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tv   Erin Burnett Out Front  CNN  November 13, 2014 4:00pm-5:01pm PST

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every day in the situation room and you can dvr the show so you don't miss a moment. thanks very much for watching. i'm wolf blitzer in "the situation room," erin burnett "outfront" starts right now. "outfront" tonight, breaking news investigators say the man who broke into the white house six weeks ago could have been stopped well before he got inside. shocking new details breaking about what the agent on duty was actually doing at that moment. plus in ferguson a family lawyer said there is no doubt about it, michael brown had his hand up, sur rendering when he was shot and killed by wilson. and how a space probe touched down on a comet and how the landing almost ended in a disaster. let's go "outfront." good evening. i'm erin burnett. "outfront" tonight, the breaking news, a major revelation about the secret service and how an
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intruder jumped a fence and was able to make it all the way inside of the white house. a review by the department of homeland security found a officer made a series of errors that allowed the intruder, omar gonzalez to enter the white house. he entered the white house and made his way to the east room and then headed down a hallway, all before he was tackled by officers inside. joe johns is "outfront" tonight. and joe, it is incredible what you are learning tonight. >> reporter: that is for sure, erin. this is the executive summary from the homeland security department that just cake out today and it gives us a number of details we didn't know about this. clearly there were many breakdowns here on september 19th when omar gonzalez actually made his way all the way into the white house. there were communications breakdowns and people talking over top of each other on the radios. there were officers who couldn't see because there was construction going on here at the white house. and there was also the question
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of why one individual did not unleash his canine dog on omar gonzalez when he was crossing the yard. and here is what they said about this. he said a man was parked with his dog on the white house driveway when omar gonzalez jumped the north fence. the officer was on a call on his personal cell phone on speaker. it says without his radio earpiece in his ear. he had left his second tactical radio in his locker. so there is that. they say there is more training now required for secret service officers who are working here on the white house grounds. including how to deal with individuals who don't appear to be carrying a lethal weapon. and there is also a question, of course, about people losing their jobs and a reduction in force here with the secret service. a lot of questions tonight and this report only raises more. erin. >> bottom line, didn't have, as you say, his earpiece in and on a call on his personal cell
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phone. >> reporter: that is correct. he did jump into action we're told very quickly. perhaps 11 seconds after all of this happened. but from what i can tell from the report, it was because he saw someone else running across the yard and it was not omar gonzalez. >> stunning. thank you very much, joe johns. we'll have more on that in just a moment. other breaking news to share with you as well. new airstrikes in syria with war planes pounding a terror group called khorasan. and new audio from the leader of isis. nick payton walsh is "outfront" with why. >> reporter: the timing says it all. days after he was claimed injured, even dead by iraqi officials, an apparent audio message from al-baghdadi, very much defined, less visible than the last time we saw him in public in a mosque.
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erupt volcanos of jihad everywhere, he said. light the earth with fire on all of the tyrant and their soldiers. they will be victorious he said of holy warriors, marching until they reach rome. and for the u.s., he said between this fear, weakness and powerlessness, we see them stumbling in failure. and after losses and days in which it was uncertain whether he was hit in an air strike. >> we cannot confirm if isil leader al-baghdadi was hit. >> we cannot confirm his condition. >> peshmerga fighters were helping syrian kurds blunt the response and they said isis
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needs big wins attractive to recruits n. one reference, perhaps aimed to date the message to near airstrikes that were claimed to have hit his convoy, he said president obama's announcement of more advisors shows the air strike is not working. they will be forced to send their ground forces to their deaths, he said. obama has ordered the deployment of 1500 additional soldiers under the claim they are advisors because the crusaders and others have weakened their resolve. and now with a $10 million price on his head, the rage is palpable, universal declaring ala order all to jihad without making exception for anyone. >> there are in many ways what is remarkable about the message is the sense of global ambition. this is a militant leader caught
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up in local battles that aren't going particularly well at the moment in syria and iraq. he's not justifying them, but talking about how militant groups in egypt and libya has pledged allegiance to him and saying the caliphate is commanding. perhaps that is the point of the message to show he has not cowed or sound like a man who may have been killed or injured six days ago. thank you very much. >> nick payton walsh. and now republican congressman mike rogers. good to have you with us. and u.s. officials were asked repeatedly if al-baghdadi was killed or wounded. nobody knows anything. and he appears to be live. you were briefed. do you have any information on whether he was injured or even present during the air strike? >> well again, obviously without seeing a body, it does take some time, especially when you don't have intelligence folks right there in the mix. so it will take some time.
