tv CNNI Simulcast CNN October 31, 2014 12:00am-1:01am PDT
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a massive manhunt ends as police bring one of america's most wanted criminals into custody. just how did this fugitive manage to evade them for weeks? we'll have the latest. one of jerusalem's holiest sites at the center of rising tensions. israel decides to reopen the temple mount on what could be a day of rage. we'll be joined with a report in moments. also coming up -- >> they put the man on the stretcher on the cutter safely. but it doesn't appear that he's responding at this point. it's unclear what they're going to do with them. >> cnn takes you along with the u.s. coast guard to see the
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perilous journey that thousands of migrants attempt to make each year. welcome to our viewers in the u.s. and around the world. i'm natalie allen. >> good to have you back. hey, everyone, i'm errol barnett. en alleged police killer on the run for nearly seven weeks, has finally been captured and will face a judge today. officials say eric frein could face the death penalty. he was found at an abandoned airport in pennsylvania in relatively good shape. he's accused of killing one state trooper and wounds another in an ambush last month. officers used one of those dropper's handcuffs to arrest frein. cnn's susan candiotti has been following the investigation. >> reporter: after escaping capture just shy of seven weeks, suspected cop killer eric frein runs out of luck and out of time. without one shot fired, he's taken down by u.s. marshals, who spot frein before he even knew
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eyes were on him. sources say helped by intelligence, a special-ops team clearing a frooef upreviously s area spotted him running across a runway at an abandoned airport. he's accused of shooting two troopers, killing one of them. marshals getting him on the ground, recovering these two weapons, a rifle and a pistol. the self-styled survivalist is put in a car. his nose appears to be injured. pennsylvania governor tom corbett weighing in on the capture. >> we have stated that early on we would not rest until his capture was made. i am so pleased to say that tonight we have made the major step that has to be taken down the path to justice. i can't tell you how much on behalf of a grateful state. we want to thank all the partners who have been involved
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in this mission to capture this individual. and how much you have given your heart and your soul in the name of justice. >> reporter: he's fingerprinted, booked and jailed. while on the run, life far from normal. even halloween canceled to keep kids out of harm's way. now that's back on. one official saying frein's arrest has made him ecstatic. susan candiotti, cnn, new york. >> meantime, u.s. president barack obama was in maine on thursday. that's the state where a nurse is challenging an ebola quarantine. he was hundreds of miles away from kaci hickox but essentially he was right in the middle of the controversy. new jersey put her in isolation after she returned from west africa. >> she went on a bike ride
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thursday morning. alexandra fields tells us the town the split on what the nurse is doing. >> it's small community. if one person gets sick, everybody gets sick right away. that's the big thing. it's just fear. >> reporter: it may be a small town, but there's no shortage of opinions on kaci hickox and the state's quarantine. >> it scares me. it scares people being infected. >> it's only transmitted by bodily fluids, so we don't have anything to worry about if you don't come in contact with her. >> reporter: this is a logging community that sits on maine's border with canada. but the low-key atmosphere here all changed monday when nurse kaci hickox came home. becky long says she's not sure
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what she would do if kaci hickox came into her restaurant, but is backing her and proud of her decision to defy the state's request. >> this is a very small community, very family oriented. i think she has a lot of support here. >> reporter: both support and criticism. >> we don't need this here. stay in the quarantine until it's over and we're good. >> i don't want to bring it home, i'm sorry. she should know better because she's a health professional. >> reporter: a reaction some people believe is simply driven by the unknown. >> i think it's an overreaction in a way. people are scared of what they don't know about. >> reporter: alexandra fields, cnn, ft. kent, maine. >> now to another major story. u.s. secretary of state john kerry says washington is concerned about escalating tensions in jerusalem. >> kerry says it's critical all sides exercise restraint in the wake of israel briefly closing jerusalem's holiest religious
