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tv   New Day Saturday  CNN  July 5, 2014 3:00am-6:01am PDT

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like a lot of modern medicine, it's an amazing thing. >> you just got to teach your kids that you're the number one fan of theirs. and teach them to listen to you. no one out there is for their good like you are. it doesn't matter what they say. there's too many con artists today.
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i miss all this. i was sleeping, byes way'sthe east river lit up by 50,000 pounds of explosives to the delight of tens of thousands who watched. >> and the big show at the national mall in honor of the 200th anniversary of the st star-spangled banner. back in september actually of 1814. the new arrangement debut featuring new additions, and choirs and cannons. beautiful. >> and in miami, festivities there, too. 75,000 gathering to watch a
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massive fireworks display at the biltmore hotel. and the navy pier, there as well. more than 100,000 people came out for the annual fireworks display. if you didn't make it in there, don't worry. there will be another show tonight. >> and here in atlanta, the city skyline, annual display at centennial park. the one that woke me up. this woke me up. i was like, who is shooting outside? then i had that moment of, oh, it's the fourth of july. they're fireworks. they are like -- shootin'! but they weren't. all right. don't let the clear skies last night fool you, though. arthur, downgraded to a tropical storm but it's still posing a threat for high winds and rains into eastern canada. >> the storm may have passed over the eastern seaboard, but its aftermath remains. if you're headed out to the beach this weekend, watch out for those rip currents. they can be very powerful.
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of course, deadly. >> alexandra field gets us caught up on the storm right now. >> reporter: from north carolina all the way up to the northeast, high winds, big waves, drenching rain and now powerful rip tides. arthur lost force while heading north, but it was enough to leave a mark. 100 mile-per-hour winds and 35-foot waves reported at the peak of the storm, when arthur made landfall thursday night over north carolina. >> we are just absolutely getting slammed right now by arthur. you can see the wind guchts real gusted really picked up and the rain is just coming down. >> reporter: though arrange arthur had more bark than bite, thousands were left in the dark. >> blew a lot harder, emily. we didn't have a lot of weather this time, we were fortunate. >> reporter: by friday, the hurricane 2 was down graded but turned deep into the atlantic and today nova scotia is feeling
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its effect. >> how's that vacation going so far? >> it was going pretty good until a few hours ago. >> tough conditions? >> yeah. not too, too, bad, but you're kind of stuck inside. can't really do anything outside. >> reporter: the first hurricane of the season, coinciding with the busiest travel week of the summer busted some holiday plans. prepared for a washout, boston moved up its annual fourth of july celebration. the fireworks went off a day early. in washington, d.c., the fast-moving storm cleared out just in time for a friday night light show. ♪ but there are big concerns about what's left in arthur's wake along the eastern seaboard, possible rip currents. the national weather service calls the spurts of back-flowing water, the worst danger at the beach. >> even though many of the beaches are open and we're still evaluating some of the outer bank beaches, please, listen to
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lifeguards. look at the warning flags. >> reporter: alexandra field, cnn. all right. so let's go ahead and bring in meteorologist karen maginnis for the latest on tropical storm arthur. >> karen, good morning. now downgraded, just about an hour ago. >> exactly. we received our latest update from the national hurricane center, and it is at tropical storm intensity and it's racing towards the canadian maritimes. we've got some thunderstorms developing across the midwest, but until then, take a look at what's happening with arthur. now it is pummeling some sections of new england. all the way from portland and extending into nova scotia and halifax, and for prince edward island, and boston. we're seeing two, three, four inches of rainfall. the flash flooding potential persists across a good portion of maine, but flash flood warnings and watches. you'll see some high winds, but that threat for the rip current is going to be very great. up and down the eastern
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seaboard. if you're wondering what a rip current is, essentially it's going to be the water drawing you back in. so you'll struggle trying to get out of the water. we have to remember safety items, and that is to just to kind of follow the shoreline and eventually you'll make your way in, but it can be quite powerful, and very, very dangerous. all right. as we go into the forecast, you're probably wondering. can you salvage the weekend after arthur? a ridge of high pressure dominating the weather feature along the eastern seaboard, once we get rid of arthur. this morning, waking up to pretty good thunderstorms in omaha. strong storms, and also into iowa. we'll keep you updated. another update in another hour. back to you guys. >> karen maginnis, thank you. breaking overnight, another flight carrying illegal immigrants from texas arrived in southern california. this is the second one this week. the migrants reportedly boarded three buss to a processing
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center in san ysidro district of san diego. >> protesters forced another fleet of buses to turn back. the latest flashpoint in a broiling national debate. >> reporter: alison and victor, immigration and customs enforcement kept undocumented immigrants in this town. the concern, security. the anticipation, they may arrive on the holiday and why protesters did as well [ chanting "usa" ] >> reporter: celebrating the fourth of july. >> stop illegal immigration. >> reporter: by using the right of assembly to scream at each other. separated by police, this is the second time pro and anti-immigration forces faced off at the marietta patrol station. this week's flashpoint for the immigration debate. earlier in the week, they blocked the entrance to the station. buses of undocumented immigrants
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from central america were forced to turn around. in texas an influx of undocumented migrants, many of them children, crammed facilities. there railroad been beds, bathrooms or food. 680,000 children without parents expected to cross without parents earlier this year. to cope the government is putting them on buses and planes to nearby towns and processing them in smaller towns, like marietta. a second round of buses was anticipated on july 4th. marietta protesters came on this independence day to say, they're not welcome. >> we're not going to stand for it. that's just how it is. there's thousands and millions of other people who have done the right way, but for people to just come in here and ask for a free handout, that's my money. >> reporter: migrant rights supporters say on this holiday marietta should recall its own history of its birth and that
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it's a nation of immigrants. >> from 1800 up to 1900, now crises of's hassing other places and trying to come through the borders, suddenly it's different because we have divisions based on be race, language and chauvinism. >> obey the law! obey the law! >> reporter: while both sides engaged in plenty of free speech, the protest was relatively peaceful. [ chanting "usa" ] though several were arrested. the buses never did show up. if they do, protesters promise, they'll be here to greet them. >> out in marietta, california. thank you. very passionate. >> not going away anytime soon. this is going to be difficult to watch. warning you, shocking to see. video of a woman in california being punched in the face by a highway patrolman. cnn has been working on getting the story behind it, and we're going to tell you what we've
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discovered. and anger boiling over in the mideast after the murder of a palestinian teen. dozens injured in violent protests including our own ben wedeman. we'll talk to him, next's really... so our business can be on at&t's network for $175 dollars a month? yup. all five of you for $175. our clients need a lot of attention. there's unlimited talk and text. we're working deals all day. you get 10 gigabytes of data to share. what about expansion potential? add a line anytime for 15 bucks a month. low dues... great terms... let's close.
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. so we showed a bit of the video a few moments ago, and the question is, what is going on here? that california highway patrol officer we showed a moment ago is on administrative leave this morning. if you didn't see the video a driver recorded him punching a woman in the face over and over again. >> the woman was taken to the hospital and the incident under investigation. sara sidner is looking into the case for us. sara. >> reporter: victor and alison, the witness says he was in very heavy traffic, basically at a standstill when all of this happened right in front of him. video from a california freeway shot by a driver stunned by what he was seeing unfold. a woman being punched over and over and over again by a california highway patrolman. >> you see it, heard it, it was like, thump, thump, thump, and then you see her head bouncing, bam, bam, on the concrete. >> reporter: how many times did he hit her? >> i seen 11 on the video.
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he took more shots that than, i think around 15 shots, to her head. >> reporter: punching? >> punching. not just jabs. these are hooks. those are lights out punches. those aren't like taps. >> reporter: the highway patrol says the woman posed a danger to herself and other drivers because she was walking within traffic lanes at times and when asked to stop, she continued ignoring the officer's command and ultimately she becomes physically combative, it says. >> the tape only shows a small part of what transpired. there were events that led up to this, until all that's collected and put into perspective, we aren't going to be able to make a determination. >> reporter: the eyewitness who goes by the name david diaz, says he saw exactly what led up to it, before he started recording. >> you see the video. the first thing you hear is me laughing. the reason why is, before we got the video starting, they were playing, like a ring around the
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rosy behind that red truck. it's a grown man and grown women running around the truck. kind of like a benny hill moment. right? >> reporter: she's avoiding him? >> avoiding him. almost like when we laugh when someone runs on the baseball field. >> reporter: she eventually started walking towards the officer, and that is when the takedown began. >> he grabs her. resisting, in terms of natural reaction, and then he then grabs her, throws her to the floor and then gets on top of her, which then you would think, okay, he's he's going to wrap her up, call it another day in los angeles. no. this wasn't the case. >> reporter: the c hp says the woman who carried no i.d. was taken to the hospital for a physical and mental evaluation. >> the report indicated the individual was not injured and the officer didn't notice any injuries on the individual. >> reporter: diaz has a hard time believing that, after seeing and hearing this -- >> she didn't put up restraint. she did what anyone else would
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do when getting pounded, to go like this. to go like this. and now saying, oh, restrained? excuse. given too many excuses. no more rationalizing this. we need to stop this. that's why i posted the video. >> we're going to make a determination as to what transpired in this situation, and we will do the right thing. >> reporter: the officer involved has been put on administrative duty while the case is investigated. witness diaz has not spoken with anyone from the california highway patrol and that if they call him, he will discuss what he saw with them. alison, victor? >> sara sidner, thank you. amazing this whole thing was recorded and they have a witness who saw everything. >> because clearly, that video does not correspond with the report that the woman was not injured and the officer did not notice any injuries. clearly a lot of questions there. we'll stay on top of it. >> certainly. now to the mideast, juice rimm on edge. more than 60 people injured.
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>> thousands marched in the funeral for a palestinian teenager snatched off the street and killed. cnn senior international correspondent ben wedeman joins us now live from jerusalem, and, ben, we know that you were hurt in the clashes yourself. tell us what happened and how are you? >> reporter: yes, i'm fine. it was really just scratch to the head, lots of blood, but not too much pain. quickly taken care of. now, the situation here is calm at the moment. keep in mind, it's the holy month of ramadan. people are fasting from sunrise to sunset. so we don't usually expect any sort of problems until the afternoon, but with tensions still high, the possibility of further clashes is also high. [ chanting ]
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fou mourners carried the body home. dubbed the known martyr. the israeli police are investigating but is widely believe to have been revenge for the murder of three israeli teenagers kidnapped last month. israeli police blocked up a entrances to the palestinian neighborhood where the teen lived, but that didn't stop thousands from attending the funeral. emotions here further em flamed by images captured by a resident and broadcast on palestinian television that appeared to show israeli police beating and kicking a youth on the ground. cnn has learned the youth is a 15-year-old, a u.s. citizen. the funeral was followed by more clashes. by nightfall friday, more than 60 protesters and 13 policemen had been injured.
