tv CNNI Simulcast CNN February 28, 2015 1:00am-2:01am PST
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one of the russian president's vocal critics gunned down in moscow. what happened and plus, jihadi john once a prep school british boy, now he's known around the world as the face of isis. how someone with such prospect had a dark side. >> the motion to reconsider is laid on the table. >> with the sound of the gavel the u.s. congress finally compromised on a measure to fund the department of homeland security. at least for now.
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welcome to to our viewers in the united states and around the world. i'm george howell. this is cnn newsroom. we start the show in russia. police are investigating the shooting death of a well-known opposition leader and vocal critic of putin. this outspoken boris nemtsov was in the shadow of the kremlin walking across a bridge when a car pulled up to him and someone opened fire. the suspect or suspects remain at large. boris nemtsov seen in a rally last year was a top official with the liberal opposition group. he had most recently been very
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critical of the kremlin's handling of the ukraine crisis. now we are learning that boris nemtsov gave a radio interview hours before his death. he talked about why russia needs political reform. listen. >> of course when the power is concentrated in the hands of one person and this person always rules everything ends up in an absolute catastrophe, absolute. >> boris nemtsov's death is prompting speculation he may be killed. they have ordered a task force to investigate. jonathan mann spoke to an expert from american university. the professor down played boris nemtsov's prominence as an oppositioning leader saying he doesn't pose much of a threat to the kremlin. listen. >> one thing i'm sure we will all hear about is whether the
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kremlin has been come police it is or not. i think that makes little sense given where the murder happened right in the middle of moscow right next to the kremlin, a stone's throw away you could say. the truth about boris nemtsov i have met personally did not know very well but he was articulate intelligent, tall and hand smchlt politically over the past decade he's become increasingly irrelevant. so the risk or the threat that he poses to the cement lynn is virtually nil these days. so, you know, my initial impression is to direct this or to link this to the kremlin or president putin is really a red herring at this point. let's turn to our senior international correspondent in moscow with closer look at who maybe behind this killing. how hard will it be to find the
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people or person behind this. >> there is a manhunt underway that got started shortly after all of this happened. authorities saying that putin was informed of this killing pretty much immediately after it happened. then the manhunt got underway for someone in a white car because eyewitnesses said they saw someone speed away in a white car from the scene of the crime. of course the interesting thing to many people here in moscow is where this happened how this happened and when this happened. of course as we said this happened on the doorsteps basically of the kremlin. the kremlin is less than 1100 yards away from where this happened. how this happened it seems to have been a professional way in which this was done. boris nemtsov was talking next to a friend of his and the friend was not injured or wounded in this. all bullets appeared to have been on target and of course when this happened it happened right before a major opposition rally is to take place or was to take place here in moscow tomorrow.
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so let's have a look at how the night unfolded. the killing happened very late in the evening on friday. let's have a look. gunned down in the heart of russia's capital, investigators work the crime scene where boris nemtsov lay. law enforcement officials say one of russia's most prominent russian figures was struck in the back by several bullets. the killing happened next to the kremlin walls in the vicinity of saint ba sill's cathedral. he was walking with a friend when a car stopped and an assailant opened fire. >> as mourners lit candles and laid flowers, speculation over who did it. some blait blame the government of the putin and others disagre. >> this is a message to all of
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us. who will be next? >> we have some small part of russia people who want to break putin, and maybe they make it to show people in other country, government of country -- putin. >> reporter: it's not clear who's behind the killing but boris nemtsov had many enemies. he was russia's kepty prime minister in the late 90s but joined the opposition after putin came in to power and was jailed several times for criticizing the government. >> putinen condemned boris nemtsov' killing and offered the family condolences and launched an investigation this to murder and said it i bears the hallmarks of a killing provoking unrest. a friend and political ally of boris pors was one of the first
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at the scene of the murder and criticizes russia's p. >> translator: i don't know who did the shooting or pulled the trigger but i believe it is russia's government and personally putin who are responsible for it. vladimir putin is responsible for creating atmosphere of hatred in our community. they have incited hatred for dissidents and for boris nemtsov. nemtsov was set to take part in a rally this sunday. instead there will be a march for mourning for one of the most else want opposition voices brutally silenced forever. certainly if you look at putin's approval ratings here in russia you can say it would have made no sense for the kremlin to be in any way, shape involved in all of this. putin currently has 86% approval rating here in russia. the big question with though
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george is what will happen to the opposition in this country? certainly we'll know more about that on sunday and see whether what happened will galvanized them or if people will be in fear and opposition will be marginalized more. >> the world will be watching as this investigation unfolds. this is not the first opposition member to have met a similar fate. how likely will it be to track down the people or person responsible for this in this investigation? >> well if you judge by past experiences, and certainly it could be very difficult. if you look at the case of anna -- people there believe the true people behind her killing were probably never brought to justice, even though there were trials that went on. it is something that will be very difficult. certainly from the point of view of the russian authorities say they they are putting all of the resources that they need to in to the investigation of vladimir
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putin. if you look at the manhunt, we were going around in moscow last night. there were a lot of police check points and a lot of cars checked. they have put out the order to look for white cars which were checked frequently. they appear to be putting a lot of resources in to this. whether or not it will be successful only time will tell. >> senior international correspondent live in moscow. thank you so much. the white house has condemned what it calls the brutal murder of boris nemtsov. president obama is calling on the russian government to conduct a prompt impartial and transparent investigation of the murder and ensure those responsible are brought to justice. mr. obama also said he admired boris nemtsov's dedication to the struggle against corruption in russia. in the united states the u.s. department of homeland security will have funding at least for the next week. close to the midnight deadline congress passed an extension to keep the agency running for now.
