tv CNN Newsroom CNN February 8, 2015 12:00pm-1:01pm PST
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involving bruce generaljenner. the newsroom starts right now. hello again and thanks so much for joining me. we start in the ukraine where the -- pro russian rebels say that eight civilians were killed this weekend in fighting according to ukrainian forces they have lost 12 of their own soldiers and killed dozens of rebels during the fighting but there may be a glimmer of home for renewed peace. the leaders of france russia germany and ukraine have all freed to meet on wednesday to discuss a new peace equipment. nick payton walsh is in donesque. >> reporter: fredericka the shelling has been intense the past few nights and tonight is no different. today we saw how people are picking up the pieces from the last 24 hours of shelling, which
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killed eight separatists, so many civilian homes here destroyed by artillery. while this is the backdrop to peace talks, donesque is finding a deathly routine of picking up the pieces. here lived and died vladimir home alone when the shells struck. these flagments may have been hit to hit a separatist base nearby, idiots the man says. around these shops, a day earlier, shells landed a woman died two others wounded,'s lost dragging this self declared public further away from ukraine. >> as so often in nakdslike this the net effect is so often clear amongst the residents of donesque and it fuels the loathing they have for their government in kiev. the way out towards the rest of
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ukraine is complicated, this day is full, we're told. she says they're all fleeing the shelling. take a look at what one stray shell did to one warm happy family life here. he shows us where it landed in the bathroom shrapnel through windows and walls, entering the girls' bedroom, childhood's innocence was lost. why are they destroying us? why is the west supporting the kiev government. the 3-year-old family sheep dog was killed. these private homes, he says, what are we meant to do, wait for them to kill us and not take up arms? why are we fighting? he said he never want ed to
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fight in the war, but is now thinking about it. the violence here -- this is a nato backed war on ethnic russians. with each torn home greater the challenge of making ukraine whole again. now fredericka the real fear is that we now have this tentative date for the peace talks, but the four leaders, russia france and german any attendinging. a lot could still go wrong, a lot of people here fearing for their lives on both sides of the lines, i should say, and a lot resting on whether or not the diplomats can make anything work in mensk. >> kimberly is there a diplomat
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i believe solution on the horizon here. >> well, you do see the various different sides maneuvering to make it look like there could be one, france and germany making agreements. we also see vice president joe biden making some really sharp remarks again about russia and then anonymous officials saying that the u.s. is considering arming the ukrainian rebels. something we know germany and france don't want but what we could be seeing here is a good cop/bad cop situation, in that germany, you've got a chance to help sovm the situation and get some relief from those economic sanctions you're serving under, but this is the tough guy, the tough route we're going to take
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arming your opposition. >> is there a feeling, particularly among these european leaders, just arming the ukrainians they still have going to be dwarfed by what the russians have so it seems like a futile attempt for the ukraine to be able to stand up against russia. is that why they are against arming ukraine? >> in large part they're worried about seeing this situation deinvolve into a bosnia like civil war, where yes, the u.s. could agree to give limited aid to the ukrainians on the ground but the russians with all their resources right arrange the border can match that and overmatch that with so much more firepower, possibly bringing in their air force and then you've got an escalating situation, whereas, right now, you have an opportunity to keep it from sliding into that. that's what european officials are arguing. u.s. military officials i have spoken to have said they would really like to step up even some sort of special operations
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aid where you have advisors on the ground helping some of these ukrainian forces with better intelligence to better concentrate the fire power that they do have. >> okay so that is kind of the push for some american leaders, but if europeans like germany and france saying they don't want ukrainians to have more arms and they feel like there's hope in more diplomatic discussions, if the talks haven't worked thus far, what is it about france germany's position that they don't want to depart from that that they want to give diplomacy a chance. >> look they have managed to get russia to agree to possibly show up this week. so they have another opportunity to prove their point. but they do have three major sticking points that are going to be tough to solve, if there is some sort of a cease fire do you put peacekeepers or something on the ground to make
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sure russians aren't coming in with more covert aid, what happens with eastern ukraine, ukraine gave them some more autonomy russia and the separatists say there's not enough how do you resolve that in the third case how do you keep the ukrainian government onside if the separatists start attacking again? >> right and if there is a deal reached by these talks, is there a real feeling that accept cysts will go along with what they conclude? >> this is true russia doesn't command them. >> all right, very prickly situation to say the least. kimberly kimberly i know i'll see you again in the 4:00 eastern time e. still ahead brian williams taking himself off the anchor desk at least for a while as nbc sorts out what is true what's not. what more about this story is being told over the years? we'll be right back.
