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tv   CNN International  CNN  March 30, 2015 10:00pm-11:01pm PDT

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new details emerge about the man accused of crashing germanwings flight 9525. the deadline looms, the scramble to finalize an iran nuclear deal. and leaders in indiana are uh fire over that controversial religious freedom law. a warm welcome to all of our viewers in the united states and all around the world. it's just gone 1:00 in the morning here in atlanta. i'm zain asher. >> i'm john vause. you're watching "cnn newsroom." ♪ we begin with new details about the mental health struggles of the man who authorities say deliberately flew an airliner into the side of a mountain. >> long before andreas lubitz
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had suicidal at any densies. pamela brown has more. >> reporter: a young andreas lubitz laughing behind the controls of a glider plane. now said to have been suicidal before he ever got his commercial pilot's license. >> he had at that time been in treatment of a psycho therapist. >> reporter: more recently, a source tells cnn lubitz went to an eye doctor, complaining of vision problems. but the doctor found nothing wrong with his eyes. diagnosing him with a psychosomatic disorder. it was apparently all in his head. the source says lubitz also visited a neuropsychologist, complaining of being overburdened and stressed at work. but today the german prosecutor says he didn't tell his doctors he was suicidal and showed no signs of adwregs. prosecutors say they found torn up doctors notes deeming him
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unfit to work in his trash canon the day he deliberately crashed the plane. they didn't find a suicide note. >> we have not found anything that is giving us any hint that enable us to say anything about his motivation. >> reporter: a german aviation source tells cnn lubitz passed his annual recertification test in the summer. as part of that exam he would have had to fill out this questionnaire, specifically asking, are you taking any medication? do you have any psychological, psychiatric or neurological diseases, and have you ever attempted suicide? lufthansa says they were not aware of any medical issues. pamela brown, cnn, dusseldorf, germany. tom ballantyne joins us. he has a lot of experience
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covering airline safety. thanks for being with us. the hot issue right now for the aviation industry around the world, how much confidentiality are pilots entitled to when it comes to issues like suicidal tendencies, and when should doctors report their concerns to the authorities or the airlines? do you see any big changing on the way? >> oh, yes, i think so, john. the fact is, when something like this happens we have to take a very close look at the system, the system of recruitment of pilots, the system under which we check their back grounds, the medical issues that they've had in the past. it's quite clear that in this case he got through the cracks. for whatever reasons, lufthansa failed to pick up the issues that this chap had had before he joined the airline. and they need to really sit down and take a look at how we recruit pilots, how we test them, how we psychologically
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test them, and how we ensure that, you know, people, i mean, this man should never have been give and job as a pilot in the first place. that's quite clear now. >> but tom, the bottom line here is there's what, an estimated 150,000 commercial pilots out there right now. in the next decade or so, there's going to be a lot more than that. is it even possible to monitor them all? and not just agree on what symptoms might be warning signs here? how do you go about that? or do you accept the fact that maybe this is something that's impossible? >> well, in some ways it is impossible. i mean, the boeing forecasts say there will be a staggering 530,000 new pilots required over the next 20 years for the world's airlines. we just simply have to find a way of ensuring that these new pilots coming into the system are properly checked. it's a little bit like security. i don't think we can ever have 100% guarantees. i mean, it's simply, as you say,
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not possible. but we have to put systems in place which give us the best chance possible of checking these things. and privacy is obviously a big, big issue here. but these are, after all, people who have the lives of thousands of people at their fingertips every day of the year. >> and you touched on lufthansa, the parent company of germanwings. just last week the airlines said that lubitz was 100% fit to fly without any restrictions, but knowing what we know right now, what responsibility does the airline have to bear in all of this? >> well, i don't think it's only the airline. if this pilot was visiting a private doctor who presumably knew that he was a pilot and had this concern, was giving him tickets to stay off work and telling him to stay off work, i think, you know, in this case, privacy aside, the doctors should be informing the company,
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the employer of those issues. and i think that can be done in a way which, you know, protects someone's privacy at the same time, can be done at a specific level. and if that had been the case, this chap would not have been flying. >> it does get down to that, how far are you willing to go, what are you prepared to do to make sure everyone is safe. we shall leave it there. thank you once again for being with us. we appreciate it. >> pleasure, john. it's deadline day in switzerland. six world powers and iran are trying to reach a deal to curb iran's nuclear program in exchange for sanctions relief. they have given themselves until midnight to work out an agreement. but talks may go beyond that. here's our jim sciutto. >> reporter: with 24 hours to the deadline in switzerland, america's top diplomat has only questions, no answers on a final deal. >> do you think you'll be able to get a deal by the deadline?