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site on thursday. the action followed violent confrontations in the city after an assassination attempt that targeted a controversial rabbi. >> israel reopened access to the site after stinging criticism from palestinian leaders. but some new restrictions are in place at this hour. we'll bring in our reporter knockout live from jerusalem. erin, this all centers around an incredibly sacred religious site. this runs the risk, of course, of kicking off even more israeli-palestinian violence. how are both sides trying to avoid that? what limitations are in place right now as far as who can visit? >> reporter: well, the situation is calm here outside the gate entrance to the old city in east jerusalem. but as you can see behind me, there is a heavy police presence. security barricades have been set up. they're checking the i.d.s of people trying to enter the old
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city. now, as you mentioned, the noble sanctuary or temple mount is open today, but under restriction. only men over the age of 50 and all women are allowed inside to pray. it's the kind of restriction that angers many muslims. and yesterday, for the first time in some 14 years, the site was completely closed to all worshippers. a decision that the spokesperson for the palestinian president calls a declaration of war. the grand mufta of jerusalem walks through the streets of the old city. today, at the third holiest site in easy ham, he was turned away from noon prayers. closed following the attempted assassination of rabbi yehud glick. a group of right wing israeli activists wowed to enter the temple mount, also known to
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muslims as the compound for prayers. but the state is completely closed to all worshippers. now yehud glick lies in an israeli hospital. medical sources say he's in sere condition. police say a man on a motorcycle shot him four times. glick had just hosted an event attended by members of the israeli kinesset, which called for more israeli jews to go to the temple mount to pray. it was here at his house that the suspect, a 32-year-old palestinian, was killed in a shootout with israeli forces. there have been increasing clashes in jerusalem. islamic scholars have been protesting the number of far right israelis arriving daily at the site. >> translator: it's the jewish right wing extremism that's raced the pace of assaults. since 2003, we've been talking about these unilateral
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decisions. the pace of assaults has increased. >> reporter: jews are not allowed to formally pray at the site. glick and others have been calling for greater access. >> good will and trust, it should be possible to acome 2k5i89 everyone without jeopardizing their attachment, but there has to be that good wi will. >> these days good will is more hard to come by. and now an all-too familiar scene on the streets of jerusalem. last night was the funeral of the main suspect in that assassination attempt, 32-year-old, under court order, only 45 people were supposed to have attended. a cnn producer was at the funeral and said that more than 500 people were there. they were climbing over the cemetery walls in order to be
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able to attend. things were very tense. there was heavy security but no clashes. erol? >> erin, i though that yehud glick is in serious condition. is he likely to improve? >> reporter: well, we are still waiting for an update from the hospital. as for the condition of the far right rabbi, yehud glick, as of yesterday, medical sources were saying he suffered four bullet wounds to the chest, arm, throat and stomach. he had undergone a 2 1/2 hour surgery. medical sources saying that there is potential that he would need further surgeries. >> just past 9:10 in the morning, joining us live from jerusalem. thank you. next, protests in ferguson, missouri continue months after the shooting of michael brown. what the police chief is saying now about his own future.
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isis kills hundreds of sunni tribesmen in iraq and officials say they've seen a mass grave that proves it. stay with us here on cnn. when it comes to medicare, everyone talks about what happens when you turn sixty-five. but, really, it's what you do before that counts. see, medicare doesn't cover everything. only about eighty percent of part b medical costs. the rest is on you. [ male announcer ] consider an aarp medicare supplement insurance plan insured by unitedhealthcare insurance company. like all standardized medicare supplement insurance plans, it could really save you in out-of-pocket medical costs. so, call now and request this free decision guide. discover how an aarp medicare supplement plan could go long™ for you. do you want to choose your doctors? avoid networks? what about referrals?
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peshmerga soldiers are preparing to enter kobani from turkey as isis continue to shell the only border crossing. >> next door in iraq, isis militants have slaughtered hundreds of fellow sunnis. >> it's happened again. jim sciutto has more on the massacre and the questions it is raising in washington. >> reporter: when they took up arms against isis earlier this month, the tribe celebrated with gunfire and a parade. they are essential to the u.s.-led war. moderate sunnis challenging the extremist sunnis of isis. much as the sunni awakening fought against al qaeda back during the iraq war. but now, just two weeks later, this. in the last 48 hours, tribal leaders tell cnn isis has massacred 400 tribesmen.
