tv CNN Newsroom CNN November 22, 2014 11:00am-12:01pm PST
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of searching this man traveled to retrieve his son. >> they put the cap on me, they hide me because they suspect me of being a cia. they believe me in the end and let me go. and that same leader he let my son return. >> reporter: according to general gel intelligence and security service of the netherlands, 160 dutch nationals have traveled to syria and iraq to join the conflict. but there could be more roughly 18 have died there and only 30 have returned home. for many families it is a heartbreaking situation. but there is hope and the realizization that getting them back may require the most hazardous of journeys.
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new developments on the grand jury in ferguson. >> we know from sources that the grand jury that was here considering whether to indict officer darren wilson left the justice center here in st. louis county without reach ago decision last night. plus, u.s. combat troops are getting ready to withdraw from afghan. meanwhile, the president is considering expanding another military role there. plus newtown shooter adam lanza, a chilling story he wrote in fifth grade. hello again. we have just learned new information about the grand jury deliberating the case of ferguson police officer darren wilson. the jury did not reach a decision last night.
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it's unclear when the panel will reconvene but law enforcement efficients are preparing for protests and potential unrest when that decision is rendered. more than 100 protesters hit the streets last night. they remained peaceful but at times blocked traffic. people were arrested for unlawful assembly. how are people, i guess, bracing themselves for any news of a decision? >> reporter: well, we've seen signs that especially law enforcement are doing the preparation to get ready for any potential unrest. as you mentioned, barricades going up around the county courthouse where the grand jury has been deliberating. the lead prosecutor has been heavily criticized the last few months. then you have people here on the streets of ferguson, many who have been spending the last three months trying to calm nerves and reiterate to people,
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if they're going to protest, to do it peacefully. >> destroying property is not the answer. >> reporter: you were one of a handful of people who were in the middle of it all, trying to keep the peace. you were like the last line of defense before things went crazy. i watched it. what was it like to be there on that line? >> every night that i went out there, i looked at my wife and i looked at my children and i didn't know if i was coming home. >> reporter: on this stretch of road in ferguson, missouri on the nights the protests turned violent there was a small group of peace keepers, mostly local religious leaders, who put themselves between the cops and the protesters. >> we were the last line of defense. and if we were to fail out
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there, if we would have, not succeeded out there, could you imagine the blood that would have been on the street? >> reporter: so i've gone back and found a couple of those peace keepers that i met on those night ons this street to talk to them about what it was like and to get their perspective on what they fear might happen the next. >> you've got a guy in front of you telling you i came here to die. >> his actual word were i came here to die tonight. and i response was, why don't you choose life? you don't have to come to die tonight. >> you need to exit the roadway. >> i am afraid as a citizen that there's going to be fashions on both sides that's not going to be able to keep peace. i remember the night when the frustrations built up between the clergy and the police officers and there was a disagreement with how the police
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were managing the people. and i remember when i was like, i'm done. i threw my hands up and i was ready to walk away. there was a particular sergeant from the highway patrol and as i was taking off my orange shirt and throwing in the towel. he took off his baton and helmet and said if you quit, i quit. reality is there's bad protesters on your side and there's bad cops on my side. if you and i quit, they're going to clash. and he and i came to tears in the middle of the street. and we promised each other erp going to stand through until the end. we haven't left. >> reporter: those folk that is you heard from in that piece, over the last few months they have been talking to people trying to keep things as peaceful and prepare for this alimony as much as possible. >> very volatile situation. meantime t u.s. military's
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role in afghanistan will be exte extended. we have learned that president obama has signed an order authorizing a more expanded mission. explain. >> reporter: although president obama was adamant that there would be no more combat for u.s. troops by the end of this year, this new order could reverse that in effect if u.s. troops need to act if they are threa n threatened by the taliban. i want to play for you what president obama said in the rose garden in may when he was announcing that draw down. >> i've made it clear that we're open to cooperating with afghans on two narrow missions after 2014. training afghan forces and supporting counter terrorism operations against the remnants of al qaeda. >> reporter: now, this new order