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>> good question. >> reporter: russia's foreign minister left the talks for home. >> i'm not paid to be optimistic. >> thank you, everybody, very much. >> reporter: and iran supplied a 11th hour surprise, rejecting a oft discussed plan to ship its stockpile out of the country. a source said that's true, we do not intend to ship our material out. and we will deal with it in the talks. u.s. officials insist that shipping the material abroad, possibly to russia was always only just one option. the deal's most skeptical observer, benjamin netanyahu believes the talks are headed in a dangerous direction. >> translator: this agreement as it evolves is fulfilling our deepest fears and even worse. >> reporter: sending what experts say is iran's 9 tons of
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urge out uranium is one way to guarantee the breakout time. >> there are other options under discussion, i'm sure. but the best approach would be if iran were to agree to ship out its stocks of enriched uranium to russia. >> reporter: other remaining sticking points? how quickly the west lifts economic sanctions, and how much research and development iran is able to do while the plan is in effect. they make it clear who will lose out. >> it doesn't seem to be moving in the right direction. and clearly, with a deadline of tuesday, i'm concerned with what we might give away. the iranians don't seem to want to conclude this. >> the saudi coalition is not letting up with its air strikes in yemen.
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houthi rebels took over the city of sanaa in january. >> one of monday's vikesstrikes appears to have killed dozens of people. we want to warn you that the video we're going to show you may be disturbing. at least 40 people were killed when a saudi air strike hit a refugee camp near the border. another 250, including these children, received treatment at the hospital. when we come back here, one say the's law on religious freedom is the focus of a national controversy. we'll have a closer look at the impact it's having. plus, shots are fired near washington as a pair of men dressed as women tried to force their way into the national security agency. we'll have details coming up. you're watching cnn.
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what you're doing now, janice. blogging. your blog is just pictures of you in the mirror. it's called a fashion blog, todd.
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well, i've been helping people save money with progressive's discounts. flo, can you get janice a job? [ laughs ] you should've stuck to softball! i was so much better at softball than janice, dad. where's your wife, todd? vacation. discounts like homeowners', multi-policy -- i got a discount on this ham. i've got the meat sweats. this is good ham, diane. paperless discounts -- give it a rest, flo. all: yeah, flo, give it a rest. [ male announcer ] diagnosed with cancer, he didn't just vow to beat it. i vowed to eradicate it from the earth. so he founded huntsman cancer institute. ♪ everything about it would be different. ♪ it would feel different. ♪ look different. and fight cancer in new and different ways. with the largest genetic database on earth that combines 300 years of family histories with health records to treat, predict and in many cases, prevent, cancer. [ huntsman ] we made it welcoming and warm with a focus on beauty, serenity,
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and getting on with life. [ male announcer ] huntsman cancer institute is the only cancer hospital in the world designed by a patient, with the vital understanding that cancer moves fast. and we have to move faster. to learn more or support the cause, go to huntsmancancer.org. ♪ welcome back, everyone. one man is dead, another wounded after they tried to ram a car through a gate at the u.s. national security agency headquarters in maryland. the nsa says officers opened fire when the men, dressed as women, sped towards them. the car was stolen from a nearby hotel. >> wigs and you can see one there on the road.
