tv New Day Sunday CNN April 12, 2015 4:00am-5:01am PDT
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clinically proven to help minimize blood sugar spikes. i'm a bull rider make it part of your daily diabetes plan. so you stay steady ahead. today is the day! hillary clinton and her message to voters. we have got new details for you as to what she'll say as she embarks on a new campaign to win the white house. plus -- >> cuba is not a threat to the united states. >> a historic meeting between president obama and cuban president raul castro and this is more than just a photo op. this is the first substantive sit-down in decades. plus. >> i shot him. i'm sorry.
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>> a sting operation goes horribly wrong. a officer thinks he is using his taser, but it is actually his gun. good morning here on a sunday. thank you for sharing your time with us. i'm christi paul. >> i'm victor blackwell. always great to be with you. the race to the white house adds another name to the lineup today. hillary clinton in a few hours. she is expected to announce her candidacy through a video message posted to social media. >> her soon to be campaign team outlined part of that message through a values statement that was handed out at their brooklyn headquarters promising to, quote, give every family, every small business and every american a path to prosperity by electing hillary clinton the next president of the u.s. we are covering this store from all angles. john king looking at clinton's challenges ahead. but let's talk to brianna keilar first with more on hillary's message. good morning. >> reporter: good morning. this is the day. we have known that hillary clinton was very likely going to
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be running. that was very apparent. but the question has been how is this going to be different from 2008, her very disastrous campaign? the memo you referenced is really part of this. that was a memo given to staffers as they begin this sort of adventure and this big task of this campaign. but this was also a memo that is for public consumption just to be clear, because hillary clinton, about eight years ago when she threw her hat into the ring, again, with a video that was on social media, she said, i'm in and i'm in to win. that was really seen especially in retrospect as hillary clinton, the front-runner kind of taking it for granted and what you're hearing now from the campaign is they are taking nothing for granted and they want to aggressively fight for every vote and show they are doing that. this is something that came from that memo, a quote. we are humble and take nothing for granted and never afraid to
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lose and we always outcompete and fight for every vote we can win. it's fascinating. this is the language you might hear from the underdog, maybe not from the campaign for the candidate that is, so far, ahead in the polls, but they are trying to reason as if they aren't on this day where we expect hillary clinton to make it official before she heads to the early states of iowa and new hampshire to reinforce what her campaign message will be. >> let's bring in cnn chief national correspondent john king. john, we heard from her this more humble campaign strategy, they are taking nothing for granted. is this a different clinton or is it just a different strategy? >> well, we are about to find that out. that is the key question. look. you are who you are at a certain point in your life. she ran a disastrous campaign in 2008 but remember there was a big divide in the democratic party and most of the senators
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running including senator clinton voted for the iraq war and young barack obama had not. they will say they are humble and outcompete for every vote. they also know her biggest enemy and biggest threat is herself within the democratic petarty i herself. she want to get the rust off and get her out there. she is a very smart person. we have seen her as first lady of arkansas. then first lady of the united states. then as a senator. then as a candidate for president. not so great that chapter. then as secretary of state. she has reinvented herself more than anybody in public life over the past 25 years, so we will see what is different in this campaign but she is the boss and brought on a different and more tested staff and a a lot of veterans of the obama campaign but she is the ceo and the candidate so if it's going to be different it has to come from her. >> clinton's campaign is promising to go small in a sense, fewer gatherings and fewer people and more intimate
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settings. when you have to hit five states in three days, how does that work? >> brea, you want that one? >> well, yeah. i think what we know from hillary clinton and the forums in which she performs better, the smaller ones she does much better in. she struggled in 2008 with big sort of speeches. and i think even recently when we have seen her with some paid speeches, they are okay but they are not super captivating so not the place she is going to clean up, right? i think the smaller venues are good for her. but i think that also what you're going to see is it's not just the smaller. i think you'll see her do some bigger events but it's that she is going to try to have things of all different sizes ultimately but i think what you're going to see just in this initial phase, this sort of launch phase, is these smaller events. right now it's not necessarily about hitting five locations in a day.
