tv Erin Burnett Out Front CNN September 22, 2014 4:00pm-5:01pm PDT
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gender equality. go to he for she.org if you want more information. that's it for me. thanks very much for watching. i'm wolf blitzer in the situation room. erin burnett "outfront" starts right now. >> next, news. the man who jumped the white house fence had more than 800 rounds of am month in his car. how did he get through the front door of the white house? and more news. a new message from isis calling for lone wolves to kill ffls. americans fighting militants overseas are now back on u.s. soil. plus, the fbi joining the hunt for missing uva student. how did police let the student last seen with hannah graham get away? let's go out front. good evening. i'm erin burnett "outfront." news on two national security
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stories we're following for you. first new details about the white house intruder who jumped the fence and got through front door of the white house as you can see. there running right around the column up there to the door and got in. prosecutors say omar gonzalez had 800 rounds of ammo, two hatchets and a machete in his car parked a few blocks away. we are learning he was arrested last july on a weapons charge. this as they are calling for an investigation of the secret service. despite that the president had words of support for them. >> i'm grateful for the sacrifices they make on my behalf and my family's behalf. and our other tox national story, american fighter yets and drones attacked targets in iraq with four new air strikes as isis calls on lone wolves to kill on their own soil. administration officials warning a number of americans who have gone overseas to fight with
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terrorist groups are now at this hour back in the united states on american soil. we are covering both news stories with our white house correspondent jim acosta and jim sciutto. i want to begin with you at the white house. a prosecutor calling this fence jumper a i know did a to the president. when you see that video, it is still stunning. now we're hearing about 800 rounds of ammunition. what else are you learning? >> you can count the seconds. it was roughly 20 seconds between the time jumped over that fence and by the time he got inside the white house. prosecutors are calling him a danger, or they were calling him a danger to the president. a court appearance that omar gonzalez, the suspected fence jumper had earlier today. and yes, as prosecutors laid out, he has had some run-ins with law enforcement before. consider what happened earlier this summer in july. they are saying that gonzalez was arrested by police and with county, virginia. that's in southwest virginia with a sawed off shotgun and a
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map and circled the white house. then in august, he was stopped on the south side of the white house grounds outside of the fence of the white house grounds with a hatchet on his belt. at that point he was stopped by secret service but he was released. he was not detained or arrested. and then what happened friday night as a result of that. law enforcement officials, officers, investigators searched gonzalez' car and they say that at that point, they found the 800 rounds of ammunition inside that car. but it appears at this point that we have a situation where there were dots that should have been connected, that weren't connected, that might have allowed law enforcement to stop this man sooner. >> that just only adds to the stunning breach of security. what is the secret service saying? you heard the president coming out and doing what he needed to do. so many do make great sacrifices for him and his family. nonetheless this was a serious lapse. >> absolutely. this was unprecedented. people around here who covered
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the white house for many years do not remember anything hike this happening before. however, there have been security ins denlts over the years no, question about it. he saw additional officers say. not a huge jump in terms of numbers but you did notice a difference. in addition to that, they are doing an internal review that the white house is waiting for. one of the things they want to know about is why the canine dogs were not deployed. they act like missiles and go after suspect who's jump over the fence and can take them down quickly. the canine dog was not deployed, according to a law enforcement official and they think that's inexcusable. they wanted to know why the door was unlocked. and here at the white house they did tell us from now on, this door helen me will remain locked a regular basis. >> and of course you have to would not if it was a very nice friday night. our other story. some americans who are believed
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to have traveled to fight with terrorists in syria are back in the united states tonight. our chief national security correspondent jim sciutto is out with the latest. this is the first time them talked about 100 or so that may have been fighting. they talked about the risk of americans coming home. this is the first time they said some of them are coming home. >> to be clear, it is 100 americans who have gone to fight in syria in some capacity or tried to get there to fight. those who did it successfully, some fought for the worst groups. the isiss oral us in ra. it is believed that some of those who made it over there to fight with these militants have made it back to the u.s. i'm told the current intelligence does not show any of the attorneys actually fought for isis. but it is the belief that some of them who did fight there for other mill daniel groups made it back and that can be a rick. wolf blitzer spoke to jay
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johnson, the director of homeland security and he said they have a pretty good idea of who those people are. the fbi tracking them. it shows you the difficulty here. because it is a lot of people to track. that no continues. it is hard to keep track of them when you have incomplete information. >> and they have passports of stamp that's may alert them to any sort of transgression. and i know there is a new audio tape that is calling for attacks on americans and other countries in the coalition. and isis tape that you've had a chance to listen to. >> you're right. what is particularly alarming about this, we've seen a lot of alarming isis videos and exhortations to violence. this one is so general. it says basically to isis supporters around the world, take any chance you can find to kill a nonbeliever. whether an american or a british or a french. they focus their attention on those countries because they're the one now leading military action and other action against isis in iraq and possibly syria.