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cocaine was also found in the car. and officials are investigating whether or not the men were under the influence at the time of the incident. republican lawmakers in indiana are promising to clarify a controversial new law on religious freedom. the governor signed it last week, and the backlash has exploded since then. the governor insists the measure provides protection to people who have religious objections to certain issues. >> grassroots protests and boycotts of the state are fueling this debate. >> we don't believe anyone should be discriminated against. we wouldn't have supported this law if we thought it was the effect of it. to the extent that we need to clarify that by adding something to the law to make that clear. that's not the intent of the law. >> we said look, if it's not about discrimination, prove it by adopting this amendment or
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adopting this amendment. had they done that and not just been slapped aside just out of partisan instincts, we wouldn't have been at this spot right now. >> and indiana is not alone in passing this particular religious freedom law. there have been other states. i spoke with miguel marquez about the attention indiana is receiving. there are 19 other states with similar laws. why is so much of the backlash here focussed on indiana? >> it's a different law that they have passed here. many states that do have religious freedom acts, they are, they also in some cases have laws that specifically protect gays, lesbians and the transgender, or they have much narrower acts, acts that only involve the government coming down on somebody for their religious practices or ways. and not what you have in
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indiana, which is a very broadly-written act that allows individuals to discriminate or to take action based on their religi religion. >> and indiana lawmakers have said that they are working to quote, fix this controversial law. work us through what this would entail and how long it would take to implement. >> that is the million dollar question. how soon can they fix? there's big pressure to do this. the final four, the big college basketball finals are here this week. the ncaa that runs those is also based here. the ncaa has expressed concern about this law. the governor of the state, mike pence, even penned an opinion piece just today in the wall street journal, where he says in part, i want to make clear to hoosiers, which they call indianaens here and every
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american that despite what critics and many in the national media have asserted, the law is not a license to discriminate either in indiana or elsewhere. what he does not say in that editorial is that he wants to change the law. republicans in both their houses, the house and the senate here in indiana have super majorities. a lot of republicans, republican leadership have come out to say we want to change this law, but it's not clear how they get from what they have right now, a law to an amended law. it could be a week or more before that happens if it happens at all, zain? >> indiana's law is drawing protest well beyond its own borders, connecticut's governor signed an executive order banning state travel to indiana. and seattle's mayor is planning to sign an executive order this week which will bar city-funded ci travel to indiana. >> the financial impact of the
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law could be devastating to indiana. our cristina alesci reports on the businesses it that are taking a critical look at their relationship with the state. >> reporter: the backlash couldn't have been more high profile. apple's ceo, tim cook, who recently came out as gay, sharply criticized indiana's new religious freedom law that critics say is anti-lgbt. he wrote in the washington post that such laws are quote-unquote very dangerous and will hurt jobs and growth. indiana's economy is already feeling the impact. local success story angie's list announced it's putting its expansion plans on hold. >> we're unwilling to engage in a plan that's contingent on us hiring people in when the state is sending a message out to potential employees that is not always palatable. >> reporter: and the drug company, eli lilly says the law
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is bad for indiana and for business. paypal co-founder weighed in. >> the first thing i'm asking is my fellow ceos to look at how they're thinking about the relationship with the state. >> reporter: and tourism can be hurt too. the ncaa, which is hosting the final four in indiana's capital is examining the law's impact on future events. one event is threatening to pull its event from the state. indiana's new law could make it harder to attract employees and customers from a khey demographic, millennials. >> they are the crest of the wave that is shaping everyone's behavior, regardless of the generation, which is people are shopping increasingly with their hearts, not just their wallets. if a company reflects your shared values, you'll give them your business, you'll even
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become a eadvantage list for that company. up next, who may be winning the nigerian presidential race. and a fireman fighting for his life. more details when we come back. .