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as well as this correspondent, hit in the forehead with a rubber bullet. a minor wound promptly treated by medics. while jerusalem smolders, israel and hamas and gaza continue to exchange missile strikes and air strikes. in april, the u.s.-led peace process collapsed. july and a far darker process is in full swing. and we are also getting reports of protests and clashes. not in jerusalem or the west bank, but within israel itself in predominantly palestinian-arab communities. >> ben wedeman, thank you. all right. some haunting new images to show you of the sunken "costa cordia." the ocean liner that ran aground off the coast of italy in january of 2012. italian police just released
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this footage recorded by divers there. >> more than 4,000 passengers onboard. 32 people died. if you'd like to see more of the video, just go to cnn.com. imagine this, being underwater for 31 days? is that even possible? actually, yeah, it is, and we're going to talk to the guy who did it. fabian cousteau. >> and it's the fourth of july weekend. hot dog, steaks, burgers on the grill. tasty mac and cheese yesterday. how about a python? we'll tell you how this happened. >> oh! let me get this straight... [ female voice ] yes? lactaid® is 100% real milk? right. real milk. but it won't cause me discomfort. exactly, no discomfort, because it's milk without the lactose. and it tastes? it's real milk! come on, would i lie about this? [ female announcer ] lactaid®. 100% real milk. no discomfort. and for more 100% real dairy treats you'll 100% enjoy
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-- hot dogs and buns, the future champion of the world, joey chestnut! >> he goes by "jaws." joey chestnut. the coney island hot dog eating champ once again. i cannot look at the video. he scarfed down 61 hot dogs in just ten minutes. >> yeah, but i was just telling you, being there is different. the heat, the smell of the dogs. oh, watching this guy do this -- yeah. okay. but i have a real crowd pleaser, victor. he got down on one knee and proposed to his girlfriend of three years. she said, yes, but apparently he did this before he scarfed down the hot dogs. the what happened if she said
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no? would he have gorged himself more because of self-pity? >> here's the thing. i'm glad he did it first. can you imagine the guy with all the, like, meat and filler and bread? >> something tells me she's got to get used to that. >> i wonder if he does that at home? does he eat like that at the table? >> i hope not. hey, look at this. a 12-foot python. yes. this is in a miami neighborhood. at least near miami. from a cnn affiliate there that reports the folks there trapped the snake inside a barbecue grill. >> but, hey, dinner? >> no, no! >> why not? they happen to keep it in the grill until police came. apparently caught it just in time. a boy saw it eyeing his neighbor's cat. after that, they just cooked it for dinner. i'm joking. >> send all comments to alison kosik. ah, brazil. >> brazil. the host nation's top scorer
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will miss the rest of the tournament. >> neymar fracturing bone in his spine during yesterday's game. more in today's "bleacher report." is this really true? >> you know, when we saw it, it looked pretty bad, and yes, it's true. sad news for brazil. it was a party last night after the host nation knocked off colombia 2-1 in the quarter finals but the celebration turned bittersweet when the news ar neymar came out. if there was a guy brazil didn't want to lose, the man wearing the number 10 jersey. kneed in the back as the match was winding down and knew it wouldn't be pleasant. writhing in pain. immediately stretchered off and taken to the hospital. brazil's semifinal oh popponent probably licking their chops. wonder, who will step up in his place? four goals, one assist in the tournament. an intriguing matchup in the women's wimbledon final.
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it will be the 20-year-old bouchard first-ever grand slam title. won once before in 2011 and seems comfortable on the wimbledon grass but she's becoming a star before our eyes. the super bowl of bicycle racing underway today. this year the tour de france will actually start in england and it's not unusual for the race to pass through neighboring countries. two years ago the tour began in belgium. the 21-state race finishes in paris july 27th, and some fantastic scenery on that. i would love to ride my bike through there. no. i probably couldn't keep up, though. >> you don't need 21 stages of it. nice afternoon, we got it. >> stop off, get a croissant somewhere. >> definitely that would slow you down. >> right. >> thank you. a siris radio show host, fired. and a case so many are
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talking about. the kid who died unfortunately in that hot suv. new questions about not one but two insurance policies on that 22-month-old's life. this is the first power plant in the country to combine solar and natural gas at the same location. during the day, we generate as much electricity as we can using solar. at night and when it's cloudy, we use more natural gas. this ensures we can produce clean electricity
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whenever our customers need it. ♪ really... so our business can be on at&t's network for $175 dollars a month? yup. all five of you for $175. our clients need a lot of attention. there's unlimited talk and text. we're working deals all day. you get 10 gigabytes of data to share. what about expansion potential? add a line anytime for 15 bucks a month. low dues... great terms... let's close.
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introducing at&t mobile share value plans... ...with our best-ever pricing for business. the porter was so incredibly... careful... careless... with our bags. and the room they gave us -- it was... beautiful. a broom closet. but the best part but the worst part was the shower. my wife drying herself with the... egyptian cotton towels... shower curtain... defined that whole vacation for her. don't just visit new york. visit tripadvisor new york. [ male announcer ] with millions of reviews, a visit to tripadvisor makes any destination better. bottom of the hour now. welcome back. i'm alison kosik. >> and i'm victor kblblack.
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what you need to know, about 90 minutes ago, arthur downgraded to a tropical storm, but still a threat to the east coast. the national hurricane center is warning of possible coastal flooding along cape cod and high winds in nova scotia. last night arthur drenched north carolina. knocking out power to thousands from nantucket to boston. rescheduled some fourth of july celebrations, too. and arriving in southern california, immigrants, boarded buses in this processing center in the san ysidro area of california. and protesters this week forced another fleet of buses carrying immigrants to turn back. three, anthony consumy, a part of the siris radio show, fired for a racially charged rant on twitter. apparently attacked by an african-american woman in times
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square. he sent at series of profane laced tweets calling the woman among other things an animal, ranted about violence and it was deleted overnight but promised to address the story next week. and new orleans police say they've arrested the alleged bourbon street shooter. charged with first-degree murder saying he opened fire in the crowded new orleans clubbing area. one woman was killed. number five, convicted killer joran van der sloot is a newlywed and about to be a father. he's in prison, but remember, the laws are different there in peru. his attorney says van der sloot married a pregnant peruvian woman yelled at the prison, is serving a 28-year-old sentence for killing stephany flores back in 2010. when he is expected to get out of prison he's expected to be
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extradited to the u.s. for trial in the disappearance of alabama teen natalee holloway. >> apparently they can have visits. and according to warrants, the father whose toddler died after being left in a hot car made comments to family members regarding a $27,000 life insurance policy he had on his son. >> of course, we're getting this new information right after the hearing, where prosecutors described ross as -- ross harris, rather, as an unfaithful husband in financial trouble, even alleged he spent his day sexting with a half dozen women, including one under the age of 18. 16 at the time, i think the detective said. the whole time his 22-month-old son cooper was left to die in the back seat of his suv. let's bring in defense attorney paige pate now with more on
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this. we've been talking about this nonstop since i started covering it and you came in to talk about it. when we hear about these ex is-thi is -- sexts and the underaged girl, what is this accomplishing for the state? >> two things. number one, getting the public to realize this is a bad character and using the bad character evidence to try to taint or push public opinion away from him. i don't think we're going to see anymore online petitions to not charge ross harris. the second thing is, i think it's laying the groundwork for the possibility, the possibility, that the district attorney could pursue a death penalty charge. now, they're on the clock now. they've held him without bond and have 90 days to determine if they're going to indict imhad, present it to the grand jury and at the arraignment they have to make the decision if they're going to charge the death penalty. >> with all of these horrific details coming out and media attention, the tide has certainly turned.
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it certainly began differently with a lot of empathy and sympathy for this guy. as a defense attorney, how do you prepare for this case in the public yipe? ho do you defend against it when it almost seems like he's convicted already? >> a lot of people want to go ahead and close the book on him. after hearing the evidence at the probable cause hearing, a lot of evidence. it's a hard case to win. the first thing the defense attorney has to do, though, tell your client to stop talking. i apparently these new warrants are based on information that he's trying to arrange the recovery of the proceeds on the life insurance policies while he's in custody. i cannot think of any better evidence for the state to show motive than trying to get the money from the life insurance policy. so tell him to be quiet. the number one thing. >> the warrant says that, as it relates to these two policies. one is $2,000, through his employer, home depot. the second $25,000, according to the investigator on the stand was taken out in november of 2012, months after the child was
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born essential willy. . does it matter when he started to talk about this, if he asked the family before the child's death, after the child's death, when in custody or if it was months ago? >> i think it does matter. obviously, the clo ess closer io the incident, the more guilty he appears. there is an explanation. we'll hear from the defense once they review all the evidence. they need to put forth some theory. why do this, other than to kill his child? >> yes. why would someone take out a life insurance policy on their 22-month-old kid? why? >> i think a long time ago it made sense financially. a big whole life policy, maybe an investment for the child. in this case, i think the circumstances point to a bad motive, unimportantly. >> for so long we were asking are where's the defense, the family, the friends? michaela pereira of "new day" during the week had a conversation with someone that says this is just not the ross harris they know. let's listen.
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>> before this tragedy i never heard anybody say a bad thing about him. just an overall great guy. >> reporter: i can imagine you were quite surprised when you heard the news. tell me about the day you found out about this. >> i was scrolling through facebook and i saw people that i know posting about it. we were all in shock, because we a all knew him. still disbelief, not knowing what to think. >> so does this help the defense or does this reinforce the double-life native? >> it reinforces the narrative the state wants to use. another thing about this type of public information, these character witnesses, i think, are going to have a hard time coming back to court to support him, because they're finding out things about his life i am certain they did not know. this is something the state often does in these cases so you don't see as many character witnesses when it comes time for trial. >> talk about his wife who
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showed little if no emotion in court, i can't understand that. can she be, chaed in this? where does she fit in this? >> she could be charged. i don't think they have enough to charge her with felony murder or cruelty to children. as the investigation continues, statements to day care, very strange. her conversations with her husband while questioned, about, did you say too much? that's very incriminating evidence. once they look at all of the history, on the computers, the financial information, if it appears that the two of them are trying to get together to now collect on the insurance proceeds, that's strong evidence. >> i wonder how much his defense attorney knew about all that was uncovered in this, during this hearing? because there's no discovery before probable cause. >> exactly right. you're right. as a defense lawyer your client's usually doesn't tell you everything. i've been in the chair many times, you want to go somewhere. you can't. you've got to stand's strong. i'm sure some of it is new.
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at the same time, his defense attorney, longtime friends with the prosecutor. he's worked in the d.a. office before. i would be surprised if he didn't at least get some heads up, this is what we have. >> thanks. an intriguing case that's happening. every day more is trickling out. more and more. thank you so much. >> thank you. joan rivers, doing what she does best. opening her mouth. letting controversy fly. hear what she's saying about the obamas that's not sitting so well. wait until you hear what she said to cnn anchor from the from the fredricka whitfield. we've got it all for you next. take 4 advil in a day which is 2 aleve... ...for all day relief. "start your engines" hello! three grams daily of beta-glucan... a soluable fiber from whole grain oat foods like cheerios can help lower cholesterol.
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who needs the "philly 4th of july jam" -- the fourth of july when you have joan rivers, the comedienne. >> a photographer asked if she believes the united states would ever have a gay or female president. here's the response. >> and do you think that the country will see the first, the united states will see the first gay president or the first woman president? >> we've had it with obama. let's just calm down. >> got it. >> you know michelle is a tramp. >> sorry. she's a what? >> a transgenocidetransgender. we all know it. >> there's that.
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>> and you think, there are your headlines for the day, joan. no. she shocks us all over again. >> here she was promoting her own book when peta supporters asked why she still wears furs, including wearing one on the cover of her book. rivers seemed none too pleased with the question. >> i will tell you why. oh, shut up. you don't know what the [ bleep ] you're talking about. all the fur i wear has been killed over the years, and those furs rely in a cellar and had gotten to go to the opera. that's number one. number two, if you're wearing -- i totally agree with you, there are also other issues, but i do agree. actually -- peta is right. i also work very hard. i have four rescued animals. >> all righty. trying to backtrack from that.
