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tv   New Day Saturday  CNN  November 15, 2014 3:00am-6:01am PST

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♪ oh, it's 6:00 on the weekend comes early, doesn't it? what are you doing up, i'm christi paul. >> and i'm joe johns in for
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victor blackwell. >> good to have you here. >> it's really good to be here. and you know what, it's freezing outside. i walked four or five blocks. >> you did walk? >> yeah, my hands are frozen. >> it's 31 degrees. you should be in perfect company there. hey, listen, we have a lot to talk to you about today. >> absolutely. we begin with breaking news overnight and the release of police dispatch tapes from the deadly police shooting that put ferguson, missouri, at the center of a national firestorm, the clips which the st. louis post obtained through missouri's sunshine law indicated just how quickly the encounter unfolded between 18-year-old michael brown and darren wilson. >> these begin after noon on august 9 after a dispatching reports a stealing in progress. that gives a description to another officer, not wilson. >> 25, it's going to be a black male in a white t-shirt.
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he's running towards qwik trip. he took a whole box of swisher cigars. >> black man, white t-shirt? >> that's affirmative. she said he just walked out of the store. >> minutes later, wilson joins the radio, it seems and offers to join the hunt for the suspect. >> 21, 25, 22, do you guys hear me? >> two minutes later. wilson radios in with this. 21, put me on canfield with two and send me another car. >> and it indicates other officers arriving at the shooting scene. then at 12:07 p.m., there's a call from another officer, as a woman cries in the background. >> 25. get us several more units over here, there's going to be a problem. >> is there any available ferguson units who can respond to canfield and copper creek? advise. >> also new this morning, the
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"post dispatch" released this video, it shows wilson just two hours after the shooting in a white t-shirt leaving the station with other officers and a union lawyer. a grand jury is expected to decide at anytime whether to indict wilson in brown's death. later this hour, we're going to talk with the neighborhood about the shootings. also breaking overnight, the head of the joint chiefs of staff general martin dempsey is in iraq. he arrived in an an unannounced visit to baghdad, as he decide to expand the troops battling isis. according to reuters, this is a quote here i want to get a sense about our contribution on how it's gone. joining us military analyst
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major general spider marks. thanks for being with us. what is they looking accomplish? >> i think he has two missions. one as he indicates, he wants to get a sense from our guys, the guys on the ground. the senior folks and talk to those on the edges of this organization, who are training the iraqis, establishing the training routine. and those who are embedded in certain headquarters elements in the iraqi forces to get a sense of what they're doing, how the progress looks like, how are relationships building. the second part of this mission is to talk to the iraqi leadership no doubt. he wants to talk to his counterpart. there's a new military leader in iraq who has just been adisappointed. and the government in iraq is just transitioning. new minute sisters of the defense, et cetera. so general dempsey will get a sense at both the strategic level. the united states and coalition contributions, how they're being
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accepted in iraq. getting down to the ground level to talk to the u.s. troops and get what we call the straight scoop on their their sense of how this is working out. >> now, as you know, he is not ruling out u.s. ground forces in iraq. here's what he told the house armed services committee on thursday. listen. >> i'm not predicting at this point that i would recommend that those forces in mosul and along the border would need to be accompanied by u.s. forces, but we're certainly considering it. >> now, do you think this is the kind of thing where this visit will actually sway his decision on whether to send in the ground forces? >> well, you'd hope, you'd hope, that he'd gather, joe, more information to be more confident of what he's getting back in d.c. and a better understanding what the conditions look like. absolutely, you'd hope it would sway his decision -- or that recommendation. again, it's not his decision. the recommendation to president and the secretary of defense whether it makes sense to
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increase the numbers, or to move those soldiers and embed them with iraqi units in direct contact or have the mission to engage directly with isis. >> speaking of isis, they and al qaeda's affiliate in syria al nusra have been battling eve other for more than a year now. and now we've got word that they have come to some sort of agreement, to go ahead and join forces. how do you think that will change the coalition strategy? >> well, i don't think it will change the strategy at all. what you have, as you just described, is this confluence of activities that are very difficult to sort out on the ground. so if two elements now died to make peace, what that is, they have agreed they have a shared enemy, that's either assad or the eye united states in his presence in efforts to coalition to the country. and the government in baghdad as
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well. so, what you have, all of these elements coming together. all that means is that the u.s. strategy -- it really means, joer the u.s. strategy has to have a level of persistence that this administration has mentioned in reference. but it really needs to lay out what those specific time lines look like. what those expectations are. this truly is a long engagement. could be a generational engagement. it's certainly going to go beyond this administration and well into the next administration. we have to be able to establish and define what that new normal looks like in terms of our engagement in this part of the world. >> a lot of uncertainty, too, and that new normal could change. thanks so much for that major general spider marks. >> thank you. the former navy s.e.a.l. who now says he shot osama bin laden may have words of steel but. >> and the most extensive live
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interview today, robert o'neill sat down with cnn's jake tapper, and not only described the harrowing situation but also the criticism he's faced for killing the most wanted man in the world. here's part of that interview. >> before you walked into that room on the third floor where you thought bin laden was, what was going through your head? >> there were two of us left there. we knew we had had to get up there, we knew they were doing something, we assumed rigging vests to blow themselves up. my thought was, if we're going to blow up, let's get it over with, we went over there to do that. with the thought, we will die, if he blows up, he'll die, too. that was worth it. he was not surrendering based on the threat. i engaged him. i shot him twice in the head. he fell to the floor, i shot him one more time and i killed him.
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>> what did it feel like? >> the sense was recognition. the idea of him, and he's a threat. it wasn't the first time i've done that before on a target before. i recognized the individual we were after which is osama bin laden, and i engaged. at that minute, it was just -- it felt like it was the initial threat that i had to take care of. threats are just potential unknowns. it wasn't until the room was fully cleared and there were more s.e.a.l.s in the room that it kind of hit me. i had a moment of pause. i talked to a friend of mine in the room, he came up to me, and he put his hand on my shoulder. i said, hey, what do we do now? he kind of smiled and said, now, we go find the computers. i said, okay, i'm back. that was quite a moment. >> the pentagon, are you concerned about prosecution and for you violates the nondisclosure agreement? >> that does disclose me.
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right now, i think i did this a way that doesn't violate any tactics. >> do you think you're a hero? >> i think i was part of a team full of heroes. still coming up from snow to bitter cold, meteorologist jennifer gray is tracking the big freeze as it spreads to a lot of unlikely places. >> hunker down and stay warm today, certainly -- plus, the cancellation of a major tv appearance as race allegations resurface against bill cosby. she wanted to stay in bed forever. downy. surround yourself with three times the softening. ♪ ♪
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it's redonkulous out there. it's so cold.
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we're waking up to record-breaking temperatures this morning. >> can i tell you, though, there are a whole flood of people looking as darn good as jennifer gray does in 30-degree weather. jennifer gray is in atlanta park. there's a wide shot of it. the christmas tree's out. do you see it. >> getting started, don't you think, atlanta? >> oh, please, everybody is starting too early. jennifer gray, we're trying to zoom in on you there. look how pretty she looks. >> are you cold? >> hi, guys. yeah,s pretty cold out here. i almost feel bad there are places waking up much colder than atlanta. we have a theermometer where we're, 30 degrees here at centennial park. yes, cold in atlanta, temperatures 10 to 15 degrees below normal. the rest of the area, some areas, 30, 40, 50 degrees below
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normal. we've shattered records. april lot of areas received the first measurable snowfall for the region this is idaho. look at that. pictures are gorgeous, but some people are like, man, this is early. we saw considerable snowfall in the midwest. we're starting out around freezing here in atlanta. other places in the midwest and the northern plains single digits. 6 degrees in billings. 12 in cheyenne. 7 in minneapolis. and if you think about minneapolis, we dip below freezing on monday. it could be another week or so before we get to freezing again. temperatures have been well below and will continue to be that way all the way through the weekend and much of last week. hang in there minneapolis, you will eventually warm up. but that's not going to be said with no snow.
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you are going to get more snow through the weekend. some areas 2 to 5 inches, 4 to 6 on the side of sioux falls. dakotas getting snow like that. and even missouri. we're going to marine force the cooler temperatures by the beginning part of next week. that's going to move into the southeast, the northeast, some places in the southeast and northeast are going to be even colder next week. look at atlanta's high temperature on tuesday. that's a high, guys, 38 degrees, we'll see temperatures in the single digits. teens and 20s across much of the northwest and northern plains as we go through the week. and then low temperatures are even more shocking. look at this. temperatures below zero. rapid city this morning. the low temperature, zero on monday. so, guys, this is a deep freezes that going to last another week. the good news is, the week of thanksgiving, it looks like
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things are finally going to warm up. >> i'm totally going back to the northeast where it's warmer. >> yeah, right. jennifer, thank you so much. >> reporter: at least there's no snow here in atlanta. >> yet. yet. >> this is supposed to be a milder than normal winter. what's up with that? >> jen, can you answer that, i thought it was going to be a worst winter than last? >> reporter: well, you know what, we're getting an early start this winter. you know, hopefully, it's nothing that's going to foreshadow what we're going to see. time will tell, of course, yeah, some people have already broken snowfall records and temperatures in november. it's crazy. >> jen, get warm again. we have a lot of other news we want to get to you this morning. here's the "morning read." >> rape allegations against iconic comedian bill cosby will just not go away. the latest evidence for cosby, his appearance on the "david letterman show" has been cancel
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cosby reportedly addresses the allegation in an interview with npr that airs this morning. >> the family of a national that died of ebola has reached a confidential settlement with that hospital. thomas eric duncan went to a texas research hospital in september with ebola symptoms, had was misdiagnosed, though, and sent home. a fund will be set up to assist those hard hit in west african. in business news, less pain at the pump means more money in your pocket. right now the national average for a gallon of dallas is $2.90. you're paying less because the price of oil dropped below $75 a barrel in four years. down 31% since june. >> the nba commissioner now says he supports legalized sports gambling. in an op-ed, he said the u.s. should allow gambling in pro sports if it remains legal.
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and president obama is blasting russian owe-a depression. they're saul smiles for the camera. but are cold war tensions mounting as we take you live to brisbane. and the next time you see a small plane flying overhead, could it really be the government spying on our cell phone calls?