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officials in nigeria will resume counting votes from saturday's presidential election in just a few hours from now. >> it is a very close race. and reuters reports that the opposition is leading the incumbent goodluck jonathan. 55 million people have voted so far, despite deadly violence at polling stations as well as technical issues and up to 8 hours waiting time. we are covering the election. >> caller: this election, zain, it's been about not whether nigeria can hold an election but whether it can hold a close election. and it's been under hope and
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fear so much the last few days, between the voting and now the counting. the fear, if you like, is what happened in 2011, after election then when the opposition lost. and the supporters took to the veet, particularly in the north. and over 800 people were killed. but the hope, zain, is that actually, this will end peacefully and be a model of democracy for the rest of africa, zain. >> the big question is what happens after the results are in. will there be any sort of post-election violence. christian, what can you tell us about any efforts to manipulate results? >> caller: well, the u.s. and the u.k. have put out a statement saying there were disturbing reports of political interference. so not the voting but the actual counting of the results before they were given over to the main electoral headquarters for the results announcement. that's quite a remarkable statement. the electoral commission said
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they are very aware of, that there's no such political interference. it's certainly not uncommon in nigeriaen elections. observers called it the worst election they ever witnessed, and that has followed on. but there has been, particularly with this election chairman a noticeable improvement. nigerians will tell you they believe in most of what he does, and they put their faith in him. and so far, there have been no big complaints by either of the parties, pdp or apc about the way this has been conducted. but that could change very quickly. and in britain, campaign is officially under way in what's expected to be a tough election ahead of the may 7 vote. david cameron formally asked queen elizabeth to adjourn
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parliament. >> and he's asking to be sent back. >> wr >> britain is back on her feet again. 1,000 jobs are being created every single day. 25,000 businesses are up and moving every single day. >> for me, this election is about you, your family and the country. we need to be a country that rewards your hard work again, not as we've seen over the last five years, a country where wages fall behind bills. we need to be a country that gives a future to all of our sons and daughters, not what we've seen over the last five years, where our young people fear they'll have a worse life than their parents. >> ed miliband campaigning there. the spotlight is also on the
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increasingly influential smaller parts, such as the ukip, you're looking at the leader there. and it may all come down to a coalition government like last time. a fireman in california is fighting for his life after he fell through the roof of a house into a raging fire. >> this was really horrific. it was all caught on camera. sara sidner shows us what happened. >> reporter: a terrifying moment. a firefighter climbs to the roof of a house to help put out a raging fire inside. instead, he helplessly plunges into the inferno. [ screaming ] >> reporter: the reaction from witnesses says it all. >> people were all just shocked by the firefighter falling into that hellish pit. >> reporter: cell phone video captures the accident from multiple angles. captain pete dern was attempting
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to vent the roof. it's a tactic commonly used to make it safer for colleagues on the ground to fight the fire or attempt a rescue. but in this case, it was the firefighter who needed rescuing when the garage he's on collapses. captain dern is caught inside for several minutes before he's pulled out. he's conscious, but more than 65% of his body is burned. >> remnants of his charred uniform, burned. you can see by looking at it what hell he went through. >> reporter: captain dern a veteran of the fire department is alive but relying on a respirator to breathe. >> very trying time for the fire department. we are family. brothers and sisters, and as you can see here, we rally around each other. >> reporter: sara sidner, cnn, los angeles.
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>> gosh. 75% of his body has been burned. what a hero. >> prosecutors say the co-pilot of the doomed germanwings flight had a history of suicidal tendencies. ahead, a flight doctor explains why they did not know about their pilot's troubled past. plus some lawmakers are threatening more punishment for iran if a nuclear deal isn't reached by tuesday's deadline. oh, i love game night. ooh, it's a house and a car! so far, you're horrible at this, flo. yeah, no talent for drawing, flo. house! car! oh, raise the roof! no one? remember when we used to raise the roof, diane? oh, quiet, richard, i'm trying to make sense of flo's terrible drawing. i'll draw the pants off that thing. oh, oh, hats on hamburgers! dancing! drive-in movie theater! home and auto. lamp! squares. stupid, dumb. lines. [ alarm rings ] no! home and auto bundle from progressive. saves you money. yay, game night, so much fun.
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welcome back, everybody. thanks for staying with us. you're watching "cnn newsroom."