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don't wait for a plan. don't wait for the okay from headquarters in syria. but if you can kill some of -- if you can stab them, if you can invade their homes, go ahead and do it. have a listen to this excerpt of this tape. actually, i'll read it for you here. it was in arabic. rig the roads with explosives for them. attacking there bases. raid their homes. cut off their heads. do not let them feel safe, feel secure. remove their families from their home and there after blow up their homes. imagine all those ways that they are encouraging isis supporters. this is be even folks who might have train for isis in syria. if you have a connection or you feel some sympathy for them, they're saying take that opportunity. we saw a plot just like that in australia foiled, thankfully, last week. and this is the concern when you speak to the jay johnsons of the world. they're worried about lone wolf
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attacks like this. >> the hard toast stop because there is often no trail. up next, great to have you with us, sir. you just heard jim sciutto reporting americans trained with terror grooms are now returning to the united states. how big of a threat is this? >> it is a direct threat. that goes to the heart of trying to understand the national security threat of isis. they are one passport and flight away from returning to the united states. and you saw with this statement that was just read. this is certainly a terrorist organization encouraging attacks upon civilians. the attack is real and it is direct to the united states. >> and they're calling attacks on the united states and france which is the two countries leading the air strikes. the question remains that of capability. intend is one thing. capability in another. this sounds a bit ad lessent when you hear what they're saying. their intent would be, is far from that did you it doesn't necessarily read that they have
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it all together. >> clearly they have a significant capability. having come out of years. i can't taking a good portion of the territory in iraq. they have financial cape bills as they looked to oil money that they've been able to obtain and the spoils of the towns and areas they've taken. so they have real organizational capability and asset capability. >> and right now, how many americans do you think that there could be? they're now saying a few. but 100 or so went over fight. there is no real way to know. these are intelligence estimates based on information that has come in the hands of the united states. but there are significant number of people who are fighting and who are engaged in this. which we don't know their identity. >> and i want to ask you the other story, jim acosta on the man who jumped the white house fence. the door was unlocked. not apprehended by anybody.