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our league fredricka whitfield got to sit down with joan rivers. >> and asked about criticism she's been getting over those furs. look at this. >> this whole interview is becoming a defensive interview. >> no. >> are you wearing leather shoes? >> yes. >> then shut up. i don't wear to hear. you're wearing you are if. >> i'm not an activist. >> you're eating chicken, you're eating meat. i don't want to hear this nonsense. come to me with a paper belt and i'll talk to you. >> but you did hear it in some of those press conferences. people were upset and you're saying, no way. >> i'm going. i really am going, because awe you have done is negative. all you have done is negative. >> no! >> you know, i think the difference is, i think if you put yourself out there as somebody who, let's say you're all for peta and you say, i rescue dogs, i don't wear this or that and then you wear it, there's the hypocrisy in it. her attacking fredricka is a little -- ah -- >> joan rivers has been doing
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interviews since -- literally, before color television, and if you can't take a question about your coat, then should you continue to do these interviews? the questions are going to be tough sometimes. listen -- >> she may be just trying to sell her book. >> the book comes out july 1 st. came out july 1st. >> tune in at 11:00. fred's full interview airs when she anchors the "cnn newsroom" right here on cnn. let me ask you this -- do you think you could live under water for 31 days? >> no way. i'm claustrophobic. >> that gets me. the space. you're about to meet a man who just came back to the surface from his month-long stint underwater. and you've got to hear the big time hollywood names that went down to visit him. and after winning the wimbledon men's singles final, andy murray had to chance to go home to scotland and sharp his
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success with the people who mean the most. the champion is also investing in his hometown community, having purchased this house, transforming it into a luxury 15-suite, five-star travel destination. >> i was sitting in this room just over a year ago and there was bats in the roof, and, it's changed a bit since then. came here for my brother's wedding, and about six months, aer yao later, we're told the hotel was going out of business, and the property was for sale, and i mean, it's five minutes from my house and i thought it would be a nice thing to do. >> reporter: how involved have you been in the revamp and what role has your family played as well? >> i've seen a lot of the interiors, looked over a lot of them with my girlfriend who's been back and forth here. my mum's been up here quite a lot and a lot of my family, they live around here. they've also been coming up more
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i'm fabian cousteau and we
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are living underwater in the only marine laboratory. >> fabian cousteau during 30-plus days under water. >> cousteau and the team during their living 63 feet down and we have cousteau now. welcome back to the surface. >> good morning, victor. good morning, alison. how are you? >> good morning. >> so did you have to get -- i guess when you got back on land, are you a little uneasy? is it difficult to walk? >> well, it's been an epic, exhausting, surprising and very rewarding expedition. the first time we pierced the surface, it was a little surprising. you know? there was the air on your face. the sun, and then there was a lack of sound. a lack of activity. it was only human beings on a boat waiting for me, rather than sea life everywhere around me.
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>> so your underwater lab gave you and your fellow aquanauts a chance to spend long hours on the ocean floor, long hours of scuba dives. did it lead to a change in ocean research? could we see more aquanauts living under water and first of all, tell us the significance of the 31 days as opposed to maybe just 30 days? >> the 31st day is to mark symbolically the next big step in ocean exploration. mission 31 is based on my grandfather's conshelf ii experience. as far as mission 31 is concerned, it felt extraordinarily rewarding and an insatiable curiosity from the general public, from what we can feel, from not only the media coverage and news coverage and the classroom and the general outreach we've been able to make during that 31 days.
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>> the mission of mission 31, climate change, pollution on marine life. what did you learn? >> the science was very solid, of course, and we had some partnerships with northeastern university and fiu, and we certainly concentrated along those topics, but we have to look at it through the lens of adventure and exploration, which this truly was, and also engage the general public that may not know about these topics or have an efinty to them to have them fall in love with the ocean and support it. so successful, i'm seriously considering creating an ocean learning center in florida to be able to bolster and continue on the mission 31 mission. >> so you actually had visitors who wanted to come join you for a little bit? i hear from hbo's aun tra russia? >> absolutely. amazing. visitors such as nasa astronaut
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play anderson. ian summerholder from "vampire diaries." the list goes on and on. it was just an amazing and honor. i was honored by all of these visitors who supported us is for mission 31. >> so what was the toughest part of your 31 days under water? >> i think the toughest part, while -- that's a difficult one. there were a lot of tough parts. being away from friends and family, obviously, is one of the of you iter ones, for many of us. beyond this, coming back to the surface, because the clock was ticking. it was only a month under water and we were just scratching the surface of learning about our oceanic frontier. if i had another 31 days i think maybe we could do twice as much, but we were able to do three years of research in 31 days which is pretty amazing. >> wow. >> definitely amazing. an amazing mission. fabian cousteau, thank you.
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>> pleasure. thank you all. . a few phrases at you. see if you can recognize. man hands. >> yes, yes. >> the low topper, puppy shirt. ugly naked another one. >> there are lots of phrases brought to you by "seinfeld." you know the show. today celebrates, or marks, rather, 25 years of the show about nothing. you know. yada, yada, yada. >> yada yada. really... so our business can be on at&t's network for $175 dollars a month? yup. all five of you for $175. our clients need a lot of attention. there's unlimited talk and text. we're working deals all day. you get 10 gigabytes of data to share. what about expansion potential? add a line anytime for 15 bucks a month. low dues... great terms... let's close. introducing at&t mobile share value plans... ...with our best-ever pricing for business.
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you need something to make you feel old? great. i got something for you. >> sure! >> today marks the 25th anniversary since "seinfeld" premiered on nbc. >> and initinischelle turner re. >> reporter: july 5, 1989. nbc debuts a new sitcom built around stand-up comedian jerry seinfeld. >> wouldn't it be great if you could ask a woman what she's been thinking. >> reporter: first called "the seinfeld chronicles" the title shortened later to just "seinfeld." >> the show is about -- nothing!
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>> well, it's not about nonothing. >> it was about the kinds of things that stand-up comedians talked about a lot, but that sitcoms generally didn't. issues of, how one eats snack foods. >> did he just double dip that chip? >> issues of shrinkage. >> i'm really sorry. [ laughter ] >> i was in the pool! i was in a pool! >> reporter: master of your domain, perhaps the most memorable episode "seinfeld" ever did. >> i'm out. >> well, that was fast. >> it changed television in that it gave us a whole new way of looking at the world. a whole new kind of comedy. >> i didn't say anything. >> like the start of alternative family comedies. >> people who are not roommates, don't live under the same roof,
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aren't related and don't even work in the same place. "seinfeld" establishes that, so that becomes completely the norm. >> now it's weird again. >> i think "friends" was obviously a young "seinfeld." >> get outta here! >> every successful new kind of show changes television, because itic mas a whole bunch of other stuff possible. >> my name's luis and he said to be here around two. >> he said? the doctor doesn't make appointments. >> "louis" is probably the closest to a modern day "seinfeld." "seinfeld" ended its run in . the series developed by the co-creator larry david. >> yada, yada, yada. . >> what's that? >> excuse me? >> reporter: "seinfeld's" characters live on, just as they were in syndication. still impacting tv and the
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culture. >> not just influences comedy writers, it kind of influenced everything. it's like, people's dialogue, people's references. >> we're not gay. not that there's anything wrong with that. >> he's just a dentist. >> yeah, and you're an antidentite. the man-zeer. get it? >> remember "seinfeld." the perfect show. >> somebody has b.o., the oh usually stays with the b. >> reporter: nischelle turner, cnn, new york. thank goodness for reruns. >> i love them. the muffin stump episode? remember that? >> so many memorable moments. >> christi loves that show. he moment to give that big, hello! >> thanks for starting your morning with us. your "new day" starts right
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now. we're not going to stand tore for it. that's how it is. there's thousands and millions who have done it the right way, but for people to just come in here and ask for a free handout, that's my money. >> these conversations happened with these females, of what nature? >> the most common term would be sexting. >> we believe in the sanctity of life are and continue to believe in the sanctity of life and the message is very clear. there has to be a response. good morning, everyone. i'm alison kosik in today for christi paul. >> i'm victor blackwell. it's 7:00 on the east coast. so much to talk about, "new day" saturday, even the threat of a hurricane could not keep the american spirit down. >> patriotic revelers from all around gathered to celebrate in new york. the east river lut up by 50,000 pounds of explosives to the
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delight of tens of you thats who gathered to watch. fireworks were even shot off the brooklyn bridge. >> washington now, the big show at the national mall in honor of the 200th anniversary of the star-spangled banner. a new arranged debuted, new additions, some choirs, canon nos as well. >> san francisco's famed fireworks display last night as crowds gathered at tourist host spot pier 39. >> and 100,000 gathered to watch near phoenix. clear skies there in the area. just hours after the first sandstorm, haboob, what it's called, after it blew there. >> and arthur has been downgraded this morning to a tropical storm but it's still posing a threat for high winds and rains into eastern canada. >> the storm may have passed over the eastern seaboard but its aftermath remains. headed to the beach this weekend, be careful of rib currents. they can be deadly. >> alexandra field at jones beach on, new york's long
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island. are you actually seeing that concern? >> alison, i think actually jones beach, people are relieved to see the sun shining on this holiday weekend. a lot of people thought they wouldn't make it to the beach. water conditions out here are actually looking really good. pretty calm out there according to lifeguards we've spoken to. even if it looks nice at the peach were, the national weather service saying be mindful of the flags the lifeguards put out there. water conditions can be really rough, even in the wake of arthur. from north carolina up to the northeast, high winds, big waves, drenching rain and now powerful rip tides. arthur lost force while heading north, but it was enough to leave a mark. 100 mile-per-hour winds and 35 foot waves reported at the peak of the storm. when arthur made landfall thursday night over north carolina. >> we are just absolutely
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getting slammed right now by arthur. you can see the wind gusts really picked up here and the rain is just coming down. >> reporter: though arthur had more bark than bite, north carolina took the brunt of the storm with some damage and thousands left in the dark. >> emily blew a lot harder than this one. this one, we were really fortunate. we didn't have a lot of weather this time. >> reporter: by friday, the category 2 hurricane was downgraded, urn it had deep into the atlantic and nova scotia and feeling its effects. >> how's vacation going so far? >> pretty good until a few hours ig a. >> tough conditions? >> yeah. not too, too, bad, but you're kind of stuck inside. can't really do anything outside. >> reporter: the first hurricane of the season coinciding with the busiest travel week of the summer, busted some holiday plans. prepared for a washout, boston moved up its annual fourth of july celebration. the fireworks went off a day
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early. in washington, d.c., the fast-moving storm cleared out just in time for a friday night light show. ♪ but there are big concerns about what's left in arthur's wake along the eastern seaboard, possible rip currents. the national weather service calls the spurts of back-flowing water, the worst danger at the beach. >> even though many of the beaches are open and we're still evaluating some of the out other bank beaches, please, listen to lifeguards. look at the warning flags. >> reporter: really important stuff there, alison and victor. sometimes you look out at the water, looks so tempting. you have no idea the rip tides are at plate. you get in the water and can feel the powerful force. at jones beach, on days with a serious current, 80% of rescues related to rip currents. how serious they are. yes, we're excited to get out here. yes excited to see the sun shining but it is something for people definitely to think about
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today. >> alexandra field in jones beach. thank you. bring in meteorologist karen maginnis for the latest on tropical storm arthur. the beautiful blue skies we just saw alexandra standing under can be deceiving about the water. certainly looks like a beautiful day in new york? >> and gradually improving, even in boston. right now kind of overcast and dreary. a little windy. you will experience rip current there as well, but we saw north carolina's coast battered for over eight hours, but as it raced off, arthur as a hurricane, as it raced off towards the northeast, now it's such an elongated system, it's in such colder water now, that it's losing a lot of its tropical characteristics. still in its wake, down east maine and extending northward into the canadian maritimes, could see substantial rainfall with gusty winds. off of bangor, 25 mile-an-hour winds out of the northwest. halifax, coming up from the southeast and wind gusts there
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reported this hour at 52 miles an hour. this is the way it looks kind of disorganized, the system, no clearly defined eye, with probably extra tropical characterist characteristics. winds associated with this now at 70 miles an hour. i dare say by our next report from the hurricane center, we'll see winds even weaker. but that's not to say all of the weather is quiet. certain up and down the eastern seaboard you have to worry about the rip currents and isolated showers. big storms rumbling across the great plains. we'll keep you updated on that and potential for severe weather there. >> thank you. breaking overnight, another flight carrying illegal immigrants from texas arrived in southern california. it's the second one this week. the passengers reportedly boarded three buses to a processing center in the san ysidro district of san diego. drivers steered clear of nearby marietta. protesters, we saw this, the first fleet of buses, forced to turn back.