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this is not unusual. we've seen this before in remote areas where strikes have occurred. so they are going through all of the processes to check all of their sources of information to see if, in fact, that was true. i have not seen anything as of today or right now that would cop -- confirm that is his voice. it may be. there was speculation that he may have been wounded but is still alive. and the fact that it is audio and not video may lead to the confirmation of that assessment. >> right. absolutely. obviously, we should note even though it was audio and not video, he's sort of a reclusive guy. we hadn't seen a message from him -- a direct message since july. even a failure of the intelligence system, the days after the strikes, that were again repeatedly we were told u.s. officials citing iraqi intelligence, they thought he was dead and then wounded. is it a problem that nobody seems to know what happened.
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iraqi intelligence targeted this convoy and said he was there and killed him. you would think they would know. >> not necessarily. there is in certain areas where there is no iraqi or peshmerga troops or american troops or intell jens collectors. so it does take time. this is not unusual to see somebody who was at least believed to be killed or believed to be part of a strike. and then it takes time to make sure that there is, again, other sources. so you have human sources and other collection methods to use to try to figure out is he dead or not. and this is not completely unusual. the fact that the iraqis came out so early, we've seen that before. where they are very aggressive saying he's there and he's dead. we always take that with a grain of salt. we give it a little time and space. >> right. >> i think, again, what we'll determine is that it is probably closer to the truth point of wounded but still alive. >> and interesting point about
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iraqi intelligence. within the past month, they talked about a possible attack on new york or london subways which american intelligence said was not accurate. but what about al-baghdadi himself. because when you are someone who doesn't appear very often and there are reports that you are killed but you are not killed and you put out a release, it sort of harkens back to the days of osama bin laden and how he used to do that. is this something that is actually going to empower al-baghdadi, give him more of a cult-like status among his followers. >> i don't think so. so he's risen to the level of stature of where he is today and they'll continue to play this great cat and mouse game of where he is and where he isn't. the whole goal has to be can you diminish a couple of things. their command and control, the ability to resupply themselves or logistics and really stop the momentum of them able to take new land. and you see a little bit of this
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in his conversation where he ends up talking about other al qaeda affiliates or jihadist affiliates who are declaring allegiance to the islamic state. and we've seen that, by the way. out of the 21 or so al qaeda affiliates that we track, half of them have pledged some sort of allegiance to the islamic state so he is still in pretty good shape and something we have to work on but you need a more comprehensive strategy to contain him. >> you are hearing that some have pledged in some way to isis. i want to show the video of omar gonzalez, the man who broke the white house security and got n. and you've seen this. ran across the white house lawn and got across the east wing and into the family's residence. i don't know if you heard the reporting we had now, the secret service outside was on a phone call when omar gonzalez did this. he was on a personal phone call and didn't have his secret service piece in. that is shocking, isn't it?
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>> well, to me it is grounds for termination. if this is your assignment and your job, this is an incredibly serious work they do, any deviation from what is procedure during your course of work hours is grounds for termination. i don't know all of the facts, but everything that we're seeing clearly tells me they have to turn -- and if they don't, this is only going to lead to more problems. they have a bit of a cultural problem grewing in the secret service they need to get a handle it, it is a great service with very committed people and if they are going to stand up for those people they need to have very tough, i think, consequences for what happened on that particular day. >> thank you very much chairman rogers. >> thank you. "outfront" next, in ferguson a lawyer for the family said michael brown definitely had his hands in the air surrendering when darren wilson shot him. and breaking news on immigration. details on when the president plans to take executive action. and these sailors attacked
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tonight michael brown's family attorney comes out swinging, saying brown had his hands up when he was killed by officer darren wilson. >> there is evidence that showed michael brown had his hands up. yes, no doubt about that. >> also today the family's private pathologist dr. michael badden testified to the grand jury after being called in at the 11th hour. >> reporter: the grand jury looking into the case that has spawned three months of daily protested in ferguson, missouri is a step closer to a decision. thursday the 12 jurors heard from dr. michael badden, a forensic pathologist who was hired by the family to perform one of threw autopsies on brown.