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i think you're going to see her vary her strategy more as we get closer to the election. >> john, did you want to chime in? >> we will focus what does she look like and the events big or small and doing a lot or a few and important to see if she is different stistically. you read some of the statement at the beginning. the big question is why? republicans will say she is yesterday and the past and as old as ronald reagan and say it's time for a chance after eight years of a democratic president barack obama. her biggest challenge why me? it's not my turn as a winning presidential message and how would you make the economy different and what is different on the world stage as we watch the events and strategy i think more than the strategy the biggest question is how does she communicate why she shis she should be president and why she would be different than the options before us. we will have a crowded republican field and see what happens on the democratic side, if anything, tells you 2016 is
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fully on and not second gear any more. >> thank you both. catch john on "inside politics" today and every sunday at 8:30 a.m. eastern. this morning president obama is back in the u.s. after a trip to panama where he sat down with talks with cuban president raul castro. >> the historic meeting ends a decades long freeze in the communications. jim acosta has more. >> reporter: simply put, history was made at this summit of the americas after president obama and raul castro held what were the highest level talks between u.s. and cuban leaders in more than half a century. it's a cold war no more as the president and raul castro came face-to-face, the first exchange between u.s. and cuban leaders since before mr. obama was even born. >> it was time to fry something new. [ speaking in foreign language ] >> translator: we are willing to discuss everything but we need to be patient.
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>> reporter: the president told leaders gathered at the summit of the americas in panama he wants to turn the page with cuba. >> the united states will not be imprisoned by the past. we are looking to the future. >> reporter: though, he conceded these long time adversaries will still have their differences. >> we will continue to speak out on universal values that we think are important. i'm sure president castro will speak out on the issues that he thinks are important. >> reporter: castro did speak out. joking he was making up for missing past summits when cuba wasn't invited, castro blasted u.s. meddling in his nation's affairs over the course of ten president but in a remarkable moment, castro said he admired mr. obama. >> translator: in my opinion, president obama is an honest man. >> reporter: an assessment castro said he made skimming through the president's autobiographies. >> translator: i admire him.
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and i think his behavior has a lot to do with his humble background. >> reporter: there hasn't been a take like this since nixon met fidel castro in 1959, when dwight eisenhower was president. after a series of encounters with castro, the president stopped short of saying he trusts the cuban leader. do you feel that raul castro is an honest man? >> it was a candid and fruitful conversation between me and raul castro. i can tell you that in the conversations i've had so far with him, two on the phone and, most recently, face-to-face, that we are able to speak honestly about our differences and our concerns in ways that i think offer the possibility of moving the relationship between our two countries in a different and better direction. >> reporter: next, the obama administration is expected to
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remove cuba from the u.s. list of state sponsors of terrorism. a move blasted by some lawmakers, including florida republican senator marco rubio who said, i don't see how they can rationalize taking them off the list, other than the president's desire to achieve a legacy issue. the president argued, times have changed. >> cuba is not a threat to the united states. >> reporter: the president did not resolve the issue of whether cuba will remain on the u.s. list of state sponsors of terrorism, but a senior administration official told reporters that the president is nearing a decision on that issue, but the process doesn't end there as congress will have 45 days to weigh in on the issue. >> jim, thanks. president obama is weighing in on the woman who could replace him in the white house two years from now. coming up at the half, what he says about hillary clinton's announcement. plus, an undercover police officer in a sting operation pulls out his gun when he says he meant to pull out his taser. we have the new video of the
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a sting operation. you see the video goes terribly wrong leading to a deadly police shooting you saw a moment ago there. authorities in tulsa, oklahoma, say they are now investigating what went wrong leading up to that incident which was all caught on camera. watch. eric harris selling ammunition to an undercover officer in ape. shortly after allegedly selling the gun to a tulsa county task force member, harris runs from officers trying to arrest him. it's while harris is bolting from the police that one of the officers catches up and the suspect is wrestled to the ground.
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it's in the ensuing take-down you can hear on the tape the 73-year-old tulsa county reserve deputy robert bates shouting that he has a taser. >> that's done to warn other law enforcement officers that you're about to deploy this device. >> reporter: investigators say bates accidentally pulls the trigger on his gun instead of the taser and firing a round into harris and you can hear him apologize for what he has done. jim clark, tulsa police sergeant, brought in as an independent consultant said friday during a news conference a scientific phrase explains what happened to bates in that moment. it's called slips and capture and when someone reacts dimple -- differently in extremely pressure. >> you train in every area you can. but in times of crisis, sometimes training is not going to take you through the scenario. >> reporter: clark says that in the 200 shootings he has investigated has never seen a weapon leave the officer's hand
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and he believes there is no doubt that deputy bates thought he was getting ready to discharge a taser. >> he, obviously, had a taser grip when caused the gun upon discharge to leave his hand and fall to the pavement. >> reporter: before the tape was released, harris' son spoke to the press about what he talked to his father. >> i talked to him the next day but when i didn't get to talk to him, i knew something was happening. >> reporter: as the investigation is happening, the family and their attorney wants something to come to light. >> a lot we know about eric harris but a lot we don't know. >> reporter: more insight into this case. back with us is former fbi assistant director and cnn law enforcement analyst tom fuentes. let's show you a graphic first of the gun and the taser that were used. we have got the information here, both are similar in weight. just a few fractions of an ounce off. it would be easy to confuse the two. i mean, does it happen often?