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they returned on the fourth of july to stake their ground in what's become a broiling national debate that reaches all you the way to washington. >> joining us from the white house, what's the latest? >> reporter: alison and victor, good morning to you. you know, it's become a battleground from here's at the white house all the way to california, and that flight that landed was carrying about 100 immigrants last night when it landed in san diego and they specifically avoided going to the small town in california which, as we've seen over the last week, has not become a welcome place for these immigrants. last night protesters and counter protestors again squared off a heated debate, exchange that we've seen all week, and that kept up all last night. >> if we want to keep attracting the best and brightest from beyond our are shoulds we have to fix our immigration and pass immigration reform. we shouldn't beic maing it harder for the best are and brice brightest to come here and
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grow our economy here, we should be making it easier. >> that was president obama who, of course, is involved in this political debate here in washington, d.c. he attended that naturalization ceremony, 25 new american citizens took the oath of allegiance at the white house yesterday. the president said it is a powerful and moving background in this big debate over immigration reform. alison and victor? >> we know the president's schedule has him mid-week in texas to raise some money. texas govern every rec rick perry invited the president to visit the border there in texas. any response from the white house, any indication, if he will indeed do that? >> reporter: well, he might not be able to avoid it, victor, if the political pressure keeps up on him. the would us has said that republicans would be better served at focusing on passing comprehensive immigration reform rather than making these sort of invitations to the border. president obama, as you said, is going down for fund-raising.
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interesting to see wednesday when in texas if he manages to make a side trip to the boarder. >> although very unlikely, and that he and governor perry will be together at the border. we'll see what happens. there at the white house, thank you. this is the case that has intrigued the country, and it's an international story now. >> infuriated. >> yeah. >> the more details that emerge about the accused father in the hot car death, the more experts are saying this could be the trial of the year. . >> and sirius radio is down one shock jock. why half the opie & anthony radio team has been fired.
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prosecutors are painting a picture of the georgia man charged with murder in his son's hot car death as an unfaithful husband who wanted a child-free life. justin harris remains in jail after a jump denied him bond during his probable cause hearing on thursday. >> nick valencia joins us now with new information about the life insurance policies on this 22-month-old. >> reporter: essentially these new search warrants were released yesterday laying out the same narrative we heard at the bond hearing.
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into finances. speaking to justin ross harris what have you been up to in the weeks leading up to his child's death? we know he start add new business with friends to make money on the side. we also know he wracked up a $4,000 credit card debt. is this enough to say he had motive to kill his son? prosecutors are hoping that along with the me myriad of other thing. the new search warrants is this, victor. through the investigation, it says harris made comments to family and friends regarding a life insurance policy on cooper and what they need to do in order to file for it. two life insurance policies. one for $2,000 through the employer, home depot. the other for $25,000, the family signed in november 2012. supporter of harris maintain this is, of course, a tragic accident. prosecutors think it's something much more sinister. new to report also, toxicology and full autopsy. expecting those to come out. we don't know time line or eta, waiting on toxicology reports.
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did baby cooper, that 22-month-old, have anything in this system at the time of his death? that could lay out motive a little and a full autopsy on 22-month-old cooper. lots of questions still unanswered in the case. supporters have his back. i was at the funeral. hundreds stood up to clap. you've been following the story, and the courthouse full. >> we'll see if the people continue to come moving into the trial. >> that was before the hearing. >> it was before the hearing. learned a lot. we'll see if he still has support. >> thank you so much. bring in hln host jane velez-mitchell. >> talk about the life insurance policy. $27,000 on a child, and the 25 grand taken out months after he was born, november 2012, according to this investigator. unusual, jane? >> oh, yeah. it is so bizarre. first of all i have to say the idea that this guy in these circumstances would have the unmid gated gall to instruct
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relative how to cash in and collect his new son the life insurance policy, blows my mind and reveals much about his character. as we know, cops say this man told one of hicks sexting parter ins he had no conscience. -- no conscious. it reveals a fundamental lack of judgment on justin ross harris' part, like, how his behavior, his actions will be perceived. like he operates in an infantile, give me what i want attitude. good luck collecting insurance. insurance has a lot of things that void your policy. murder is the first that comes to mind. you've got to wonder about the mentality of this man, that he would make that decision in these extraordinary circumstances. and then what you point out. they got the policy, apparently a couple years ago's we know he's been unhappy for a while,
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because he was allegedly sexting the 17-year-old back when she was 16. and cops say he admitted cheating on her before. you have to wonder, if prosecutors are right and that this was not simple negligence and he had a nomotive and plan d wanted a child-free life, first of all, why did he have a child and secondly, how long was this alleged plot in the making and being cooked up in his mind? and i just have to say, a little knowledge is a dangerous thing. he worked as a police dispatcher's did he kind of have sort of a cops and robbers mentality in his head, because police said he used cop lingo when talking to them. did he really think he could, if all the circumstances are true, get away with something like this? that they wouldn't find him sexting with a half a dozen women? that they wouldn't find all of his internet searches for how long it takes a child to die and looking at a veterinarian
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demonstrate the tortuous death inside a car and looking at all the imagery of death? did he really think nobody would find this stuff? >> jane, we saw him, said the prosecution may be looking at his wife leanna. listen to the testimony of the detective about a conversation between the two. >> did his wife ever say anything to him about what he said to police? >> she asked him, she had him sit down. he starts going through this. she looks at him. did you say too much? . >> could we see suspicion fall on the wife? >> well, listen, my heart goes out to her in this horrible time, and i certainly want to stress that she's not charged with anything, but some of her behavior is definitely odd. i know she raises eyebrows during the funeral when she said she would not bring her son back into this broken world and listed a bunch of unpleasant things he'd avoid not being alive, like his first heartbreak. a lot of people were like, what it's that about?
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and of course it's odd when she goes to the day care to pick the child up,aled to the child's not there. witnesses say she almost immediately jumped to the conclusion her husband must have left the boy in the hot car, and people are saying things to the effect, there's a million other explanations. she's like that has to be it. that's odd. the other odd thing is that apparently when she's talking to her husband when they put hthem in a room together, she says words to the effect of, did you say too much? why would she say that? and justin tells leanna, i dreaded how he would look in the past tense. all of those things together paint, at the very least, a very bizarre portrait. >> jane, do you think we've got a peek at the defense strategy here? a question to the detective from the defense attorney about if he knew ross harris was deaf in his right ear and if he asked if he
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was physically capable, there there was a physical ailment from preventing him turning to his right side and brags about his mental health on the website. is that a peek how the case will be defended? >> i have to say, this is one of the most overwhelming cases in terms of evidence i've ever sooner and the way it was brilliantly laid out by the prosecutor, i really thought told the story from beginning to end and kind of connected the dots. i think they're going to do what they can. he's deaf, but he's not blind. and he had many opportunities to turn around and see that child and we know that the child's head poked up over the car seat. so he can't say he just looked back and didn't see that child's head. he backed up. he picked up a bag, a computer bag. all of these were moments where he had to make that motion to look in the direction of his child, which was so close to him. i think it's going to be a very, very tough defense and i think mental state may be the fallback
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position, because this is -- this is unbelievable evidence. i mean, he visited an internet site that advocates a child-prelifestyle. extraordinary. five days before his child dies he watched a video where a vet demonstrates how terrible it is to be left inside a hot car. >> and we'll find out if it is or isn't. jane velez-mitchell with us talking abbotts this case. so many talking about this case. jane, thank you. >> thank you for having me. and stranded on the side of a cliff. hundreds of feet in the air and his rescue caught on tape. the best six months for job growth in the last eight years. what's behind the trend, and where you should look for work. really... so our business can be on at&t's network for $175 dollars a month? yup. all five of you for $175. our clients need a lot of attention. there's unlimited talk and text. we're working deals all day. you get 10 gigabytes of data to share. what about expansion potential?
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i've got him. he's at our 1130 -- >> this is incredible video of rescue of a stranded hiker. this guy got stuck high on a cliff in washington state. now, the county helicopter rescue team, they swooped in literally here and saved this person. >> a rescuer was low ared down by cable, attached the hiker to it and both got back up to the chopper safely. the sheriff's office says the hiker called 911 for help. the helicopter rescue team, by the way, is made up of
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volunteers. >> good job there. >> yes. our heroes. now a lot of people have been waiting for this -- ishs the economy added 288,000 jobs in june. >> yeah, but that's not all. employers added 1.4 million jobs in the first six months of the year. that's the strongest six months of job growth in eight years. cnn chief business correspondent christine romans breaks down the numbers for us. christine, good morning. >> alison and victor, look within the numbers. by now you've seen the headline. 288,000 jobs created. the trend is important here, because the trend is telling us that there is some momentum gathering on the jobs front. the best first six months of the year as the white house likes to point out, since 1999. the best six months overall for jobs creation since 2006. so you're seeing a trend of companies more confident, they have been kept hiring to the bone for so long, as demand picks up, having to add workers. i like to look within the numbers of different sector. professional and business
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services, the past few months, seen these jobs starting to gain strength. these tend to be higher paid jobs. they help oh alleviate concerns about the quality of the be jos we've been seeing, but you still have leisure and hospitality, big gainer in job creation and retail jobs driving job creation as well. probably why you will still see debate over the minimum wage and raising it, still likely to be an economic conversation of the year, because over the past six years, preponderance of the jobs created have been lower quality jobs than the jobs lost in the recession. the asterisk in all this, a strong jobs report, but 12.1% is still out of work or working part-time, would would like to be working full-time. that number is still too high. still an important debate here who has been left behind in the economic recovery. overall this is telling us, the labor market recovery is gaining speed. >> which is good news. christine romans, thank you. so we've got to talk about
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what's happening overseas. palestinians gathered to bury the teenager murdered by unknown abduct abductors. fears of more revenge illinois cillinois -- comings. could this be the start of the third intefadeh. and a teacher stabbed in front of her class? new details be a the connection to the school. ♪ sweet, sweet, st. thomas nice ♪ ♪ so nice, so nice ♪ st. croix full of pure vibes ♪ so nice, so nice ♪ st. john a real paradise ♪ so nice, so nice ♪ proud to be from the virgin islands ♪ ♪ and the whole place nice [ female announcer ] to experience your virgin islands nice, book one of our summer packages today.