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45 iraqi men executed on camera on wednesday. and today, hundreds more found in a mass grave. today, pentagon leaders acknowledge that u.s. trained iraqi forces could not be relied on to help. >> the iraqi security forces in al anbar province are in defensive positions, and would be unlikely to be able to respond to a request for assistance from the tribe. >> reporter: on monday, the u.s. air dropped humanitarian aid, but there was no military action to rescue them. and pentagon leaders indicated that will not change any time soon. >> here you have a group that is risking their lives in a way that the coalition is frankly desperate for. and yet no one came to their aid except an air drop of meals. >> this is just another one of
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many daily dimensions of what's going on over there. the brutality of isil and what they're doing has to be stopped. >> reporter: as isis continues its deadly march through syria and iraq, the president's national security team is facing its own internal disagreements. today, defense secretary chuck hagel ak nocknowledged he sent two-page memo to change the policy in syria. >> that's the responsibility of any leader, and because we are a significant element of this issue, we owe the president and we owe the national security council our best thinking on this. and it has to be honest and it has to be direct. >> reporter: this is a very public disagreement on a core element of the administration's syria policy, which is what to
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do about assad. for three years, the president said assad must be moved. now he's pursuing an air campaign which hurts isis. this is also a key point of contention between nato allies, the u.s., and turkey. jim sciutto, cnn, washington. speaking of assad, we don't know if coalition air strikes on isis are helping the assad regime, but it does appear syrian government forces are now making gain. >> for more on that, and how the battle against isis is affecting syria's 3-year-old civil war, here's nic robertson. >> reporter: weeks of wall-to-wall coverage of air strikes on isis in kobani on syria's northern border, some of it carried live from the relative safety of turkey. this brought international focus away from what is happening deeper inside the war torn nation. fragments come into view, like this recent rebel video from
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aleppo, syria's largest city. for months, cnn, like many others, denied access by the syrian government. unable for the most part to report independently on what's happening inside syria's boarders. >> there is no question, the assad regime's advances threaten to cut off a city of well of 300,000 civilians. >> reporter: while coalition aircraft bomb isis, rebels send words that barrel bomb dropping helicopters are picking off softer targets and report thousands of civil deaths in other parts of syria. >> that's a regime strategy, focus on assad's attempts to regain lost territory without dealing with isis. >> reporter: assad it appears is leaving the coalition to take on his toughest enemy, isis.
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u.s. officials are adamant there is no deal struck with assad. >> this is not about assad, this is about isil. >> reporter: but moderate opposition rebels believe isil is trying to force the u.s. to talk with them, aiming to drive them from front line positions against isis. so that only assad's forces face the terror group on the battlefield. there by cementing common cause with the u.s.-led coalition. the assad reseem wants to present itself as the sole solution to terrorism and to fight isis in syria. >> reporter: far beyond kobani, assad's strategies are still at play, and some of them, like in aleppo, appear to be working for him. nic robertson, cnn, london. we'll turn to the u.s. next. the ferguson, missouri police
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the police chief in ferguson, missouri denies reports he's going to quit. >> that's right. here's what thomas jackson told cnn's jason carroll in an exclusive interview. >> where does it stand, are you going to resign? >> no, i'm going to stay and see this through. >> straightforward there. >> that's an excerpt of that
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interview. emotions still running high in ferguson nearly three months after a white police officer fatally shot unarmed african-american teen michael brown. >> there's still tension and anger there along with signs of change. >> reporter: if ever there was a sign that racial tensions are simmering to a boil in missouri, this is it. an uncensored, racially charged front page of the missouri state university newspaper, where the n word and f word are spelled out. the editor in chief explained why he did not sensor the words hurled at students protesting for ferguson. >> i wanted people to say, look at this. i wanted people to look at those words and look below where it says these things were said by students and other attendees. i wanted them to read that article and see what black students and students of other races have to go through on
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missouri state's campus every day. >> reporter: back in ferguson, the memorial for unarmed black teenager michael brown remains in the middle of the street where he was shot and killed by officer darren wilson. anger has been building in the city for years between the majority black community and almost all-white police department. after the shooting, wit and dozens of others decided to arm themselves with cameras. what are they doing differently? >> they're respecting residents to a degree. >> reporter: is that because they know they're on camera? >> they know they're on camera now, so they're not interacting with the community, you know, but they are coming in and practicing restraint. >> reporter: at night, the biggest change is outside the police department, where protesters are now part of the scenery. the ferguson police now wear
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cameras too, saying they and fair that willlies have become targets of threats and violence. at a city council meeting, one person said she had been harassed by police and warned the mayor's private information had been released on the internet. >> did you see where your social security had been released on the internet? >> thank you. >> reporter: businesses on this street are hurting along with the community. >> we were doing okay, but barely making it. and now that this has occurred, it's so slow, it's like a dead zone. pretty much. >> reporter: for business? >> for business, for the community, as well. >> reporter: she's boarded up her salon, worried about unrest. yet some residents are trying to rebuild. a group calling itself one ferguson is stepping up to find
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solutions from within. >> the seen i've seen is our community willing to come together. >> the first step is admitting there's something that needs to change and holding ourselves accountable as residents. >> reporter: sarah sider in, cnn, inning, missouri. still to come here on cnn, he's accused of murdering a pennsylvania police officer, and he was put into that officer's patrol car when he was finally caught. you could call that poetic justice. we're learning more about the arrest of eric frein. also ahead here, ukraine and russia making a deal finally on energy. how much it will cost to keep ukraine warm this winter. that's next.
