tv CNN International CNN May 4, 2015 10:00pm-11:01pm PDT
10:00 pm
daughter gets to finish the application and gets hired by baltimore police. this is an important discussion. we hope an ongoing one. and thank you for watching, this is an important discussion, ac 360. new details about the suspects behind an attack at a controversial art exhibit in texas. baltimore tries to return to normal. we'd like to welcome our viewers in the united states and all around the world. this is cnn "newsroom." the fbi is investigating whether the men behind an attack in texas have ties to international terrorists. a police working as security at the sunday night event shot and killed the gunmen outside the
10:01 pm
auditorium. the u.s. homeland security chief says the officer likely saved a number of innocent lives. the gunmen were wearing body armor and had assault rifles. we went to fee nikphoenix where shooters live. >> it is through this busted doorway the would be gunmen lived and hatched a plan. nadir soofi, a pizza shop owner and father to a young son. he grew up in pakistan. elton simpson, no other history of violence. neighbors saw nothing outwardly alarming from the two roommates. >> i'm getting goose bumps thinking about it right now just because i wanted to buy that car. and knowing it's on the -- like, on the news i see it blown up. i was going to purchase that car.
10:02 pm
you don't think he's going to go plot something and you're giving the money to help him go plot something. that's how i feel now. it's crazy. >> the neighbor never suspected. in fact, he sauna dear soofi as a good samaritan. >> you had contact with one of the men. >> one time about a year ago, i came home and i'm walking up this and i had heartburn condition. and i collapsed over here onto this stairwell. and he seen all that and he came over and offered me help. >> how do you reconcile that with a guy that drives to texas and shoots people? >> it's easy. everybody has a good side to them. if you see somebody hurting like that, you're going to help them. you know, he's -- i think he went to texas to shoot people for a reason. >> the reason appeared to be inspired by isis. he wrote, the bro with me and myself have given bay'ah an oath
10:03 pm
of allegiance. his last tweet before the texas attack. but the fist clues date back to that 2011 arrest. talking to an fbi informant, court records shows simpson wanted to go to somalia to fight. recorded saying, if you get shot or if you get killed, it's heaven straight away. why not take that route. you try to make us become slaves to man? no, we slaves to allah. we going to fight you to the death. >> there are lots of questions now about whether he's someone who may have fall p through the cracks. >> do you look back on the case and wonder the same thing? >> no, i don't. he was on probation for three years. he didn't have any violations. he didn't have any problems that i was aware of. i don't feel like he was ever a danger or ever someone that was going to be harmful.
10:04 pm
perhaps he got angry and did a really bad, terrible thing. >> his facebook page reveals strong opinions but no call to violence. but there is a 4-year-old note asking for forgiveness. he asked allah for forgiveness for every sin. their plan, so secret that mosque president spent years with both men at services and never saw either as a threat. >> you have, you know, two members that they didn't show any signs of radicalization or any signs of even thinking about those things in that -- in that manner. so when that happens, it just shocks you. you know, how good did you know these people. that's the question people ask themselves. >> cnn, phoenix. >> in a statement a few hours ago, simpson's family said they
10:05 pm
are heartbroken and had no idea of his plans. meantime the group behind the contest is the american freedom defense initiative, labeled a hate group by the southern poverty law center. many muslims consider images of the prophet to be blasphemy. they said an anti-isla ma phobia event was held there in january. >> in offensive speech need to protection. it's not the 8th amendment, it's the 1st amendment. it protects all speech. and most of all, political speech. who decides what's good and what's forbidden? the islamic state? this contest was for muhammad cartoons. cartoons are political critique.
10:06 pm
with political islam, which is imposing restrictions on free speech, we are lampooning it. >> for most in the west, it's almost impossible to understand how a simple drawing can spark such a violent and often deadly reaction. this person is with the muslim public affairs council. thank you for being with us. the prohibition on drawing the prophets, jesus, moses, muhammad, all of them, it's not even in the qaran is it? >> we're not supposed to draw any images of them, to number one, stay away from any kind of idol worship. and number two, not put in any kind of racial depiction because the artist will definitely present the image of these prophets through their own lens. so that's been the traditional
10:07 pm
understanding. but i think in this particular case, we're looking at more of a political dimension in terms of these caricatures that are being made about the prophet. >> in this case, what we're looking at here is nonmuslims drawing insulting images of muhammad. that makes it so much worse? >> i think that's the keyword you mentioned. the caricatures are designed to insult the muslims and really attack the identity of the muslim. and in the west, when you see these caricatures, it's more about defa mags than it is about whether a person has the right to draw a picture or an image of a prophet. >> jews don't go out and kill those who draw anti-se met ik cartoons they find insults, christians don't go out and kill those that insult jesus or mary.