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a guy who had three earlier indications of intent, including showing up at the white house with a hatchet. how did that happen? >> it is stouing. earlier reporting, all protocol that's would have prevented this were not followed. there are protocols in place that would have pre vented this from happening. the warning signs, those should have been an area. hopefully it could have thwarted this. >> are the secret service to blame here? it sounds like that's who dropped the ball. >> since we know protocols were not followed that could have pre vented this and someone wasn't doing their job, obviously they need to be held accountable. an assessment needs to be done to assure the white house and the first family are safe. >> thank you so much. appreciate your time, congressman on. wednesday i'll be interviewing former president bill clinton. we'll ask him about the threat from isis. and you will see a sneak peek of our conversation at 7:00
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wednesday. president clinton in a special town hall. up next, police say he may have been the last person to have seen missing uva student hannah graham. where is jesse matthew and how did police let him get away? plus, video leaked of her husband knocking her out in an elevator. who is she and what is she doing right now? her friends speak "outfront." ? and ebola victims turned away from hospitals because there aren't enough beds. means keeping seven billion ctransactions flowing.g, and when weather hits, it's data mayhem. but airlines running hp end-to-end solutions
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this is police are searching for a man they say was the last person to be seen with graham before she vanished nine days ago. today charlottesville police issued a wanted poster for jesse math and served a second search warrant. >> we are right here in the downtown mall at the, in charlottesville, the university. this is the exact area that hannah walk minutes before she vanished from the face of the earth. law enforcement is saying tonight, they are not giving up. as police go into their second
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week in the search for hannah graham, the investigation is focusing on jesse matthew who police believe is the last to be seen with the university of virginia sophomore. >> we want to talk to him. we want to talk about his interaction with the sweet young girl that we kblt find. he was with her. >> today police issued this wanted poster. >> it is important we talk to jesse matthew for very obvious reasons but it is also important if he and hannah parted ways at this mallering with need to know that as well. >> police have not charged him with her disappearance but he is wanted on charges of reckless driving. he was seen speeding after showing up saturday at the police station and asking for lawyer. >> detectives don't know any more about the interaction we had that young girl. any more than the moment he walked in. >> the 32-year-old has been employed since august 2012 by university hospital. as an operating room patient
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technician. according to police, surveillance video shows matthew putting his arm around the 18-year-old. they say they ended up at the tempo restaurant. i asked investigators if they can confirm the two left the downtown area together. >> we do have them together after they left the straunl. he is still with her temperature. >> law enforcement search jesse matth matthew's apartment for a second time today. police say items previously collected won't come in until tomorrow. and earlier .with jesse matthew's family. they say his attorney told them not to comment. >> graham's family homes that someone comes forward with information that will bring their daughter back. >> somebody knows what happened to hannah. and others may be watching. and they may know something about what happened to hannah. >> police believe matthew can
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provide answers that hannah's grieving parents need to know. we have been trying to locate the attorney that actually went to the police department on saturday to aid jesse matthew. i spoke with the public defender today and emthat they are not allowed to assist someone until they have been charged with a crime. and jesse matthew has not been charged with a crime. they were not the ones that walked through the police station to help. >> and i know that the information that they've been able to get from the search warrants. what are they looking for? >> the forensic lab doing the testing. they're obviously in his car for her dna. but it is not a criminal to sit in a car. not a crime to drive off with someone in a car. so they have to be looking for some type of evidence to see if a crime was committed. if he has said at all that they parted ways when they left the tempo restaurant, they did not go together, and they final her dna in the car.
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then you have an inconsistency. you have someone authorities could say is obstructing justice in hig to law enforcement. erin? >> thank you. the charlottesville police chief is "outfront." good to have you with us. a second search warrant we've learned has been issued to search jesse matthew's part. what are you looking for? >> let's be up front. i just learned about that search warrant moments ago myself with all the difactivities taking pl. it is my understanding it was to search for clothing that had been identified during the course of the investigation. i can't go into any more detail than that. that's what they were looking for. i don't know whether any of that was secured or not. >> what more do you need to make a full arrest? >> well, that would require me to go into some facts that i'm
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not prepared to discuss. as a practical matter, our commonwealth attorney, out chief investigating officer work hand in hand with detectives and along the way will do the probable cause investigation. they are asking to consider an arrest warrant. we're not at that point and in all fairness to that point, one of the thing we need to do is to talk to jesse matthew. >> that's the big question. jesse matthew walked into the police station as we know. asked to see a lawyer. and then he sped away at high speed. what happened after that? might understanding is you all chose not to pursue him. >> let's put the chronology back in order. he left the police station and then was observed in our neighboring jurisdiction of albemarle county leaving the residence in a vehicle at a high rate of speed.
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he was being surveiled by a state trooper. i believe it was at a member of the federal authorities as well. they had to make a calculated risk as to whether continuing to engage in high risk driving behavior was going to put others at risk. and quite frankly, this was a residential neighborhood. it was the middle of the day. he was about to enter a highly populated roadway. they made a calculated decision and disengaged, went before the magistrate and object tained the two warrants. >> do you have a fear that every moment counts? that every moment may matter as to whether hannah graham is alive. >> of course. we have legal standards we need to meet. if we're going to detain someone, we need a suspicion. if we don't meet the standards at any given time, we could damage the consequent prosecution if one should take place. >> you believe jesse matthew was the last person to see her alive. >> i have no information to the contrary.