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soon after president obama signed a temporary patch as mary maloney reports the compromise came after a dramatic day in washington. >> the ayes are 357. the nays are 60. two thirds in the affirmative. >> reporter: with the sound of the gavel congress compromised and passed a stop gap measure to fund the department of homeland security. now tsa screeners, border agents and federal workers can get paid and keep working. chaos came before the compromise. for most of the day on friday, lawmakers seemed poised to avoid a nail biter showdown. when it came to the vote a shocking twist in the house to an already dramatic day on the hill. >> joint resolution is not passed. >> reporter: nearly every democrat and a few does en republicans voted against it. it all comes down to playing politics. republicans wanted a provision,
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blocking the president's executive order on immigration, which the bill didn't have. and democrats didn't vote for it because they wanted to force republicans to fund the department for the year rather than three weeks. as hope started to fade by the hour nancy pelosi told democrats to vote on a patch that would fund the department for a week. >> we certainly want to protect the american people every minute of every day. 24/7. >> reporter: the house took note and passed the tech rare patch. congress is expected to continue the debate next week mary maloney reporting. an american blogger who stood up for secular freedom and criticized religious extremism has died after a savage attack if bangladesh. activists poured on to the streets on friday to protest the killing of avijit roy. he founded the website free mind. and wrote for the center for
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inquiry. >> what's so sad is the way in which he was murdered so brutal and callus for someone so kind and open minded. it's horrible. >> reporter: witnesses say two men attacked roy and his wife with machetes on thursday night. roy died and his wife was baddedly wounded. >> i saw an unknown person bring out a big knife and first hipt him from behind on his head and then on his shoulders. i shouted for help from the people but nobody came to save him. no one came. a lady was with him. she was his wife. she was also hit on the shoulder. >> roy is the second blogger to be killed in bangladesh in the past two years. his father says islamic extremists are behind the attack. for more let's go to ivan watson in hong kong. this is not the first time a writer has been attacked in this
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muslim majority country. what impact is it having? what are people saying? >> well there have been some small protests organized in the days since this murder took place. you have top officials in the bangladesh government and the police that have come out denouncing the attack. the police telling cnn that they still have not arrested any suspects in connection with this murder. we spoke to the forensic doctor who carried out the autopsy on the victim here. the description of the wounds matches these words such as savage and brutal because avijit roy had wounds deep wounds in his skull and his in his back and neck as a result of this apparent machete attack. the u.s. state department has condemned the attack against roy. we believe to be a u.s. passport holder of bangladesh descent.