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expands on those counter terrorism operations. i want to read to you a little bit of a statement that we got from a senior administration official this morning explaining this. as part of this mission the united states may provide combat enabler support to the afghan national security forces in limited circumstances to prevent detrimental strategic eskss to the afghan security forces. while we will no longer target belligerents solely because they are members of the taliban. to the extent that ball ban members directly threat the united states or provide direct support to al qaeda we will take appropriate measures to keep americans safe. and what we have also understood is that the reason the administration feels this is necessary is because they learned a big lesson from iraq in that after pulling out of iraq, after the u.s. pulled out of iraq, it left the conditions for groups like isis to be
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creative in iraq and they want to avoid that same sort of thing in afghanistan. a new report revealing details of how deeply disturbed the newtown school shooter was. two years ago adam lanza killed his own mother and 20 children at sandy hook elementary school. there were a lot of missed flags and warning signs throughout his life. we had heard for some time that there were a lot of missed signals. but what's new now. >> i think it's important to start by saying the authors of this report say this doesn't answer by when he did this but they hope it could prevent future shootings. a couple of red flags in this 114 page report which is largely based on interviews with educators and physician that is treated adam, one was three months before the shooting
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happened he hadn't left his room. while he was living under a the same roof as his mother, he had blacked out the windows with garbage bags. he refused to commune wait with his mother except through e-mails. his health was in really bad shape. he was 6'0" tall, only 112 pounds. he had dealt with mental health issues as far back as when he was three years old. he would aun be in the corner hitting his own head against the wall. in fifth grade his bhai wror really took a turn for the worse. he penned this book, the book of gran a granny where he talks about killing children. really disturbing stuff for anyone who's in fifth grade. >> the mother didn't know what to do with it, didn't convey it?
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or were there others who were eyewitness to the book that he wrote and these behaviors and didn't know what to do about it or failed to do something about it? >> it's critical of health care providers and his mother. she took adam to a connecticut hospital. and they suggested there should be a further psychiatric evaluation. nancy said she didn't want to do that. she took him back home. she thought he would be better suited being home schooled. that's when he began playing very violent video games. and also in this report he had a friend, probably his only friend that suggested that he had a falling out with the in the months leading up to the shooting, somebody who was a confidant that would talk to about his family, video games and his deep infatuation with mass violence. that could have contributed to
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this violence. >> the mom didn't like what some of the recommended options were, she diplomat think they were suitable for her son and thought that perhaps her approach might be the best and of course we know by now that was very futile. is there any explanation that they reveal about the mom's actions or inactions or what she thought was the best thing to do? >> it doesn't go that deep. you can only assume that the parent thinks they're doing the best for their child. and she probably thought she was doing as much as she could. it talks about the strained relationship with his father. he hasn't sp spn to his father in two years. this contributed to his bizarre behavior. there's no reason you could understand why or understand the mind of somebody like this. on that know, on the mom, it's critical suggesting that she could have done more.
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and there were other health care providers who could have done more to treat this kid. buffalo hit this week by a year's worth of know in just'ss a matter of days. now the combination of rain and rising temperatures is creating the threat of major flooding. swift water rescue crews are also on alert. and no decision yet from the grand jury in ferguson. up next our legal analysts walk us through some possible scenarios. they take us to worlds full of heroes and titans. for respawn, building the best interactive entertainment begins with the cloud. this is "titanfall," the first multi-player game built and run on microsoft azure. empowering gamers around the world
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. welcome back. we're still awaiting word from the grand jury in ferguson, missouri. sources are telling cnn the grand jury did not make a decision last night. and it's still unclear when they will reconvene. here are some of the outcomes being considered, inindictment of police officer darren wilson for first degree murder or second degree murder. voluntary manslaughter, involuntary manslaughter or no charges at all.