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i can tell you that. everything we know at this point was that he was in fact the last person to see hannah before she disappeared which is why it is so critically important that we talk to him. >> so he is the last person to have seen her and then he fled at high speed. that's not enough. you are staying bottom line is you do not have enough evidence. even from searching that part twice and the car to actually formally ask for his arrest. >> as i speak to you now, that's correct. >> and you have been searching the area. have you found anything that may indicate where she is? that may indicate whether there is still a chance this young woman is alive? >> you know, we have not found any piece of evidence to answer that question one way or the other. i'm going to continue to be helpful. continue to investigate as aggressively as we can. we'll bg our work, the view is toward handing hannah. >> since 2009 at least four young women from the area have disappeared or been killed. one was named morgan harrington.
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i spoke to her parents last week and her mother suggested there could be a link between the murder of her daughter and hannah. do you think that's possible? >> anything is possible. that's a very logical and legitimate question. we're working hand in hand with the very investigators that worked that case with the state police and the fbi. the group of people that are in the room now as we speak are some of the same people that worked that case as well. they're familiar with the issues. they're familiar with the evidence in that case. so as we move toward this investigation, to the extent there is a crossover or linkage, we're going to ten down that road. right now we're at the point where we need to find hannah. >> thanks vex for your time tonight. >> thank you. next, the owner of the ravens in more hot water tonight. he think as zero tolerance policy against domestic violence
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baltimore ravens insist there was no cover up of the ray rice assault case. the report that the team knew about the videotape of ray rice knocking out his new wife. in kroosh yaigt detail, walk through scene by scene everything that happened hours after the attack. bisciotti says it is all lies. there was something else that caught my attention from him. he insists it is a bad idea to implement a zero tolerance policy. >> you can bet there are some opportunistic peel out there that will look at this zero tolerance place we're getting to, we're going to get to. and they're going to say, boy, this is really, really going to be easy to threaten and get some
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money. the minute i threaten him, he gets cut. >> is the ravens owner forgetting the real thing happening here? suzanne malveaux is "outfront." >> janay rice is neither a punching bag nor a punch line. >> i know janay to be very kind. to be very smart, intelligent. >> for professor sandy nichols and others, she is not simply the woman in the elevator. >> a very sweet and motivated student. they just worked really hard. >> we are thinking of her as a one dimensional character. that she is the wife of ray rice. she is a victim of domestic violence. those do not define who she is. she is a mother, a friend, a
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committed student. >> that janay, according to friends who know her, is anxious to get her life back. >> on sundays, game day, getting ready, going to the stadium. sitting with the rest of the wives, cheering on her husband. that life has been taken away. >> they got to know her personally when she co-hosted a radio show. >> they were a young couple in love. >> before she was janay rice, she was janay ashley palmer, a girl from the new york suburb of mt. vernon. >> she was the president of the student council at her high school which was an exclusive, all girls catholic high school. >> ray attended nearby new rochelle and they kept in touch in college. the first purported date was at a cheese cake factory. in 2008, ray was drafted out of rutgers by the ravens. >> she follow him to baltimore shelf put him through school. >> according to marks, the
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relationship turned unstable. >> it got very toxic and unhealthy. >> becoming a proud mom. often seen pushing her daughter in a stroller from class to class. >> she really programs wanted to be seen on her own merits. and her own work without being associated all the time with a celebrity. >> for graduation, ray proposed with the ring and a new car. since the elevator incident was exposed the two have rarely be seen in public. sources close to the couple say they are leaning on each other. >> that nfl family is no longer there for him. he has to turn to someone or something. he's turned to janay. >> friends say they are thriving from counseling but with all the attention, they're having dilly trusting people. >> just hearing how the friends