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the u.s. has offered to assist with the investigation. listen to the spokesperson for the u.s. state department. >> avijit roy was a journalist humanist and friend. he was taken from us in a shocking act of violence. this was not just an attack against a person but a cowardly assault on the universal principles enshrined in bangladesh's constitutioning. >> avijit roy was an outspoken critic of religious extremism of all stripes. he had published a book called "the virus of faith" and he wrote in an unpublished essay -- it was to come out in april in the magazine "free inquiry," he wrote after the publication of his book last year that he was inundated with death threats from wa he described as islamist radical groups and cited one man who he alleged
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wrote a warning saying we can't kill roy while he's in america. we'll wait to kill him when he comes back to bangladesh and that's apparently what happened. he and his wife were attacked while they were walking back from a book fair where their books have been released in the past. he was reportedly due to leave bangladesh back to the u.s. in a few days. >> one other thing just pointing out here you are saying that he would not be killed in america but would be killed in bangladesh according to that person. is there a chilling effect for other writers there? >> there certainly has been a very worrying trend here. as you pointed out at the beginning of this report there was another secular aught yis writer blogger murdered in similar fashion two years ago in the bangladesh shi capital and another writer killed in 2004 also in what is believed to have
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been a machete attack. roy actually cited those two instances, those two attacks in his article that was yet to be publish ed. his father has accused islamist groups in bangladesh of being behind this attack. the most prominent islamist political party in the country has rejected any links to this murder and has called for justice behind the murder of avijit roy. it's important to note his wife is still being treated in the hospital and she had one of her fingers severed in again, what is described by everybody across the board as a savage attack. >> ivan watson with us in hong kong. thank you for the reporting. we are getting our first look at the man known as jihadi john when he was a school boy in london. authorities say mohammed emwazi is the man who narrates the isis propaganda video in english when
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western hostages are being beheaded. they identified him on thursday. former classmates tell various british media outlets, mohammed emwazi was a typical school boy growing up. he had a lot going for him in london and many say he didn't have a violent past. so why does someone like this become radicalized? we look in to it coming up. [ male announcer ] you wouldn't leave your car unprotected. but a lot of us leave our identities unprotected. nearly half a million cars were stolen in 2012, but for every car stolen 34 people had their identities stolen. identity thieves can steal your money, damage your credit
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welcome back to cnn newsroom. jihadi john grew up as a typical british kid. authorities say the child this this picture, mohammed emwazi went from pop groups and football to being a western front man in extremist videos. brian todd looks at the theories behind his radicalization. >> reporter: he's known around the world as isis' best-known killer a cold-blooded brit, who waves his knife terrorizes western leaders. and then shows an innocent hostage decapitated. he may have beheaded hostages on camera himself but gee had di john the man believed to be 26-year-old mohammed emwazi was a preppy british school boy from a middle-class family. he graduated from a large, well-regarded classroom in london with a computer programming degree. how and why did a young man with his prospects join isis? an advocacy group said it
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started when he went to tanzania in 2009 to take a safari. instead he was detained sent to britain. cage whose leader claims to know him says he was subjected to hostile questioning five times mostly by british security services and worked over by interrogators. >> on one occasion at the airport he was roughed up by the police a little bit. he was strangled by an officer. >> reporter: british officials have no comment. analysts who know isis recruiting say this about the claim that harassment from authorities turned mohammed emwazi in to jihadi john. >> i think it is an absurd claim. it is not the cause of his radicalization. the reason intelligence services harassed him is because they suspected him of wanting to join al shabaab in somalia. >> reporter: papers say that he was part of a group of extremists called the north london boys who allegedly funneled money and recruits to
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al shabaab. >> some raise up to senior positions within al shabaab and the al qaeda cell out of east africa. he seems to have known some of these people. >> reporter: he said he went to syria in 2012. analysts say it is likely he joined another jihadi group first and then isis and he had at least one skill attractive to isis. >> to make your mark and become important within the organization it is important to speak arabic and that would have made him stand out. he was a brit, a westerner but he was also an arab. one analyst says another characteristic jihadi john has that would have moved him up the ranks is harassment. one pointed out martin luther king were harassed by authorities and neither of them resorted to beheadings. the prime minister of israel
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ceremony for eric holder. he is leaving the post as the top lawyer. he was the first african-american and third longest-serving attorney general. his departure ceremony included the unveiling of his official portrait. the israeli prime minister benjamin netanyahu is scheduled to arrive in the u.s. on sunday. the months leading up up to the visit have not been without controversy. president obama says he will not be meeting with mr. netanyahu when he comes here directly. cnn's wolf blitzer takes a look at the relationship between the two countries, both past and present. >> there's no doubt the personal relationship between the president of the united states and the prime minister of israel is not good. the u.s.-israeli relationship is in trouble because of public rhetoric. >> we have a real difference around iraq sanctions. it does not make sense to sour
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the negotiations a month or two before they are about to be completed. >> i'm going to the united states not because i seek a confrontation with the president. to speak up on a matter that affects the survival is of my country. because congress might have an important role on a nuclear deal with iran. >> the prime minister's response to the john boehner speaker of the house invitation to address the house that was awkward. >> if we had an opportunity to weigh in more we would welcome the opportunity and probably make a variety of changes. >> on both sides there is a degree of partisanship. it is destructive of the fabric of the relationship. >> i remember a time when you have seen members of one political party, democrats in this case threatening to boycott an address by the prime minister of israel before a joint meeting of congress. you wonder is this as bad as