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the doctor who has a history of cases, including an investigation of the jfk assassination and the o.j. murder trial wouldn't say anything about his testimony here. but the family attorney who hired him did talk. >> there is evidence that shows michael brown had his hands up. yes, no doubt about that. and that is not in regards to his testimony, that is in regards to what we know based on our review of all of the opinions. >> it appears by dr. baden's appearance today, that we are probably getting to the end of the witness list. >> reporter: so far most of the evidence that has leaked out of the grand jury has favored wilson's version of events, including eyewitness testimony and wilson's own story, saying brown reached for the officer's gun through the window of his patrol vehicle. but the witness with brown that day said brown was trying to pull away. the official autopsy leaked to the st. louis post-dispatch in october said brown's right hand
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had gunshot residue on it. whether forensic evidence indicates brown reached for the gun is in dispute. then there is the question of how far away brown was from officer wilson when brown was killed. and what that says about whether or not wilson feared for his life. those are some of the issues the grand jury has to consider. while the brown family attorney spoke in missouri, officer wilson's attorney spoke to cnn from st. louis about whether the police union supports his use of force and wilson's version of events. >> you know, the answer is, they don't. obviously they are interested in their members and making sure members are safe. in terms of taking a position on anything else, their position is that, look, justice is a process and they support the process. >> reporter: but it is a process brown's parents and protesters don't trust. >> here is the problem. when you have a grand jury, they
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only have one voice in there, and that is historically they are going to do whatever the prosecutor wants them to do. >> reporter: but this is an unusual case. and the prosecuting attorney's office has said time and again they are going to show this grand jury all of the evidence that they have to present so they can make a decision with all of the voices that they can bring into the grand jury. so they can look at all of the evidence and make the decision whether or not to indict. erin. >> sarah, thank you very much. and now i want to bring in mark omara, forensic sciencist lawrence colin ski and michaelelin son. and we now know the grand jury asked to hear from the path ol exist, it was not the prosecutor. why would the grand jury ask for this at the end, at the 11th hour.
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>> well they maybe have cob fusion about the -- confusion about the autopsy. maybe one particular question or jury. i like we have an activist grand jury who is asking the prosecutor to get more witnesses and evidence because we really want them to make a complete analysis of all of the evidence before they make a decision so i'm encouraged they are doing it this way. >> and we know there was an official autopsy and the autopsy from the family. now that the pathologist is testifying for the grand jury. you heard benjamin crump, the attorney for michael brown's family saying there is no doubt about it. michael brown's hands were up in surrender. you have looked at both autopsies, the official and one from the family, is there anything to suggest brown had his hands up in surrender. >> it is a complication, believe it or not. i think both autopsies say the same thing, where the wounds were, how many rounds were fires, the fact that the right side of the arm sustained four
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rounds. there is a lot that is the same in all of the autopsies. the question whether his hands were up can be argued different ways. i can tell you that the wound to the forearm had an entrance on the back of the forearm. it is what we call the dorsal side. and the exit was on the vent ral side. >> that would indicate your hands are up this way which is not in surrender, that is the opposite. >> that is correct. it is inconsistent with this. so with respect to that, i think it is more likely than not that the hands were down. now on the upper arm, that is another issue. that could be interpreted different ways. i don't think there is anything clear-cut about whether the arms were up or down. >> so you are saying up or down, no answer, but you do believe in terms of whether they were this way or this way. you do get an answer. and so elsy, so i want to replay
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what michael brown's family attorney said today. >> there is evidence that michael brown had his hands up. yes, no doubt about that. >> and you just heard what doctor cob lynn ski just said. but what is the right thing for benjamin crump to be saying given how passionate people are, given that his word is fact to a lot of people right now. >> well, i think before we talk about the attorney, we need to talk about the voices that we heard prior to the attorney getting involved. there were several witnesses within the first 24 hours that talked about seeing michael brown run away. it is true, if your hands are held up in a serb way like this. the bullet will come this way. then if you are running away, it is clear you are in the opposite direction and would help explain why the autopsy came out the way it did.