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you are watching cnn. i'm errol barnett. >> i'm natalie allen. in the headlines this hour. >> prosecutors in pennsylvania plan to go after the death penalty for alleged cop killer caught after two months on the run. eric frein was found in pennsylvania late thursday. you see the expression on his face there. he's suspected in a september 12 ambush shooting that left one state trooper dead and another wounded. friday prayers are under way amid tension in jerusalem. israeli authorities are restricting muslim access to the sacred spot after closing it down. this follows violent unrest in the wake of an assassination attempt on a controversial rabbi. israeli police killed the alleged gunman. right now at this moment, more than 100 people are volunteering for the world health organization's ebola vaccine trial. this is under way in switzerland and it's the largest ever trial
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for the ebola vaccine. the w.h.o. hopes to have the first results in december. ebola has killed nearly 5,000 people in west africa. back now to our top story. eric frein is set to be arraigned later today in pennsylvania. >> police captured him thursday night, ending a seven-week-long manhunt. he's accused of killing a state trooper and injuring another. he was found in an abandoned airports in relatively good shape. cnn's miguel marquez has details for us. >> reporter: incredible, incredible relief. pap payab palpable emotion as the governor and head of the state police described how eric frein was taken down. the big takeaway from this, and this is clearly how close they held this to their hearts, is that when he was arrested, they slapped the cuffs of corporal
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brian dixon and put him in dixon oscar. that is the corporal that frein hunted down and killed as though he were an animal in that letter released. also saying that he was caught completely by surprise. this is an area they had gridded out, they had been through, they were going back through it. they saw him and immediately went after him and were able to get him to go down to his knees and take him into custody. he immediately told them who he was. he has a cut on his nose, if you can see the pictures that we've seen so far in the pack of that police car. they're only saying that was a cut that he suffered, but it wasn't particularly bad. this person had been on the run for seven weeks eluding police. a massive area they had been searching through, and to find him in that abandoned hangar, a lot of these different buildings he had been using, if they got
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lucky, they make their own luck. this was a very, very good night for law enforcement officials here. >> it certainly was indeed. eric frein is a self-described survivalists and belong told a group of war reenactors. >> anderson cooper spoke to one man who filmed frein in his element. he said at times frein took his role seriously. he said he wasn't surprised the officers had been shot and frein was the suspect. >> when we interviewed him, he spoke about events where he had gone into the forest for days at a time. so we really thought that he was living his fantasy. it was no longer a re-enactment. there were real bullets, gone from obscurity, living in his parent's basement, to being a real fugitive who had shot someone and had people shooting at him. so he was definitely living a
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fantasy. >> a fantasy gone wrong. >> very bizarre. >> my goodness, yes. eric frein doesn't even actually have a military background. no word if he has an attorney and prosecutors are saying they're going to seek the death penalty. >> very bizarre. but thankfully he's been captured. another story we're tracking for you. ukrainians will not be out in the cold this winter thanks to a deal with russia and the european union. russia has agreed to resume natural gas supplies to ukraine but only after the eu agreed to help pay russian debts. >> this comes after months of intense negotiations. let's bring in matthew chance hive in moscow for us. what more are you learning about this deal and how it was reached? >> reporter: well, it was agonizing negotiations that eventually led to the agreement.