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bottom of the hour now. welcome back. i'm alison kosik. >> i'm victor blackwell. >> illegal immigrants from texas, another flight arrived in southern california. the passengers reportedly boarded three buss to a processing center in the san ysidro district of san diego oh. the driver steered clear of nearby marietta where protesters forced the first fleet of buses to turn back. number two. stunning images from montana. a train carrying fuselages for boeing derailed and sent them into the river. the train was headed to boeing's assembly plant outside seattle and boeing knows be a the derailment and are sending experts to the scene. and part of the sirius xm
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radio so opie & anthony, fired. cumia sent a series of profane-laced tweets calling the woman among other things an animal and ranti inabout black violence. hepromises to address the story next week. and a classroom full of children witnessed their teacher being stabbed today in france. yesterday it happened. officials say the suspect is the mother of a student. psychiatrists are helping that community cope. and taliban claim they fired rockets at hundreds of oil tankers outside of afghanistan capital kabul. emergency crews rushed to the scene. reports the tankers were transported fuel for nato forces. israeli prime minister
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benjamin netanyahu is vowing to find those responsible for the kidnapping and killing of a palestinian teenager. this new closed caption pg television footage released by an east jerusalem store shows what the 16-year-old's family says is that moment of abduction. cnn cannot verify the authenticity and israeli police are not comment evingcommenting and jerusalem is seeing some of the most violent clashes in years between police and protesters as a result. >> cnn's ben wedeman was injured covering the clashes. joining us to talk about the escalating tension is the former plo league adviser diana boutu. we planned to have you on at the same time as an israeli spokesman but you said you didn't want to be on with an israeli.
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why? >> with an israeli government spokesperson who defends the indefensible. what every spokesman has been doing, defending the collective punishment they'd meted out on though es in the west bank, destruction of, ransacking of homes, arrests of 500 people, killing of children and bombing of the gaza strip. something that my principle i refuse tory appear alongside with someone who defends those indefensible actions. >> aren't you sending the wrong message? shouldn't it start with peace? saying, no way, on just a talk show? >> when they acknowledge i have rights as a palestinian. this isn't just a question of talking and sitting down in the same room but the fact that israel denied the freedom to millions of palestinians for decades now and the fact they've been held to no standard of accountability by any government around the world. you can't just put people in the room and expect somehow there's going to be a peace, unless you
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actually address the underlying root causes. in this case, the fact palestinians have been denied their freedom for decades and there's no end to this denial of freedom in sight. >> also it's difficult to do when you demand you're the only voice in the room at the time to have that conversation. i understand this is a very passionate issue. we understand that this teen edgea edgea edgeager, burned, remains left in the woods. also three israeli teenagers were kid p in aed and killed and both voices at least on a television show can have that conversation. let me ask you about what the leader of the plo had to say. the president, mahmoud abbas, condemned the kidnapping and killing of the israeli teen, but had se doing enough to find those responsible? >> let me state clearly these three were actually kidnapped and killed in an area not within control of the palestinian authority. an area entirely controlled by israel. just as the killing a few days ago, it's an area entirely
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controlled by israel. at the same time the palestinian president indicated he wanted to and was willing to help in the investigation. what israel has done is they sievely int indicated who they feel is responsible for this, destroyed the homes of at least a couple of the people they believe are involved and it's as though they've didn't found guilty without ever having a trial. this is preciselies akd that will lead to further escalation. unwilling to feel i have equal rights means this will continue on for a very, very long period of time. >> we're going to move on -- >> one more question. sorry for cutting you off. calls, death to israel, death to jews and a ycall for the third intefadeh. what's your response for this third rising? >> it's important to keep in mind none of these responses have come from any palestinian leader, whereas, look at the office that the reverse has been the case. the you ary prime minister
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calling for revenge. labeled palestinians as animals. other members within the israel irparliament including knesset members -- >> do you condemn the call of death to jews, death to israel? >> of course, of course we condemn these -- >> i was expecting that to be the start of the answer, but go ahead. >> as i said, of course. this is -- all of this type of violence only ends up ricocheting and backfires against palestinians'sthe a the end of the day, nobody's talking who is going to protect inmessrs.? all we keep hearing, israel is entitled to security. at the end of the day, who's going to provide palestinian security? >> thanks for talking with us separately. bring in mark a regev, spokesman for the israeli government. your thoughts on the fact that the plo adviser didn't want to be on talking with youen 0 the same screen. your thoughts? >> the only way were we can overcome the problems is by dialogue, by talking, by israeli and palestinians engaging. i know there's an extremist element on the palestinian side
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that refuses to do that, that says, you know, we as israel irs, as a jewish state, have no right to exist, not in any borders. the majority of palestinians, at least i hope, have a different view. they're ready to engage with israel for peace. it's difficult on days like today because of all the tensions, but if the family of one of the three israeli teens who was murdered can stand up and say that, they're against vigilante violence, that they're against all murder and condemning the murder of the palestinian, i think palestinians also can stand up and overcome the emotion of the moment and say, how do we solve this problem? >> let me ask you the question that diana put forward saying so many people talk be a the right for israel to exist and israeli safety, but who is going to guarantee the rights and safety of the palestinians? >> israel remains ready for peace with the palestinians, for two states, two for two peoples. my prime minister has been clear over the last five, six years saying we're ready for palestinian state order in the framework of peace and security
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arrangements and recognition of the legitimacy of our country and the jewish state as well. we're ready for peace. what is the problem? on the palestinian side a tolerance for extremism. hamas, which under u.s. world is considered a brutal terrorist organization, as we saw targes d and killed children. now, it's very difficult for a palestinian to come to our side and say they believe in peace if they're forged and alliance with hamas. that's what the palestinian government has done, by forming a political pact with hamas. we urge them, reject the extremists, and return to talks, return to moderation. we're ready to engage. >> some wonder if this could be the start of the third intefadeh. what do you think about that? >> i hope not. i don't think violence serves any interest, doesn't effort is israel's interests or the palestinian interests either.
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only extremists like those in the hamas organization, willing to sacrifice israeli and palestinians lives on their radical agenda. for them the jihad is holy war and they want to conduct it. in that way, hamas is not dissimilar from a group like boko haram in nigeria or hezbollah, and mainstream palestinians, palestinians who believe in peace and and reconciliation have to break off all connections with them. how can they tolerate a blood-thirsty group? >> an israeli government spokesperson. thank you for speaking with us this morning. >> my pleasure and happy holidays to all of you on the fourth of july weekend. >> thank you. federal authorities have been going after fake pot hard. >> we have seized over $1 00 million worth of assets. arrested hundreds of individuals all around the united states. . >> but the impetus for this
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effort by the dea may not be what you think. the fake pot crackdowns, ties to terrorism. this is the first power plant in the country to combine solar and natural gas at the same location. during the day, we generate as much electricity as we can using solar. at night and when it's cloudy, we use more natural gas. this ensures we can produce clean electricity whenever our customers need it. ♪ and cialis for daily use helps you be ready anytime the moment is right. cialis is also the only daily ed tablet approved to treat symptoms of bph, like needing to go frequently. tell your doctor about all your medical conditions and medicines, and ask if your heart is healthy enough for sex. do not take cialis if you take nitrates for chest pain, as it may cause an unsafe drop in blood pressure.
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toronto mayor rob ford, he's being honest, sometimes painfully honest with ims had and potential voters. after returning to city hall after two months in rehab, the controversial mayor flat out told newstalk radio 1010 in canada that he cannot guarantee he'll stay sober and went on to say he is a disease, and he knows he can never drink again. so he's taking things one day at a time and insists he's running for re-election in october. >> showing the human side. for law enforcement ish tos, tracking down terrorists means following the money. that hunt recently led authorities to unsuspected places and products. >> the national correspondent deborah feyerick reports on the connection between synthetic drugs sold in the u.s. and terrorism. >> reporter: alison and victor, federal authorities are concerned that the next source
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of terrorist funding could come from an unlikely place. convenience stores right here in the united states. you're not supposed to ingest these, but people do anyway. synthetic drugs known at the street as fake pot. small packet sold with names like scooby somebody thats, crazy clown. spice. >> it's not synthetic pot, it's sin thek poison. >> reporter: the last year, raiding gas stations in mini martz across america. not because the synthetic drugs are necessarily ill leagegaille because the money, officials believe, is going overseas to fund terrorism are. >> seized everybody 0er $100 million worth of assets, arrested hundreds of individuals all around the united states. we have seized guns all over the place. >> reporter: usually sold at herbs not for consumption, the synthetic drugs are made in china with proceeds suspected by the dea of going to global crim-in-law a organizations.
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this man heads special operations for the drug enforcement administration. >> if a mini mart is operating in our country's sending 40 million, 50 million, $60 million back, we're very earn canned about that. >> reporter: tens of millions of dollars. the bulk of the money, according to the dea, going to places like yemen, syria and lebanon. >> as state sponsorship declined, terrorism fueled by criminal activity is on the rides. >> reporter: while the dea acknowledges no smoking gun ties the drug money from the u.s. to terrorists, they say the existing evidence paints a clear picture. >> terrorists need money to finance their operations. they need money for logistics, recruiting, training. you cannot do that with american express and visa. you need a suitcase of cash. >> reporter: synthetic drugs aside, the global drug trade produces plenty of that. according to the u.n., some $300 billion and counting. synthetic drug use is are sowing in the united states accounting for more than 11,000 emergency
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room visits in 2010. half of the patients were teenagers. alison, victor? >> all right, deb feyerick reporting. thank you. supposed to be a separate experiment, but the cat's out of the bag, and facebook could be in a lot of trouble. we'll tell you more about their mood manipulation study and what some are now threatening to do about it. ian ] in a race, it's about getting to the finish line. in life, it's how you get there that matters most. it's important to know the difference. like when i found out i had a blood clot in my leg. my doctor said that it could travel to my lungs and become an even bigger problem. and that i had to take action. so he talked to me about xarelto®. [ male announcer ] xarelto® is the first oral prescription blood thinner proven to treat and help prevent dvt and pe that doesn't require regular blood monitoring or changes to your diet. [ brian ] for a prior dvt i took warfarin,
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your co-workers think of you? >> i think i already know. you know what? anywhere i worked they're not shy about it. that's okay. i like direct. >> do people really care? i don't know. an app if you do. >> it's call ed knowsen. trying to figure it out. let's people anonymously rate what they think about your colleagues. >> let's you vote on how people are doing at work to personality traits. who's more trustworthy, or -- who would leave early for a date? >> hmm. do you really need an app for that? i think people aren't shy anymore i. think people would tell you. >> leave little notes for you. on your seat, thumbtacks. >> all right. you may have heard the headlines
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this week. it's facebook messing with our minds? >> the short answer is, yes. the company admitted to ma n manipulating news feeds of 700,000 user they say in the name of research. >> we're just finding out about it this week. >> there's been major backlash from the public and facebook is not saying we're sorry, at least for the study itself. the coo, chief operating officer, sheryl samberg said, it was poorly communicated. for that communication we apologize. we never meant to upset you. >> joining us, cnn everybody wanting to know why in the world did facebook do the study in the first place? >> facebook is always trying to find ways to get us to use their site more and trying to find ways to make their site more appealing to advertisers. there's a new trend in online advertising, emotional advertising. where the advertisers actually, they want to know your emotional
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state so that they can better approach you with advertisements that you're more likely to fall for. they want to know when you're happy, maybe they can pitch you with some vacation ideas. want to know when you're sad, maybe they can pitch you with whatever kind of things they've figured out make you happy. these are also things that they know. it's not uncommon for websites, that have an active user base to try to find ways to get us to use the sites more. it's just in this instance, there was an actual published scientific study made out of users. and the big, the big throwback on this is that the users involved in the study still to this day don't know that they were involved in it. that has some people raising some ethical flags. >> to be studied and have no idea. a couple of questions about that. brett, we know we're asking why did they do it, what was the impact, publicly. what did they learn? anything? >> they actually, they learned
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some interesting stuff. some of the things they learned, it's like thanks captain obvious. they learned things like when your newsfeed is filled with negative posts, you tend to feel more negative about your life. and vice-versa, when your newsfeed is filled with positive posts, you feel more positive. one of the interesting things i found is this wasn't anything you needed to hear, no verbal cues needed. you could just read it and your posts would reflect the mood you were in. and of course it goes back down the rabbit hole of advertising. facebook knows they're in a bad mood, let's continue to funnel negative posts to them to get them in an even worse mood. we're not saying that facebook -- there was no dr. evil sitting behind a keyboard, typing this in. this was all done by an algorithm. one of the big questions they came up with this is if someone
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was depressed, and then they were seeing such a negative stream of information, how far would that have pushed them? yet again, that's another ethical flag that comes up. >> what facebook is saying is this is part of their normal research. is this normal? for big companies to test their users or their clients, do you have any other examples of other companies doing anything similar? >> this is very normal for companies to do things like this. what's abnormal about this is this was a published study. this kind of stuff is happening to us every single day. every site we go on they're trying to form a user experience around what we're already doing. they know where our mouse goes on the screen. they know when our mouse hovers over something, but doesn't click on it. they know that advertisement didn't grab their attention. maybe we need to update that advertisement. this kind of thing has been happening for years in the retail space, in the brick-and-mortar stores, when you walk in, it's no secret or shouldn't come as a surprise, that there are things you're going to want right up front and
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things you need further in the back, so you have to walk through the entire store. and we all know very well some of us, too well, about the impulse buys at the checkout stand at the grocery store. those aren't apples and orange force a reason, it's candy and things you shouldn't be eating, but you might buy, because you might be in the line for a few minutes, i think the lady in front of me is writing a check. that's the kind of thing where you know, you're being manipulated again because of a social experiment. >> reese's cups and tabloids right at the end. >> exactly. >> brett, thank you very much. >> thanks for having me. after losing both legs and an arm in afghanistan, a veteran builds a new life. and breaks ground on a new home with a little help from friends and new york jets. your daily dose of the good stuff coming up next. >> we need it. the cadillac summer collection is here.