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president obama is getting a warm greeting from australian prime minister tony abbott, but
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while they're all smiles, mr. obama is blasting russian president vladimir putin. leaders of the world's most powerful nation, in brisbane for the g-20 summit but putin brought a fleet of warships with him. >> let's get more from cnn senior correspondent jim acosta. jim, thank you for being with us. are russian warships -- i mean, are they really off the coast of australia right now? >> reporter: they are, and i'll tell you about that in just a moment. but i wanted to hold this up first before i do anything else. check this out, joe and christi. it's the front page of the local paper. it has the russian bear and a kangaroo putting up their dukes here. that sums it up with vladimir putin. it's again the g-19 plus 1 here very isolated, the russian president has gotten the cold shoulder. and tony abbott sent only low-level officials to greet vladimir putin at the airport.
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aides to steven harper say he told putin, i guess i'll shake your hand, but you need to get out of ukraine. we did see him walking out of dinner with angela merkel and obama, they were deep in conversation. you could hear the words cease-fire. and earlier, president obama mentioning the downing of malaysian flight 17 and vowing that the u.s. will take on a lead role in standing up to russia. here's what the president had to say. >> we're leading and dealing with ebola in west africa and in opposing russia's aggression against ukraine which say threat to the world, as we saw in the appalling shootdown of mh-17. a tragedy that took so many incident lives, among them your fellow citizens. as your ally and friend, america shares the grief of these australian families, and we share the determination of your nation for justice and accountability.
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>> reporter: now, russia, as you said, christi, raised tensions at the summit by positioning naval ships off the australian coast. moscow said they were there for putin's security. australia responded by sending heir own warships to keep an eye on the russians. there are subjects such as ebola with the g-20 leaders releasing a joint statement to encourage nations who haven't joined in the fight against isis in doing so. and i know you're just getting your day start over there, but we're ending our day here. and the president will end his trip here at a news conference. or holding a news conference before heading back to washington. that also happening tomorrow here in australia. but it may be overnight four guys. we'll have more on that tomorrow. >> you know, jim, does the cold shoulder really do any good? when you see a situation like
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this, and everybody is turning their back on putin, it doesn't seem like he gets the message? >> reporter: no, and actually, joe, earlier this week when we were in myanmar, the white house staged a news briefing on the road and dispute national security adviser ben rhodes was there and he acknowledged very frankly that at this point this has not changed their calculus. that vladimir putin while the sanctions against russia have created, you know, big economic pain for russia. and they're feeling it with respect to the ruble, the value of the ruble has gone down considerably, it has not really changed what is happening on the ground in ukraine. so it is sort of something that bedeviled leaders here. and a big problem for president obama, something that he's not been able to solve thus far. what they're saying at the white house, joe, they're going to continue to have control and isolate vladimir putin. they checked vladimir putin out of the g-8.
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they can't necessarily do that here at the g-20, but he's certainly felt person son that non grata since on the ground here in australia. >> jim, that's a good point, you talk about the message that he sent, that president obama sent really to russia in his speech. what about china, what has the relationship been there? >> reporter: you know that has been fascinating to watch during this trip, christi, we went into china earlier this week thinking what is the president going to come out of this trip with. and lo and behold, with the chinese president xi, they announced climate deals which doesn't force china to do really that much. with the white house saying the -- the u.s. and china being the biggest polluters in the world to come to an agreement to start lowering carbon emissions. and bring down the effects of climate change and they do feel
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that was part of the accomplishment. we did hear the president praise china in those efforts in that area. but the president also said in his speech, we still need to see how china's going to play count road. they still need to play by the rules when it comes to trade and human rights and so forth. but there has been a warming of that relationship, no question about it. >> jim acosta, senior white house correspondent, really logging a lot of miles on this trip. thanks so much for that. >> thanks, jim. >> absolutely, thank you. >> well ferguson, meanwhile is on edge, waiting for the grand jury's decision about the officer who shot michael brown. now, this morning, just released audio, providing more details about the deadly brief encounter between the officer and the and the team.
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well, it is so good to have you with us. 32 minutes past the hour. just relax, it is saturday after all. i'm christi paul. >> and i'm joe johns. >> we want to get right to some breaking news overnight here. newly released police dispatch tapes do seem to shed new light on the fatal police shooting of unarmed teenager miking brown. >> now, root calls were obtained by the st. louis post dispatch, and they indicate that this encounter between officer brown and darren wilson who is white really lasted only about two minutes. they begin just before noon on august 9th, when the dispatcher reports, quote, a stealing in progress. seven minutes later, wilson radios in with an offer to help
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hunt for the suspect. and then two minutes later, wilson said he's, quote, on canfield with two. referring to the street near the shooting scene. a minute later, a witness reportedly tweeted that he just saw someone die. >> and also new this morning, the post dispatch release influenced surveillance video. take a look at it here. this is wilson two hours after the shooting. he's there in the white t-shirt leaving the police station. there are other officers and a union leader with him there. a grand jury is expected to decide any day now whether to indict wilson in brown's death. >> now, let's bring in cedric alexander, he's the president of the law enforcement agency of lack law enforcement executives. good morning. >> good morning. >> listen to get audio do you get a sense for the take-away for it? what does it mean for the case? >> well it's very difficult for me, for anyone at this point, to draw any conclusions around that piece of video. i think what's going to be critically important is this, is that the grand jury is going to
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look at all of this evidence together. and they're going to make sense of it in terms of its entirety in the context in which everything occurred. and i think in all fairness, we're all going to stand by and we're going to wait and see what this grand jury finding is going to be, as we go forward, joe. >> and while you're standing by, what advice are you giving to police officers around the country, police departments, frankly, on how to handle sort of the ill feelings as a result of no decision to indict? >> well, you know, what's critically important here, regardless of what the outcome is of the grant jury, i think what's important that police agency across this country and communities across this country, joe, continue to communicate with each other. have open die long. dialogue. hopefully, they've had great relationships with community and police long before this incident. but i think at the end of the day, what ferguson has season
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all of this the criticality and the importance of how much it for all police and agencies across this country to have a firm relationship with its community members. and that's what makes a difference when you have an issue occur in your community. you can stand together, you can make plans together. and you can confront these issues. hopefully, that does not emerge to something in which we don't ever want to see and that's civil unrest. >> now, an attorney for brown's family benjamin crump spoke with our erin burnett. listen. >> you want them to think, think about all the things they said about michael brown, the unarmed teenager. i think it's fair for him to get his due process, but also, we need michael brown to get his due process, and if he gets this indictment, he's going to have
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the chance to have the best lawyers. he's going to have the chance to have the best defense possible. but if he's not charged, you do look to michael brown's family and say, where is their due process gentleman where do they have a chance to get justice for their unarmed child who was killed? >> okay, you get that, right? he's basically saying the brown family cannot get justice if officer wilson is not charged. do you buy that? >> well, we have a judicial system, joe, in which we're all going to have to respect and we're all going to have to make sure, as best we can, hopefully, in that communicate as well, too. at the end of the day, whatever the grand jury findings are. we all are watching. we've all been very attentive to the issues that are there. there's a lot of hurt. there's a lot of pain in that community, certainly with that family, with the loss to their son. but we're going to have to depend on our judicial system and our leadership in that community as questionable as it maybe to some people.
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and as we move forward, we're going to make some -- some determination is going to be made as to what the outcome of this case is going to be, and then we'll move forward from there. >> but you got to have a sense of the language. the kind of language that's going to be used to talk to people and to talk people down if they're upset. what are the words that need to be said to bring a community together, as opposed to tearing it apart? >> well it's important to remember, and it's important for all of us to remember, and i say this not only to you, but i say this across the country to everyone that's listening as well, too, in an incident such as this, we have to work together. violence is not going to resolve anything. peaceful protests, of course, is very much accepted as our first amendment right. but think at the end of the day for all of us, joe and christi, we have to sit down and work together, start talking about as we move forward, how we're going to change relationships in this country between police and community. because in some communities, there certainly needs to be a
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great deal of work that needs to be done. and in other communities, they have already role modeled some of the great work out there, too. in terms of peace, regardless of what the outcome is. as a nation, as a country, we're all american citizens. we have to find a way to work through this but we've got to find a way to work through it in a peaceful manner. >> thank you so much for that. >> thank you, joe. >> as they just mentioned, we're talking about michael brown's parents. they are back in the united states now. they'd been in geneva, switzerland, testifying about brown's death. brown's mom spoke to reporters at the airport. >> thank you for supporting us and praying for us. and getting justice for our son michael brown. i know while we was gone, there were some more things said and discovered and uncovered.
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but god is with us, she's still with us now, he's going to continue to be with us. >> brown's parents asked the u.n. committee against torture to recommend wilson's immediate arrest and as well as investigation of police brutality in the u.s. chuck hagel says the u.s. nuclear program has some serious issues and needs a big makeover. we'll tell you where the problem lies. and how much this had major overhaul is going to cost, coming up next. it's been a couple months since myron sillic has won a match. as the magnitude continues to sink in. >> when i came back, i realized how much it had an affect on people. of course, it was one of the best moments in croatia sports,
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ever. i didn't think that people are going to be -- that, it's going to change their life for that week, month or those days. but everybody i saw was extremely happy. they were unbelievable proud. >> where is the trophy? >> the trophy still hasn't come, believe it or not. it's being made in new york. so hopefully, in the next week or two, it should be here. >> have you got a spot ready for it? >> yes. yes, i do. it's going to be -- it's going to be at my apartment in doing greb and i'm going to have to polish it every day.