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this is an extremely high profile case. is this grand jury being charged with the same kind of responsibilities under same parameters as any other grand jury? or do they have special conditions in which to work? >> listen, here's the story, a grand jury has parameters and they differ, of course, in different states. we know what this grand jury's doing. and they're charging the various, you know, charge there is. but their mission is to sift through the evidence and make two determinations. one is their probable cause to blo believe that a crime was committed and did darren wilson submit it? and the different charge that is you mentioned, and of course in sifts through the evidence this prosecutor has opt today give them everything. and when i say everything, all of the evidence and all of the information. in doing this, they'll have to
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decide is it murder. and was it premade dated. if not, they'll drop to second degree murder. and the absence of premedication. then they'll go to voluntary, was there heat of passion, sudden quarrel. if there wasn't that, then they'll senior the lesser included, involuntary man sha t manslaughter. they're not charged, finally, with really determining guilty. they're charged with determining if the matter could go to trial. >> i think that's a really important message to convey because i think some people convey there's a verdict a decision being rendered by the grand jury, guilty or innocence. that's not what it is. this is about carrying on with the legal process and should this go to trial.
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does it have certain privileges that other grand juries don't have, meaning, the prosecutor is giving this grand jury everything. and the prosecutor, i understand, is also saying to this grand jury you set the schedule. you let us know how much more time you need, under what conditions you need it, et cetera. is that unique to this grand ju jury? >> the way this is sort of unique and we've called it a super grand jury is that rather than a proektd presenting basically what he or she wants and getting what he or she wants, he is saying that he's going to identity impartially and all on record. in that sense, giving this grand jury everything that they can possibly want and allowing them to be more activist, bringing back witnesses if they want, additional witnesses, talking about other evidence, if they want other evidence, allows them to make hopefully a complete picture of what was happening
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and a much better result in deciding ooet to endiet or to not indict. the nice thing that mccollough is doing or the appropriate thing is that he's already committed to having all the transcripts of whatever they talk about and whatever evidence they have released. that's going to help us and the rest of the nation look and decide for ourselves if the verdict or decision was appropriate. >> and is it true that this prosecutor has said we're leaving it up to the grand jury to decide whether there will be charges imposed even if they do not return an indictment. this prosecutor could potentially still impose charges fwhu th but in this case he's withdrawing himself from doing this. >> i would see that as unlikely. the whole purpose of having a grand jury is you have this body of citizens that come forward unlike of course an actual jury where they're deciding beyond a reasonable doubt. you have a jury that's making a
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decision that's presented as to whether criminal charges should be brought. and only nine of the 12 have to make this decision. in the event that there is no true bill, meaning there's not an indictment, could there be a different presentation to a different grand jury? yes but i would think that would be highly unlikely in this particular case. >> could you have a dead locked grand jury, you know, similar to what joey was spelling out? if they don't have the nine votes does that simply mean it's over? >> it sort of means it's over. look at it this way, in order to come back with an indictment, nine of the members have to agree to an indictment on one of the several counts. if they fail to come to that level of consensus, then the result is no true bill. they don't actually vote for no true bill as they have to have nine people agree to vote for an indictment. if they don't get to that level
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under missouri law they cannot vote for indictment, the result is no true bill and no through charges. >> is the expression of a grand jury to create its own schedule, can they say we just need a little bit more time to tackle this? we want to wait until after the holiday. or is there some urgency placed on them where they have to get it done as soon as possible? >> the deadline is january 7th. any insight we get from the fact they didn't make a decision friday is they're still thinking about what's going on. they may want a witness to come back or they may want more time. i do think we have to be sensitive because they are aware the nation is on edge waiting for their results. i wish they would have worked this weekend just so we had a decision. >> that would indeed influence their decision. thanks so much to both of you.
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appreciate it from new york. up next, why the government wants millions more air bags recalled. we'll talk to an industry analyst who says it should have been done a long time ago. can't wait to get the next big thing? come to t-mobile and get the samsung galaxy note 4 for zero down. grab the hottest phone around, for zero down and zero waiting and zero annual service contracts only at t-mobile. stuck in a contract? we'll even buy you out of it. so why wait? switch now and get the samsung galaxy note 4 for zero down. ameriprise asked people a simple question: in retirement, will you have enough money to live life on your terms? i sure hope so. with healthcare costs, who knows.