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nbc's brian wnlsilliams won't be anchoring the nightly news for the next few nights he's pulled himself off the anchor desk. in a memo to his staff, williams writes this it has become painfully apparent to me that i am presently too much a part of the news due to my actions end quote. the long-time an for has apologized for a story -- in 2005 that he describes being part of a convoy that was hit by a rocket propelled grenade. one of the pilgts who was in the helicopter convoy shared his story for the first time on television.
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>> reporter: do you know where brian williams at the moment your helicopter was hit by the rpg? >> we had a lot going on, but i am pretty sure he was not on our flight at all. >> reporter: meaning he must have been so far away that he couldn't see the understandincident happen? >> yes, we each had two units, they had different missions, they were separated by time their destination may be different from what our destination s so it can put time in between the two flights as they're heading up north. >> and what is the first time that you ever heard brian williams describe what happened inaccurately? >> when i return back to kuwait for repairs on the aircraft, a friend of might have been had alerted me of the story of you know basically asking me if we
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had brian williams on our flight of which i told him we did not, and then he showed me a video of it on the internet. >> so another point of view on where brian williams was on that day, we spoke with the chief adam keller who says he knows the answer. >> is it right to say that brian williams was aboard your helicopter and not on board the helicopter that was shot at in iraq that day. >> that's correct, he was aboard my aircraft that day in march. >> what was your aircraft doing and was it ever in sight of the chinook that was shot at? >> my aircraft along with my -- the chalk one, i was chalk two in a flight of two chinooks we were carrying bridge pieces up to the euphrates, we heard they were going to blow the bridges and we wanted to make sure that
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we had the capability of crossing the euphrates, the chinook that was shot down we were not -- >> brian williams told his staff that he will be back on the anchor desk in the next hour i'll speak with media experts about what the network is weighing to see if indeed that will be the case. still ahead a connected murder may get a second chance at freedom, all because of a popular podcast. nick is following that story for us next. >> hey, there, fred, it's a show that captured the attention of millions and brought new life to a 15-year-old murder case. we'll show you how a serialed podcast may have helped a convicted murder win an appeal. buying a home used to mean visiting a licenseded real
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estate agent. and visiting place after place until you find the one you loved. thanks to technology buyers can now browse real estate listings whenever and wherever they want. >> at least 85% of all congress assumers search, go online before they actually buy anything and well before they're ready to buy. >> reporter: today even with technology, red tape and paper abound- abound--that's the physician of square feet that's an internet based realtor. >> we have streamlined the process so you as the seller would download the app, you take pictures of your home and once you're finished it taked five or six minutes to create a listing, it's just going to be cleaner, simpler and faster. >> and it's cheaper too, list your home with a traditional agent and you pay 6% commission.
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do it yourself with square feet and pay 1%. that's a 25,000 saving on a half a million dollar home. the question two the future is whether people really will want to do it themselves. >> i wouldn't mess around trying to take shortcuts with a big investment like real estate. >> technology may not put the broker out of business but it does let us decide whether or not we need win.
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all right, checking our top stories now, a deadly crash involving bruce jenner was not caused by paparazzi, according to los angeles county sheriff's investigators, they say photographers were not chasing jenner when his suv ran into a lexis from behind. the drive of the lexus died. in monroeville, pennsylvania, just outside of pittsburgh a 17-year-old has been arrested in connection with a mall shooting that injured three people. police say the suspect faces adult charges of attempted
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homicide according to investigators one of the three people hit by gun fire was the intended targets while the other two were apparently by standers. and public health authorities in chicago say three more babies have come down with measles, all three attended a chicago area daycare, where two other children came down with the disease. officials are unsure whether these cases are linked to the multistate outbreak that began at disney land in california. and if you have any questions about the measles you can ask them just tweet your questions and we'll answer your yeses. the wildly popular pop cast known as serial could help a connected killer get a new trial. each week a case chronicled in cliffed hanging detail. the inconsistencies in the trial for the murder of his high
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school girlfriend back in 1999. here's a sample of what listeners heard. >> when i first met him in person i was struck by two things he was way bigger than i expected barrel chested and tall. in a photos i had seen he was still a lanky teenager in sagging jeans, now he was nearly 32 and had spent nearly half of his life in prison. he had giant brown eyes like a dairy cow. could someone who looks like that really strangle his girlfriend? idiotic, i know. >> hugely popular pop cast and now the plot thickens. >> absolutely this story just keeps on giving it's a story that gripped so many arrange the world, millions tuning in every week to listening to the potential podcast serial. >> this is serial the most talked about podcast in 2014