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here are five things you got to know for your "new day." number one, students in west virginia university are mourning the loss of their friend. police found 18-year-old nolan birch. unconscious at a frat house. he died yesterday at a local hospital. now, the university has suspended all greek activities on the campus. >> this does not define him at all. whatever happened, this does not define him. >> officials are giving out details be the incident as they continue the investigation. number two, a doctor infected with ebola is on his way from sierra leone to a nebraska hospital as we speak here. he's expected to arrive at the nebraska medical center this weekend. he's a legal permit resident of
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the united. hospitals have treated the freelance cameraman and a doctor. number three, a man accused of grabbing a woman off the street and holding her for three days could face life in prison. delvin barnes pleaded not guilty to kidnapping charges. the woman's abduction was caught on video and sparked an intense manhunt by police and fbi, they tracked him down using barnes' car gps system. number four, the famous philae comet lander might stop working today. the space probe made history this week when it landed on a small comet 310,000 miles from work. it's race for time. as the batteries may die. officials thought the solar
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batteries would power it but apparently, it's not getting enough space light. and number five, imagine everyone thought you were dead and you wake up in a funeral home. it happened to a 91-year-old woman in poland. a doctor declared her dead, she woke up 11 hours later in cold storage. she's home now and doing fine. investigators saying what on earth went wrong there. >> really wrong. >> you can say narcolepsy? >> oh, my goodness. that poor family. defense secretary chuck hagel said the u.s. nuclear program, he admits, has some problems including a lack of resources and manpower. >> he said it needs a major revamping and it's going to cost billions of dollars to fix it over the next few years our tom foreman has more. tom? >> reporter: hey, credkristi, h yo, this may be dismaying to some and alarming to many
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others. in the dangerous world of nuclear missiles and strategic bombers, it's hard to imagine a asimple hand tool could be a problem. but the pentagon review found supplies were so neglected, workers at three nuclear sites were sharing a single specialized wrench for more than 400 missiles. >> how did they do it? they did it by federal-expressing the one wrench around to each base. they were creative and innovative and made it work but that's not the way to do it. >> reporter: the pentagon is now showing many troubles including knit pick. ed details while ignores serious issues like leaking doors on ageing blast doors. making it difficult to close properly. micro management and daily shortages in equipment, qualified personnel, facilities and funding, even badly outdated helicopters being used to
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service nuclear operations. choppers that came under you service under president nixon during the vietnam war. >> we just have kind of taken our eye off the ball here, if we don't fix this, eventually it will get to a point where there will be some questions about our security. >> reporter: officials say these problems grew in part from the fighting in iraq and afghanistan which forced the pentagon to choose between sending resources to battle or to the nuclear program. >> when you have to make a hard choice like that you're going to support the war fighter, and you make it as best as you can. >> reporter: still, embarrassing lapses have resulted such as an incident last year in which a missile bay door was left open and unattended while one crew member slept and another went for food. and more recently, reports of missile officers cheating on proficiency tests. fixing all of this will not be cheap. the pentagon currently spends about $15 billion aids year on its nuke program. it will have to increase that by
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10%. and even then, undoing the damage could take years. >> tom foreman, thanks for that. let me ask you, what do you think here -- is big brother spying on your cell phone calls right now? >> a lot of people would probably say yes. the federal government is using technology on planes that can track your cell phone use. we'll explain coming up next.
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well, it turns out the federal government may be tracking your cell phones. >> small planes can fly overhead and gather data from most of the
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u.s. population. cnn's pamela brown explains to us. >> reporter: the u.s. marshal service put special devices on small cessna planes as a way to locate criminals, according to "the wall street journal." these devices dubbed "dirt boxes" are supposed to trick cell phones into thinking it's a cell tower. >> the system is designed to pick up a ton of data because it's looking for a needle in a haystack. to find that needle, it has to look for every other piece of hay in that stabbing. >> reporter: the special equipment scans thousands of phones. when it finds the target's phone, the equipment locks on and uses that information to find a suspect's location. >> the advantage of the drone airport or helicopter is that they can just search a much larger area much faster and necessarily get information on a huge amount of people. >> reporter: the device is known as the stingray.
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government officials say it's intended to be used with a defined, legally authorized purpose in serious violent crimes. cnn has learned that technology was learned in the capture of el chapel guzeman, the head of the former sinaloa cartel. >> this has trickled down bit by bit to law enforcement and eventually the state and local law enforcement, too. >> reporter: in a statement, the department of justice would not confirm the existence of technology but says that any techniques that the marshal service uses is for the apprehension of wanted vehicles and not to conduct surveillance or intelligence-gathering. pamela brown, cnn, washington. >> government officials say they would obtain a court order or search warrant before using the device. anyone's data who is not the suspect is supposed to be discarded but it's not clear right now how that's done nor
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how often. >> i'm sure a lot of people have a question about that, too. >> the moments before the killing of michael brown captured opolis dispatch tapes will have newly released audio and hear directly from darren wilson, who shot the teenager who was unarmed. you know how you look in the mirror and kind of go like this... it looks great but you can't walk around like this all day. where's the kitty kitty? kitty kitty! so covergirl and olay invented facelift effect firming makeup. it has an advanced olay firming complex
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and a milkshake, my daddy ordered the same thing as me. that is my daddy. >> my friend's father he was murdered. they have a bond, they share a bond that a lot of kids don't have with their father. >> i love my city, i have lived here all of my life. but people here are having crisis after crisis. i believe that the violence in this city and grief are directly connected. >> somebody hurt my dad. >> a child's grief can be very
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a remarkable lady right there. absolutely. good morning to you all of you. i'm christi paul with -- >> joe johns in for victor blackwell. it's 7:00 o'clock, bright and early here in atlanta. very cold. but we're inside. >> a little bit of a jolt this morning. we have lots to talk about today. >> yes, we do. we begin with breaking news overnight and the release of police dispatch tapes from that deadly shooting that put ferguson, missouri, at the center of that national firestorm. >> our stephanie elam has more. >> reporter: our st. louis dispatcher obtained the release from the sunshine law. that is the encounter between darren wilson and michael brown. at 11:50 a.m., a zbamper reports a stealing in process. >> we're taking a stealing in
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process. subject may be leaving the business. stand by for further. >> reporter: the post dispatch says about 19 seconds later, dispatch issues a description of the suspect. >> 25, it's going to be a black male in a white t-shirt. he's running from qwik trip. he took a whole box of swisher cigars. >> black man in white t-shirt? >> that's affirmative. she said he just walked out of the door. >> reporter: and there's more detail in the police cross-talk. >> he's got a red cardinals hat, white t-shirt, yellow socks. >> reporter: officer wilson reports he's back in service from another call. he then asks officers searching for the suspects if they need his help. >> 21, 25, or 22, do you guys hear me? >> reporter: seven seconds later, officers report the suspects have disappeared. >> couldn't hear him. >> he thinks that they disappeared.
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>> clear. >> reporter: the paper says at 12:02 officer wilson responds. >> 21, put me on canfield and send me another car. >> reporter: on august 9th, michael brown's friend dorian johnson said they were talking down the street when officer wilson to told them to get out of the road. according to johnson, he said told wilson they would be off the street shortly. but then he said he grabbed brown by the neck and shooting hill to the grount. and then telling local radio station ktfk that according to wilson, brown started a physical altercation with him and grabbed the gun and ran off. both sides agree that brown ran and turned back. the post dispatch said 45 seconds after the call, another officer was about to arrive at the location. the. >> 25 out. >> reporter: the radio calls also show other officers
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arriving at the scene. and they called for a supervisor. according to the newspaper, a call, and a woman wailing. >> get us several more units over here. there's going to be a problem. >> there are any other available ferguson? >> reporter: the video shows wilson in the white t-shirt leaving the police station for the hospital two hours after the shooting, accompanied by other officers and his union lawyer. the video then shows him returning to the police station. >> stephanie is joining us live from ferguson right now. i'm wondering, stephanie, as everybody is waking up to this new information, how are people reacting there? >> reporter: well, it is just new information here. what is noteworthy about this,
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christi, you're not getting the perspective from the police recording about how august 9th unfurled for them. we've heard from witnesses on canfield where mike brown died. but we have not heard what happened on that side. obviously, this is interesting leading up to the grand jury decision we're awaiting to hear on whether or not officer darren wilson will or not not be indicted. it's just more of a clue of what may happen on the decision. >> the latest grand jury deliberations, how is the community bracing for a decision on that? >> reporter: i've been having a lot of conversations with people here in ferguson about that, joe. and it's wide ranging, some people are buying up a bunch of groceries and they're planning on staying in their houses for days if they have to. there's a lot of concern for school kids. we understand that a lot of schools in the area are saying they're going to keep the children at the school if the ruling comes down while in session and parents have to go
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pick up their children. i also talked to other people who say they're not worried but concerned about what's going to happen the residents i've spoken to from ferguson, both black and white, do believe that the town is going to come through this. they're just not sure how they're going to do it, joe. >> stephanie elam in ferguson, thank you for that. later this hour, we'll talk with our panel of experts about what if any consequences could emerge from the release of the videotapes and the surveillance of officer wilson. america's top u.s. general makes a surprise visit to iraq. general martin dempsey now in baghdad as the u.s. prepares to expand its assistance to iraqi and kurdish forces battling isis. >> according to reuters, general dempsey said, i want to get a sense about how our mission is
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going. let's bring in krichristopher, senior analyst to the war. what message is it sending to u.s. troops, as well as the pentagon, as well as the united states? >> good morning. thanks for having me. it's very important for senior leadership to go, what we call, walk the battlefield. they've got to get out there and see what's going wouldn't their own eyes. they got to get a sense or a feel of how the troops are responding. i've worked here at washington, d.c. and the world looks very different inside the beltway than it does in reality. i think what general dempsey is doing here, sending a message both to the u.s. troops that he understands what's happening and sending a message to our ally, the iraqi government that he's taking this serious lely, and we committed to an actual victory. >> he actually sat down about a month ago. let's listen. >> we need to develop a ground campaign. we've got an air campaign that's
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ongoing. we need to integrate into that a ground campaign. we need to be able to put pressure on isil from multiple directions simultaneously. we need to continue to restore the capability, training and equipping of iraqi force, and peshmerga. we need to keep pressure on isil in its safe haven inside of syria. we need to build up a syrian opposition. >> a lot of people look at an advisory group and think at some point, that will equate to boots on the ground. >> whether we want to call it boots on the ground, we've got north of 1,000 boots on the ground. going up to 2,000, closer to $2$2 $2,i think what general dempsey, pointing out, some people use the word mission creep to
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describe the troops. i don't like that as much as it's resource creep to meet the mission that we've already established. i think general dempsey is pointing out you can't complete isil through one depth. you got to have a multi-depth approach to it. we've been fighting the tall la band and al qaeda for more than 13 years. we haven't defeated them. we've suppressed them. we've stained them to a certain extent, and i think ultimately, that's where we're heading with isis. hopefully, at assistance we've provided will enable them to evict isis from iraqi territory. i don't think that's going to happen anymore soon but in the short term, that's what we're looking for. >> christopher harmer, we appreciate your insight. >> thank you had, christi. this november is one for the record books already. our ireporters are sending in proof of that. places which are normally warm this time of year are falling
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into a deep freeze. meteorologist jennifer gray is out in it this morning. plus, the federal government may be spying on your cell phone calls. what are they doing? coming up ahead. sign-then-drive. for practically just your signature, you could drive home for the holidays in a german-engineered volkswagen. like the sporty, advanced new jetta... and the 2015 motor trend car of the year all-new golf. if you're wishing for a new volkswagen this season... just about all you need is a finely tuned... pen. hurry in and get zero due at signing, zero down, zero deposit, and zero first month's payment on select new volkswagen models. ...the getaway vehicle!