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i'm not a professional in this area. no one would. it is on a smell and sight test. and if witnesses saw his hands up and rubbing away -- running away, it makes sense why you have a bullet coming in the other way. >> and so obviously the official autopsy, both autopsies leave open the question of the hands up or down. if so far, a lot of people have said the official autopsy does support darren wilsons case in one significant thing, is that there was a struggle inside of the car for the gun. and also as lz is pointing out, there are witnesses that were supporting michael brown's side and there were seven or eight witnesses that supported the officer wilson's account. if the case for officer wilson is so strong, given the passion about the case, why wouldn't the prosecutor bring it to the grand jury and they would return a not guilty and so why not. >> for any other reason than to
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address somebody's concerns. you should only be charged with a crime if in fact the grand jury believes you committed a crime. when he deferred from making the decision to the grand jury, you have to trust them. you have to remember ben crump is a great, zealous advocate for his client, he is not bound by the facts. he is believing what he is believed to be said on his client's behalf and that is not fact. it is interpreted on his behalf. >> and that is my point. people will see that and people will get angry. he has the ability to have people lose faith in the system even that is not what he is intending to me. >> it seems to me that ben crump's job is to defend his client and he is a lawyer and he won't sit here and hisk riz credibility, so if he is saying this publicly, there must be
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something to support what he is saying and he's also -- i've spoken to him and he's passionate, about the conversation, about there being any response to an indictment or nonindictment, about it being a peaceful protest. and it is important to know he is using his force for good and he's trying to argue for his client using the facts that he's presented and that he knows. >> thank you very much to all three of you. "outfront" next, when the president will take executive action on immigration. that report come up. and plus the u.s. sailors attacked on an istanbul street. tonight the parents of the key man there in the center of this speak out. ♪
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big salvo. >> we are told it could be as early as late next week and jim acosta is being told at the white house that the president won't make any decision on content or timing until he comes back from asia, which is this weekend. but let me tell you what i'm told from an administration official about the working plan for this executive order. it would direct immigration agents to allow illegal immigrants whose children are american citizens to be able to stay here legally. obtain documents to do so. and also protect illegal immigrants who came to the u.s. as children, the so-called dreamers. and also erin, they made clear anyone convicted of a crime would have to leave. and again, just underscore the timing could be as early as late next week, but also could be a little bit more -- a little bit later than that. >> right. obviously the rhetoric as early as next week designed to get republicans to sit up. which they will. >> exactly. >> how will they respond. even if he said i'm willing to
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do it later, or even next week is sure to make them so angry that compromise becomes more difficult. >> absolutely. i was on capitol hill. there were meetings going on behind closed doors across capitol hill trying to figure out how to counter and negate any executive action. and the idea is to use the main idea they have, which is the power of the purse, to defund the immigration policies the president would do by executive order. but get this, erin, the funding for the government, runs out december 11th. so if republicans want to use a bill to keep the government running, which they have to do before december 11th, to defund immigration, like they did with obama care, it could spiral into another government shut down and that is why harry reid told us today that he wants the president to wait until that funding is done to submit the
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executive order. dana bash. >> thank you. and now to the three american sailors on leave from the uss ross and dressed in civilian clothes and unarmed. they were then verbally and physically attacked. all of this happening in broad daylight. mark anthony conic jr. is the sailer here, the one surrounded by the attackers an then a bag placed over his head. his parents mark and deanna join me "outfront." and i can't even imagine what you all must think when you see that video, before you even saw it, though, i believe you got a call from mark. what did he tell you? >> well he called yesterday morning and he said, dad, i just want to let you know, that something has happened and i'm okay. and i asked for details and he couldn't give me details and he had to hang up immediately. so at least we knew he was okay but we had no other information than that when he first called. >> so deanna, did you get a better sense of what happened