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>> it doesn't happen that often. it does happen occasionally. one of the things police departments do, victor, to try to avoid that is the training with insisting that the firearm is always on the same side, same holster. the taser is on on the opposite side of your gun belt on your other hip in a cross-draw position and try to get it so that it's a reflex that when you need your firearm, you draw your firearm. when you pull the taser, you pull the taser. now, obviously, we hear from the audio part of this tape that the officer believes he is firing the taser. he is caught up in the excitement of the moment. these kind of arrest situations with a potentially violent individual don come up every day. keep in mind, this subject has just sold firearms and ammuniti ammunition. the expectation is that he is not going to get rid of every weapon he has. he is going to keep one to protect himself so he doesn't get robbed of his weapons. so the expectation is that the
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police may have been justified in using a firearm instead of a taser, you know? he was trying to use a taser. accidentally used a firearm, but the investigation is going to have to determine is that accident or not, even using the firearm might have been justified in this situation. yet, again, we see a subject who doesn't imply, doesn't want to be arrested, takes off, fights with the police, and that almost guarantees bad things happen. tasers don't always work. even though that was the first attempt was to tase him, it may not have taken any way, even if done properly and they may still have had this continuing violence with the subject resisting arrest. >> tom, one of the things that stands out to a lot of people when they hear about this story is the fact that this reserve officer was 73 years old and this was really had the potential to turn violent. what do you say to that? >> well, i say that is a good question, christi. the police will have to explain
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that. what they also will have to explain in my mind is how much training does that axillary or reserve officer get? that is the difference we see bought of budget cuts, even regular police officers are not getting the continuing training, once they graduate from the police academy and all states have a mandated minimum to graduate and be certified as a police officer. but once they graduate, how much training is mandated as they continue in their career? but somebody is a reserve or access auxry were not armed and shut in special events but not ever participate in what could be a dangerous or arrest situation. i think the department's judgment will be called into question. why didn't they ask for more assistance from a neighboring department or members of their own department that were fully trained police officers at that
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potentially violent scene and, instead, use a reserve officer? >> tom fuentes, thank you so much. >> you're welcome. thank you. >> thank you, tom. so, you know, the pope has morning mass this morning and he talked about something from 100 years ago. we are going to explain to you why one word is making, you know, some particular news. plus, former president clinton says his role in the 2016 election should be as a back stage adviser. but mr. clinton is not exactly known for avoiding the spotlight. we will have more on his potential impact on the race and a young african-american man gets pulled over by police and records his interaction with the officer. now this video is going viral. millions of people have watched it. we will show you part of it. you don't know "aarp" thanks to the aarp tek program, this guy is spying on his new grandson. aarp tek gets people better connected to technology, to better connect with each other. with social media, digital devices and apps.
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good morning to you. let's take a look at other stories developing this morning. pope francis mass today is getting a lot of attention for one word in particular -- genocide. he says the killing of armenians 100 years ago was the first genocide of the century. turkey has long disputed that genocide is a description of what happened. a 2-year-old boy fell into a cheetah exhibit at the cleveland metro park zoo yesterday afternoon. here is what heard from our affiliate. eyewitnesses told a zoo official he may have been dangled over the rail. now, zoo officials, they may push for child endangerment
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charges against the boy's parents. fortunately the cheetahs did not go after the family who jumped in to grab the boy but the boy is in a stable condition at a nearby hospital. president obama is blasting senator john mccain for his attacks on john kerry and the iran nuclear deal. you'll hear it after this. first, listen to this bit of sound. >> people need to understand that not all officers are crooked. not all officers are racist, bad people. and not all people -- >> this young man's message, you're going to hear more of it in just moments. it was recorded after he was pulled over by a cop and it went viral. we will talk to him live about this video coming up. where are in this week's "human factor." we share the jets secrets of lo life.