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see your finances in a whole new way with it. this is your business on intuit quickbooks. run with it. all right. take a look at what a boise, idaho, ireporter sent us. first recordfall, no joke. broke the old record by 0.2 inch. rememberer it's november, folks. >> that's >> that's christmas card weather. look at that, it's beautiful. that's gorgeous. >> wow. >> jennifer gray is out in the cold. >> not quite snow? wonderland. >> not quite. however, the christmas tree subpoena, centennial park where she is. all the lights are up already. >> you're so lucky, you get to stand out in the cold. >> reporter: i know, lucky me, right? at least i'm not standing out in
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the cold in minneapolis. single digits there. we do have the beautiful trees, the leafs have changed. it is chilly. last live shot, we were right around 31. we dipped around 28 degrees. so it has dipped just a little bit. it will warm up throughout the day but nothing compared to our friends to the north. we do have freeze warnings, though, in effect, through much of the south. let's get to you the map even places like new orleans, the panhandle of florida, seeing very cold temperatures. that freeze warning is in effect through this morning. just south of atlanta, around macon, you're included in this as well. current temperatures outside. temperatures around 32 in charleston, 25 in little rock. 35 in shreveport. and panhandle at freezing. pensacola, 32. here's the forecast, you are going to see more snow throughout the midwest as we go through the next 24 to 48 hours. that does include you,
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minneapolis. chicago could pick up a little bit of snow. for the southeast, though, it's mainly going to be rain. south louisiana picking up a lot of rain this weekend. north of atlanta, through tennessee, also portions of kentucky, the ohio valley seeing a little bit of rain. as far as snowfall amounts. we're going to see anywhere from 2 to 4 inches, 4 to 6 outside of siouxfalls. 1 to 2 in minneapolis. grand rapids you've got lake-effect snow and that's going to continue throughout the weekend. high temperature, single digits in rapid city. 9 degrees today. year going to see the temperatures stay below freezing in minneapolis. you started this trend of below freezing temperatures on monday. it could be another week before your temperatures get above freezing. so just stay warm, minneapolis. hunker down. it will get better by the time we get into the week of thanksgiving. low temperatures also in the single digits and below zero for
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a lost cities. guys, midwest, northern plains, they're getting a dose of winter early. the week of thanksgiving should look a little better across the entire country. >> so this is the polar vortex effect, right? >> no. >> no, it's not? >> arctic air coming down -- >> if the polar vortex is over the u.s., we would have major problems. >> oh, really. >> it's basically arctic air pulling down from canada. yeah, but it's very, very cold. >> oh, well. you know, polar vortex has a twitter account. >> and apparently, it's lying. it's not the polar vortex. >> reporter: yes. >> the polar vortex is very popular right now. >> we got it. >> jennifer, thank you so much. it's a busy day of news. here's your "morning read." >> yeah, there's a new report in "the wall street journal" on how the government's keeping tabs on us, americans.
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it says federal law enforcement agents are flying small planes to spy on cell phones. defense secretary chuck hagel said the country's nuclear program has got systemic problem, and it could cost $7.5 billion to fix them. that's according to "the washington post." an general review found inadequate and ageing equipment and insufficient staff and resources. in business why is a billion dollars not enough? how about when your ex-husband is worth $20 billion. suzanne hamm is not happy that a local court awarded her $20 million in a local divorce. her lawyers say she dedicated 20 years in the business. she should get more. next time you swipe sunblock, you might want to think about this, a new study from the national institute of health finds chemicals from sunscreens and others that
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filter out uv rays may cause infertility issues in men and make it tougher for couples to concei conceive. still ahead, more trouble for bill cosby. the cancellation of a major television appearance as decades-old rape allegations resurface against the iconic comedian. stay close. ve moderate to severe plaque psoriasis. so i talked to my doctor about my condition and my treatment options he told me about stelara® in a medical study, 7 out of 10 stelara® patients saw at least 75% clearer skin at 12 weeks. and 6 out of 10 patients had their plaque psoriasis rated as cleared or minimal at 12 weeks. [ male announcer ] stelara® may lower your ability to fight infections and increase your risk of infections some serious infections require hospitalization before starting stelara® your doctor should test for tuberculosis. stelara® may increase your risk of cancer. always tell your doctor if you have any sign of infection, have had cancer, or if you develop any new skin growths. alert your doctor of new or worsening problems, including headaches, seizures,
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those rape allegations against iconic comedian bill cosby just won't seem to go away. the latest evidence of trouble for cosby. his appearance on the "david letterman show" next wednesday
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has been cancelled. despite cosby's repeated denials over the past decade alleged victims continue to come forward with stories of being drugged and sexually molested by him. >> now, one of cosby's accusers is barbara bowman who has gone public with her allegations now. she told our story to our michaela pereira who says he was a 17-year-old aspiring actress when cosby took her under his wing. >> as a young actress has was appointed to me to groom me by my agent. when i was 17 and up and coming and wanting to become an actress, a movie star, my agent knew him, and he came out to do just that. so when i came to new york, it was all part of it, they were subsidizing my housing and my acting classes. and i was adoing acting work with him. and i was often in private environments. >> you're 17 years old. you're wide-eyed, you're eager.
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and you have somebody taking an interest in you. >> that's right, that's right. and because of the circumstances, like i said, it was very controlled, he zeroed right in on my vulnerabilities which is my had no father figure. so there was no man to come knocking on had his door to find out what's going down. and when these things started happening, i wasn't silent. i told my agent what was going down. >> what was the reaction? >> she did nothing. i believe she's as culpable as he is. in my inside, i believe she did know what was going on. so her doing nothing was a protective measure on her part. >> did you tell other people? >> i didn't tell her -- i told her but i didn't really talk about it much because nobody was believing it. and it was just -- i was in a situation, i was in new york. my job was to work hard, go to classes. don't ask questions. just be grateful for this amazing opportunity. don't mess it up. so when things would come up,
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and he would start making me uncomfortable, and i knew something was going on, i'd start asking question, he'd say, you know what, you got to trust me. you don't trust me. and by the way, were you drunk. i understand didn't drink. and i certainly wasn't doing anything that i wasn't supposed to do. in 1989 i did go to a lawyer. talked me into doing that, had he left me out of the office. it was terrible, humiliating. >> saying, what, there's no way to prove it. >> he's dr. huxtable, wouldn't happen. >> we have a couple things at play here. we have america's favorite dad. and a lot of people would say this doesn't square up with mr. cosby that we know from tv. >> i just gave up. it was clear to me, right to my face, point blank, i better never, ever see your face or hear your name again. >> cosby may have addressed the allegations in an interview with npr. it's airing this morning.
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we're going to bring that to you as soon as it becomes available. a fresh time line emerges in the shooting of michael brown. we're now hearing the sequence of events that led to the death and police officers that respondeded in that day. >> but can any of it influence the grand jury hearing testimony in the case? our legal panel is weighing in. your blog is just pictures of you in the mirror. it's called a fashion blog, todd. well, i've been helping people save money with progressive's discounts. flo, can you get janice a job? [ laughs ] you should've stuck to softball! i was so much better at softball than janice, dad. where's your wife, todd? vacation. discounts like homeowners', multi-policy -- i got a discount on this ham. i've got the meat sweats. this is good ham, diane. paperless discounts -- give it a rest, flo. all: yeah, flo, give it a rest. this is kathleen. setting up the perfect wedding day starts with her minor arthritis pain, and two pills. afternoon arrives and feeling good, but her knee pain returns. that's two more pills.
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25. >> get us several more units over here. there's going to be a problem. >> any is there any available ferguson units who can respond to canfield and copper creek? advise. >> we're following breaking news this morning. >> what you're listening to, 911 calls received by the st. louis post dispatch revealing the best time line of events so far in the shooting of michael brown by a police officer in ferguson, missouri. good morning, i'm joe johns. >> and i'm christi paul. we want to get right to it. newly released police dispatch
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tapes that shed new light on the shooting of michael brown. >> the radio calls the st. louis dispatch just before noon on august 9th when a dispatcher reports a stealing in progress. listen. >> 25, it's going to be a black male in a white t-shirt. he's running toward qwik trip. he took a whole box of swisher cigars. >> black male, white t-shirt? >> that's affirmative. she said he just walked out of the store. >> fast forward, seven minutes later, officer darren wilson radios in with an offer to help hunt for the suspect. >> 21 to 25 or 22, you guys need me? >> just minutes later, a witness reportedly tweeted that he just saw somebody die. >> also we should point out new this morning the "post dispatch" releasing this new video. that's wilson two hours after the shooting. he's in the white t-shirt there, leaving the police station with
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other officers as well as a union lawyer. a grand jury could decide any day whether to indict wilson in brown's death. >> let's yin in hln legal only joey jackson, and cnn legal only little paul callan. paul, how do the release of the police audiotapes, the surveillance tapes of wilson impact the grand jury deliberations that are going on? >> well, i think these tapes are going to be a very important piece of evidence. the thing that i would focus on primarily, i haven't had a chance to look at the video of officer wilson in the hospital which i assume is post-incident. but it's the radio calls that now tell us what was really going on in sort a time sequence. and according to the tapes, it suggests that officer wilson had stopped the two young men, johnson and brown, because they were walking down the middle of the street. he tells them to get on the sidewalk. he doesn't realize that they have, or at least one of them
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have been identified as possibly involved in what's calling the stealing incident. because he had been out of a cruiser on another call when the dispatch first goes out. while he's in his suv pulling away from the two, who he probably can see in the rear view mirror of his suv, the police cruiser suv, he hears the radio call, confirming that the big tall guy with the t-shirt and the swisher cigars is the suspect. now, that would be michael brown. so he now -- we now know when he has his initial -- his second encounter, i should say, with michael brown, he knows brown is a suspect. and so he backs the cruiser up. and then there's the encounter in the cruiser where the two shots are fired. and then, of course, there's the subsequent encounter in the street where michael brown is killed. and the officer has apparently told police authorities that he was trying to pursue brown after the initial car struggle.