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there was a joint press conference yesterday evening in brussels where this took place, these negotiations, where all the various parties that had been at the negotiating table gave their comments. jose emanuel barosso, head of the european commission, say thing is no reason now as a result of this deal for people in europe to stay cold this winter. the energy czar saying he thought this was a first glimmer of hope in easing tensions in russia and ukraine. so a really important deal for various reasons and for all sides, for the ukrainians first and foremost. winter is upon us in this part of europe and it's becoming very cold indeed in ukraine. so it meant a need for a deal with russia that cut off its supplies of gas since june of this year. this deal means there won't be
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energy shortages inside ukraine, which is a good thing for the people there. it's also a good thing for the people of western europe, because much of the gas that is supplied to western europe from russia is done so across pipelines that run through ukraine. so there was a real possibility if gas continued to be cut off to ukraine from russia, there would be shortages inside western europe, as well. that's one of the reasons why the european union has been an interested party with russia. from a russian point of view, the russian energy minister saying that he believes it's a good deal, because it gives assurances that russia is a reliable supplier of energy resources. it's something that it wants to emphasize in its relationship with europe, that it continue to supply energy despite the geopolitical problems that we're in the middle of between those two sides. >> certainly. as you mentioned, one situation that has a positive outcome, and perhaps that is a hopeful sign
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for the days to come. thank you, matthew chance, live for us in moscow. morning light has arrived in burkina faso and so too ends the curfew there after a day that saw the military seize power and the president of the west african nation disappearing from sight. >> demonstrators stormed the parliament and set it on fire, angered over a move for the president to extend his 27-year term. he later withdrew the proposed amendment. burkina faso is a key western ally in the fight against al qaeda. in south korea, a court-martial ended in the conviction of four soldiers there. they'll each serve between 25 and 45 years if prison for the beating death of a fellow soldier. >> the case shocked the nation and led to the resignation of the army chief of staff. prosecutors said the 20-year-old victim was beaten and bullied
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almost daily for a month before he died. they plan to appeal for tougher sentences. north korea is claiming a man who escaped one of their brutal prison camps is a child rapist. that's just one of many allegations coming from a video. >> the target, a prominent defector who says it's a smear campaign to discount what he is saying about human rights violations. here's cnn's paula hancocks. >> reporter: north korea calls this man human scum. he's the only man known to have been born into a north korean prison camp, escaped and survived to tell the tale. this footage was posted on the website which carries pro-pyongyang propaganda. his father says to his son, come
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to your sense and return to the embrace of the party. stop being the play thing of others. the video alleges shin left the country to avoid punishment for the rape of a 13-year-old girl. shin says it's a lie he has heard before. and north korea is trying to discredit him. shin wrote a book about his life in camp 14, where he says one of his earliest memories was being forced to watch the excuse of his mother and brother. they showed mel the video, he says, to keep me quiet or return to north korea. one thing is for sure, my father's fate hangs upon north korea. if i keep doing this, my father will endure more hardship. shin testified at the united nations commission of inquiry, a damning report on pyongyang's human rights abuses. north korean officials have went on an international publicity
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blitz to mitigate that report. shin says despite north korea using his faith tore discredit him, this is the first time he's been grateful to the regime. he said he now knows his father is alive. more of the day's biggest stories coming up. making it in the u.s. isn't easy for many migrants. for some, the difference between life and death is a simple helping hand. plus, heavy rain closes roads and damages buildings in western norway. we'll have the world's weather for you, as well. stay with us.