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literally from this very frightening video we're seeing with your son right there in the middle? >> yes, ma'am. yes, ma'am. it is very scary. >> oh, it must have been terrifying. go ahead, sorry, mark. >> it's okay. we went online just like everybody else did, once we found out. we didn't know our son was involved from the call. he's called like that before and didn't want us to worry if we saw his ship mentioned or anything like that. so we went online and saw that there were three sailors that were attacked. and still at that time we didn't know that it was him. we had no idea until later when we pulled up one of the videos and saw it and were just -- our heart stopped when we saw that it was terrifying. >> oh, my gosh. i can't believe that is how you found out. i don't think anyone would have expected that. i want to play -- i know it is hard to hear but obviously he's okay. sow know he's all right. i want to play one part of this
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sound bite when they spoke to your son directly. i'll just play it for our viewers. >> because we decide you as murderers, as killers, we want you -- we want you to get out of our land. >> mark, when you hear that and your son is serving his nation overseas, how did that make you feel? >> when we first saw the video, obviously we were frightened and angry all at the same time. you see things like this on tv and i know everyone says this, but until it is someone that means something to you, it really doesn't -- it really doesn't take effect. but when we saw our son being talked to that way and pushed around and then that bag placed on his head, it was -- i don't even know how to describe it to you, erin.
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it was awful. >> deanna, despite being afraid, you must be proud how your son handled this, that he didn't fight back when he himself must have been terrified. >> very proud. he makes me a very proud mother. >> i know he'll be glad to hear that and watch this when he hears you say that. mark, there were 12 turks allegedly involved in this attack. and here is what we know at cnn, according to a tush issues in agency. we know there were 12 and they charged and then released pending a quote, unquote, investigation. does that anger you that this is an ally to the united states. >> it could be easy to be angry at the individuals that did this, but with our faith we really don't feel that way. in a way, we feel sorry for
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them. we would like to see their life changed and turned around where they don't feel like it is necessary for them to do something like this. and to be honest with you, erin, our faith has given us peace to know our son is okay. >> and you've spoken to him again and he knows you've seen the video and he knows that you know everything is okay? >> no. well, like i said, we got to talk to him yesterday morning just for a moment. and then the only other contact we've had with him was social media and that was just one quick, i'm okay, just want to let you know that. we're heading back to -- heading back to our port and that was it. that is all of the information we've had from him. >> wow. my goodness. and that is so hard because now you have seen the video and haven't been able to talk to him about it but at least you know he is safe and we appreciate you sharing your feelings with us tonight. thank you very much to both of you. >> you are very welcome. and "outfront," 13 women die
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from a surgical procedure from a quote, sterilization camp. doctors performing up to 300 sterilizations in one day. and new details on the space probe and the comet making a connection and how close did it come to a disaster. we'll ask bill knight. was a new class of medicine that works differently to lower blood sugar? imagine, loving your numbers. introducing once-daily invokana®. it's the first of a new kind of prescription medicine that's used along with diet and exercise to lower blood sugar in adults with type 2 diabetes. invokana® is a once-daily pill that works around the clock to help lower a1c. here's how: the kidneys allow sugar to be absorbed back into the body. invokana® reduces the amount of sugar allowed back in, and sends some sugar out through the process of urination. and while it's not for weight loss,
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it was a space mission ten years in the making. 310 million miles from where i'm standing right now, plus or minus a couple thousand. the probe reached comet 67-p but it did not go as planned according to this rocket sciencist. >> we landed, almost vertical and almost to the open air -- open space, there is no open air. two feet on the surface. >> one foot hanging out there. that might be scary. but they released new black and white images on the second day of the study.