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now, that would seem to be substantiated by the radio calls. the other thing i find interesting about the radio calls is how fast it all went down. it sounds like from the time officer wilson first becomes wear that maybe michael brown is a suspect, until the end when michael brown has been shot and you can hear somebody screaming in the background, about 61 seconds have passed. so, it's a very, very quick series of encounters that led to the tragic death of michael brown. >> yeah, 61 seconds. one minute is all that is. >> yeah. >> joey jackson, when you heard all of this, i want to get your first thoughts on what stood out to you. >> sure, christi, good morning, joe good morning, paul. the reality is you can look at 61 seconds to look at that last point that wall was making as a quick point or an eternity. if we stopped this program right now, and we waited a minute, would you see, depending upon
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which side you're sitting that it's time, it's time to reflect. it's time to think. it's time to make a judgment call. it's time to make a decision. so that in the event that there's an indictment, christi, you'll see in the courtroom. you'll see that blown up, the 61 seconds, exactly what transpired. but stepping back from there, the critical inquiry is what did darren wilson know and when did he know it? yes, there's release of information regarding the theft. did he match that at the time, did he know, was he sure, that michael brown was indeed of the suspect? if so, that goes to his state of mind, in addition to that, christi, the state of mind is very critical here. but in the state of that, is that heightened tension, is he in a struggle? and the struggle has a lot to do, right, with exactly what kurd here. but they're separate in time. the police call, that time there that in time has to be separated
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from what happened outside the car to justify the imminent threat and shooting and death of michael brown. >> christi, i wanted to jump in with one other thing that i think is going to be important with this tape. and that is one of the big issues is why didn't this cop call for backup. you know if he called for backup an waited, maybe this tragic death would not have occurred. according to the tape, he did call for backup before even the second encounter with the struggle in the car had occurred. he had asked for backup. but backup didn't arrive there paula zahn also a claim that after the car struggle, he tried to radio once again on backup but he was on the wrong radio channel, they think, and nobody got his second call. but it's all over by the time the backup cops arrive. >> right. >> sometimes, it's hard to sort out what's going on on the police radios. again and again we hear that. joey jackson, paul callan, thank
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you so much. we're going to get you caught up with five things you need to know your your "new day." number one, a texas teacher has been fired after she sent rationally charged tweets about ferguson, missouri. >> she submitted her resignation thursday but a school board decided to fire her two. number two, a doctor is on his way from sierra leone and to nebraska. he's expected to arrive at the medical center later this weekend. he's a legal permanent resident of the united states. doctors at a nebraska helicopter had successfully treated two ebola patients. free land cameraman mukpo and dr. rick sheaffer.
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and a student at west virginia university died yesterday at the campus. officials aren't giving out details about the incident as they continue to investigate. number four, the man accused of grabbing a philadelphia woman off the street and holding her for three days could face life in prison. delvin barnes appeared in court yesterday. he pleaded not guilty to kidnapping charges. the woman's abduction was caught on video and sparked an intense men hunt by the police and the fbi. they tracked down barnes using his car's gps system. and number five, mtv's diem brown lost her battle with karnes. the 32-year-old in "real world" was first diagnosed with ovarian cancer eight years ago. the cancer went in remission in 2006 but returned two years later. coming up next, president obama is throwing down the ga t
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gauntlet. >> he's vowing to do it alone. the gop said it's ready for battle. >> that's going to happen. >> we're going to fight the president tooth and nail if he continues down this path. ♪ ♪ ♪ not to be focusing, again, on my moderate my goal was to finally get in shape. to severe chronic plaque psoriasis. so i finally made a decision to talk to my dermatologist about humira. humira works inside my body to target and help block a specific source of inflammation that contributes to my symptoms. in clinical trials, most adults with moderate to severe plaque psoriasis saw 75% skin
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president obama ordered u.s. troops back to that country. the upcoming executive order and the highly debated keystone pipeline legislation, the president has a few battles on his hands waiting for him when he gets back to washington. >> and here's cnn's erin mcpike with that. >> the bill has passed. >> reporter: so much for work together. confrontation is ahead when president obama returns from australia. on friday, 30 house democrats joined more than 200 republicans in voting yes on a bill that would force the president to open up the keystone xl pipeline. >> with respect to keystone, i've been clear in the past, my position hasn't changed. understand what this product is, it's providing the ability of canada to pump their oil, send it through our land. down to the gulf, where it will be sold everywhere else. that doesn't happen in fact on
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u.s. gas prices. >> reporter: there are senate democrats who support it, including mary landrieu of louisiana who faces a tough election. >> i call for a vote on keystone pipeline. i said it's time. i've been calling for a vote for over three years. as chair of the election committee, our work is done. no excuses. >> reporter: if it passes, president obama may exercise his veto pen. next up, immigration reform. the resolute president insisting he'll move ahead with action to stop deportation. >> i gave the house over a year to go ahead at least gave a vote to the senate bill, they failed to do so. and i indicated to speaker boehner several months ago, that if in fact congress failed to act, i would use all the lawful authority that i possess to try to make the system work better. >> we're going to fight the president tooth and nail if he continues down this path.
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>> reporter: and what's worse is that this particular fight could lead to a government shutdown next month, christi and joe. >> erin mcpike reporting live from the white house. erin, good to see you. thank you. the city of new orleans has uncovered reported sex crimes against children that detectives have never investigated. >> you are never going to be able to get over this. sometimes even when the heartbreaking evidence was staring them right in the face. we're talking about a 2-year-old here, people. we've got details about this alarming news report for you next. the holiday season is here,
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earn triple points when you book with the expedia app. expedia plus rewards. all right. i just want to give you a full warning of what we have to talk about here in case there are little ones in the room because is this so disturbing. we're talking more than 1,000 horrific violent sex crimes involving men, women, children and even infants that may have been flat out ignored by the new orleans police department. >> according to an alarming new report released by the city's office of inspector general, 1,290 sex crime-related calls assigned to the special victims unit, only 179 instances or about 14% show any signs of being investigated. of those, only 74 were
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investigated. >> we're going to talk about cnn legal analyst pollen and hln legal analyst joey jackson. some people say -- a lot of controversy it there. but still, how can something like this happen. >> you know, christi, it's troubling. you have to find out what happened. is it laziness, is it incompetence? because then it goes to larger issues such as the discipline involved, detectives involved, and then a step further, christi, could it relate and otherwise relate to criminality? is it official misconduct, were they filing police report, and that type of thing. you have to wonder where was the supervisor. where was the oversight. where was the supervision, and how exactly could this occur when you have people making these allegations. and finally, christi, we should
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know, this is a victims' bill of rights here. with victims' bill of rights, victims have a right to consult with the prosecutor to follow up on their case to be be looked into. >> paul, the new orleans inspector general said the five officers are not rookies so this isn't necessarily a question of being incompetent. is there more to this than negligence or someone not knowing better or what? >> well, you know, the allegations are so shocking on the face of it that you would think there's bribery, there must be bribery or corruption or something going on. why would these detectives who are assigned to handle sex crimes, just willfully ignore the complaints, hundreds, maybe thousands of complaints by women who have been raped and sexually abused and just walk away from the cases. i'm not finding an answer in the
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report except that they weren't doing their job, number one, and it just sounds like they have this sort of attitude that you know, if the woman was drinking and there was a sexual encounter then it doesn't go on their list of a crime. >> we're going to have to look into it more deeply to see if it, as joey said, amounts to criminal conduct by the detectives because it's very, very hard to prosecute a police detective for negligence in investigating a crime. that's the difficulty they confront. >> right. i again want to forewarn people. this next piece of information is really -- really tough. according to the documents there was a 2-year-old, a 2-year-old brought to a hospital emergency room after an alleged sexual assault. tests showed that toddler had a sexually transmitted disease, but the detective allegedly said it did not warrant a criminal investigation and closed the case. joey, will that cop be fired or
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prosecuted? it's a big question i think people want to know. >> i think it's a huge question. what you look at in these instances is certainly police have an obligation to pursue justice wherever that might lead, and to work with the district attorney to find out exactly what did occur. so again, these parallel universes that i think investigators track, christi, one relates to deputily, rules, policies that govern, who you speak to, how you examine and document those cases. were they followed, were they not? ad of course, in the event they look at the departmentally the officer could and should be fired. then you look at the other track and that's the criminality track. what was the motivating force behind this? why would a detective, when you have something as compelling and powerful as what you just mentioned with a child, why would you walk away from that? what could it be? is it negligence? is it incompetence or more
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sinister, is there something else to say look, you know what, i'm going to give you, x, walk away from this. i don't know. >> seems like we keep talking about the new orleans police department. paul callan and joey jackson, thank you. so, what was it like to break into osama bin laden's secret compound and kill the most wanted man in the world? >> you'll hear the harrowing details from robert o'neill. uret ignoring them in your body? even if you're treating your crohn's disease or ulcerative colitis, an occasional flare may be a sign of damaging inflammation. and if you ignore the signs, the more debilitating your symptoms could become. learn more about the role damaging inflammation may be playing in your symptoms with the expert advice tool at crohnsandcolitis.com.