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welcome back. thousands of migrants are desperate to make it into the united states each year. >> we know how dangerous those travels are. some risk their lives by taking boats from their home countries with exclusive access, cnn's alina machado rode with the u.s. coast guard in the florida straits and witnessed dramatic rescues. >> reporter: a dramatic scene plays out in the florida straits. >> i got them. >> reporter: a united states coast guard plane spots this small boat packed with 29 cubans, including several women and at least one young boy. the boat is taking on water. >> norvel is coming on scene. >> reporter: yet when the coast guard cutter arrives to help,
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the group's leader refuses the help. eventually the group gives up and gives in. joining the growing number of migrants rescued while make thing dangerous and sometimes deadly journey to the u.s. >> we've seen the highest migration levels from cuba and haiti in the past five years. >> reporter: roughly 10,000 migrants have been found in this area this year. that's more than 3,000 the year before. the biggest spike, cubans, whose numbers have doubled since the castro government lifted travel restrictions in 2012. you have to be desperate to go into open water and just try to make it, no? >> yeah, it is. >> reporter: it's very dangerous. >> most of it is economic. they're looking for a better way of life. >> reporte >> this is the front line of
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coast guard operations. this is where the action happens. >> reporter: we wanted to get a first hand look at the action. we spent few days on board and what we saw was sobering. a few hours into our journey, the ship takes on ten migrants. the heights of the u.s. shine in the distance. this is the closest this group will get. >> one more. >> reporter: a doctor is concerned the last one may be suicidal, refusining to eat, afr saying this was his ninth attempt to reach america. they put the man on the stretcher, on the cutter safely. but it doesn't appear that he's responding at this point. it's unclear what they're going to do with him. we know that the remaining nine migrants are all in the same area, on this boat, and they'll probably be here until the process runs its course. in the early morning hours,
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another group of migrants is found barely moving, idling in what appears to be the middle of nowhere. each one is given a life vest before being transferred to the cutter. their small boat is then filled with gasoline. and shot up with a.50 caliber machine gun. a fire sinks the tiny boat. on the cutter, the my dpranlts wear superintendents to stay dry and given red beans and rice to eat twice a day and a rubber mat to sleep on. some interact with the americans. >> it's difficult to see this situation that they're in. >> reporter: in all, we saw about 80 cuban migrants in four days with the coast guard, all of them with desperation in their eyes. for most, the search for a new life over, at least for now. of the 80 migrants we saw, 29
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cubans were allowed to stay in the u.s. because of a long standing policy that only applies to cubans. most migrants who are found at sea regardless of the country at origin are usually sent back. alina machado, cnn, miami beach. flight operators hit the self-destruct button seconds after the launch of an unmanned cargo rocket. a malfunction was defected and this was a disassembly, that's a quote, that resulted in this stunning explosion and crash on the launch pad in the u.s. state of virginia. >> however, officials are still trying to figure out what caused the malfunction. you can just hear and see how shocked we were when we saw that happen. thankfully, no one was injured on the ground. >> i was covering a story once in the ocean and a missile
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launch just went awry and blew up. it is kind of weird. several homes are in danger of slipping into a river after massive flooding in norway. >> this is more dramatic footage. this is a really scary situation for people. >> you have to see these visuals. these are very dramatic, and some of this is coming out of what is called oda, norway, about 300 kilometers west of oslo. houses and bridges swept away. rivers bursting at their seams, swelling to more than twice their average size. a lot of people left homeless. a population of about 7,000 people. there were 20 roads that have been closed thanks to the flooding. no reports of injuries or fatalities. but an additional 30 to 50 mill meemters of rainfall expected over the next 24 to 48 hours.
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that's on top of rainfall totals in excess of 146 millimeters. you can see on the satellite loop across western and southern central norway that all of this moisture just creating the constant rainfall. there's oslo. again, the oda region just to the far west of that area. if you look closely, you can see the rain and the snow and this is a lot of different terrains across the area. so more rain accumulating quickly into the valleys there. so look out for the possibility of further flooding. it's the wind swept rain, wind gusts between 30 and 40 kilometers per hour, continuing through the early weekend. switchi ining geers. trick or treat. if you are traveling to the east coast of the united states, grab your winter coat.