10:08 pm
why is it muslims around the world are willing to kill those that are drawing the prophet muhammad? >> now we're talking about the political dimension in that you have groups like isis, al qaeda, terrorist groups that are luring people who are very impressionable obviously who don't know the religion and they're being told to go out and attack those with violence who insult the prophet. number one, it tells us that the prophet was insulted by his opponents throughout his life. and in each and every case, the prophet met that insult with the power of silence. and so the bullets that were intent -- intended to kill people yesterday were actually bullets against our prophet. >> pam geller and the afdi, do they have every right, would you stand there and defend your right? would you stand in front of
10:09 pm
those gunmen so they could have the right to show those images of muhammad? >> we defend the rights of anyone, even if they want to insult the most sacred symbols in our religion. and so obviously, if we believe that this is the principles in islam, we would defend their rights. with pamela geller however, i think there's another dimension. that is that she is instigating this kind of reaction. we have to be concerned about islama phobia and how people are hiding behind freedom of speech to promote hate. i think we have to speak out against that not through legal means, but through political, social and interfaith means. >> thanks to him there from the muslim public affairs counsel. we go to baltimore now where national guard troops are pulling back after officials
10:10 pm
lifted a nighttime curfew. tensions are still high in the city where freddie gray died while in police custody last month. on monday, anger flared over arizona. >> police just shot someone. >> as officers subdued a suspect carrying a handgun, his weapon discharged sparking false rumors that police had shot the man. >> the police never discharged any weapons. he has no injuries on his body whatsoever. no injuries whatsoever. he is not shot. >> the incident highlighted once again the distrust between the community and the police. u.s. president barack obama is weighing in on some of the reasons behind the unrest. we have that part of the story. >> president obama today in new york -- >> that sense of unfairness and of powerlessness of people not
10:11 pm
hearing their voices, that's helped fuel some of the protests we've seen in places like baltimore and ferguson and right here in new york. >> as the city of baltimore, rocked by violence this time last week, tries to return to normal. with some 4,000 national guard troops beginning to pull out. the mayor lifting the curfew on sunday, good news for local businesses. >> i am really, really happy about that. i cannot wait to see our regulars. i cannot wait to see customers. i cannot wait for employees to feel relieved. >> and the mall that was one target of looters has opened its doors again. >> this is just a great day for this community to have the mall reopen. >> since april 23rd, police made 486 arrests and 113 police officers were injured. some 200 businesses, most minority-owned, were lost in
10:12 pm
last mond's violence, hundreds of millions of dollars in losses. >> it's going to take a little while for us to get totally back to normal. but i think lifting the curfew is a good idea. let's get back to normal and get people back to work and back to school and get people coming back into the city. >> once tense demonstrations turned into celebrations. a group of marching bands showing up at city hall sunday to show a positive picture of baltimore. >> the media make my city look bad. >> meanwhile, it's only the beginning for the legal case against the six officers charged. now the question is whether the states attorney can win convictions. >> at the end of the day, my job is to seek justice. breaking news now. we have exclusive reports from inside one of the world's most secretive countries. this time he met with a student
10:13 pm
from new york university currently detained in noerk. will skbrojoins us now on the l. you got to sit down with 21-year-o 21-year-old. what's his conditions like? >> he was very relaxed. he didn't seem too concerned about the fact that he could potentially face very serious charges for admittedly illegally crossing into north korea. he took a semester off from school, decided to make a cross-country trip across the united states from new jersey to california. he says he tried to find work in california. he had an idea to cross into north korea. he says that's exactly what he did. listen. >> why did you go into north korea? >> well, i thought that by my
10:14 pm
entrance illegally, i acknowledge, but i thought that some great event could happen and hopefully that event could have a good affect in the relations between the north and south. >> what kind of great event did you think could happen? >> of course i'm not completely sure yet, but i hope that, you know, i will be able to tell the world how an ordinary college student entered the dprk illegally but however with the generous treatment of the dprk that i will be able to return home safely. >> have you spoken with anybody from the south korean government or the united states government at this point? >> not yet. >> have you been able to make any phone calls? >> not yet. >> so this is your first time? >> uh-huh. >> what messages would you like to put out about your situation and what people should do to try to get ahold of you? >> i of course i understand my parents and loved ones are
10:15 pm
worrying a lot about me. i would like to say that i'm well and there's no need to worry because the people here have treated me with the best of humanitarian treatment. i've been fed well and i've slept well and i've been very healthy. i would just like to apologize for creating a lot of worry among my loved ones. >> he says he has not yet been informed what charges he may face. but he says he's being held in comfortable conditions. he's in a room with three beds, a private bathroom. he does not have access to television, the internet and hasn't been able to make phone calls. as you heard him say, he does hope he will eventually be able to return home. by the way, he got into north korea by going to the great wall in china and hiking crossing through wire fences and walking down a river before he