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television interview to date former navy s.e.a.l. robert o'neill sat down with cnn's jake tapper to discuss the raid that killed the most wanted man in the world. >> o'neill even described the bizarre moment standing next to the al qaeda leader's body while watching president obama break news to the world what the team had done. here is part of that interview. >> before you walked into that room on the third floor where you thought bin laden was what went through your head? >> there was two of us left on the stairs. they were doing something, we assumed rigging explosives to blow themselves up. so when we went up my thought wasn't of we're about to shoot this guy and be heroes. my thought was we're going to blow up let's get it over with. we went up with the thought that we will die if he blows up but he will die too. he was not surrendering. he was moving and based on the level of threat of him not
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surrendering and the likelihood of a vest i engaged him, shot him twice in the head. he fell on the floor. i shot him one more time and killed him. the sense was recognition first of all, i.d. of him and then he is a threat. and then i had to shoot him. it wasn't the first time i had done that on a target before. i recognized the individual we were after, which is osama bin laden and i engaged. at that minute it was just it felt like that was the initial threat that i had to take care of and then there were more threats. threats are just potential unknowns, it wasn't until the room was fully cleared and there were more s.e.a.l.s that it hit me and felt like i had a moment of pauds. i talked to a friend of mine and i said what do we do now? he kind of smiled and goes now we go find the computers. i said okay, i'm back. i'm back. >> once you got the computers and bin laden's body on the helicopter and you took off, what happened? >> then we took him up to bagram
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and they were going to do more tests to confirm, the president wanted to know everything that had gone on, the numbers -- they wanted to have the numbers right before it was reported and be 100% certain. then once it was we were standing there watching a flat screen tv watching the president address the nation and the world. >> you were next to bin laden's body watching obama? >> a number of feet away, yes. i heard him say, if i had a breakfast sandwich in my hand and i heard him say i can report to the world that the united statesen conducted a mission. i heard him say osama bin laden and i looked at bin laden and thought how did i get here from butte, montana. >> you can see that full interview with robert o'neill and jake tapper on cnn.com/thelead. >> the next hour of your "new day" starts right now.
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breaking overnight. america's top military leader now on the ground in iraq. could general martin dempsey be looking to expand the u.s. presence in the region? >> and police dispatch tapes released from a deadly police shooting in ferguson, missouri under the national spotlight. the timeline the voices reveal. >> plus, decades old rape allegations resurface against bill cosby. why the women are coming forward and will the iconic comedian respond to their claims? >> take a deep breath and welcome to saturday. 8:00 on the dot. i'm christi paul. >> i'm joe johns in for victor blackwell. it is 8:00. >> good to have you here. >> thank you so much. glad to be here. >> you came in, boy, a lot of stuff going on. >> absolutely. there's breaking news out of iraq, america's top general has made a surprise visit to the
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country. general martin dempsey arrived in baghdad as the u.s. prepares to expand its assistance to iraqi and kurdish forces battling isis. >> this is the first trip, his first trip to iraq since president obama ordered noncombatant american forces back to the country. this week general dempsey testified before the house armed services committee saying he is not ruling out sending u.s. ground forces to iraq. >> i'm not predicting at this point that i would recommend that those forces in mosul and along the border would need to be accompanied by u.s. forces but we're certainly considering it. >> joining us with more on general dempsey's unannounced visit to iraq douglas oliver, senior national security fellow at the new america foundation. thanks for being with us. what's general dempsey looking to accomplish with this visit, do you think? >> i think he's trying to gather more information, get his own sense of what's going on. you can get all of the reports you want over the phone or the videoconference, but there's
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nothing like being there and getting a sense of what people really feel about what's happening. i think he's just there to collect data and talk to the iraqis about the next steps forward. >> cnn's kyra phillips sat down with general dempsey last month. >> we need to develop a ground campaign. we've got an air campaign that's ongoing. we need to integrate into that a ground campaign, be able to put pressure on isil, we need to continue to restore the capability, training and equipping of the iraqi security forces in the peshmerga. we need to keep pressure on isil in its safe haven inside syria, we need to build up a syrian opposition to confront that. and we need a bit of patience. >> general demly isn't ruling out sending ground forces to iraq. you think this visit is going to sway him one way or the other or has he made up his mind?
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>> i suspect he's open to new data and again, general dempsey is not the person who decides if people go. he is the senior military adviser to the president and very careful to couch it in terms of what i would advise. but he is there to gather data, i met general dempsey, he has a very good reputation, no stranger to baghdad, he spent a year there as a two-star, a year as three-star. he understands this country and he'll be gathering data to make better recommendations to the president and the secretary of defense when he comes back. >> douglas, thank you so much. good to see you. >> pleasure. >> let's get to brisbane, australia. leaders of the most powerful nations are there for the g-20 summit. >> president obama headed into a working dinner with german chancellor angela merkel. the headlines are all about russia and its president vladamir putin. >> cnn's correspondent jim
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acosta is live from brisbane. good to see you. i have to ask you, what kind of reaction have you heard about this comparison to nazi germany? >> reporter: you know, i haven't heard much about that to be honest with you, christi. i can tell you that the rhetoric has been very heated, aimed at russian president vladamir putin. we were at a protest earlier today, g-20 protests, and they were -- there were people making unkind references to the russian president and there were some references to adolf hitler, these are the the kinds of comments that the russian president has heard before. and the animosity is on the front page of one of the local newspapers in australia. it says ice cold war, shows the russian bear and australian kangaroo duking it out. that's a sense what if the flavor is. it has been the g-19 plus one, isolated vladamir putin at this g-20 summit. the russian president has gotten
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the cold shoulder. and the summit's host tony abbott sent low level officials to greet putin at the airport. he told putin i guess i'll shake your hand but you need to get out of ukraine. president obama walking into dinner with angela merkel deep in conversation. and in the video you can hear the word cease-fire, officials told us that president merkel would talk on the sidelines here and the president pile and putin in a speech earlier in the day mentioning the downing of flight 17. and vowing that the u.s. will continue to take on a lead role in standing up to russia. here's what the president had to say. >> we're leading and dealing with ebola in west africa, and in opposing russia's aggression against ukraine. which is a threat to the world as we saw in the appalling shoot-down of mh-17. a tragedy that took so many innocent lives among them your fellow citizens.
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as your ally and friend america shares the grief of these australian families and we share the determination of your nation for justice and accountability. >> reporter: for its part russia caused a stir here in australia, at the summit by positioning some naval ships off of the australian coast, moscow said they were in the area for putin's security. australia responded by sending its own war ships to keep an eye on the russians. besides putin there are other issues such as ebola, the g-20 leaders released a joint statement encouraging nations that haven't joined the fight and started contributing against this deadly virus, to start doing so. and the battle against isis is also a top priority. something that president obama will discuss with the leaders from australia and japan tomorrow. we may get a chance to ask the president about vladamir putin and this reaction that the russian president had here over this g-20 summit. the president will have a news conference before heading back to washington tomorrow evening.
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>> jim acosta, we appreciate it. thank you, sir. i want to get to breaking news. the release of police dispatch tapes from the deadly shooting in ferguson, missouri at the center of a firestorm. the radio calls indicate that the encounter between unarmed black teen michael brown and officer darren wilson who is white, lasted less than two minutes. >> the new audio and never before seen surveillance video of wilson in the hours after the shooting come as a grand jury is expected to decide any day now whether to indict wilson in brown's death. >> stephanie is joining us live from ferguson. what more can you tell us about these tapes? >> reporter: well, christi and joe, when you listen to these tapes it helps put in perspective the police side of things, what exactly they heard, what they knew and how things happened. also how darren wilson was involved in all of this on august 9th around high noon. "the st. louis post-dispatch"
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obtained the police audio and video flew the state's so called sunshine law. according to the paper's timeline of the august 9 encounter between darren wilson and michael brown. at 11:53 a.m. a distacher reports a stealing in progress at the ferguson market. >> a stealing in progress from 9101 west forest. subject may be leaving the business at this time. stand by for further. >> reporter: the dispatch says about 19 seconds later dispatch issues a description of a suspect. >> it's going to abblack male in a white t-shirt, running toward kwik trip. he took a box of swisher cigars. >> she said he walked out of the store. >> there's more detail in the police cross talk. >> with another male, he's got a red cardinals hat, yellow socks and khaki shorts. >> according to the paper, at noon, officer wilson reports he's back in service from
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another call. he then asks officers searching for the suspects if they need his help. >> seven seconds later officers report the suspects have disappeared. >> dispatch, relay. i couldn't hear. >> we think that they disappeared. >> the paper says at 12:02, officer wilson responds. >> 21, put me on canfield. >> on august 9th, michael brown's friend dorian johnson said they were walking down the street when officer wilson told them to get out of the road. according to johnson he and brown told the officer they were almost at their destination and would be out of the street shortly. but johnsen said the officer grabbed brown by the neck and drew his gun, eventually shooting brown. by contrast, a wilson family friend told ktfk according to wilson brown started a physical altercation with him and grabbed
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the gun which went off. both sides agree brown ran and then turned back. the post dispatch says 41 seconds after wilson's call another officer was about to arrive at the location. the radio calls also show other officers arriving at the scene and a call for a supervisor, and then according to the newspaper, this call at 12:07 p.m. with the apparent sound of a woman wailing in the background. >> several more units here. there's going to be a problem. >> any available ferguson units who can respond to canfield and copper creek advise. >> reporter: the post dispatch obtained surveillance video of officer wilson hours after the shooting. the paper says the video shows wilson in the white t-shirt leaving the police station for the hospital two hours after the shooting, accompanied by other officers and his union lawyer. the video then shows him
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returning to the police station. >> here in ferguson the community is bracing for what may be the reaction once the grand jury ruling comes out and that's what people want to know. as they prepare some are stocking up on groceries, some planning to stay in their homes. others saying they believe that ferguson is going to come out all right no matter what the grand jury decides on the fate of darren wilson. >> stephanie elam in ferguson, missouri, thanks for that. >> still to come, early winter is descending. have you felt it today? have you opened the window, the door? >> got a taste of it here. >> it's bitterly cold. >> jennifer gray keeping tabs on the arctic blast. >> that's right. it's below freezing here, temperatures at 30 degrees but much colder across other parts of the country. of course we'll have your full forecast and a live report coming up.
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how much money do you have in your pocket right now? i have $40, $21. could something that small make an impact on something as big as your retirement? i don't think so. well if you start putting that towards your retirement every week and let it grow over time, for twenty to thirty years, that retirement challenge might not seem so big after all. ♪ not to be focusing, again, on my moderate my goal was to finally get in shape. to severe chronic plaque psoriasis.
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so i finally made a decision to talk to my dermatologist about humira. humira works inside my body to target and help block a specific source of inflammation that contributes to my symptoms. in clinical trials, most adults with moderate to severe plaque psoriasis saw 75% skin clearance on humira. and the majority of people were clear or almost clear in just 4 months. humira can lower your ability to fight infections, including tuberculosis. serious, sometimes fatal infections and cancers, including lymphoma, have happened; as have blood, liver, and nervous system problems, serious allergic reactions, and new or worsening heart failure. before treatment, get tested for tb. tell your doctor if you've been to areas where certain fungal infections are common, and if you've had tb, hepatitis b, are prone to infections, or have flu-like symptoms or sores. don't start humira if you have an infection. set a new goal today. ask your dermatologist about humira. because with humira clearer skin is possible.