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>> the world's second biggest air bag maker was called to capitol hill this week. those air bags that have been linked to deaths and injuries across the u.s. well, questions over a new recall lead to this exchange. >> we have deeply sorry about each of the reported instances in which takata air bag has not performed as designed. >> do you agree with a nationwide recall of the takata air bags. >> it is hard for me to answer. >> it is not hard for you to answer yes or no. >> i want to bring in lauren thick. how did you manage to get from your home to that studio in buffalo? what's your story?
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>> snow tires. i can get anywhere. >> fantastic. let's talk about these air bags. we're talking about a nationwide recall that's being recommended because of this shrapnel, these pieces and fragments that go flying. should there be this wide spread recall and should it have happened a long time ago? >> it should have happened a long time ago. they have been asleep at the wheel from if gm ignition switch to these takata air bags. there have been five deaths. there are over 20 class action lawsuits right now. and 16 million cars world wide. there have been deaths in malaysia and some other countries. there needs to be a naegs wide recall. cars move. if you have a car from 2002 there's no way that car has
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always stayed in montana. the fact is cars stay all over the place. dealers buy and sell. they go to auctions. people move. with all those potential factors. and there is humidity all over the country, not just in florida, georgia and alabama. this puts a lot of drivers at some serious risk. >> even in all these test that is take place before something is installed in a vehicle, does this mean that never on any occasion was there shrapnel or these pieces that would go flying when in a dummy test, for example, the air bags were dispensed? >> well, what we're finding is -- and they still can't find the exact cause of why we're at risk here. this has not happened in the past. air bags have been around since the '80s. it's entirely possible and i'm only speculating on this that
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has to do with dollars and cents, cutting corners. that we're not sure of and we won't know that until we get our hands on the paperwork from takata. which oddly the national highway traffic safety administration is not demanding. they ran gm through the coals and they get all their paperwork and all their e-mails. they should be doing the same exact thing to takata. we need to find out why this is happening. the story that you had in the last hour, of her telling what happened when her air bag deployed was so upsetting. to think about this could happen to anybody in a fender bender, that's really serious and puts a lot of people at risk. fender benders happen every day. to take a chance of an air bag di employing that could potentially kill you or a passenger, that's very serious. >> her story was very moving but
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also you could see how emotional she was knowing how it could have been worse. it did cause that problem in her sinus area. that kind of shrapnel could have caused something much more lethal. next, we are going to see more of where lauren lives there in buffalo. people there say they have never seen anything like it, the city blasted by storms that have left 13 people dead and a year's worth of snow on the ground all in a matter of days. first, in today's human factor dr. sanjay gupta introduces us to a woman who is getting a new look at life. >> ♪ my name is lyric and my stage name is lyric the queen. >> the patch on her eye has become her trade mark when she
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first auditioned for the kpx factor two years ago few people knew what was behind it. >> i'm totally blind. that's why i wear the pass. >> she has a disorder of the cornea that causes it to bulge. being blind never derailed her career. >> i don't think i took the time to think about how will you going to be a blind rapper. >> but darkness -- >> i hasn't seen my own face in careers. >> and emotional, were crippling. all that may change. lyric's going to undergo a procedure she hopes will restore her vision. >> ♪ i'm so lost. can't you help me find my way ♪ >> i didn't feel anything. >> went absolutely perfect. >> oh my gosh, it's crazy. i'm like looking around like crazy. ♪ music
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. there remains unsevcertaint. a grand jury did not reach a decision on friday in the case of darren wilson, the white police officer who fatally shot michael brown, an unarmed black teen. our coverage continues in missouri where the grand jury has been meeting. jason, i see the barricade are up. that's one way in which people are preparing there for a decision. what else? >> reporter: just within the past hour, in fact, police have set up two barricades. you can see they've set up the plastic one and behind that another metal one. just up the street you can see a truck. that truck is filling up the plastic barricades with water to keep them stable. most of the people that i've spoken to out here just want
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this whole thing to be over. but before that can happen, the grand jury has to reach its decision. large demonstrations have taken over the streets of portifergusr months. but in the past few days clayton, missouri, a relatively small affluent town has also seen its share of unrest. it's where the grand jury sits and where the prosecutor has his offices. since many who support michael brown feel the grand jury will not indict officer wilson and because critics say mccollough is two close to law enforcement to be impartial, demonstrators have their eye on clayton. >> nobody is really sure about what's going to be said or what's going to be done, but with all the reactions of what we're preparing for, we feel like we're preparing for a war.