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that's why i always choose the fastest intern.r slow. the fastest printer. the fastest lunch. turkey club. the fastest pencil sharpener. the fastest elevator. the fastest speed dial. the fastest office plant. so why wouldn't i choose the fastest wifi? i would. switch to comcast business internet and get the fastest wifi included. comcast business. built for business. three and a half minutes to the top of the hour, time for the good stuff. >> a hero's welcome for u.s. army sergeant bryant diliberian in staten island this week, the triple amputee lost an arm in both legs in an ied attack three
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years ago in afghanistan that took the life of his best friend. >> today things are looking up for him. he was on hand for the ground breaking of his future smart home. made possible by a group of veterans. aid home group and a home building charity. a generous $1 million donation. where did it come from? the new york jets. hence the jersey there as he rides in. >> three years ago i got hit and i lost a couple of friends. and there's just, it's like another rebirth. >> the three-bedroom smart home will be outfitted with customized fixtures and an array of high-tech features controlled from an ipad helping him to regain a sliver of the precious thing he lost in the line of duty -- his independence. >> our freedom is not there by accident. it's there because we have our young men and women who serve. and he's got a challenge going forward and hopefully the house is a little bit of an aid to
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him. >> more than just an aid, diliberian says the gift is going to mean everything to him. and you know, on this independence day, that he can have through this gift, his independence returned to him, it's well deserved. we thank you for his service. >> we hope you enjoyed your fourth of july. did you get to see the fireworks? i didn't. >> i heard them at about 11:00. if you went to bed early. we've got a look at some of the beautiful fireworks from all across the u.s. take a look. ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪
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♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ thanks for starting your morning with us. >> that was nice. next up your new day starts right now. >> it's about kids! it's about kids! >> i live here! >> you were blocking their way in. >> not because of them. because of standing firm, letting the officials know, this is not the right way to handle this. >> how many times did he hit her? >> i've seen 11 on the video. he took more shots than that, i
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think it was around 15 shots. >> punching? >> punching. like not just jabs, these are hooks. >> he's got this whole second life that he's living with alternate personalities and alternate personas. good morning, i'm alison kosik in for kristi paul. >> i'm victor black. 8:00 on the east coast. this is new day saturday. a lot of people on the east coast cleaning up. it wasn't a lot of damage, but still damage from the storm. a night after the fourth of july, the hurricane came through, hurricane arthur, now a tropical storm. no major problems, though, but still some problems. >> arthur has been downgraded. it left some evidence of its wake. streets were flooded and homes were submerged in coastal areas running from north carolina up through new england. >> and many residents are getting their lights back on at the height of the storm. more than 44,000 people lost power in north carolina alone. and it appears that travelers
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may have narrowly escaped a travel nightmare. despite the storm disruptions, no major delays are reported at any east coast airport this morning. >> but for beachgoers there is some lingering danger. swimmers are warned to watch for deadly rip currents. alexander field has the latest. >> from north carolina all the way up to the northeast, high winds, big waves, drenching rain and now powerful rip tides. arthur lost force while heading north, but it was enough to leave a mark. 100-mile-per-hour winds and 35-foot waves were reported at the peak of the storm when arthur made landfall thursday night over north carolina. >> we are just absolutely getting slammed right now. by arthur. you can see the wind gusts really pick up here. and the rain is just coming down. >> though arthur had more bark than bite, north carolina took the brunt of the storm with some damage and thousands left in the
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dark. >> emily blew a lot harder than this one. we were really fortunate. >> by friday, the category 2 hurricane was downgraded, but churned deep into the atlantic. and today, nova scotia is feeling the effects. >> how's that vacation going so far? >> it was going pretty good until a few hours ago. >> tough conditions in. >> yeah. not too, too bad, but you kind of stuck inside. you can't do anything outside. >> the first hurricane of the season coinciding with the busiest travel weekend of the summer busted some holiday plans. prepared for a wash-out, boston moved up its annual fourth of july celebration. the fireworks went off a day early. in washington, d.c. the fast-moving storm cleared up just in time for a friday night light show. but there are big concerns about what's left in arthur's wake along the eastern seaboard, possible rip currents.
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the national weather service calls the spurts of back-flowing water the worst danger at the beach. >> even though many of the beaches are open and we're still evaluating some of the outer bank beaches, please listen to lifeguards, look at the warning flags. >> alexander field joins us now from jones beach on new york's long island. are you seeing that people are heeding the warnings, despite the beautiful day out there today? >> hey, allison and victor, a lot of people are coming out here early this morning. i think everyone is relieved to see the sun shining and people are hearing that the rip currents can be a possible. lifeguards say the conditions at this beach are fairly calm. rip currents are pretty frequent in the spring and early part of the summer. they have when you've got a break in the sand bar and common at low tide. we know they're powerful and it's something to think about today and the rest of the summer. allison, victor. >> alexander field in jones beach, thank you. let's bring in meteorologist
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karen mcginn ess for the latest on ar thr. >> it's post-tropical arthur. no longer a tropical storm strength. but as this, the remnants essentially of arthur move across new brunswick and nova scotia and the gulf of st. lawrence, we'll still expect gusty winds, heavy downpours, because it still has a component to it that is going to produce that. winds coming off the coast of maine, down east main, through the gulf of maine. some gusty winds and some rainfall. but look at halifax, 59-mile-per-hour wind reported just this hour. our other big story, as arthur exits, was a hurricane, was a tropical storm, now post-arthur, moving into canada, are these big storms that have erupted across american united states.
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and the southwestern corner of iowa, right here, there are estimates of three to four inches of rainfall. and our severe weather threat for today, from grand forks and fargo, this is where we're looking at the potential for some high winds, hail, can't rule out an isolated tornado. as we go into sunday, an even broader area, from green bay to chicago. and down towards peoria. we'll be watching that, keeping you updated and letting you know what's happening with what used to be category 2 arthur. allison, victor? >> karen, thanks. breaking overnight, another flight carrying illegal immigrants from texas has arrived in southern california. it's the second one this week. the passengers reportedly boarded three buses to a processing center in the san ysidro district of san diego. tensions rising in the immigration debate. president obama has weighed in again. speaking at a fourth of july nationalization ceremony for the members of the military.
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>> if we want to keep attracting the best and the brightest from beyond our shores, we're going to have to fix our immigration system, which is broken and pass common-sense immigration reform. we shouldn't be making it harder for the best and brightest to come here, we should be making it easier. that's why i'm going to keep doing, he agrees with me. >> usa, usa! >> and that was the scene on independence day in murietta, a city at the flash point of the immigration debate. leaders forced another bus of illegal immigrants to turn back, our kung law has more. >> immigration and customs enforcement has kept the arriving of any illegal immigrants under wraps. the concern is security.
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the anticipation was they may arrive on a holiday and that's why protesters did as well. celebrating the fourth of july -- by using the right of assembly to scream at each other. >> separated by police, this is the second time pro and anti-immigration forces have faced off at the murietta california patrol station. a flashpoint for the immigration debate. they blocked the entrance to the station. buses of undocumented immigrants were forced to turn around. in texas an influx of undocumented migrants, many of them children, have crammed facilities, there aren't enough beds, bathrooms or food. a total of 60 to 80,000 children without parents expected to cross illegally this year. to cope, the government is putting them on planes and buss to nearby towns. processing them at border patrol centers in smaller towns like
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murietta. a second round of buses was anticipated on july 4th. murietta protesters came on this independence day to say -- they're not welcome. >> we're not going to stand for it. that's just how it is. there's thousands and millions of other people who have done it the right way. but for people to just come in here and ask for free handout, that's my money. >> migrant rights supporters say on this holiday, murietta should recall america's own history of its birth and that it's a nation of immigrants. >> impoverished europeans came here in droves in the 1800s, and up to the 1900s, now when we have rights, other places they're trying to come through the borders, suddenly it's different because we have these divisions based on race, based on language and based on chauvinism. >> obey the law. obey the law! >> while both sides engaged in plenty of free speech, the
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protest was relatively peaceful. >> usa, usa! >> though several were arrested. the buses never did show up. but if they do return, protesters promise they'll be here to greet them. allison, victor? >> kyung lah, thank you. a father and husband sending explicit sexual text messages to a number of women and one underage girl, while his son died in a hot car. those are the allegations prosecutors are laying out against justin ross harris. now details about two life insurance policies. >> thump, thump, thump, and then you hear, a head bouncing on the concrete. >> and a california highway patrolman caught on tape punching a woman repeatedly on the side of the road. ♪ ♪ ♪
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to get your complimentary q&a book, with information from experts on your condition. (water dripping and don't juspipes clanging)ncisco. visit tripadvisor san francisco. (soothing sound of a shower) with millions of reviews, tripadvisor makes any destination better. breaking news overnight. this is devastating -- a fire has killed four children in philadelphia. >> flames tore through eight row houses in a southwestern philly neighborhood this morning. the victims are a 1-month-old baby boy, 4-year-old twin girls and a 4-year-old boy. people desperately tried to
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rescue them. but the children were trapped. the city's fire commissioner said investigators are trying to determine what caused the fire. >> this is a tragic, tragic day for the city of philadelphia. tragic. we lost four children today. and i want everybody to understand that fire is everyone's fight, not just the fire department. it's everyone's fight. >> four children all four and under. the fire commissioner said 42 people have been displaced. prosecutors are painting a picture of the georgia man charged with murder in his son's hot car death as an unfaithful husband, and wanted a child-free life. >> did you uncover anything what he was doing during that day while the child was out in the car? >> yes. >> what did you uncover. >> he was having up to six different conversations with different women. >> justin hayward remains in jail after a judge denied him bond during a probable cause
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hearing on thursday. >> nick valenti joins us, we hear there were two life insurance policies during the hearing that you've learned more. >> we've got search warrants that were released. essentially laying out the narrative that prosecutors laid out in this week's pretrial hearing. the bond hearing and probable cause hearing. a lot was admitted in the probable cause hearing that won't be admitted in court. because they're trying to prove this probable cause. you talk about harris's finances, we know he had recently taken over his family's finances. in that time had accrued a $4,000 credit card debt. we also know he had recently developed a business on the side with friends. he wanted some supplemental income. wanted to get more money on the side. and this nugget on the life insurance policies. here on the last page of one of the search warrants we got, buried deep it says through the investigation, meaning after the death of little cooper, harris has made comments to family members regarding a life insurance policy that he has on cooper and what they need to do in order to file for it. now victor you were saying two
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life insurance policies, one through $2,000 through home depot and then the $25,000 life insurance policy that the family signed in november 2012. does that prove motive? that's what prosecutors are going to try to lay out. we're waiting for full toxicology report that could speak to motive if little cooper had anything in his system. >> anything else pointing to harris and his wife and possible financial problems? >> lee anna harris was mentioned in this report as having this sort of what can be characterized as a strange reaction. saying -- you know, the kid was left in the car when she went to the day care. and the day care worker saying there could be 1,000 different reasons for your kid not showing up to day care today. and she was convinced. and the conversation they had in the investigation room while prosecutors, or while police were watching. but not in the room. justin ross harris saying i dreaded what the child was going to look like, using the past tense, that came up as well.