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would describe her. what have you said about how she's feeling about this entire incident? that she keeps seeing the video playing on tv. >> there are a number of takeaways. in talking to friends and associates, they're hunkered down at home. they're watching movies. they have a small inner circle of supporters. you have a few ravens players who call ray. and while he's feeling he's been cooperative with the nfl and since demonized, janay still feels badly like she in some part played a part in tearing him down. one of the toughest things they're dealing with is losing their identity. they were so wrapped up in the ravens franchise. they even named their daughter raven. they have to let that go. they're also very concerned about the day their daughter will see the elevator altercation. and one thing they are hopeful about is that they do believe that ray is going to play again. a lot of people very protective circle right now. not a lot of people talking
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publicly. they feel very protective of this couple and they really need to get in front of this. and they're still through it in the beginning stages of all this. >> thank you very much. an incredible look at what's going on with that couple. don is with me. great to have you both with us. i did not know that they named their daughter after the ravens. and that little detail for some reason seems to be rather pointant, giving a sense at what they're going through right now. >> while everyone should see janay as their sister, daughter, friend, see the woman that she is, you must keep an eye on what this is all about. they are going through something very publicly that is probably the most private crime in our society. why we call it domestic violence. if it only hams in the home, that is its origin. so the light of day is being shown. it is also showing how much his
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life was their identity. >> yes. >> and his life as an nfl player was their identity. which makes it a very cloudy situation for both of them and as we're seeing in the nfl organization and as a whole. trying to pull that apart and saying this is a domestic violence crime that is taking place in the context of this nfl landscape. that we are having a very hard and difficult time talking very honlsly about it. because of how deemly entrenched it is in our culture. >> you've been very open about this. that a college boyfriend knocked you out. this is something you've talked about and been open about. a lot of people watching openly about. you heard janay's friends talking about her and ray. what do you hear? >> i hear a lot of women trying to be good friends to janay. what they really ought to be doing is saying, janay, you're a victim of domestic violence. you have to quit defending ray rice. you have to quit talking about this. you have to quit appearing in
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public with him. what you have to do right now is work on your relationship. if the counseling is really working, then jump right into it. this is a time to work on your marriage and your relationship and get your problems solved. not a time to get the job back for the husband who punched you in the elevator. >> and the guilt she still feels. when you went through it, some of your friends were defending the boyfriend. >> i completely understand it from her standpoint. now she's destroyed their entire family life. it is not just his life that has been affected. it is hers and the daughter's. >> she didn't destroy it. >> but that's how she feels. >> i'm sorry. yes. >> but that's where, even this whole conversation is even shifting to the nfl now. and somehow the raiders organization has destroyed his career. and so all of a sudden, ray rice -- you have to be very careful in this conversation not to make ray rice the victim. the victim of janay rice doing something to him. the victim of the nfl doing
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something to him. >> there are a lot of people who would like it to be that way and one seems to be the owner of the ravens who is saying, that a zero tolerance policy would create an environment of ruining careers. that is a stunningly -- >> a slippery slope. >> insensitive. i'm appall that someone would counsel him to go out and say it. >> that's the problem that clearly no one counseled him. he didn't think that losing the ownership of the team was a threat to him. >> the problem is that they have to qualify. the players in the league versus what the league is moving forward. it will be a very difficult time if they have a zero tol rags. the statement they need to be saying is a guy like jameis winston right now doesn't qualify for employment in the national football league. that's where the zero tol ranls is. >> the thing struck me during that whole news conference by the baltimore ravens owner is
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actually two things. he said he loves ray rice. he still loves ray rice. he believes in redemption but he wasn't curious enough to want to watch the tape of what happened in that elevator. he didn't want to way. . he didn't care. which i finltd interesting. if you love a person and you're a great friend, you want to know bad with the good so you can hem your friend, right? you don't want to close your eyes to their faults. that's not really a true friend. the other thing he talked about was redemption. he said that he would be interested. he would open the door to ray rice possibly working with players in the future to teach them the good evils of domestic violence. >> it is strange because he doesn't have the answer to this larger problem. how do we get control of the guys who are currently employed with us? i'll get you off my problem so i