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i'm john vause. >> and i'm zain asher. recovery crews are getting some help to reach the german wings crash site more easily in the french alps. a new road is almost finished. it's meant to get family members and workers closer to the site. a safer option than helicopters. d-day in switzerland. six powers are trying to reach a deal with iran on their nuclear program. they have given themselves until midnight luzon time. iraqi forces say they're capturing key areas in tikrit, but their advance has been slowed by hundreds of bombs planted in the city streets. this latest push comes after u.s. air strikes. republican lawmakers are
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promising to clarify the law's intentions. critics say it will allow discrimination against gay people. we want to take you back now to our top story. we have new details emerging about the mental health of the co-pilot of the germanwings pilot. >> he had suicidal thoughts that were never revealed to the airline, apparently. diana magnay explains why. >> reporter: a man whose passion was flying, who dreamed of being a pilot, but he was prone to dark moments he knew might kill his dreams if they ever became known to his employer. >> translator: several years ago before obtaining his pilot's license, he was in a long period of psychotherapy treatment. >> reporter: tendencies he
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managed to overcome. he was 100% fit to fly, lufthansa said. and given strict privacy rules, that's as far as they're able to dig. >> he gets his license. and that's it. and there are no other points and lufthansa is not allowed to do any more tests. >> reporter: except the medical checkup. >> there is no test where you'll find out if someone does something like that. >> reporter: dr. bernard hoff is a medical examiner in dusseldorf. >> basically, when this guy comes to me, a pilot comes to me, as i told you, i make a physical exam. there is no real psychiatric
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exam. i'm not a psychiatrist. the pilot fills out a sheet of paper, stating how much hours he has flown, stating if he has been to a doctor or a psychologist or another medical person since the last exam. what kind of doctor that was. if he has got any medication. and he has to sign that. >> reporter: the law is fairly clear on the principle of confidentiality. only if someone poses a danger to others can doctors break the hippocratic oath which demands they keep patient information secret. >> but the point is to convince the patient to act in a responsible manner and to see when he is a danger and that he has to act accordingly, and only if a doctor sees that the patient does not act accordingly, then may he inform the relevant authorities. >> reporter: lubitz seemed pretty good at concealing the truth. he may never have admitted what
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his job was to his various doctors. unfit for work as a pilot, a whole different ball game to unfit for work behind a desk. there are limits to doctor/patient confidentiality. the policy existing to break that oath in the name of the greater public good limits which weren't tested in this tragedy for reasons that we will perhaps never understand. diana magnay, cnn, dusseldorf. >> many thanks to our diana magnay for that. the clock is winding down for iran to reach an agreement in nuclear negotiations. >> but the talks may go beyond the self-imposed midnight deadline. some lawmakers are threatening to slap more sanctions on iran if a deal isn't reached by then. michael holmes reports. >> reporter: u.s. sanctions against iran date back decades and include a ban on oil, weapons and of course anything
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that might further iran's nuclear program. a long list, essentially cuts off trade and investment between the two countries. in recent years, the united nations and the european union have joined the u.s. in calling for iran to stop its nuclear ambitions. since 2006, the u.n. security council has passed six rulings. but perhaps the biggest impact on iran came in 2012 when the eu agreed to stop buying their oil. iran's oil exports dropped dramatically. their currency plummeted in value. and their economy lost hundreds of billions of dollars. >> all told, sanctions have deprived iran of more than $200 billion in lost revenue. >> reporter: the sanctions don't
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stop there. western firms are limited from doing business in iran and having increasingly isolated iran's banks, denying them access to western markets. also millions of dollars in assets from dozens of iranian nationals, organizations and businesses have been frozen. including top members of iran's government and military. now some u.s. lawmakers, led by house speaker john boehner, are threatening to increase sanctions even further, should the nuclear deal not go through. >> if there is no agreement, how quickly will you move to further sanctions against iran in the house? >> very. the sanctions are going to come. and they're going to come quickly. >> reporter: will sanctions against iran intensify? or could they soon be lifted in part? with the deadline hours away, it may be now or never to make a deal. michael holmes, cnn. let's take this one step further.