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bill nys joining me. and i want to talk about one of the first pictures taken. this is 310 million miles away. >> it is a piece of the prime orderial solar system. this is before planets had formed. 4.6 billion years ago so this surface has been largely untouched before that time. so the premise of the bit, as we say in comedy writing is to get a piece of it and to understand it and see what it is made of. are there amino acids with the two oxygens. >> so to me this looks like any old rock and to you this is not any old rock. >> to the geologists, every rock tells a story. >> which they do. every rock tells a story. so now let me show this and i know you'll talk about the video. >> and this is touch down, more aggressively. there we go. >> okay. >> so this is actual -- >> that is a free fall for what, seven hours.
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they just dropped it out of space. >> and when it hit the surface, it bounced. the thing has these mechanical arms or legs. >> they are called harpoons or something. >> well the harpoons are going to go vertically. but the idea is they have a little springiness, they are a neck nix like an -- mechanism like an umbrella and it bounced out into space and came back down again. and as it bounced off and surprising, everybody out here has gravity. the rock and the spacecraft have -- >> just enough. because it could have missed. and here is the thing. when we look at the lander. here it is with the one -- >> this is the representation -- yes. here we are, stuck. >> can it do it's job with one leg up. >> well now it gets risky. because although it is just really seriously a beautiful graphic, it is partially in the
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shade. it landed in a crater where there is a lot of shade. so the batteries can last, they say, about 60 earth hours. and then without sunlight, it will not recharge. so now you have to make a decision. >> here is the size of comet 67-p, 2 1/2 miles long. so if you land in a shady part of earth, it resolves so you get a sunny day. does it revolve? >> very slowly. and my understanding from what i've read, it is in a situation where the axis is not being presented to the sun. can you imagine if you are at the north pole and you don't get to spin into sunlight every day. >> right. >> so it is in an undesirable place and people have to make a decision. there you are a rocket scientist and you've been working on this thing for ten years and it is getting some data. do you take a chance and try to operate the drill and have it push the thing back off the object and then fall back down?
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now if you like to worry about things, you are in a great situation here. this is 2 1/2 miles wide. if this object came in to the earth at 20 kilometers a second, pretty fast. 30,000 miles an hour, it is trouble. so with one day, humans will have to make the rendezvous and give it a nudge. it is the europe an space agency and they do this because they know it raises the quality of life. the optimism and the expectations of so site -- society and they will make discoveries. >> i hope they do. coming up next, a doctor with ebola coming to the united states. and a mass loss after sterilization. >> and we'll turn the cute factor up with jeanne moos with a baby who dances until she drops.
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breaking news, cnn is just learning a surgeon infected with ebola will be flown to america. he is the third patient with
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ebola to be treated that hospital. meantime a surgeon is under arrest for the deaths of dozens of women. he sterilized them in india. he operated on the number of surgeries the government recommends and let's emphasize the indian government supports sterilizing women. samina udas is outside the town where the incident happened. >> reporter: the victims keep arri arriving, more than 120 women hospitalized. some in critical condition. 13 have died after having their fallopian tubes tied in a governme government-organized mass sterilization drive. this is where it happened, an abandoned government building. a temporary camp was set up in this hospital which has been vacant for the past seven months. the caretaker here says a sterilization drive used to be held here in this room, twice a month. but as you can see, it has been
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sealed off by the government because an investigation is now under way. dr. rk gupta was arrested on charges of negligence and attempted culpable homicide in the deaths of a dozen women. investigators say he operated on 83 women in six hours. the procedure was free, and the government even offered $23 as an incentive, a little more than a week's salary for some in this part of the country. families here in the village are outraged and grieving. three women volunteered for the procedure. two of them died. my wife had severe pain and started vomiting the day after the surgery. i took her to the hospital. she died half an hour later. it is very difficult for me, he says. i have three very young children. investigators believe the antibiotics and painkillers distributed at the sterilization