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a lot of people traveling from london to new york, and temperatures are going to range between 10 and 15 degrees below average for this time of year. that's in fahrenheit by the way. the national weather service issuing deep freeze warnings for much of missouri and tennessee, where we could see 7 inches of snow falling in southern appalachian mountains. temperatures running 10 to 15 degrees below average. you can see the storm system bringing snowfall to much of the great lakes regions. so a very cold weekend ahead. and we won't be spared the cold in atlanta either. >> about time we got a little fall cool here. all right. we're going to turn it to the iphone next. the six is becoming the go-to camera for many filmmakers. >> but do you hodoes it compareo a professional news camera? we'll put it to the test after the break.
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plus, nine out of ten plan members surveyed say they would recommend their plan to a friend. remember, medicare doesn't cover everything. the rest is up to you. call now, request your free [decision guide] and start gathering the information you need to help you keep rolling with confidence. go long™. ♪ big announcement from apple. the ceo tim cook revealed he's day. >> he wrote that he hopes coming out publicly will inspire people to assist on their equality. it's a sentiment he expressed when he referenced martin luther king in a speech monday at his
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home in alabama. >> dr. king once said our lives begin to end the day we become silent about the things that matter. there is little, if anything, that matters more in our country that our basic tenants of equality and human rights. i have long promised myself to never be silent in my beliefs in regard to these tenants. >> apple's ceo tim cook speaking this. >> had to be a reheef lief to g that out in the open. last month, the iphone six was released. >> some filmmakers are using it to produce feature films and documentaries. harvey hogan puts it to the test against our own professional kit. take a look. ♪ >> i'm harvey, a cameraman for cnn. and i've worked in the industry for 14 years.
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day-to-day, we use standard issue professional grade kit. i also own an iphone 6 and the camera on this has been widely praised. a lot of people ask me just how good this is. >> tell them, peter. >> good enough to make feature films and music videos like these. they were shot using specialist apps, as well as filters and lenses. on the flip side, they complain about the same things i do, low battery life. so i took both of my cameras to london. ♪ this is a standard use camera and this is my e phone that i use every day. let's see how they compare.
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♪ the iphone colors look little washed out on the bagpipe, but this is because of the lighting. the news camera can handle it much better. the shots of traffic look cool. and using the iphone slow motion feature, this guy in the costume looks scary. when you're filming on any camera, first, that's perspective. choose an angle that shows depth and it will look more life like. when films, try to imagine your view finder divided into thirds. try to shoot a sequence of shots and avoid awkward pans. as you can see, apple's new
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retina dismay is fantastic, but let's see how they both compare. when you're editing the pictures, you can really see the difference. the broadcast camera, the pictures are sharper. that's more depth, and they're much nor vibrant. the iphone, on the other hand, they're more anemic. and the pictures are very flat. it is like comparing a mini to a maserati. and there are plenty of other minis around. the iphone only has an 8 meggi pixle camera. it's about being out there, having fun and being creative. so less about the kit and more about the shots. harvey hogan, cnn, london. >> we're the big winner. >> cnn. you've been watching the right channel, folks. some of you may be about to
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celebrate halloween. >> an artist used his animating skills to bring historic photos to life. take a look. >> the project kind of started out as a procrastination. i had this internship where i had a lot of downtime, just playing around with animation in photo shop. it's a really incredible collection at the library of congress. i look through, you know, 100 different photos before i pick one that i like. i look for people that look like they have a story to them. i just saw her as an intense looking woman. so i thought it would kind of make sense if she turned into birds and flew away. everybody around him is kind of engaged in this moment, and looking around, he's got this far away look in his eyes. some of them get a little bit
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more metaphorical, i guess. i'm always intrigued by the portraits of royalty. some of them i researched the history and kind of see if there's any little bits of the history that i can kind of bring in. she just looks like an icy kind of person. and then i did some history research and i kind of backed that up. there's a story called the yellow wallpaper. one of the original horror stories, i think that's more of an homage to that. the more of these i do, the more things i want to try out and the more things i play around with. i think it came out looking pretty cool. >> there's the guy with an imagination. >> and some free time. >> thanks for watching our
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captured alive. accused cop killer eric matthew frein finally arrested nearly 50 days on a manhunt. taunting investigators. how he was finally taken down ahead. defied quarantine. a nurse returning from west africa refusing to stay inside the house. the question this morning is what will kaci hickox do next and what will the consequences be? and ferguson's top cop on the record forced to resign. talks about the shooting of
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