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>> reporter: businesses located just blocks away from mccollough's office worry what will happen here once the grand jury releases its findings. this woman says their toy store should have a steady flow of preholiday shoppers but not now. >> this is our busiest time of the year. with thanksgiving coming up we're worried what might happen to our store. >> whichever decision comes down, is, i think, still going to be problematic. >> and i think that most of the problem is in the coming from here, but people that are coming in and instigating and inflaming people when they have the problem to begin with. it's wrong. >> hurting others or destroying people are not the answer. >> reporter: michael brown's
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family has called for calm and brown's father urged nonviolence. residents throughout the city hoping demonstrators are listening. >> i hope we're going to be very fair in how we treat whatever the verdict is going to be. and i would like to think that it's done in a peaceful way. >> reporter: so a lot of uncertainty here in clayton. also in ferguson in fact throughout stlu. louis. protesters say they plan to target a number of neighborhoods. the president calls for nonviolence. let's head very north now, buffalo, new york. massive snowfall and now fears of major flooding. the storm is blamed for 13 deaths, the latest a 68-year-old
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man who died from a heart attack while clearing his driveway. the region is under a flood watch now and rescue crews are on stand by zblrchlt i want to show you the walls of snow on the streets. this is a good sign. it shows you how much snow well in buffalo this week, really unprecedented. but it also shows you how much of a clean up is going on. that's just the first part of the major response effort that the state is tasked with this week. now that they've dealt with some of the snow removal, they're turning their attention to the throat of flooding. they've brought in more than 50 boats and rescue teams. sandbags, hundreds of pumps, more than 500 national guards men. they've brought in these high axel vehicles that can go into
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several feet of water to make rescues. that's when we could see a problem, with a really quick melt and some serious flooding. the governor and everyone else here is hoping that that temperature won't rise as quickly as it's predicted to right now. warnings going out to homeowners to get that snow off their roof especially before the rain comes. we've seen lots of roof collapses. people hoping to prevent more of that. straight ahead, the first paralyzed service member to walk, receiving a bloronze star. see the incredible technology that allowed this marine to stand tall. but first, our look at a new independent mission to the moon. it's called lunar mission one. nasa is not involved and the mission needs your help. >> it's the most inspiration al moon project since the apollo
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moon landings. we're going to send a robotic spacecraft to land at the south poll of the moon. and we're going to drill much deeper than before. >> lunar mission one's primary objective scientifically is to answer the question where did the moon come from? it's going to ache about ten years between now and arrival at the moon. the problem is money is very, very tight. we're looking to raise a million dollars. that's to do then the next stage of the design. to complete the whole mission, we're looking at somewhere just a little short of a billion dollars. >> this is a huge crowd funding exercise, getting millions of people to take part. >> that could be photographs. it could be family trees. it could be video of their family. it could be their whole life history. >> we're going to use it to store a time capsule, a record
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here are some other stories we're following. just a few hours ago the u.s. defense department says it released a saudi man who was detained for 12 years at guantanamo bay. he no longer poses a threat to the united states. authorities believe florida state shooter myron may put several packages in the mail to several friends around the country before thursday's rampage. at least one of the packages has been intercepted by the fbi. packages are not considered a public threat. three people. >> reporter: wounded, one critically in thursdays's shooting at fsu's library before the gunman was shot dead by campus police. and a window washer, this is incredible is in critical but stable condition after falling about ten stories friday. san francisco police say the washer was setting up his equipment on top of the building