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there are fears if no deal is reached iran could secretly test a nuclear weapon. cnn is told there would be getting away with it. >> reporter: dire predictions if iran and the u.s. don't reach a nuclear deal. >> iran will immediately begin once again pursuing its nuclear program, accelerate its nuclear program without us having any insight into what it's doing. >> reporter: the wisdom, they make weapons-grade fuel and then a weapons test. the doctor runs the agency that monitors testing. he says tehran could not test in secret. >> any country that will try today to hide a nuclear test explosion, we are more than 90%
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of chance in detectiviine detecg it. >> reporter: they can detect radioactive material in the air. but there are problems. it took 55 days for sensors to pick up radioactive gases from a north korean test seeping into the atmosphere when pyongyang set off a device in a sealed tunnel deep underground. >> what we need is cracks in the ground that could let the gas seep through. and then be detected. >> reporter: he wants iran to take a step few are talking about. ratify the international test ban treaty. >> first, everyone talks about enrichment. but before we discuss this enrichment, let's get this treaty into force, so that we don't even think about the process towards the dropping a nuclear weapon. >> reporter: and even with a deal, iran has plenty of
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potential nuclear capability in tact. it recently put a satellite in orbit using an intercontinental missile that could carry a warhead, leaving air strikes as an option of last resort if there is no enrichment deal. but u.s. intelligence calculate iran's nuclear sites are so far underground that israeli bombs could not hit them. and the u.s.'s largest bomb, the 30,000 pound massive bomb couldn't destroy the site in a single strike. barbara starr, cnn, the pentagon. we're going to take a short break. when we come back, a governor defends a religious freedom law, lawmakers try to clarify it.
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[ huntsman ] we made it welcoming and warm with a focus on beauty, serenity, and getting on with life. [ male announcer ] huntsman cancer institute is the only cancer hospital in the world designed by a patient, with the vital understanding that cancer moves fast. and we have to move faster. to learn more or support the cause, go to huntsmancancer.org. ♪ in uganda, a top prosecutor may have been killed in what looks like an assassination. he was shot by two men on motor bikes as she was driving near the capital city. >> she was the lead prosecutor in the ongoing trial of men in an al shabab bombing.
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they're looking into whether her murder is connected to her prosecution. the conclusion of the state's case in the dzhokhar tsarnaev case was emotional for many in the courtroom. >> reporter: jurors had tears in their eyes. they had their heads lowered as the prosecution brought its case to a close. the last thing though heard, graphic details of martin richard. they saw a jersey he had been wearing and a pair of pants melted nearly beyond recognition. the medical examiner who performed the autopsy on the boy. he told jurors that nearly every part of martin's four-foot frame had been covered with injuries. the autopsy photos were too graphic to be shown in open court. but martin's family were in the courtroom, hearing the details
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of the autopsy report. his father keeping his eyes closed for much of that testimony. >> just heartbreaking. and more than 90 witnesses have testified over the past month. the defense now begins its case. in singapore, in singapore a teenager is under arrest for a youtube. the eight minute long title, the teenager criticized the late patriarch. he called him a horrible person and compared him to jesus in a tirade about christianity. he was arrested and is facing charges on a newly enacted act. he was ordered to refrain from social media postings. >> we are heading to indiana.