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sanjay gupta has more. >> reporter: a retired heart surgeon occasionally does his own yard work and walks regularly and still drives. you drove here today? >> driving is nothing! i worked until i was 95 assisting, mind you. i could have done heart surgery but it wouldn't have been fair to the patient because sometimes you need reserve strength. if you gave me something to memorize, i would memorize is just as quickly now as i would when i was 20. >> reporter: how is your health? >> oh, superb. i haven't got an ache or a pain. >> reporter: the great grandfather believed his plant-based diet plays a big part in all of this. >> if your blood cholesterol is under 150 your chance of a heart attack is pretty small. mine is under 17 so no chance i'll have a heart attack. i'm dealing in an area which i understand. >> reporter: perhaps another key to his longevity not letting problems weigh him down. how big of a role does stress play in your life? >> you've asked the wrong person! i have a philosophy you do the best you can and the things you
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can't do anything about, don't give any thought to them. >> reporter: what motivates you nowadays? >> i feel that i have to make a contribution. when i was doing surgery, i made it my operating. now i try to make it by thinking about preventive medicine. >> reporter: and showing people just what a hundred years old can look like. dr. sanjay gupta, cnn, reporting. i've lived my whole life here in fairbanks, alaska. i love the outdoors, spending time with my family. i have a family history of prostate cancer. i had the test done and that was when i got the news. my wife and i looked at treatment options. cancer treatment centers of america kept coming up on the radar. so we flew to phoenix. greg progressed excellently. we proceeded to treat him with hormonal therapy, concurrent with intensity modulated radiation therapy to the prostate gland. go to cancercenter.com to learn more about our integrative therapies and how they're specifically
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bottom of the hour now. welcome back. president obama is back in the u.s. after his historic trip to panama. historic, because, yesterday, he sat down for talks with his cuban counterpart raul castro and ending a decade long standstill in u.s./cuban relations. key stumbling blocks exist but president obama says it was time for us to try something new. >> the president talked about more than just u.s./cuban relations. he also took a jab at republican senator john mccain for calling secretary of state john kerry, quote, delusional and earlier this week when they were discussing the iran nuclear deal. we are live at the white house with the details on this one. good morning. >> good morning, christi. the bickering between president obama and senator mccain stems from the two different interpretations what is in the
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deal. the u.s. officials are selling it one way. the ayatollah in iran is selling it in a completely different way. senator mccain has been picking up on these differences over the fundamental and key differences over this deal and in a radio interview, he brought secretary of state john kerry's honesty into question. he called kerry delusional for trying to sell what he says is a bill of goods about this deal saying he believes it's the ayatollah, the supreme leader in iran, who is probably right about the details here. now, clearly, this touched a nerve with president obama. he brought up senator mccain's comments in panama without being asked. >> when i hear some, like senator mccain recently, suggest that our secretary of state john kerry, who served in the united states senate, a vietnam veteran, who has provided exempl
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larry service in this nation than the stream leader of iran, that is an indication of the degree to which partisanship has crossed all boundaries. >> reporter: senator mccain responded quickly to president obama last night saying that these are widely divergent views in the deal and they need to be reconciled and took to twitter. he had a snarky tweet here. here it is. he said so president obama goes to panama, meets with castro and attacks me. i'm sure raul is pleased. now all this back and forth sets up what likely will be a testy week ahead on capitol hill. congress returns tomorrow. >> sunlen, thank you so much. hillary clinton may be planning to jump in the presidential race later today and she already has a key supporter, president obama. watch. >> with respect to hillary
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clinton, i'll make my comments very brief. she was a formidable candidate in 2008 and she was a great supporter of mine in the general election, she was an outstanding secretary of state, she is my friend. i think she would be an excellent president. cnn political director david challenger is joining us now. so many things to talk about here. the president is not saying this about joe biden, but how close does secretary clinton want to be to president obama? >> well, she has got to strike a balance, right? clearly, the country wants some change from the obama administration. that is a natural thing after eight years. his approval rating are sort of upside down. i think our most recently poll showed 6 in 10 americans say they want to support a candidate that represents a clear break from the policies of the obama administration. hillary clinton is keenly aware
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of that, yet, she cannot dance so far away from him that she alienates his base of support that is critical to her success. there is much more risk for her in separating out than there is in making sure to embrace him, embrace his overall vision but then being able to find clear moments where she can carve her own path. i will say you are right about the fact that the president is not saying similar words, a phrase for vice president biden, not that he doesn't like his vice president, he does, but he was asked specifically at that press conference in panama yesterday about vice president biden and he didn't deal with that at all, whereas you saw he basically came this short of giving hillary clinton a formal endorsement. >> it's interesting that we are having this conversation about how close should she be to president obama. we have a piece on cnn.com in which hillary clinton is compared to al gore and many