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when something went wrong. and he landed right there on top of that vehicle. he crushed the roof and then landed on the street. a witness tells affiliate ktvu that she heard the plan scream as he fell from the sky. and a u.s. marine honored for brave ri on and off the battlefield. a bullet left hem paralyzed. a robotic device never before used by an american, he was able to stand to receive a bronze star. >> reporter: what makes marine special operations captain derrick herrera a hero is not just his actions on the battlefield. >> we were on the rooftop observing some suspicious activity in the valley to our
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north. >> it was june 14th 2012. he was leading a patrol in afghanistan. >> just felt a pulsing sensation in my back. >> it was an ambush a bullet from an ak 47 lodged in his spine. >> as i was laying there, immediately knew and had some pain. and just kind of almost felt like electrical stimulation pulsing through my back zblmplts everything in your life is changed very suddenly. >> it was, yeah, in an instant. in inch one way and it would have missed me completely. >> reporter: months of rehabilitation would follow, adjusting to being completely paralyzed from the chest down. >> overtime i came the realize of the many friend that i've had who made the ultimate sacrifice in our nation, anyone of those would be happy to be in my position and continue to live a life. >> reporter: tell me about your bracelet. >> i wear that every day just to
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try to remind myself and try to have a small visible reminder of the sacrificing that these guy versus made and remind myself that, you know, that i have a gift and i'm happy to be here and still able to continue to move forward. >> reporter: and moving forward is literally what he's doing, just needs a little help. this is the rewalk kpo skeleton, a wearable device that powers his hip and knee motion and allows him to walk on his own, the first american to own one. >> the president of the united states takes pleasure in presenting the bronze star medal to captain derrick jay herrera. >> reporter: now the first paralyzed service member to stand and walk as he receives his bronze star with valor. >> to be able to stand and
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receive this honor is a symbol to show other that is i'm not out of the fight. >> reporter: captainerer ra requires out of the service, his next battle underway. kyung lah, cnn. >> so incredible. and we will be right back. which means it's time for the volkswagen sign-then-drive event. 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. ♪ ♪
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. now, our weekly look into the future. richard quest looks at a new way to do your banking in tomorrow transformed. >> lending money has always been a community affair. >> your money is in joe's house. that's right next to yours and the kennedy house and a hundred others. >> as the banks became more involved, everything changed.
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when economies crashed in 2008, bank lending dried up and opened the doors for others to step in. today, it's called peer to peer lending, a platform where people lend money to each other over the internet. >> you can't get, actually, a better deal by looking at people around you, looking at your community. >> the benefits work both ways, borrowers typically pay lower interest rates. lenders earn higher returns. >> it's very simple. it's very fast. really you can do it in your pajamas at 2:00 in the morning. from the investor superfective it's the first time ever people have been able to invest money in their fellow citizens. >> china is the biggest in peer to peer lender. it's growing by an astonishing 20% each month. yesterday, today and tomorrow
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all come together as one. peer to peer lending allows members of the community to lend money to each other. >> it's funny because it's sort of come full circle. thanks are now participating in peer to peer lending. >> people today are going to have a bank account the same way you and i have a bank account. >> i think we're going to see the banking world completely transformed. thanks so much for joining me today. the news continues after a short the news continues after a short break with poppy harlow. -- captions by vitac -- www.vitac.com the legacy of usaa auto insurance could be one of them. if you're a current or former military member or their family, get an auto insurance quote and see why 92% of our members plan to stay for life.
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. high everyone. you're in the cnn newsroom. i'm poppy harlow joining you live from new york. wl is watching and waiting for a decision in ferguson, missouri. a 12-person garage must decide whether the police officer should be indicted in the fatal shooting of michael brown. the grand jury did not reach a decision yesterday. it is still unclear when the grand jury will reconvene. mostly peaceful demonstrations were on the streets of ferguson until the very early morning hours overnight. >> i got my hand on my head
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