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there have been. there been strains in the u.s. israeli relationship during various administrations. i remember in 1990 george h.w. bush was president, james baker secretary of state. they weren't happy with the new israeli president. and baker was testifying before the house foreign affairs committee in '90 when that irritation publicly burst open. >> everybody over there should know the telephone number is 1-202-456-1414. when you are sere s you about these, call us. >> reporter: what happened a year later, even made that relationship even more tense. the israelis were absorbing tens of thousands of jewish refugees. they needed financial help. they were seeking billions of dollars in loan guarantees from the united states and they basically told the shamir government you are not going to get those guarantees until you cease the settlement activity on
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the west bank. that caused a real rupture. what you don't see now, that you did see in '91, is cut off of aid, if you will. one of the strengths israel has had over all of these years is strong support among republicans and democrats, liberals and conservatives and if you undermine or poison that relationship it will hurt israel in the long run. they have a lot of work to do. >> wolf blitzer reporting there. a friend of boris nemtsov says the activist paid for his believes with his life. up next pro democracy advocate gary kasparov weighs in on the kremlin critic's death. plus police capture one of the biggest targets in the drug war and did it without firing a single shot. ahead -- >> i think by making this comparison they are extremist muslims is working as these people want. we are muslims.
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welcome back to our viewers in the united states and around the world. you are watching cnn newsroom. . i'm george howell. the headlines this hour u.s. president obama signed a week-long funding extension for the department of homeland security. congress bassed the measure averting a shut down of the agency that handle airport screening and border security. india's new budget aims to
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increase economic growth. the finance minister says india will grow at a rate of 8.5% starting in april. they plan to increase infrastructure investment by $11 billion and to set up a universal social system security system. russia is threatening to cut off natural gas shipments to ukraine if it doesn't get full payments. they say it received a $15 million payment from kiev but that only covers a day's worth of natural gas. also in russia police are investigating the shooting death of opposition leader boris nemtsov. the outspoken critic of vladimir putin was shot multiple times on friday in moscow as he walked across the bridge near kremlin. president putin condemned the killing. boris nemtsov was well aware he was a potential target. hours after he was shot and killed, his long-time friend and pro democracy activist gary
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kasparov spoke to cnn's john bermen. he believes kremlin led investigation in to the murder will turn up nothing. >> brave man, full of life who had been blasting putin's regime for corruption for violation of human rights up to the last hour of his life. his last is recorded 40 minutes before he was shot dead. few hundred yards away from kremlin. >> who do you think killed him? >> remains to be seen. i have great doubts they will be found. we could see pictures of police bringing machines and using powerful hoses to wash away the spots. if you are serious -- if you are trying to investigate it seriously you don't do that of course. i doubt that it was a direct order from putin. it is a toxic atmosphere of hatred that has been pomle gated
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by russian television 24/7. russian mass media has been spreading hatred. boris nemtsov and people like him have been called national traitors. i think that some of putin's cronies decided it could move further by eliminating one of the enemies of putin because murder, death, destruction, they are regular guests on russian television. when you hear it for 30 minutes you can get sick. they are preaching death to everybody outside of our country. >> the russian leader said he has launched an investigation. do you trust the investigation if to this murder from the government of vladimir putin. >> i trust the investigation will find nothing or will find someone to blame for this crime. again, what they did in the first minutes after this crime
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tells us that there was no interest to find those who did it. the fact is they did it just in front of kremlin. i think just tells us that it is -- it's impunity. so they believe the country belongs to them. you can see how putin's power base has shifted. now he relies on the most brutal cruel, aggressive elements of russian society. >> you heard boris nemtsov, your friend talk about the risks that he was taking as an opposition figure in that country and in that clip we just played mr. there. you haven't been back for two years. >> are you afraid? >> i left because i was called to testify or to be a witness in one of the numerous political cases. i spoke to boris and another prominent election leader what could have happened and they told me look, you enter the building of russian investigating committee as a
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witness and leave it if if you leave it as a suspect. so i stayed away with it is tragic to remember that when we argue with boris about the future. you could hear him being optimistic and i said it would be inevitable. this tragedy was unavoidable in my view. >> you told him, he would be killed. >> it was just about the outcome. i kept telling him no way russia would be transformed with the ballot elections and he said maybe we have to try. he was one of the few believed that russia could find a safe path to democracy. we can somehow rebuild our country without revolution and turmoil and he paid with his life for his belief. >> gary we are sorry for your loss. thank you for coming in tonight. large opposition rally planned for this weekend was cancelled after news of boris nemtsov's death. a mourning march is expected to take place on sunday in downtown
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moscow instead. mexico has captured one of the most wanted drug kingpins in the country. gomez is the leader of the knights temper cartel. the government accused the cartel of involvement in drug tasking, killing and kidnappings and extortion. >> reporter: mexican authorities have captured the country's most wanted drug lord. gomez, known as the teacher. the 49-year-old drug pin was the leader of a car pell separating out of one of the country's most dangerous states. the former teacher was arrested in the city. police officials say he was captured without a single shot being fired. the knights temple once dominated the methamphetamine market in mexico. he called many of the shots using intimidation extortion
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and coercion they controlled local politics and business. that changed when group challenged them. when the federal government took the state by storm in an effort to free from the grip of them. a $2 million bounty was put on gomez's head. in a rare interview in 2014 gomez admitted that one day he would have to answer for his crimes. [ speaking foreign large ] >> how does a teacher become a criminal?