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people thought in 2010 he ran too far away. gore had trouble connecting with voters. he seemed to remake his image constantly. he's concerned that could be a problem for hillary clinton. you know, she is remaking herself as a grandmother. after her win in new hampshire she said by listening to voters she found her owner voice. she was 60 years old at the time. will they buy another reinvention of hillary clinton? >> no voter is going to buy sort of a clean slate. every voter will come to hillary clinton with a lot of information already. that is not the case with a lot of the republicans that are running who are sort of fresh to the scene for many voters, whether that is rand paul or ted cruz or marco rubio who is announcing his campaign for president tomorrow. are they going to recast hillary clinton in some ways as you said to emphasize her new position? where she is now entering this presidential race as a grandmother. she just released a new epi log
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in the paper back version of her book that came out last year how the birth of her granddaughter made her think she to to double-down on her call on service. she is putting that rationalize after all of these services on the public stage she is feeling ready for this moment and she does need to make that sale. no doubt about it. the best comparison to vice president gore is the fact she is like a quasi incumbent. not stiff competition on the democratic side and like when president gore was a sitting vice president and the entire apparatus of the democratic party was basically behind him. hillary clinton is finding herself in a very similar position right now. >> let's talk about former president clinton. my team was able to pull up the video from 2007 in iowa grocery store in december where former president and then senator clinton walked in.
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you see what happened here. people wanted to speak to the president and the senator was left looking around where her husband had gone to. what will his role be this time around? >> i think his role is going to be what it always is, first and foremost, which is a very active strategic adviser to secretary clinton. i don't think that there are going to be real sort of major decisions about the direction of the campaign that he is not playing a role in. he can't resist it. and he is a great political mind, but people on both sides of the aisle give him credit for that. i do think that he claims he was in a town and country magazine. he did a whole spread and claims he is a back stage adviser. we are told not to expect bill clinton out there on the stump right away. going to give hillary clinton her space to get this launched. i'm sure utilized as a major fund-raising tool and in big moments he does have the ability, as he did for barack obama at the 2012 democratic convention to help frame and
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argument and make a sale to voters unlike many politicians on the stage today. that's what i think we will see from him. >> president obama has called him on more than one occasion that he should be the secretary of explaining stuff. cnn political director david chalian, thanks so much. >> thanks, victor. hundreds of yemenis are saying a violation of international law with the air strikes in yemen. we will ask our expert about that next who has a few things to say.
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this morning new daletails the crisis in yemen. more than 500 houthi rebels have been killed. more than 200 air strikes in two weeks. a saudi source tells cnn that saudi arabia is using u.s.-made apache attack helicopters in some areas. meanwhile, hundreds of yemenis are calling it a violation of international law. let's bring in cnn military analyst retired major general major "spider" marks. how likely do you think of a ground invasion and how would that change this equation as we see these protests in the streets? >> i think, number one, saudi wants to make sure it can at least protect its integrity so it has forces, obviously, disappoint deployed along the border why wyemen. it would be some trigger event
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of president hadi who is in saudi arabia riyadh, not in the capital in sanaa in yemen. if he could not be able to be returned, in other words, no possibility of trying to create some form of stability or hostility i thinked saudis might take the additional step to try to create some type of effect to force a solution that they have been able to achieve through the air alone and we have seen that in our efforts against isis in syria and iraq that air power can contain the fighting and really kind of keep the enemy's head down, but you're not going to have an ultimate solution that gets some type of control on the ground unless you have forces that are there. >> i imagine fountain saudis launch this ground invasion and that could preclude the u.s. from getting involved at all? >> it would preclude the united states from having a direct hand. the united states is involved
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right now. from the standpoint of providing good intelligence and low gistics. we have a longstanding relationship with the saudi government in terms of selling them military equipment and trained them over the course of many, many years. >> general marks, thank you so much. >> thank you, victor. sticking up for the police. a driver's video goes viral after he shows everyone how a traffic stop is supposed to go when you follow an officer's instructions. find out why he did this. we are going to talk to him next. meet the world's newest energy superpower.