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have to do these press conferences. >> and the comments that someone would accuse him to get money. >> what money? >> to extort players. if they're going to lose their job and not get the money. i lose the logic. >> i took it to be i'm biased on this subject but i took it to mean all of these women would come out of the wood work and accuse these players of wrongdoing when they didn't get anything wrong. >> so they would have to be paid off and be quiet. >> i don't know. >> here's the problem for this conversation. >> this is a reflection on how bad sexism in the league is. they need to be talking about, not that this is a women's problem. and control the narrative. when do we ask, when does a woman say, why does a man stay in a relationship where him being abusive to his mate is
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okay? it is part of the make-up and the dna of men? that's the question that needs to be addressed. that's the question the nfl can be very effective in that conversation. >> thanks to both of you. "outfront," sierra leone discovered 90 bodies. all victim. ebola. the spread is getting exponential. we'll go live to liberia. and how many cell phones has apple sold? >> as for this job, not that i have a choice but [ bleep ] i quit. >> we apologize for that. we'll be right back. [ female announcer ] we help make secure financial tomorrows a reality for over 19 million people. [ mom ] with life insurance, we're not just insuring our lives... we're helping protect his. [ female announcer ] everyone has a moment when tomorrow becomes real.
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at iwith somethingpoint ofterrible to admit.nnovation. i treated thousands of patients, risked their lives, while high on prescription drugs. i was an addict. i'm recovered now, but an estimated 500,000 medical professionals are still out there, abusing drugs or alcohol. police, airline pilots, bus drivers... they're randomly tested for drugs and alcohol... but not us doctors. you can change that: vote yes on proposition 46.
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in the next few weeks. the hardest hit country is liberia. our correspondent elizabeth cohen is there. and has a firsthand look at what it is like for those people desperately trying to stop the crisis. >> reporter: an international health crisis unpress denltd in modern time. ebola. ground zero, liberia. this city, a hot spot as a sunday service comes to an end. parishioners washing up with chlorine. the threat of the virus ever present. this young parishioner lost 13 of his relatives to ebola including his parents. the pastor tell his congregation, no hands. no hugging. >> are you afraid of death? no. but i don't want to die from ebola. >> reporter: a prayer before the dead body management team winds its way through the city slum to retrieve cadavers.
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even these suits can't protect their hearts from what they see on the job like a baby hungry for his dead mother's milk. >> i took the key. i opened the door. i went in. i saw the 6-month-old child olympicing on the mother. >> reporter: the woman inside this bag, one of more than 1,500 people suspected of dying from ebola in liberia. one major reason? a shortage of hospital beds. so the sick forced to stay home where they can infect others. this new clinic opened just sunday. but when we arrive, no one come outside to bring these patients in. too weak, they fall to the ground. inside this ambulance, three people make a seven-hour trip to get here and die outside the hospital. father king does his part. he stopped giving everyone communion from the same cup.
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>> by stopping this practice, have you saved lives? >> definitely. >> reporter: his congregation awaiting the health conference by president obama. >> the news that america was coming in with a huge number of personnel. that is a relief to people in lie beer i can't. >> reporter: they know relief won't come quickly. for now, ebola is here to stay. >> the image of that baby and the mother and those bodies you were showing outside the hospital. those people who traveled seven hours and died because tlrm no beds. what is being done about that? >> reporter: you know, this is something i've sort of learned as i've been on the ground here. things don't always go as quickly as one might like and they don't always go as smoothly. so there was an ebola treatment clinic. 100 new beds. there was a ceremony. but on this first day they were open, ambulances arrived.
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when we were there, there was no one to take in the patient who's couldn't walk. so we just watched as these patients sat in the ambulance. no one came to get them. a few people tried to get out and they were so weak that they collapsed on the ground and they were left, at least for a period of time on the ground. and you just see that there are so many stems to making this work. and at the same time ebola is growing exponentially and then the efforts are not growing exponentially. not a good combination. >> thank you. it must be devastating to have to observe that. next, the anchorage anchor who dropped the f bomb on her career. >> as for this job, not that i have a choice but [ bleep ]. >> jeanne moos is next. and how big is the iphone 6 craze?