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let me give you a bit of perspective this morning. if it's cold in parts of georgia right now as it is in anchorage, alaska. >> take a look. >> there is something wrong with that. >> totally wrong. okay. at 4:00 eastern this morning t temperature in ken asaw, georgia was 25 degrees, in anchorage 1 degree colder at 24. they did not take the temperature at barrow close to the north pole. >> thank you for that. doesn't that make us feel better. jennifer gray our meteorologist who is stylish and at centennial park there. it's beautiful as is jen. >> is that from the building? >> i think it's from the building. >> they don't have a blimp. hello, jennifer. >> hi, yeah, they brought the two cameras. no, i think it's a towercam.
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it's a great shot. the sun's coming up. i'm counting on the sun to warm us up. it's 30 degrees right now. and it feels even cooler. we have a little bit of a light wind going on but it's much, much colder across other parts of the country with temperatures breaking records left and right. we have video of redmond, oregon, a hard hit area. central oregon got a lot of snow. that's the airport. we're going to get more snow for the midwest as we go through the next couple of days. and no good news for the near future at least. we are going to continue to see temperatures very, very cold. just as cold as they are now, maybe even colder as we go through much of the upcoming week. let's switch to the weather graphics. we can get you the temperatures. we are starting out in the single digits across minneapolis, billings, cheyenne, 18 in denver this morning. 21 in chicago. and temperatures are going to
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continue to stay very cold. like i mentioned for at least the next seven days. forecast snowfall for the weekend, looks like 2 to 5 inches around des moines, outside of sioux falls, 4 to 6 inches. minneapolis, you could pick up an inch or two as well as madison. grand rapids getting snow off the lake, four to eight inches for you. we're going to see temperatures in the single digits, teens and 20s for rapid city through tuesday, 38, a warm day for you. and that's your high temperature. minneapolis, you have been below freezing since monday. it could be another week before you see temperatures above freezing. chicago, barely hitting freezing. possibly tomorrow. and then atlanta, look at tuesday. circle that one. 37 degrees your high temperature on tuesday. so yeah, we're all going to be feeling the chill. the southeast, the northeast could actually be colder the upcoming week than we have seen, guys, over the last couple of days. so like i mentioned before, thanksgiving, that's the week that we're all going to look
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forward to. we should be warming up by then. >> if we don't at least we'll eat enough to make us feel warmer. >> running road races. >> that's right. >> burn a few calories off. >> jennifer, thank you so much. >> it's a good thing we got chicken. >> divorce. >> divorce. what's fair is in the eye of the beholder a lot of times. a billion dollars? >> b, a billion, sounds like a lot, right? well, one ex-wife says uh-uh. i should have gotten more. >> a billion dollars. type 2 diabetes affects millions of us. and for many, it's a struggle to keep your a1c down. so imagine, what if there 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
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the hour. i want to get you your morning read. >> there is a lot to talk about here. a report in "the wall street journal" on how the government is keeping tabs on americans. it says federal law enforcement agents are flying small planes loaded with gear to spy on cell phone calls. an official at the department of justice would neither confirm nor deny the report. >> top defense officials call for major updates to the u.s. nuclear weapons program after an external review found quote systematic problems. "the washington post" reporting a shortage of man power and inadequate and aging infrastructure. defense officials estimate $7.5 billion. >> in business, when is a billion dollars not enough? when your ex-husband is worth 20 billion. sue ann hamm isn't happy an oklahoma court awarded her nearly $1 billion in the
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couple's divorce. her lawyers say she dedicated 25 years to the oil tycoon's business and says she should get more. she is appealing that ruling. >> take care of the nuclear problem at that point. listen to this guy. talking about show me the money, 25-year-old slugger in talks to sign a 13-year, $325 million deal with miami marlins. the contract would be the richest in total value in professional sports history. it would also include the club's first ever no trade clause. >> i bet he can't wait for the season to start. >> still ahead, the growing cloud over bill cosby as another woman comes forward alleging rape. and despite canceled tv appearances in the wake of the allegations, cosby is reportedly set to address this latest crisis. >> first, there's a new trend that's rolled out on the streets of new york city. we're talking about fashion
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trucks. we have a look at a boutique on wheels that's getting a lot of attention. >> hi, i'm jesse, the owner of the nomad fashion truck. we're open for business. i was inspired to take a leap of faith in starting this business really when i heard about the fashion truck trend happening out west. i wanted to open my own store, i just couldn't afford the rent here in new york city. i actually found the truck on craigslist. we parked the truck in my parents garage and renovated it. we have a very laid back california vibe. the clothing we carry a lot of independent brands for the jewelry and accessories we carry a lot of handmade products. social media is probably the most important thing to our business. we'll post on facebook, twitter and instagram where we are for the day. we tend to get walk-in customers and repeat customers who do in fact track us on social media. >> did you want a receipt to
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your e-mail. >> having a mobile boutique in new york the weather. if it's cold or rainy we can't open. i stumbled across this when i first was walking home from work. i love the taste, it's wyms sickle. >> so fun.fun. wait, this brim is -- >> awesome. >> i never imagined that i would be driving a truck full of clothes around new york city. it's really empowering to me that i have a dream and i followed through and i'm doing it. i make a lot of purchases for my business. and i get a lot in return with ink plus from chase. like 50,000 bonus points when i spent $5,000 in the first 3 months after i opened my account. and i earn 5 times the rewards on internet, phone services and at office supply stores. with ink plus i can choose how to redeem my points. travel, gift cards, even cash back.
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i knew something was going on, i would start asking questions and he'd say you know what, you don't trust me. you got to trust me. by the way, you were drunk. >> rape allegations continuing to haunt bill cosby this morning. >> why women are coming forward now, and when will the comedy legend respond? bottom of the hour. >> i'm christi paul. glad to have you with us. >> i'm joe johns. >> talk about these decade old rape allegations against bill cosby. they just will not go away. >> so cosby's had repeated denials, alleged victims continue to come forward with horrifying tales of being drugged and sexually molested. this week the whole thing blew up again after cosby unwittingly re-ignited the allegations by inviting fans to reach out to him on twitter and this morning cosby is set to speak on npr. alexandra fields is following
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this. >> this is a much anticipated interview people waiting to hear what bill cosby has to say after a week when he has been widely attacked on the internet. here's what we know. scott simon, for npr, is saying that he asks bill cosby directly about the rape allegations that plague him. he says that people should listen in and decide whether or not bill cosby says yes or no to that question. this debate these allegations have been re-ignited since monday when cosby or his social media team put a post on twitter asking people to mean him, that unleashed the flood gates, people accusing him of rape and calling him a rapist. there are women who say they were victimized by bill cosby among them barbara bowman, as a young actress she was mentored. after she turned 18 he attacked her. she talked about why she decided to come forward with the allegations. >> so after going to my agent
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and going to the lawyer, and getting smacked down both time i said let me get on with my life, move on and let it go. and in 2004, finally when one woman did have the courage to come forward and file a lawsuit, i said i will not sit in silence any more and i believe this woman. they were dragging her through the mud, calling her a liar and i said i believe her because it happened to me. >> that lawsuit that barbara bowman was talking about is filed by a woman who says she was drugged and raped by bill cosby. police investigated at the time and said there was a lack of evidence to charge. the stoot was settled and through the years christi and joe, bill cosby and his attorneys have denied any and all allegations, he has never been prosecuted, never charged with a crime yet these allegations continue to crop up. >> do we now how they are affecting him at all? >> i think we'll hear more when we hear this interview on npr when he is asked again, we'll
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hear from him what he is feeling now, what he has to say. but we know that as these allegations continue to be repeated that they are becoming attached to his name. when you see articles in "the new york times" or the washington post these allegations are attached to it. he does still have a sitcom street air next year on nbc. seems that's going forward. there have been reports of some appearances canceled including conflicting reports why an appearance on questionnaire latifah's show was canceled after a fellow comedian skewered and attack, calling him a rapist in october. these allegations they continue to come forward, continue to be talked about and when bill cosby's name is mentioned people bring this up. >> thanks so much for that. talk about this a little more with our legal analyst joey jackson because joey, people see this and i'm sure that a lot of them are wondering because these accusations go back ten years, some plus, what legal action could somebody take? >> you know, it's interesting
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because rape especially in new york, if you look at the op-ed piece miss bowman wrote when she was mentioning what happened and how he took advantage of her she mentioned that in his brown stone in new york apparently he drugged her, allegedly, and that there was some activity that he engaged in with her that was unwelcome. so in new york there is no statute of limitations on rape. particularly when it's either a, forceable or as miss bowman alleged when it relates to a victim who is helpless so. theoretically in theory a prosecutor can look at it and see whether or not they can go forward. but a prosecutor only takes a case if they can prove it beyond a reasonable doubt. if there is only her allegations, then of course you run the risk of well, he says, she says. the other piece is sometimes a prosecutor will look and say okay, there is no physical evidence and it's so long ago, but is there what we call a recent outcry witness, someone,
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a friend, a relative, that you went to and said someone's doing this to me and this is what they did. and of course that would be evidence it would be admissible in a court of law. so could she be prosecuted, excuse me, could bill cosby be prosecuted, yes, would he be, it's a stretch in the event the prosecutor wants to take the case, they can >> joey jackson, thanks. we appreciate it. >> thank you. as republicans are street take over congress, president obama is trying to stand his ground. it may be cold outside but tensions are hot in washington, d.c. we'll get an inside perspective from democratic representative sheila jackson lee coming up next. >> first, according to a veterans administration report on average 22 veterans commit suicide daily. in this week's impact your world a former marine is changing that using a film and a book about his experiences at war. meet mike scotty. >> my name is mike scotty and i'm a former marine who fought
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as part of the initial invasion in iraq independent 2003. i just happen to have a video camera with me and videotaped what was going on. the road block. the marines had no choice but to light it up. turned out to be a father and his baby girl. >> when i first got home i went down a hole. i started spiraling down and went almost all the way. the first couple months was garden variety depression. and then you know i started to become angry. you are angry your friends are getting killed or wounded and that the country sacrificed for sometimes forgets that it's fighting a war. you have thoughts of what are you going to do. am i going to kill myself? am i going to join up and go on active duty and try to get myself killed. when i started to come together as a film and it was a rough cut and i saw other veterans see it, and i watched, i would watch them watch, really started to click for me was that this wasn't just my story, this was everybody's story, every
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veteran's story. >> sorting out what you experienced can feel like it's impossible. you live in a sort of limbo where everything gravitates toward uncertainty, chaos and disorder. >> i realized there was a lot of people who were sad or suffering or keeping these feelings inside of them. the advice i would give to veterans, call your buddies, write about it. do something creative. if you think you need help ask for it. [ male announcer ] are you so stuffed up, you feel like you're underwater?