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>> critics say it will allow discrimination against gay people. nae indiana's governor spoke with chris comb owe. we are a state that really values those first amendment rights. >> you are well aware of the situation. you have businesses, you have states, you have the ncaa. you have everybody saying this law is objectionable to us for different reasons. the fix -- i don't know that it is a fix as a lawyer -- but the political fix was include lbgt. he said no way. i am not talking about indiana's people. this is about the lawmakers, you
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guys at the top. why don't you include them under your state law of protection against discrimination? >> that is probably not a decision for the governor or administration to make alone. that is why you have a general assembly. >> he didn't say it's not my job. >> let me talk about the general assembly. the general assembly said that is something their leadership is willing to look at longer term. they don't think it can be done in the four weeks in session, but i think these are conversations to be had. our governor and leadership are working together. we do want to make sure. it is incredibly important in indiana we make sure that people are comfortable that this law does not discriminate. aware looking at the options that need to be done to make sure that doesn't happen. >> the governor, the only
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republican that hasn't a declared he is running for president. he kind of keeps hinting about it. >> there are 19 other states that have similar laws. >> the philippines on alert. >> a dangerous typhoon strengthening. >> it's quite early for a typhoon of this strength, especially because you are seeing winds more than 70 miles per hour. >> it could attain super-typhoon status. it's as symmetrical and organized as it gets. the federated states of micronesia to the south. look at the massive size of it.
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we measured it, some 300,000 square miles when you measure the cloud field end to end. twice the size of the u.s. state of california. puts into perspective what a large feature at this time. an island in the path of the storm system over the next 24 hours. it looks like it should dodge some of the strongest winds away from the island. it's a category 4 had this been in the atlantic ocean. the first time to have typhoons of this magnitude this early into the season. the holy week, we are watching it carefully.
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at this point it looks like weakening is possible. the winds above this storm system. threatening a densely populated area. >> we go to break. when we come pack, there he is, are the new face of the daily show. we will tell you more when we come back. with the skin of then olay total effects vitamin-enriched. to fight the 7 signs of aging. in 4 weeks, skin looks up to 10 years younger. 7 in 1 from the world's #1 olay. your best beautiful
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what you're doing now, janice. blogging. your blog is just pictures of you in the mirror. it's called a fashion blog, todd. well, i've been helping people save money with progressive's discounts. flo, can you get janice a job? [ laughs ] you should've stuck to softball! i was so much better at softball than janice, dad. where's your wife, todd? vacation. discounts like homeowners', multi-policy -- i got a discount on this ham. i've got the meat sweats. this is good ham, diane. paperless discounts -- give it a rest, flo.
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all: yeah, flo, give it a rest.
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since john stewart announced he is leaving the "daily show" we have bchb wondering who is replacing him. >> there was an announcement and still people are wondering. the guy is trevor noah, a comedian from south africa, where he is a star, but unknown everywhere else. >> he went from rookie contributor to host of the "daily show." >> the question being asked it, who? trevor noah, or is it noah trevor -- a 31-year-old median from south africa. he has graced the covers of
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south african magazines. his mom is a black south african and his father a german. mixed unions weren't allowed. >> they had me, which was illegal, so i was born a crime. >> he has joked about americans. >> they don't know much about africa as a whole. >> when he did three segments recently, the laughter was underwhelming. the reaction was trevor noah is kind of smoking hot, to excellent dimples, so they couldn't find an american for the job? one thing he will have no trouble doing is ac sent. >> have you been in contact with ebola. >> to middle eastern.
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>> to what he called crazy guy. to what he described as black hitler plp an oprah-esque imitation pegged to her african school. a weatherman finds a hanger he left in his suit. at least trevor noah is no empty suit. >> are you a comedian? yes. you don't look funny. >> teen idol justin bieber gets roasted verbally. he became comedy central's butt. >> many other famous roasters were in on the action. >> let's get to the reason i am here tonight, which is to give
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justin bieber tips to use when he inevitably ends up in prison. the first thing you will need is a shank. >> justin, as a father of six, you have got to straighten up, son. last year you were ranked the any of the most hated person of all time. they are using your people to torture people. >> in the end he apologized for his recent bad behavior and thanked them for roasting. >> no grammy, no friends, but he got a roast. >> stay with us. you are watching cnn.
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suicidal thoughts. new details emerge about the man accused of crashing germanwings flight 9525. marathon negotiations intensify as the deadline for a nuclear deal with iran looms. and jaw-dropping video shows a fire-fighting plunging through a burning roof.

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