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and now the man at the heart of it is getting a new chance to overturn his conviction. on friday the maryland court of appeals agreed to hear his case. a decision based on the claim that his original attorney failed to call a key witness who gave them an alibi. it's a huge victory for the 33-year-old. in 2000 he was convicted of murder in the death of his then ex-girlfriend. >> the last time 18-year-old hayman lee was seen alive she was here at woodland high school. this past tuesday she was finally found, a passer by discovered her body in a shallow grave. >> focused her podcast on the 1999 99 bat murder case. >> something doesn't make sense here in this indication and i don't know where the problem is. and so it really is just me trying to figure that out. >> the drama was downloaded a
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record breaking 5 million times, but perhaps more importantly, it casts reasonable doubt among listeners that syed might have been sentenced to life in prison for a crime he didn't commit. >> you can take part of it and say well that didn't happen but that doesn't mean the whole thing is correct. >> syed tweeted this, we will be heard in the court of appeals. >> i would rather say you're a jerk you're selfish, you're a crazy sob you should just stay in there for the rest of your life except that i looked at your case and sooir it looked a little off. >> while the podcast may have drawn attention to the case, the wheels were in motion for case well before the podcast debuted. now now serial's army of faithful followers a chance at
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the biggs mystery, did syed really do it? >> i spoke to defense attorney who is said the burden is going to be on syed's defense to one prove that a mistake was made by his original counsel and two that it would have changed the outcome of the case. >> because it's a podcast, highly publicized that too is going to bring another strange component to a new trial. >> absolutely. everyone who's listened to this show has formed an opinion one way or the other. sarah canen who's really the brain child of the show she says she's not sure of what happened. every week she was revealing new details as they were gathering them which made the show as popular as it is. here we go again, nick you've been with us three weekends in a row and doesn't ill feel like a -- again, sarah
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gan gannen is live for us in boston. >> boston dealing with an unprecedented amount of snow. highway they're dealing with that coming up. # foreign markets. asian debt that recognizes the shift in the global economy. you know, the kind that capitalizes on diversity across the credit spectrum and gets exposure to frontier and emerging markets. if you convert 4-quarter p/e of the s&p 500 its yield is doing a lot better... if you've had to become your own investment expert, maybe it's time for bny mellon a different kind of wealth manager ...and black swans are unpredictable. [meow mix jingle slowly and quietly plucks] right on cue. [cat meows] ♪meow, meow, meow, meow...♪ it's more than just a meal it's meow mix mealtime. with great taste and 100% complete nutrition, it's the only one cats ask for by name.
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everyone. boston canceling school tomorrow and tuesday as yet another major snowstorm barrels through new england. more than 6.5 million people are in its path and it comes as boston is already dealing with record breaking amounts of snow. >> maybe you're off the street, maybe in a big mound that is supposed to be the sidewalk. >> this is still the street fred and as we said earlier, this is the problem. because these snow piles are making this street very narrow very difficult to drive through, it decreases victim for drivers, it also forces people to walk on the street where the sidewalks aren't plowed and this has become a problem.
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to snow me movl. >> we have had many case where is businesses have been cleaning their parking lots out and their parking lots look beautiful and they're pushing it out on toe the street or into a pile across the street. >> so we said that private contractors are taking snow off the properties or they're contracted to remove it but then they're dumping it into streets and into allies, it's become a problem that people are aren't honoring the parking bangs in some places and they're not able to fully plow the streets and therefore remove all of the snow. removal has become an issuing because their budget is completely busted for snow removal. he said he's going to find a way to pay for it to get the snow
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off the streets. but they may have to loan those snow warmers from the state of new york they have one here in boston, they're thinking of loaning two more to try and melt some of this snow it's only the second week of february up to two more feet could fall between now and tuesday fred. and that's a lot of snow and it's causing a lot of trouble for people in the city who are trying to get around. >> oh, it certainly is as another vehicle now passes and creeps by you there, see, sarah, i'm so glad you're no longer in the street. all right, thank you so much, sarah sarah, i appreciate it. >> all right, then more snow on the way, some sadder i know it's one day at a time. now we're three weekends in a row. >> groundhog day, it is the movie. >> we're just in february and a lot of times that's the biggest
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winter month in the northeast, oh gosh. >> there could be up to two feet so boston so far to this day, has had about 58 inches typically they should have half of that. worcester, mass has had 73 inches they have never had that much snow to date. this is not like a nor'easter this is a clipper that comes in from canada, they drop a couple of inches typically. there's a cold front me yachbdandering down from the south, easily bringing up to one to two feet in some areas. here's the low that will typically drop a few. but it's cold air in place, this is going to be a freezing rain issue that begins tonight into rush hour tomorrow. the snow mainly from new york pennsylvania border northward and then east and that's hartford that's providence that's up toward portland, providence you could get more snowfall. think of the budgets for the city for all the municipalities.
