your children unaccompanied on trains or through a bunch of smugglers. 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'll get sent back. more importantly, they may not make it. a little known immigration law is causing controversy and questions about whether billions of dollars of money is being wasted. >> reporter: this is aloy federal detention center in arizona. every day in america, 34,000 immigrants who arrived in the
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u.s. illegally are held at this and similar facilities. 34,000 is not a random number. it's a number mandated by congress as a way to track deportation. fill the beds at a cost of $2 billion a year to taxpayers. >> it's a misallocation of resources. >> the system is broken because a percentage of immigrants are detabed, it appears simply to meet the bed quota. >> had you been in trouble with the law? >> no. >> reporter: she was working as a grocery cashier when deputies raided the store and detained her. >> i showed up every day. if they asked me to work overtime i'd work overtime, holidays. i was there because i needed the money. >> reporter: she has been in the u.s. since she was three. prosecutors charged her with
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criminal impersonation for using someone else's social security to get paid. she was shipped to eloy pending removal. an immigration officer came to her cell. >> she is like you're going home? >> mexico? >> she is like, no, here in arizona. >> she was released. no deportation but no legal status either. her immigration case is now low priority. >> you are in that twilight zone. >> are this girl came to the country illegally as a child working as pool attendent when she arrested for a broken taillight. >> what was the center like? >> it's scary. it's cold in there. it's scary. you don't know how long you are going to stay there. >> reporter: all the detainees
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entered the u.s. illegally and spend months fighting to remain. but those with violent criminal records are fast tracked for deportation. >> the men are level two and level three detainees. the ones in blue are convicted of drug trafficking, sexual assaults and theft. the facility is paid $120 per person per day. figures show the two largest centers together made a half billion last year from government contracts. the same day we visited eloy we were given access to a transport plane operated by a private company. all these men crossed the border illegally, most were at eloy half were felons. >> this is a flight from arizona to texas where they pick up more
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people and on to honduras. >> there is no guarantee some of these men won't try to return to the united states. as for romero, she will stay in the u.s. and may no longer qualify for legal status after pleading guilty to using someone else's identity at her job. immigration is the focus of our cnn film this weekend. we hear the story of living in america illegally, "documented" airs sunday at 9:00. a former ceo says america's business leaders need to be open about being gay. richard quest weighs in next. a fitness plan for your baby. isn't it great that they are fat and juicy? apparently not. they need a plan. this is kathleen. setting up the perfect wedding day begins with arthritis pain and two pills.
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get the mercedes-benz you've been burning for at the summer event, going on now at your authorized mercedes-benz dealer. hurry, before this opportunity cools off. ♪ when folks think about wthey think salmon and energy. but the energy bp produces up here creates something else as well: jobs all over america. engineering and innovation jobs. advanced safety systems & technology. shipping and manufacturing. across the united states, bp supports more than a quarter million jobs. when we set up operation in one part of the country, people in other parts go to work. that's not a coincidence. it's one more part of our commitment to america.
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the back of an suv, left to die. seven hours in the car. police say they have evidence this is not an accident. the crime that shocked a city and a nation. five teens sent to jail for raping a jogger in new york city. it was a crime they never committed. you will hear from two of the so-called central park five on the settlement and picking up the pieces and moving on with their lives. also the latest out of iraq. armed u.s. drones flying the skies of baghdad. >> we'll see you in a few minutes. new york city is gearing up to hold the oldest and largest gay pride event this weekend. and a man is calling on gay business leaders to come out of the closet. john brown was publicly outed by a tabloid in 2007 and he was
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forced to step down from his position at bp. he wants to prevent scenes like this from "six feet under." >> check out that. >> you can't have that. >> i could if i wanted to. >> in your dreams you could. >> i've had finer than that. >> i'd definitely tap that. >> now brown has written a new book. he sat down with richard quest to talk about it. >> that scene with the three guys in the suits sitting around. the guy who is gay feels uncomfortable and has to play along. human rights campaign recently
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did a study. most workers hide. >> absolutely. >> even now. >> and what john browne says in his book is that there are a variety of reasons why they do it. obviously it's family. it's cultural. i'm talking about modern society in the west. we're not talking about the countries where it might be illegal. he wasn't a not as good a ceo as he might have been because he was busy hiding things. >> i'm not going to do any scuttlebutt tonight and throw any names out there but everybody knows the rumors and everybody knows who. listen to what john brown actually had to say, though, about the whole question of being gay right at the top of the corporate ladder.