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camp may have been tainted. today, they raided pharmaceutical plant that supplied the medicines. >> he said medical negligence in the sense, 83 numbers of operations in a short duration. i think the whole norms and procedure and the standards of doing all these operations, i think those were violated. >> reporter: hygiene levels in the camp and the quality of the equipment used is also being questioned and confiscated by police as they wait the results of the autopsy reports. i was given a urine test, blood test, blood pressure test and then the surgery. after that, i took painkillers and antibiotics. i'm not sure who to blame, the doctor or the medicines, she says. of the $23 she was supposed to receive as payment, she only got $10. india reported in 2012 it had sterilized 4 million women that year, more than any other
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country in the world. the government says it is an effective way to curb the country's fast growing population. gupta's arrest is one of several measures taken by authorities in response to those deaths and the growing public outcry, but gupta maintains he is innocent and merely a scapegoat in what is a much wider issue. we spoke to gupta several times before he was arrested and he says as far as he was concerned, all safety procedures were taken care of, he says he's performed some 50,000 sterilization surgeries in the past 30 years and actually recently awarded by the state government for doing exactly that. but he did mention there is a huge amount of pressure here on doctors to perform as many of these surgeries as possible. and that's what activists say is just that, it is one of the many
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flaws in india's growing population growth. >> sumnima, thank you very much. a horrific story. ameriprise asked people a simple question: in retirement, will you have enough money to live life on your terms? i sure hope so. with healthcare costs, who knows. umm... everyone has retirement questions. so ameriprise created the exclusive confident retirement approach. now you and your ameripise advisor.... can get the real answers you need. start building your confident retirement today. a wake-up call. but it's not happening out there. it's happening in here. [ sirens wailing ] inside of you. even if you're treating your crohn's disease or ulcerative colitis, an occasional flare may be a sign of damaging inflammation.
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money? time and money. awesome. awesome! awesome! awesome! awesome! (all) awesome! i love logistics. here's my sun nile. he loves to wiggle the to the song no more monkeys. here is jon jeanne moos with mo. >> reporter: who can resist a dancing baby?
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whether it is dancing with aly mcbeal or dancing to sell bottled water that when the baby is real, and she's boogying to musical birthday card featuring the hamster dance. prepare to be smitten by acadia jamison. not so much by her moves, just by her stops and starts. ♪ the card was from her grandma for acadia's first birthday. >> actually -- it is quite well loved at this point, you can see. >> reporter: the hamster inside is hanging by a threat. when i was one, they didn't have musical birthday cards. try dancing to this. but acadia could single-handedly boost the musical card industry
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with her joy divive. the opposite is also going viral. who could think the chipmunk adventure could be such a te tearjerk tearjerker. this is the second time that almost 3-year-old reagan loofer had seen it. the part where a baby penguin is reunited with its family really got to her. reminds us of marie lynn leroux. ♪ no way tomorrow >> she was dubbed the emotional baby for the way she repeatedly reacted to just this one song her mom used to sing. ♪ i'm gonna wake up missing you ♪ >> reporter: now a year later, her mom says she still gets emotional when she watches this video. it >> it's just a song. >> reporter: don't try telling that to acadia. sometimes when her parents are in the other room, they hear the card opening. >> she'll be sitting in there
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going at it. >> reporter: when you put her on tv, she went at it, all right. >> she loves it. >> reporter: jeanne moos, cnn. ♪ wake up missing you >> reporter: new york. that was great. anderson starts now. good evening. thanks for joining us. there is a lot of breaking news on several different fronts. a damming review of the white house fence jumping incident in september found one agent was on his personal cell phone at the time and had no clue what was happening. a new piece of evidence surfaced in the michael brown case and white house officials say president obama could sign an executive order on immigration as early as next week. all of that in the hour ahead. we begin, though, with breaking medical news. one of four hospitals designated to treat ebola patients in the u.s. is preparing to admit a new patient from sierra leone. elizabeth cohen joins us now. what do we know about this patient, this man? >> what we know about this man is that he's a surgeon, a