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boston 3.7 inches so far, but again we're looking at at least 15 for you, for isolated amounts, and here you go in the west coast, flash flooding there's going to be the threat for mudslides again, three, six inches possible the snow is really high elevation, so that's good news, but we have a chance for isolated tornadoes and hail with us. every weather element you can think of. because keep the earthquakes at bay today. >> this is enough. so let's take a look at boston one more time how about that? >> right now, oh, yeah just that and typically, boston has a nice thick fog, but now is this kind of like the prelude of the snow? is the snow falling right now. >> just lightly right now, but with two feet on the ground it is very cold the coldest air of the seasoning moves on after another batch of snow thursday into friday. >> that will be the fourth weekend in a row mobile that we're going to talking about. i'm sorry folks in boston but that is the way it is. just be strong. still ahead, we're answering
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hernandez, tomorrow's court schedule has been postponed. jurors took a rare field trip to better understand the evidence in the case. c cnn national correspondent susan candiotti has more. >> a field trip that's all business. a aaron hernandez jury escorted by bus in a police motor indicate for an up-close view of evidence that might make it easier to understand the case. in court, prosecutors give a preview. >> we're going to drektirect your atchxa attention to a cell tower that's located in that area. >> the jury says four cell phone towers generates signals along the route, the former tight end takes the night he was murdered. the next stop outside oden lloyd's home. during the tour the -- it
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capture this is surveillance video of lloyd getting into a car investigators say is driven by hernandez, hernandez is in the allowed on this trip but the jury gets to see the spot where prosecutors say odening lloyd's bullet ridden body is l memorabilia and family photos that were not there in june of 2013. when hernandez is arrested for lloyd's murder. inside the home they also see. >> the kitchen area and then into a living room and again we'll be pointing out certain features, the layout of the
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home. >> including the great room seen in this surveillance video, of hernandez's fiance and her sister recorded a day after lloyd's death. jurors also see the knowier, where hernandez's photographed walked into the house minutes after prosecutors say lloyd is seen hold -- >> let's bring in joey jackson i legaling analyst and defense attorney. good to see you. >> good afternoon, fred good to see you. how much of a difference does it make when a jury gets to go on a field trip like this. >> it could be significant, in a normal case what ends up happening is attorneys are arguing in court, they're showing photographs, they're showing evidence and jurors are able to persuade the evidence though that jury is empanelled in a kareem. that is other wooirz
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corroborated and buttressed by the fact that now the jury gets a hands eye view of the cell tower that they're going to be looking at that relate to pings on lloyd hernandez's home. they were right there, so they saw when there was the pickup there was aaron hernandez, mr. wallace's star co-defendants too, then they go to the home of aaron hernandez, before that fredericka they go to the fall crime scene, so it is helpful to have a jury who otherwise is con fined to the courtroom to go to the fall seen to get a sense and a flavor. >> a number of items in suzanne's piece is removed. is that because of the risk of you know any kind of prejudicial influences here? i mean why would the jury -- why is it okay the jury would go to his home try to get a lay of the land where the door that he
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would, you know, appear with what appeared to be a gun or something in his hand but everything else has to be sanitized. >> by way of history, oj simpson, february 12 1995 what happened then? that jury in that case was brought to o.j. simple son's house and surrounding areas, and in that case johnny cochran put a bible in simple song's home and otherwise strategically manipulated the house to make it appear that simple son was a god fearing man. but the night before the prosecution team actually went and they saw that things were added to the home religious items were items, memorabilia of aaron hernandez relating to hiss high school days his college days in addition to nfl days they said judge, we can't have that. the judge said look, make that house appear as it did appear on the date of oden lloyd's alleged death and nothing else.
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so they were tried as the defense team to make the house look like it looked the night of the murder so as not to influence the jury. >> court resumes on tuesday, big snowstorm heading, we know that school is closed monday and tuesday. all right, next in the newsroom saying goodbye to a legend former north carolina basketball coach dean smith died last night. his impact on and off the court, next. ♪ they lived. ♪ they lived. ♪ they lived. ♪ (dad) we lived... thanks to our subaru. ♪ (announcer) love. it's what makes a subaru a subaru.