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and lee anna harris, the reaction, some people are waiting for the other shoe to drop. could she be charged? there's so much to prove kbret. friends maintain, allison and victor, that this is a good guy. this is a good family. that this family is very religious, very centered in christianity. there's no way that someone like this, with this character could do something like this. a lot of people looking at the reaction to lee anna harris in the courtroom or lack of. saying she was very emotionless, expressionless. really how does anyone react normally after a child passes? what is a normal quote-unquote reaction? >> that's a good point. sometimes when we say we expect something. but having not gone through what they're going through, we don't know exactly how we would respond in that way. and the witnesses that were called by the defense, although each one of them said i know a good guy, you know he's a christian man, he's a church-going man, that they only know him. >> they only know him in that sense. they say we did not know about this. one said is it possible he could
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have an entire second life. and they admitted quite possible. >> that's partly why he was denied bond. >> alternative lifestyle he had. this secret life he had online. you know, they lay out the case that this made him a flight risk. denied bond. >> the financial issues, although the detective on the stand, stoddard said they had financial issues, when pressed by the defense attorney, asked, what's the evidence there. was there checkbook overdrawn? did you see that they had any huge debt, and he wasn't able at least in that moment, to offer any evidence of that. >> we did see stoddard for a moment back-track, saying there wasn't any direct evidence that linked ross harris to those searches, even on his work computer. a lot laid out. >> and this was probable cause, we'll see what happens during the trial. nick valencia. we'll have more on this throughout the morning so stay with us on that. driver captures an officer punching a woman on the side of the road. >> this is not just jabs. these are hooks.
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>> move on this disturbing video. and what the california highway patrol is saying about it this morning. joran van der sloot, the prime suspect in the disappearance of the alabama teenager, natalee holloway, just got married behind bars. that's not all that happened. before we get to that, though, do you think that, i mean you had too much stuff stashed away in your house? >> sometimes. >> sometimes. >> sort of clear it out from time to time. but you ain't seen nothing yet. today's travel insider takes us inside luna park. >> hi, i'm mark skirmen. >> and i'm moran. >> and we have a book series where we travel around the country to seek out weird places. today we're in luna park. >> the mad genius behind it. >> it was a dilapidated hunting cabin. it was kind of shabby. but it was on a beautiful piece of property. and as soon as i laid eyes on the house, i knew that this
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would be the place i would spend the rest of my life. 25 years later, this is what happened. i have so much stuff, and so many raw materials, bread tabs, wooden yard sticks, license plates, bowling balls, musical instruments, machinery from the 19th century. >> old skeletons? >> yes. this is the ballroom which serves as a dining hall. here we have what looks like a bookshelf. but in reality this is my bed. this is my luxurious bathroom. this was a five-year project and there are nearly one million broken shards in the walls. >> you counted the shards? >> i counted every single one. this is actually where i spend most of my time in my work shop. all the objects on the house inside and out, all of that is produced here on the premises. >> farewell from luna park.
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we're working deals all day. you get 10 gigabytes of data to share. what about expansion potential? add a line anytime for 15 bucks a month. low dues... great terms... let's close. introducing at&t mobile share value plans... ...with our best-ever pricing for business. 22 minutes after the hour this morning and there are lots of questions about an alarming beating that was caught on tape. >> we're going to show it to you now. we want to warn you, it's very shocking. now you can see a woman getting hit in the face over and over and over again by a california highway patrol officer.
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he is now on administrative leave. and an investigation is under way. cnn's sarah sidener is in los angeles with details. sarah? >> victor and allison, the witness says he was in very heavy traffic, basically at a standstill when all this happened right in front of him. video from a california freeway shot by a driver stunned by what he was seeing unfold. a woman being punched over and over and over again by a california highway patrolman. >> you see it, you heard it. it was like thump, thump, thump. and then you hear her head bouncing, bam, bam, bam, on the concrete. >> how many times did he hit her? >> it's, i've seen 11 on the video, he took more shots than that, i think it was around 15 shots to her head. and then, he is punching, like this is not just jabs, these are hooks. those are lights-out punches, those aren't like taps. >> the highway patrol report said the woman posed a danger to
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herself and other drivers because she was walking within traffic lanes at times. when she was asked to stop, she continued ignoring the officer's command and ultimately she becomes physically combative, it says. >> the tape only shows a small part of what transpired. there were events that led up to this. until all that collected, and put into perspective, we aren't going to be able to make a determination. >> the eye witness who goes by the name david diaz, says he saw exactly what led up to it before he started recording. >> you see the video, the first thing you hear is me laughing. the reason why is because before we got the video started, they were playing like a ring around the rosy behind the red truck. a grown man and a grown woman running around the truck. like a benny hill moment, right. she's avoiding him. it's almost like when we laugh when someone runs on the field in a baseball game. >> he says she did eventually start walking towards the officer and that's when the
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takedown began. >> he grabs her and she kind of is like you know, does the resisting in terms of like natural reaction. and then he, then grabs her, throws her to the floor and then gets on top of her, which then you would think, okay, he's just going to wrap her up, call it a day, another day in los angeles. but no, this wasn't the case. >> the chp said the woman who carried no i.d., was taken to hospital for a physical and mental evaluation. >> the report indicated that the individual was not injured and the officer didn't notice any injuries on the individual. >> diaz has a hard time believing that. after seeing and hearing this. >> she didn't put up any restraint. she did what anyone else would do when they're getting pounded is to go like this. to go like this. and now they say oh, she's restrained. it's an excuse. we're giving too many excuses, there's no more rationalizing this. we need to stop this that's why i posted this video. >> we're going to make a
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determination as to what transpired in this situation. and we will do the right thing. >> the officer involved has been put on administrative duty. while the case is investigated. witness diaz says he has not spoken with anyone from the california highway patrol and if they call him, he will discuss what he saw with them. allison, victor? >> sara sidner, thank you so much. >> there will be another side that comes out. you point to a good question, who's the other guy in the video? >> the guy in the flagged shirt, is he a plainsclothes officer? we'll find out. left alone to die in a hot car while his father was inside his workplace sexting. >> those are some of the long list of accusations against justin walsh harris and the death of his 22-month-old son. >> and the pregnant wife of a u.s. marine is missing this morning as a search is under way to find her.
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bottom of the hour, welcome back, i'm alisons couldic in for kristi paul. >> i'm victor black. it's 8:30 on the east coast. a mountain of flames in
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afghanistan this morning, 400 trucks carrying fuel and oil were set on fire in kabul. the reason for the fires is still under investigation, the taliban claims their forces attacked a parking depot. a u.s. marine's pregnant wife is missing, 19-year-old erin corwin was last seen leaving 29 palms marine base in california a week ago today. on her way to jash waugh tree national park at the time. her car has since been found. and deputies are not ruling out foul play. her mother flew out to california to help in the search for her daughter. >> my gut was just tore up. just tore up. and it's just like you feel like you're walking in a nightmare. number three, convicted murderer joran van der sloot is now a married man. and he's about to be a father. joran van der sloot married a peruvian woman friday at the lima prison where he is serving a 28-year sentence for the murder of stephany flores, he's
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also the prime suspect in the disappearance of american natalee holloway. his wife is due to give birth in september. number four, sirius xm radio has fired shock jock anthony kumia, one-half of the popular team, opie and anthony. the network said it made the decision to let him go following a series of racially charged tweets that he sent out earlier in the week. cumia claims he was fired for doing something that wasn't on the air and wasn't illegal in a statement, sirius said his postings were abhorrent and his behavior sin consistent with what sirius represents. hurricane arthur weakened overnight to a tropical storm. within the last 30 minutes it weakened even more to become a post tropical storm, sustained winds now just 65 miles per hour. about 40,000 people in north carolina lost power. most of them have their lights back on this morning.
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and communities up and down the east coast saw whipping winds and really rough rains, flooded streets as well. let's go to meteorologist karen mcginness here with where the storm or the post tropical system is now. who is being threatened by this? >> it looks like much of new england. and even that's not going to last all day. much of what is left of what used to be category 2 hurricane arthur is pushing into new brunswick, also into nova scotia. even across parts of maine, we're expecting some gusty winds, some heavy downpours. winds situated with this now at 65 miles per hour. and will continue to weaken. and pull away from the united states. back to you guys. >> from president obama vowing to take executive action to a small town in california taking a stand of its own -- >> this showdown over america's immigration crisis, it's heating up and we're seeing it happen in a really big way. this week protesters against
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this influx of central american immigrants coming to the u.s. faced off with counterprotesters in murietta, california. >> some demonstrators shouted "go back home" and successfully forced three buses carrying migrants to leave the town. let's talk about the issue with cnn political commentators maria cardina and ben furgeson. >> some of the protesters blame president obama for the problem. when he's blaming, when is he's blaming house republicans for failing to take action. is it fair to blame the president when he's tried to press the house to take up a senate-passed bill on immigration? >> absolutely it's not fair, allison and it's completely wrong-headed of these protesters to do so. in fact, the president has tried to press this congress for many years to pass real comprehensive immigration reform and i think the lack of a real policy of a set policy has led to some of these rumors that has led to the
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migration that we're now seeing on the border. and in addition to that, not only has this president pressed this congress and given them the time and the space to do something, the congress has up until now said that they do want to act. speaker boehner says he does want to act. but ultimately, what he told the president not even a week ago, is that he is actually not going to bring any legislation to the floor. unfortunately the congress has completely abdicated their responsibility. because they're being led by the anti-immigrant extremist factions in their own party. >> ben, go ahead. i hear you laughing. >> i think it's funny how selective the time memory is of democrats, they forget that obama when he was elected president said he was going to have immigration reform. he had control of the house and the senate, democrats could do anything they wanted to. including obama care, which they passed. because they controlled both, they had the house and the senate. they chose not to pass immigration reform for two
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years. when they did not even have to negotiate with republicans. so the idea that this is not a big political argument and a mid-term election year, trying to get one side fired up against the other side, and to act like the president is sitting there somehow waiting to do something, is unrealistic first of all, we haven't enforced the laws on the book. and the other issue is this, you have a major problem with a border security. if you're not willing to deal with border security, what's the point of passing law if people are still going to be able to come across the border? the white house does have power. what they should be doing is working with ambassadors and they should be working with the pr campaign to tell people in these countries that they're coming from, if you come here, you will be sent home immediately. where is that pr campaign? >> they are doing that. >> i do feel sorry for them. they're not doing it well enough. >> they are doing it, ben. and ben is right on this, that we are working with our ambassadors, we need to do more of that. we are working on a pr campaign. we need to do more of that.