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and time to visit anderson to see what's coming up on "ac 360." >> breaking news tonight on the special two-hour edition of ac-360 on the arsenal of weapons held by the fence jumper. how does a multibillion dollar business get and keep nonprofit status? and could the latest string of scandals put the nfl's money
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machine in jeopardy? drew griffin follows the money back to a deal in the '60s in the early years of the league to tell you why they have tax exempt status. what he found may surprise you. and our exclusive on the ground reporting on ebola. we sent elizabeth cohen to document how the disease has struck chaos and fear and the outbreak of spreading those stories and air strikes in syria could begin at any time as well as the ridiculist all at the top of the hour. >> see you in just a few moments. leaving one job for another. they always say it's best not to burn bridges, but sometimes you have this moment where you imagine what it would be like to leave the way you want the leave. tonight an on-air reporter did it. here's jeanne moos. >> reporter: why just quit quietly when you can go on live tv and drop an f-bomb? sharlo green quit her job as a reporter at an alaska tv station to become a marijuana activist. and critics are asking what was
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she smoking to leave like this. >> and as for this job, not that i have a choice, but [ bleep ] it, i quit. >> reporter: the f-bomb left the anchor shell shocked. >> we apologize for that. we'll be right back. pardon for us. >> reporter: pardon for us? well, at least she didn't scream like ron burgundy's floor manager. >> go [ bleep ] yourself, san diego. >> cut! >> reporter: ktva later tweeted, viewers, we sincerely apologize for the inappropriate language used by a ktva reporter on the air. the employee has been terminated. green was coming out of a story she'd done on the alaska cannabis club. she admitted she owned the club and would be devoting all her energy to an upcoming vote on whether to legalize pot in alaska. with those four little word, one of them four letters, green
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joins the ranks of those who have said take this job and shove it in spectacular fashion. none more spectacular than this. >> guys, what is this? >> i'm here to tell you that i'm quitting. one, two, three, four. ♪ >> reporter: the hotel room service server who brought a band along when he handed his boss his resignation. and who could forget flight attendant steven slater who got on the plane's p.a. to curse and quit, then inflated the emergency slide for his grand exit? or how about adam the taco bell manager who rearranged the letters on the restaurant sign. at least he put a smiley face after his f-bomb. and this guy walked into the break room with his boom box blasting. and the "i quit" emblazoned on his naked chest. at least charlo green kept her clothes on. happy to see her job in tv go up
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in smoke. >> [ bleep ] it, i quit. >> reporter: jeanne moos, cnn. >> pardon for us. >> reporter: new york. >> i kind of want to hear more about the one, the one afterwards who tried to go to commercial, then poor thing, there was no commercial to go to. next, iphone 6 sales. so i've been seeing the lines at the apple stores. they've been nonstop for days. so what's the number? it's next.
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so iphone fans have turned out in huge numbers to buy the iphone 6 and 6 plus. you've seen the never-ending lines. people have waited for days and people woke up at sick hours to get it online. now we have the first taste of how many have been sold. that's the number tonight. 10 million. that's how many iphone 6 and 6 pluses apple has sold in the three days since the launch.
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apple previously announced it sold 4 million phones on the first day available to preorder. this number is significant because it doesn't include china, the largest smartphone market in the world. regulators there haven't even approved the new phones. anderson starts now. good evening, thanks for joining us. a lot happening. air strikes against isis targets in syria could begin at any time. investigators say the white house fence jumper had 800 rounds of ammo in his car, a pair of hatchets and a run-in with the law. and hannah graham, the man seen with her the night she vanished. police have a lot more to ask him about that. new questions for ray rice's former boss at the baltimore ravens. the nfl pays no taxes, no taxes by law. the question is how did that happen? the back story is pretty surprising.
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