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>> to all straight people of the world, that's most of the ceos of course, because there is i think no openly gay ceo in the top 700 companies in the s&p index. to give them advice on how they could make the environments in their companies much better. >> you've been asked a million times do you think you could have become a ceo of bp if you had been out. i want to turn that slightly differently and ask you, do you think you would have been a better ceo if you had been out? >> i think i would have had better relationships with people. >> you went through this? >> yeah, absolutely. john brown is right. i'm with you, i spent an enormous amount of time hiding the fact that i'm gay. you worry about what your family thinks, what your friends think, what will your colleagues think, what will you think. will you still watch the program if you know that the precenter
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is gay? you go on about it. it's exhausting, erin. >> because you don't realize, probably, until you're in that position, right, how much of life and office conversation is about things like that or what you're doing on your free time or who you're spending it with. >> what is krurl and what brown makes the point and i agree completely is the ceo down has to make it clear it's okay. not only that, you need role models which is why it's important people like myself do speak out on these questions. it's one of those things, you have to do it. you don't particularly like it but you do it and then you got to make it clear. my experience was it was in big event. half the people said we know already. the other half said so what? it makes no difference. i accept. i'm living in london or new york in a metropolitan environment different from some parts of the world or this country. >> when it finally happened, did anything change?
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for those who are ceos watching, say i'm afraid, i'll be judged. did you feel that, any judgment? >> my biggest fear is i would be spent on a story like a riot or fire or hurricane and there would be one bed in the room we have to share and someone would say i'm not staying in that room with him because he's gay. that was my fear. you know what i would say to that camera man or producer that wouldn't do that? you know what i would say? there is the floor. make yourself comfortable. don't mind me. >> you should, richard. >> i can tell you it's happened. i've been to hurricanes, floods, riots, it's no big deal but i understand that object total gut wrenching toe curling fear that it's all going to go horribly wrong. >> all right. richard, thank you very much and of course, the book sounds fascinating to read. out front next, baby got biceps. yeah, that little girl.
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inhale this. >> today we do a workout. >> reporter: even if lily ann the instructor. >> whoa yeah, this is hard. >> reporter: is only six going on seven months. this tennessee baby's work out is over half a million reps on youtube. >> superman, raise your feet up. and she does them all the time. you put her on the ground and she's up and down and making those sweet noises and we love it. >> reporter: they have four kids but it's their youngest who is burning up the internet with her exercise routine. call them pushups or planks oreo ga cobra, whatever you call them, lily ann does eight of them. >> get up. nice job, nice job, yeah, yeah, do the swim. do the swim. >> reporter: staring into the ipad that's recording them. >> to the left. >> reporter: so dad can mimic
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his daughter. already fans are raving about the results they have gotten from the lily ann workout. i lost ten pounds just watching this. >> i cannot verify that. >> reporter: if nothing else, this baby inspired workout will strengthen your awe muscles. >> superman, head to the ground, to the left. to the right. this way. i love you. >> reporter: followed by a touch and then a tickle. can we see her biceps? can we see them? >> yeah, look at those things. >> reporter: the workout is over in a peer minute and a half, never fear, coming soon the lily ann workout two. >> this time, you know, it's going to be a little tougher. >> reporter: just think, a workout instructor before she even learned. ♪ your abcs, come on, come on
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>> reporter: shoes e's doing th loco motion with daddy. >> all right. i love that. it was inspired lily ann. i tried to get my son nile to do pushups. we have his first attempt for you. look, he's good. that's balance for you, people. that's balance for you, people. anderson starts now. -- captions by vitac -- www.vitac.com the crime shocked a nation, the rape and beating of a jogger and what follow sd a frenzy that sent five innocent teenagers to prison. everyone convicted the central park five. i'll talk to two of them about the settlement they finally reached with the city a quarter century after the fact today, in fact. also tonight, what we're learning about justin harris, the father of the center of what was either a
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