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this video is chilling and it set off outrage and demands for answers and change in police tactics after an unarmed blackman was shot and killed by a south carolina cop. that man was laid to rest in a funeral service yesterday. hundreds of mourners attended that story. the officer charged with that murder, michael slager, is in custody will stack showed how nothing happened during that stop. that video has gone viral. millions of you are watching it and sharing it. listen here to why he recorded it. >> people need to understhand not all officers are crooked, not all officers are racist and
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bad people and that not all people who get shot or tased or arrested by officers are innocent victims. just because you're black doesn't mean you're a victim. just because you're white doesn't mean you're a racist. this world really needs to stop putting labels on people and things and see them as who they are. ? and will stack is with us now. will, can you hear me? how are you doing? thank you for being with us. >> thank you for having me. >> so good to have you. i'm wondering, you know, you're 21 years old. you put this thing online. what is -- have you gotten any reaction that has surprised you? what are people saying to you about it? >> well, honestly, the big turnout is the biggest surprise. i was just a kid just posting a video about how i felt about something. never in my wildest dreams did i imagine that it would get this
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big. i've gotten a lot of positive feedback from it, and i have gotten some questions. i've gotten some people asking me things about it, asking me to clarify certain things. so -- >> like what? what are they confused about? >> well, i guess people thought -- some people thought that because of what i said in the video because of the positivity of the video that i was saying that there is no problem in america, and that's -- that's not the case. i understand that there is a huge problem in the world in general when it comes to race and when it comes to civili civilian/officer relations. i wasn't saying there wasn't a problem. we all know there's a problem. we all know change needs to come. what i was saying is it is possible for that change to come because not everybody is a bad person. not all officers are, you know,
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crooked people out to get you. there are good people. there are good officers in this world and as long as we know that there is good in this world, then change is still, you know, hopefully to come. >> of course, you're in south carolina where walter scott was shot and killed. what was your reaction to that whole thing? and have you had -- have you heard from police since you posted this video? any officers? >> when i first saw the video i was -- i was pretty shocked because, you know, here i see a man running away and he's several, several feet away from the officer when the officer opened fire and it's just something that i didn't expect to see. then later i saw the other video showing that he ran out of the vehicle. and so i understand that he should not have run. you know, he should not have, you know, tried to escape or elude an officer, but at the
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same time, as an officer of the law, you have protocols and that officer did not follow those protocols. even further, when i saw the video of the officer dropping something beside the body of the then deceased man, it just kind of -- it kind of -- it kind of upset me because, you know, i try to keep an open mind set and i try to be positive about things but some things like that, it's an open and shut case. >> yes. >> so i'm glad that it's being handled the way that it is and i'm glad that the reaction to handle it was so fast. as far as the response goes, it's been incredible. i've gotten messages and friend requests from thousands of people and tons of officers saying that, you know, i'm an officer in this state and, you know, i'm white, and i don't have any problem with anyone of any color. i just want to protect. i just want to serve.
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that kind of thing. they just thanked me for putting some kind of positivity out there. and at the end of the day, you know, i know there's a lot of problems in america, but the number one goal, the number one reason for me making this video was to spread some positivity. >> you did just that. will stack, it was great to see. thank you so much for that and for spending some time with us this morning. we appreciate it. take good care, okay? >> thank you. >> sure. hillary clinton set to announce her candidacy for president in just a few hours. this morning there are new details about her campaign message. we'll have those. critics are already taking aim. we'll have that at the top of the hour as well. also coming up next, tiger woods is playing some of the best golf that fans have seen from him in years. is he in contention to win the masters? we'll take a look at that. also next week on cnn, marijuana is changing the way colorado does business. yes, marijuana. and we've got a new look, a unique look inside two colorado
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it will even brake all by itself. it is a luxury suv engineered to get you there and back safely. for tomorrow is another fight. the 2015 m-class. see your authorized dealer for exceptional offers through mercedes-benz financial services. today's the final round of the masters. you know the names at the top. you've got tiger, rory, phil. and there's a 23-year-old phenom, jordan spieth. >> koh wire is joining us now. what a name this guy is making for himself, fast.
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>> no one in the history of the masters has put on a show like spieth has put on. no one has had a better first three rounds like spieth has. at 16 under he's drawn comparison to a young tiger and being called the next rory mcilroy. that's a lot of pressure for a young 21. this guy is absurdly brilliant play. we'll see if anyone can catch him. tiger has been the other big story line. currently at 6 under and tied for fifth place. we'll see. looking a lot more like the old tiger. paired up with rory mcilroy today. that's must-see tv if you're a golfer. >> all right. >> we'll see. phil mickelson is in the hunt. justin rose is only 4 behind. we'll see. a lot of people are wondering, can he keep this up? >> yeah. it's the first time we've seen him do much, let's say. >> do well. >> i'm trying to find the r
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