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>> reporter: the arrest comes after the president ordered a crackdown on gang members and cartels in the country. the president and attorney general have been under fire since 43 students were kidnapped and apparently killed by corrupt police officers working with gang members in september. cnn, atlanta. the trial for the alleged boston marathon bomber will stay in the city of boston. a federal appeals court denied the petition from dzhokhar tsarnaev's lawyer on friday. it was their second attempt to have the trial moved, claiming that jurors from boston would not treat their client fairly. dzhokhar tsarnaev has plead not guilty to more than 30 counts stemming from the 2013 bomb ing. jury selection is expected to continue next week. canadian authorities are trying to track down at least four teenagers who may have flown to the middle east in an attempt to join the group isis. three of the teens attended a
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montreal community college. that school accused a leader of the islamic group who taught one of the students of spreading hate speech and suspended the group's classroom lease. the preacher denies having any links to radical islam. one of the key players in the fight against isis jordan's king abdullah sat down with our fareed zakaria to talk about how to fight the terrorist group. in the interview which you can see on sunday fareed asks about the words that should and should not be used when talking about isis. >> president obama has gotten in to a little trouble, or at least has received some criticism because he says he want to call groups like isis islamic extremists because he doesn't want to give them the mantle of legitimacy by acknowledging they are islamic. do you think he is right? >> i think he is right. this is something that has to be
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understood on a much larger platform. they are looking for legitimacy they don't have inside of islam. are you a moderate or extremist? what these people want is to be called extremists. they take that as a badge of honor. to label islam under the term of extremists and moderates is extremely wrong. i think by making comparists they are extremist muslims is working as wa they want. no we are muslims. i don't know what these people are but they definitely no do not have a relationship tour faith. >> you can watch the interview on fareed zakaria gps on sunday. for viewers in the united states that is 10:00 a.m. eastern standard time. brilten's prince william tried on a different look in japan today. he became a samurai war lord.
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he visited the set of a long-running drama where geishas performed for him and transformed in to a royal 16th century fighter them duke of cram cambridge learned how public tv station nhk rehearses the emergency broadcasting in the event of a earthquake. he is visiting sites impacted by the 2011 deadly earthquake and tsunami. police in the u.s. are not sure what to do after finding a stolen house moved from its original spot. >> we have i guess you could say, in our custody a home. i don't know where we are going to put it. >> why they are struggling to figure out who owns it. well, did you know words really can hurt you? what...? jesse don't go! jesse...no! i'm sorry daisy, but i'm a loner. and a loner gotta be alone. heee yawww!