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a lot of people waiting for this news. we're just getting word that bill walker has won the governor's race in alaska. an independent candidate, he was up against republican governor shawn parnell. the first independent candidate to get elected to the office in the state. again, as i know that a lot of people were waiting for this news, you waited two weeks, bill walker won the governor's race in alaska. when president obama returned from australia he will face a showdown with congress. obama has been attempting to use his executive powers with a variety of issues such as immigration and climate change. and republicans are simply not happy about it. democratic representative sheila jackson lee joins us from houston. republican leaders really have harsh words for the president at least at this stage, congresswoman. let's listen and then we'll get
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your take. >> the american people elected divided government. and we'd like for the president to recognize the reality that he has the government he harks not one he wishes he had. and work with us to try to find a way to improve our immigration system. >> we're going to fight the president tooth and nail if he continues down this path. this is the wrong way to govern. this is exactly what the american people said on election day they didn't want. >> congresswoman, we're talking about lame duck politics now here at the end of the year, the house just passed the hotly debated keystone xl pipe line legislation. republicans have been saying it will create jobs. but you're opposed to it? can you tell us why and why you don't think this is a place where democrats and republicans can connect. >> well, let me say this. it's interesting that when it
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serves the will of the republican party, not the will of the american people, they are able to use lame duck politics, they are willing to go against the president, but when it serves a broader view, such as comprehensive immigration reform, there is no interest, if you will, in working with the president. it is quite a story for the american people to understand. every movement to improve the lives of americans republicans have been against. and they have been against it if the president has been for it. >> let me jump in there right now. this issue of the president signing executive action on immigration as opposed to going through the regular process with legislation especially with the new congress coming in. what's wrong with going ahead and trying to do it in the regular procedure as opposed to letting the president sign something and make it the order of the land if you will? >> joe, i'm very excited about
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that question. and the reason is because the president's been working with the congress, democrats have been working with republicans from the moment the president was sworn in on this issue of comprehensive immigration reform. having served on immigration subcommittees for almost two decades, i can tell you that we have been pushing for comprehensive immigration reform through a number of presidents, but the republicans have continuously blocked it, and what they are saying now is an insult to the american people's intellect. they should carry the constitution around. there are three branches of government. i carry this book around. and i recognize the legislative powers but the president has executive powers. those powers include interpreting how the law will be enforced which is what this executive order may do, expanding the opportunities for parents of citizen children so that children are not ripped away from their parents. looking at the potential of giving documentation to farm workers so america's farms will not continue to suffer as they
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are doing. looking at the idea of those with tech skills so that those we educate and give doctor@s to don't leave. he has broad executive power. >> the question really is if he does an executive action, a lot of people in capitol hill are saying all it's going to do is poison the water and make it impossible to get anything of substance through over the next two years. plus there's a question of judicial challenges to whatever the president signs. so, how do you overcome all of that in this environment? >> well, i have been talking to the white house and i am quite confident that the lawyers in the white house have done an enormous search, constitutional review, supreme court review, justice roberts confirmed if you will the executive powers of the president in the current supreme court. we know that other presidents
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from reagan to clinton to carter and certainly to both bush 1 and bush 2, have used executive powers specifically in immigrant situations, such as cubans, haitians and others. liberians for example. and therefore, i am not in any way intimidated by the attacks of republicans and the reason is because the republicans have been intimidating and attacking forever. the senate passed an immigration bill with 60 votes. the house has waited forever for mr. boehner to put it on the floor. but i sit on homeland security. we passed a bipartisan border security bill. i was excited when we the that. i helped write some of the language and we were looking for that bill to go on the floor of the house. you know why they didn't put it on the floor of the house? because they did not want to upset their tea party members, not because it was bad for america, and so the constitution is going to be i think the storyteller. the president has executive
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power to be able to do this and use prosecutorial discretion. >> thank you so much. we did try to get a republican from the area there to talk to us about this immigration question and we weren't able to this morning. appreciate it. you are right there on the border where it all matters this issue. >> and it will help houston and texas. it will help them. thank you so much. >> thank you so much, congresswoman. all righty. talk about holiday shopping, shall we. because you know, you're ready to go out and spend but hackers, they are waiting to pounce. where is it safe and how is it safe to pay? we're talking about it. i've had surgery, and yes, i have occasional constipation. that's why i take doctor recommended colace capsules. [ male announcer ] for certain medical conditions where straining should be avoided, colace softens the stool for effective relief from occasional constipation. go to colacecapsules.com for savings. feet...tiptoeing.
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november. it can happen to anybody. we're ready to spend our money for christmas. >> like it or not, while we're all swiping credit cards and shopping for gifts online during the holiday shopping frenzy the cyber criminals are lurking all over the place, hunting for our personal information. watch out. >> our data is more valuable apparently than we think. that's why hackers targeted retail giants, home depot, super value, neiman-marcus, that's just a couple of them. >> cnn analyst brett larsen joins us live for more. brett, at the height of last year's holiday shopping season, hackers hit some 100 million target shoppers, so how are you supposed to stay safe? >> especially when you hear a number like that. 100 million. one in three americans. either you, someone you know, someone in your family was actually hacked. i can say my father went to target, used his debit card and was hacked because of the cyber
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breach. so even the father of the tech analyst for cnn. means you can too. >> probably saying you're not doing your job if this is happening to me. >> exactly. well, you know, the one thing i do like to say when we report on these hacks is there is some good news to it. in that we're talking about it, we're alerting consumers about it. we're letting consumers know this is a genuine risk during the holiday season. and we're also letting retailers know that they can't just sit back and say oh, of course our stuff is safe. why would anybody want to hack us? when you're hacking pf change's you know there is a problem. >> let me ask you something quickly. because a lot of people are thinking but what can i do to avoid it? is it for instance, is it wise to avoid retailers who have been hacked? not that i'm trying to say don't go shopping. >> i know there is definitely a feeling of helplessness that comes with these hacks because the consumer did nothing but
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their normal routine. went shopping, used their credit card and got hacked. i would say a retailer that has been a victim of hacking would probably be a little safer because they have gone the extra nile make sure. they don't want that pr nightmare again, have to come out and say gosh, we let 100,000 people get hacked. now you're not. easy tips when you're out there this holiday season. i know this first sounds like the obvious but keep your cards close. i had my credit card account stolen in the few minutes it was taken away from me at an airport restaurant. and brought back. i mean, it happens that quickly. monitor your account. this one is really important. i use a website mid.com that oversees my banking. it's set up to alert me. my credit cards are set up to alert me. you should take a moment, go through all of your credit and debit card information and set up all of those alerts. have an alert set for if you're
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going to spend more than $50. have an alert set if your card was used but wasn't present. that's always a red flag. check the security of online sites when you are throughout doing your online shopping. look for the s in the https. and this and we saw this last year and most of us have probably seen this e-mail. those phishing attacks start to pick up this time of year. that hey, your fed ex delivery didn't make it. if you click here and give us your credit card. >> i just got that in my e-mail. just got it. you know what i thought? how did fed ex get my e-mail? >> what did i order. >> think about that. >> so creative. it's really -- they are really out to get us and you have to be extra vigilant. i wish there was a one size fits all answer to this but there really doesn't seem to be yet. >> brett, you gave us great information. thank you so much. >> there are people out there
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worried about too much security. talk about that another time. >> thank you, brett. we'll be back in a moment. grandmother was stronger than people twice her size. and that strength inspired his liquid muscle cleaner. it lifts tough dirt so you do less scrubbing. and its nozzle stops by itself... ...so less is wasted sure made grandma proud. mr. clean liquid muscle. in the country. we operate just like a city, and that takes a lot of energy. we use natural gas throughout the airport - for heating the entire terminal, generating electricity on-site, and fueling hundreds of vehicles. we're very focused on reducing our environmental impact. and natural gas is a big part of that commitment. ugh... ...heartburn. did someone say burn? try alka seltzer reliefchews. they work just as fast and are proven to taste better than tums smoothies assorted fruit.
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here are some of the top stories we're following. general martin dempsey is on a surprise visit to iraq. >> the head of the joint chiefs of staff arrived unannounced in baghdad as the u.s. prepares to expand assistance to iraqi and kurdish forces. general dempsey's first trip to iraq since the president ordered advisory u.s. troops back to the country. >> bill cosby reportedly addressing rape allegations during an interview with npr.
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we'll bring you that. also cosby's appearance on david letterman a's show has been canceled as these old allegations resur fast. >> a hospital that treated two patients with ebola is getting a third this weekend. the doctor game infected in sierra leone, flying to the nebraska medical center as we speak. >> this could be one of your worst nightmares. imagine that everyone thought you were dead and then you wake up in a funeral home. it happened to a 91-year-old woman in poland. a doctor declared her dead, then she woke up 11 hours later in cold storage. cold storage. she is home now doing fine. >> thank goodness. the famous comet lander is dead, taking a long nap. the the space probe soared into history when it landed on a comet 310 million miles from earth but batteries run out of juice.
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scientists hoping solar energy would power it. it's landing in the shade and isn't getting enough sun light. >> we'll see you at 10:00 eastern. >> "smerconish" is starting for you right now. hello and welcome to the program. great show planned for you. we're digging down on important stories with terrific guests. america's favorite dad, bill cosby accused of rape a and sexual assault. an alleged victim joins me. cosby denies the charges. i'm an attorney, i intend to get answers. ferguson, missouri, nerves are raw, people are buying guns, the town holding its breath. we talked about what could happen if there is no indictment. what happen there is one? i'll ask the cops. and political war in the nation's capital, the president versus the republicans over immigration. my take, there's got to be a better way and i think i have one. and the mayor of london is here, on his

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