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but where ben is absolutely wrong is when he said, i think this actually indicates where their party is on this, when he blames the president for not doing this and the first two years, first of all, he was dealing with trying to rescue this economy from you know, eight years of republican policies that put us almost in -- >> you're going to blame george bush. >> and secondly when ben says that democrats could have done this on their own, he is actually underscoring the complete abdication from their own party. this is not a democratic problem, ben. this is a national american problem. that we need to solve together. where are the republicans on this republicans in the senate did absolutely the right thing, republicans in the house are being led by the anti-extremists in their party like congressman steve king, who absolutely wants to put up fences at the border and make sure that no one comes in, no one comes out and that's just not, that's just not realistic. >> maria, if 15 to 20 million
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people have come across the border illegally, i think it's hysterical that you think that a fence is not a good idea. we have a fence around the white house, if a fence doesn't work, then why is there one around the white house? why is it that most people have one in their back yards to keep their pets in and other people out of their yards? fences have worked in this country, and even been looked at as a positive, as a luxury to add. let me finish this. that the fact is that you've you guys don't want to secure the border, you want to give amnesty, that a lot of americans have rejected. >> that's not what we said. you need to get your facts straight. the board certificate more secure today than it ever has been. >> the people across the border disagree. >> under bush there was a growth of the undocumented population of three to four million people. under president obama, the growth in the undocumented population was net negative. so he has dpon more to secure the border than any other
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republican president in recent history. so let's look at the facts. >> and maria, this is where the republicans are just wrong-headed. don't understand that this needs to be a bipartisan solution, they need to sit down with the president and democrats and get this done. >> ben, i got a question, after the election in 2008, john mccain got a smaller percentage of the latino vote than george bush got. in 2012, mitt romney got a smaller percentage than john mccain got. moving into 2016, and after every election, republicans then said, well, we got to do something about immigration. there was a consensus, if something can get done, it's immigration. moving toward 2016, if john boehner says we're not going to do it and it doesn't get done, doesn't that put whomever will be the republican nominee at an even greater disadvantage to take the white house? >> no. >> why not? >> because i think people are upset with the fact, they realize that this has become a political game and not about a security issue and not about truly securing our borders.
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as long as we don't fix the issue, and we already have laws on the books that we should be enforcing on the border. again this white house, and this president, they've done a better job when it comes to pr of getting kids fit, with michelle obama's campaign than they've ever done telling people in the other countries that if you come to america, we are going to send you home. this is a problem that i think democrats are enjoying because they think they can use it politically to their advantage. if they really wanted to deal with this issue, they would actually be out there and start enforcing the border, protecting the border and more importantly, the president has the biggest microphone in all of the world. he can actually go on tv and make a direct appeal, saying let me be clear, if you're coming from, name the countries, you will be sent home and get rid of this stigma, that if you get here, you get to stay. >> he's done that. >> he actually did that. on the abc interview. >> thank you. >> he has not done it expressed it to the world. there's a difference. >> he will continue to do that. >> we got -- >> let's make something very
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clear, republicans can say good-bye to the white house in 2016 if they don't do something about this before then. >> maria cardona, ben furgeson, thank you very much. >> very interesting. weekly address yesterday, president obama took a moment to celebrate the recent success of the u.s. men's soccer team at the world cup. >> and he had some fun with the white house petition calling for tim howard, the team's superstar goalie, to be the next u.s. secretary of defense. >> i want to begin today by saying a special word to the u.s. men's soccer team. who represented america so well the past few weeks. we are so proud of you. you got a lot of new believers and i know there's actually a petition on the white house website to make tim howard the next secretary of defense. chuck hagel has the spot right now, but if there is a vacancy, i promise to think about it. >> 16 blocks from tim howard. you would think the celebrations
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would be through the roof this morning in brazil this morning, right? >> brazil beat colombia in their world cup match. but during the match, something went terribly wrong. what it could mean for the host country. before we head to break, a couple of things you can do to help impact the world of our veterans this independence day weekend. >> donate your frequent flyer miles there are programs that will use your miles to bring family members to the bedside of veterans recovering in the hospital. other programs provide free rides for veterans to get and from doctor's appointments. >> send care packages, build homes and help with ptsd counseling. we have more on our website, cnn.com.
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the cnn is learning new details about murder suspect ross harris and his actions on the time and around the time that his 22-month-old son, cooper, was left to die in the back seat of his suv. now according to warrants we've
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obtained, the suspect made comments to many if aly members regarding a $20,000 life insurance policy he had on the young boy. >> this comes on the heels of the hearing where prosecutors describe the 33-year-old as an unfaithful husband, who was in financial trouble this even allege he lived a double life. and spent his day sexting with a half dozen women one under the age of 17 at one point while his son was dying. i want to hear some of the testimony that led georgia judge to deny his bail this week. >> he visited several sites and he subread it, people who die. it may not be the perfect. people who die and it shows video of people dying. all sorts of ways from suicides to iraq, executions, he was having up to six different conversations with different women. it appeared from the messages from kick mostly, a messaging
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service. the most common term would be sexting. evidence is showing us that he's got this this whole second life that he's living with alternate personalities and alternate personas. >> defense attorney bj bernstein joins us now with more. you know, you heard all this stuff come out of this hearing. i mean one, one thing after another. one jaw-dropping detail after another. as a defense attorney, how do you think his defense is going to start preparing his case? >> we've got to get the whole case. this was just a preliminary hearing where the prosecutor is putting forward facts to establish probable cause, it's not the entire case. and in georgia, especially the cruelty to children statute, whether it's first-degree or second-degree, has a lot of check marks that have to be made and that's where the defense attorney was arguing at the preliminary hearing. that said, even 26 years of practicing law and doing criminal work, there's some jaw-dropping salacious facts here that obviously is why everybody is talking about this
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case. outrage, a reminder that casey anthony was acquitted, george zimmerman was acquitted. this, clearly, justin harris is on the lips ever everyone and will be for a while. we don't know what's going to happen. >> we just had the anniversary of o.j. simpson. a lot of case where is people say it's a done deal and at the end of the day it doesn't reach the threshold of beyond a reasonable doubt. let me ask you about your interesting theory about the insurance policies and why he had some questions about getting that money. >> well listening carefully to what's been in the news about it, it was during a phone call and it sounds like it's almost like a jail-recorded call. and a lot of people forget, when you're in jail, they record those calls and prosecutors can listen to them or a room while they wait for an interview, the area could be micced. that life insurance money and saying you can get it, these people need an attorney. they hired an attorney. this is getting even bigger. that's going to require funds. and trying to get your hands on
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money quickly, although i don't think that they're going to ever be able to prove that you would have killed your child for $27,000. >> they need the money. >> they need the money for lawyers. >> will that conversation be admissible in the trial if it goes to trial in. >> they're going to have fights about it. everything you've heard at a preliminary hearing, it's a wide-open net. the rules of evidence that we typically know, a hearsay objection isn't applicable. because the only thing we heard is hearsay. one witness testified, that's the police officer saying this person said this. this day care worker reported this. so if they're wrong about it, or he paraphrased it the wrong way while at trial, those actual people, the statements were made to, will have to come in and testify. >> help us understand the charges, what they laid out on wednesday, was this, thus actual, was maybe leading towards premeditated murder. that for weeks he researched you know how an animal dies in a car
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or how to survive in prison. why not then charge him initially with premeditated murder? >> because you've got to get through -- they're still investigating the case, it was smart on behalf of the prosecutors, i know all of these guys, i've dealt with them over the years. it started off as felony murder, with the underlying felony first-degree cruelty. which requires malicious intent, it was dropped down to second-degree, which is criminal negligence, that reckless conduct. which when people heard that said oh, that may work. now we heard the hearing, i'm hearing signals that by the time you go to trial, that the indictment may have more. and that's very typical. remember, when you are arrested, the arrest warrant is what catches you in jail, and makes you either stay in jail or be on bond. the actual document that puts you in the line of fire before a jury, is an indictment. gro grand jurors will meet and the prosecutors will present it i
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think they were hinting malice murder, cruelty murder, with first-degree or second-degree are still on the table. >> what about a plea deal, the likelihood? >> it's too early to say. that's always a possibility in every case. the percentages of number of cases of people arrested that go to trial are, drops down. and there are you know, troubling things that were asked that make you worry about the psychological stability of this particular defendant. and it may be that his lawyers have to get a psychiatric examination and find out what's going on. so there's a lot more here, i know we're ready to judge and even i had pause when i heard what happened. but i also know, you know as seasoned journalists, when you get into a courtroom, it may come out differently. >> absolutely. all we heard was the state's case, they had the burden to keep him in jail on that probable cause. bj bernstein, good to have you back. >> good to see you. some tough news for brazil fans this morning.
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bleacher report's laura rutledge has the news. >> the worst-case scenario for a world cup favorite. i've got all the latest after the break. ♪ f provokes lust.
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bad news, bad news for brazil's world cup hopes, the host nation's top scorer will miss the rest of the tournament. >> neymar fracturing a bone in
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his spine during yesterday's game, laura rutledge has more in today's bleacher report. say it ain't so. >> it seemed like it was going to be a big party for brazil, but then this neymar thing has put a big dampener on their spirits. they did knock off colombia 2-1 in the quarterfinals. but the celebration of course turned bittersweet. neymar is a big blow for brazil. losing him, he's their heart and soul. he was kneed in the back as the match was winding down and you knew it wasn't going to be pretty by the way he was writhing in pain. he was immediately stretchered off the pitch and taken to the hospital. brazil's semifinal opponent, germany, is pro probably licking their chops with the idea they won't have to deal with neymar. now we're left wondering, who will step up in neymar's place, has four goals and one assist in the tournament. we have an intriguing match-up in the women's wimbledon final today, eugenie richard faces kvito kvitova. who has won the tournament once
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before in 2011 and only seems super kmshl on the wimbledon grass, but bouchard is hard to stop. and the super bowl of bicycle racing gets under way. this year the tour de france will start in england. it's not unusual for this to happen. it passes through neighboring countries all the time. two years ago the tour beban in belgium. it finishes in paris on july 27th. and prince william and his wife, kate, have a big part of this and kate cut the ribbon to start the race today, looking fabulous as usual. >> the neymar thing, it sounds terribly painful and it looked bad. a fracture of a bone in his spine. >> could you tell the way they were struggling to get him on that stretcher, that it wasn't going to be good. >> every move was delicate. >> sad for him. >> thank you. quick break, we'll be back. veggies you're cool... reworking the menu. mayo, corn dogs...you are so out of here!
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so pretty. this is my fireworks, because i slept through it all. >> i was asleep, too. although i was up for maybe 15 minutes when they woke me up. >> you thought they were gunshots? >> i thought they were gunshots, i really did. i thought someone was shooting. i grew up in the inner city, sometimes they're popping outside the window. but we're all good. >> well if you didn't get to see any of it like us, now you are up to speed. >> we won, nathan's famous hotdog and buns, the once and future champion of the world -- joey chestnut! >> they kau him jaws, joey chestnut is the coney island hotdog-eating champ. scarfed down 61 dogs and the
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buns, those are the filling part. ten minutes got it done. >> i've got the crowd pleaser for you, he got down on one knee and proposed, his girlfriend of three years, said yes. this was before though, the hotdog eating began. >> congratulations to both of you. next hour starts right now. >> we believe in the sanctity of life. we will continue to believe in the sanctity of life and our message is very clear, there has to be a response. >> how many times did he hit her? >> i've seen 11 on the video, he took more shots than that, i think it was around 15 shots. >> punching. >> this is not just jabs, these are hooks. lights-out punches, those aren't like taps. all you've done is negative, all you have done is negative. i haven't heard it. i make people laugh. >> good morning, i'm alisons soic in for

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