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welcome back to cnn newsroom. arctic air cancels flight s and snarls traffic. what a mess. the question now, where is it headed next? meteorologist karen maginnis is at the world weather center. it seems like a recurring theme here. the cold weather and the sfoe. >> yes. that description is any number of hundreds of cities across the united states. they have been impacted by this arctic air that has really moved pretty far to the south. we have seen those temperatures that are unlike what we are
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typically, or would typically see. in dallas 27 degrees fahrenheit which is kwif tloent minus three degrees celsius. single digit temperatures across the northern tier to the great lakes. not to be outdone, it is bitterly cold in the northeast and new england. that has been kind of the summation of what the entire winter season has been like. this is a view across texas. right now in dallas just to the north of the metroplex area they are seeing a little snow. there's been some freezing rain. look at what it did to the city during early friday morning. yeah. these people had some fun, even the animals did, as well. on the roadways it was slow going. the traffic was snarled. there was one 15-car pileup with some injuries reported there. at the airport, numerous cancellations having been reported. a lot of that was thanks to the black ice on the roadways that really wreaked havoc across this
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city that is fairly widespread across northeastern sections of texas. not just there, but spreading in to oklahoma as well as arkansas. so where is it headed? it is going to cut a wide path across a good portion of real estate in the united states all the way from kansas city to near chicago. extending to the ohio river valley and you can guess what it is headed next that would be boston. could be a record-setting weekend for snow for them. >> i don't know what boston does with more snow. >> it has been horrible. >> thank you so much. now on to the u.s. state of oregon where an entire house has gone missing. luckily it was found a mile away. the question how does a whole house get ripped from its foundation and moved? lyle aarons from our affiliate kobi has the story. >> reporter: while this log cabin was reported as stolen on tuesday, linda utley isn't sure what the fuss is about.
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>> i don't understand why they just now got around to saying it was a stolen home. it has been in plain sight for a year. >> the mystery isn't over. >> this is a situation where three parties are claiming ownership. one of the three parties sold it to a fourth party. >> deputy s found the home on nine mile road a half mile from where it was first reported as missing. >> 3750 feet away from where it was. across the meadow. >> no charges have been filed against the property owner where the cabin was found. >> he is an innocent person that bout a log cabin, to quote him. at a steal of a deal. >> i was getting calls from ap bbc, and you guys and everybody
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else. it's surprising. >> reporter: linda utley saw the announcement on the news too. >> i remembered the house from the photo. it is like i know that place it has been next to me almost a year. >> we have i guess you could say in our custody is home. i don't know where we are going to put it or where we are going to book it but we have a home. >> pretty cool story there from our affiliate kob ireporter lyle aarons reporting there. the hope is that you will be able to hear the next story. and if you can't, your music habits maybe to blame. the details are next.
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>> it is too late and too loud. >> turns out your parents were right you need to turn down your music. 1 billion people between 12 and 35 years old are at risk for losing their hearing. the cause listening to audio devices or going to concert and bars for too long with decibels at unsafe levels. the w.h.o. recommends limiting the amount of time you listen to music to an hour a day. and not spending more than eight hours at events above 85
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decibels to avoid temporary or permanent hearing damage. most concerts hit more than 100 dpes decibels. good thing to keep in mind there. now on to a mystery, 1,000 years in the making. it looks like an ordinary statue of a sitting buddha. it's what's inside that makes it so incredible. richard green has this story. >> this golden statue of the buddha has been hiding something from collectors and antiquity experts since the 14th century. the sta chai which originated in a chinese temple was smuggled to the netherlands where they revealed the secret a 1,000-year-old mummy encased in the cavity. experts put the object through a c.t. scan a three-dimensional
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x-ray image showed the full details of the sitting mummy. the mummy was found sitting on a bund le of cloth covered in chinese enskripgs, revealing the identity as a buddhist monk who may have practiced self mummification to prepare for life after death. a known tradition in countries like thailand japan and china. the process of self mummification included consuming poisonous food and drink to make the body too toxic to be eat bin maggot maggots. it is believed the monk was worshipped in his exposed form for 00 years before transformed in to a statue in the 14th century. you can now pay your respects to the statue at the national museum of natural history in budapest where it is on an international tour. >> that was cnn's richard green reporting.
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>> that is quite logical, captain. >> that is actor and director leonard nimoy in his most iconic role, the pointy eared half human, half vulcan mr. spock on star trek. he was 83 years old at the time of his death. nimoy played spock for three years and in the 1960s starred in several star trek films. he spoke to cnn about the importance of that "star trek" series. >> at his best i think with we did tackle a lot of interesting stories. we tackled racism, over population, we tackled pollution, a whole list of concerns of this planet. i think -- i think that is one of the important parts making this series as popular as it was. >> nimoy popularized the split
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finger vulcan salute and will always be remembered for this one line. >> live long and prosper. >> live long and prosper. good words to end the show this hour. we thank you for joining us. another full hour of news though is straight ahead here on cnn u.s. and cnn international. we'll have more on the outspoken put aen critic who was shot and killed in moscow. you are watching cnn, the world's news leader. [ male announcer ] eligible for medicare? that's a good thing, but it doesn't cover everything. only about 80% of your part b medical expenses. the rest is up to you. so consider an aarp medicare supplement insurance plan, insured by unitedhealthcare insurance
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