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fannings are leaving flowers outside the building al university of carol. >> reporter: dean smith's 36-year coaching career at north carolina will likely stand forever as one of the most distinguished in the history of college basketball. at his retirement he won a then record 879 games, 65 of them in ncaa tournament play another record. his tar heels won two national championships and made 11 trips to the final four. but perhaps smith's most
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astonishing accomplishment was that his teams won 20 or more games 27 year es in a row. >> we have been lucky the type of young men and student athletes at the university of north carolina. >> reporter: smith's influence on the game was as great as his statistical achievements. his innovations included team huddles and the shot clock in college basketball in 1985. former ucla coaching legend john wooden once said of smith, he's the best teacher of basketball i have ever seen. >> i'm here only because of my players, i think that's obvious. >> character and class, words often used to describe smith were hallmarks of the man's entire program. on the court, he taught unselfish play team work and tenacious team work. not surprisingly dozens of
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former players of smith went on to the nba, including michael jordan one of the greatest player of all time. in fact it was because of hi emphasize on team play. >> he went through the basics just studying hard understanding people being respectful being appreciative of the things that were given to me. from that day on i carried that along. >> reporter: but for most of smith's players, the lessons his taught went well beyond basketball. 97% of his hermen received a degree. smith retired from north carolina before the 1997 season. he'll be remembered not only as one of the college basketball ace winningest coaches, but also one of the best men to ever team the game. ♪
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an exclusive cnn investigation is revealing a serious gap in airport security around the country. our team started doing some digging after the story broke about a delta air lines baggage handler being charged with smuggling guns onto plains in atlanta. he was able to do it authorities say, because he did not have to go through the kind of screening that you and i do
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and he's not alone. with very few exceptions there are two different security standards at american airports one for passengers, another for all the people that have access to the planes we fly. the question is after all these years after the 9/11 attacks, how can that be? here's cnn's drew griffin. >> reporter: at miami international airport, this is the security you don't see standing in line. cnn got exclusive access to the screening that takes place for what they call the back of the airport employees. these are the baggage handlers the mechanics, the cleaners anyone you don't see going through screening with passengers. it's the same screening, no matter what kind of security badge or security clearance the employees holds. >> i.d.s are not enough to stop malicious intent.
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you can vet employees for basic information on their backgrounds, but it's not going to necessarily prevent them from carrying out some kind of malicious activity against an airport. what may surprise you, the full screens of every employee is the exception, not the rule. cnn contacted 20 of the major airports across the country and found that screening of employees is random partial at best and no national standard exists. the only other major airport that does full screening is other. many aarons like seattle's sea-tac, telling us an extensive background check and airport security badge is all that's needed for employees to get on the tarmac and gain action to airplanes. it's a lair story we heard from dallas san francisco, mccarron in las vegas, los angeles, even
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jfk in new york. pass a -- and you have access to the inner works of america's airports without going through the same screening passengers face up top. airplane officials have told cnn the cost of screening all employees is simply too much for their budgets. security expert wayne says -- >> a fifth grader can tell you you ought to be checking at the back end of the airport. we have a saying in our business. that's budget-driven security will always fail. >> reporter: the tsa which sets standards for airport security says in the wake of the case in atlanta, it is implementing or considering a range of measures including additional requirements for airport and airline employee screening, but
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so far no national changes. restaurant employees and flight crews that go through terminals do pass through a checkpoint. those that work below do not. >> in the terminal we've got to be careful with the bags. just isn't enough. the threats at her airport are the same across the country. smuggling guns drugs and the potential for terror. >> basically people that will attain their credentials and use their access to exploit the temperature. >> reporter: miami better thashl has been screening like this since a scandal in the late '90s, every employees goes through metal detectors and screening, going to work coming back from break, every time every one if miami is an example for how security should be done
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the airport also has proof of why. last year alone, 209 employee i.d. badges were confiscated due to security violations caught by screening. we have intercepted guns, drugs. weapons, knives. >> reporter: employee screening is under new scrutiny after the arrest of a baggage handler, working with a passenger to smuggle guns to new york. the baggage handler, unscreened was able to take backpacks of gun to an airport where he passed them on to a passenger already cleared through security. put it this way it's a costly program, really not that costly when you compare the cost versus the consequences of not having a program like this. so much more straight ahead
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in "newsroom" and it all starts right now. happening right now in the newsroom another winter blast, about to dump a lot more snow and that's on top of the several feet of snow already on the ground. plus things aren't getting any better for brian williams. >> now he has -- while nbc figures out what is true and what's not true? plus the measles outbreak continue toss spread around the country. we're answering your questions. tweet your questions to me.
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