10:16 pm
encountered the soldiers who arrested him. john, he said he wanted to be arrested. >> it just all sounds very strange that there is this young man who illegally crossed into north korea hoping his presence there would bring about some sort of great event. in this case, is he worth anything from a political point to the north koreans? are they willing to trade or do anything to give him up? what's his fate going to be? >> well, we got no indication right now from the north korean government what their next action will be. they're in a position where this young man who is a south korean citizen and a permanent resident of the u.s., two countries that north korea is very much an enemy of, and yet he chose to do this. he said he thought it could help
10:17 pm
bring about something positive. but the reality is it's now a very big mess. these are countries that don't have diplomatic relagtss with the dprk. it's not clear how his family or government is going to get in touch to try to start this process going. this interview really was his first opportunity to let the world know what happened. what's going to happen next really is anyone's guest. >> i guess it will be south korea's problem as opposed to the u.s. finally, it's rare to be invited into north korea on one occasion let alone two occasions. why did they bring you back to show you the dmz? >> well, they've given us really remarkable access on our trip since we arrived. we went down to the demilitarized zone. we talked to the soldier that gave us insight into the north korean nuclear program and the lingering strong feelings of anger that continue against the
10:18 pm
united states. their version of history they teach here, they say the united states started the korean war which is -- different of course from what most western historians say. they also gave us access to two south korean spies. right now, we're in a van sitting outside about to shoot a dolphin performance. our shooting schedule has been very busy with a lot of variety and we're gathering a lot of material to give people as much insight as we can into live in this country. >> we'll leave you to it. don't get to say this, a lot, on the line from north korea. first time they've seen him since he was detained back on april 22nd for illegally crossing into north korea. a short break here. when we come back, a defendant finally changes his demeanor. we'll tell you what made the
10:19 pm
boston marathon bomber finally shed a tear in court. you order it. choose 3 of 9 dishes for just $15.99. like baked lobster alfredo. brown butter shrimp scampi. and soy-ginger salmon. hey, this is my plate. get yours while you still can. we don't collect killer whales seaworldfrom the wild. to know. and haven't for 35 years. with the hightest standard of animal care in the world, our whales are healthy. they're thriving. i wouldn't work here if they weren't. and government research shows they live just as long as whales in the wild. caring for these whales, we have a great responsibility to get that right. and we take it very seriously. because we love them. and we know you love them too.
10:20 pm
10:21 pm
it's really nice mom. ♪ your dad would've loved this place. you're not just looking for a house. you're looking for a place for your life to happen. zillow [ 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, and getting on with life. [ male announcer ] huntsman cancer institute is the only cancer hospital in the world
10:22 pm
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. ♪ and when you bundle your home and auto insurance through progressive, you'll save a bundle! [ laughs ] jamie. right. make a bad bundle joke, a buck goes in the jar. i guess that's just how the cookie bundles. now, you're gonna have two bundles of joy! i'm not pregnant. i'm gonna go. [ tapping, cash register dings ] there you go. [ buzzing ] bundle bee coming! it was worth it! saving you a bundle when you bundle -- now, that's progressive. fighter jets from the saudi-led coalition pounded yemen's main airport on sunday.
10:23 pm
it comes a day after coalition jets destroyed yemen's last remaining landing strip. they've been trying to crush the houthi rebel group which is backed by iran. israeli leaders say sunday's protest exposed a open and raw wound at the heart of the israeli society. the soldier at the center of the protest met with prime minister benjamin netanyahu on monday. he said he was stunned by the soldiers beating at the hands of israeli police officers and admitted there is deep problems which need to be solved. there have been days of demonstrations and a violent protest on sunday. police clashed with hundreds of ethiopian-israelis. and the video that sparked the
10:24 pm
protest shows the officers confronting and assaulting the soldier. both officers have been fired. >> there's no way to explain the feeling. only god and i know how i felt. first of all, it's degrading because you're a soldier, a soldier serving the country giving all of yourself and it's degrading. i am for the demonstrations, but i'm against violence. whether it's on policemen or civilians, nobody should get hurt. it's a pity. but i'm for the demonstrations. >> 57 israeli police officers and a dozen protestors were hurt in those clashes in tel-aviv. an israeli advocacy group said they killed more than 2,700 palestinians during the conflict. the group, breaking the silence, said it interviewed more than 60 veterans of the war and its
10:25 pm
findings cast grave doubt on the ethics. here's what one soldier told the group. >> throughout the entire operation, we saw this house on the coastline. no one knew where it actually was or what neighborhood it was in. it posed no threat to us. it wasn't part of the operation. it was by the sea, away from any possible danger. but it was orange and that color drove me nuts. now i'm the tank's gunman. i control all the artillery systems. i am, and i'm the one who shoots, who sees everything that's going on. this orange house drove me crazy. so one day i tell my platoon commander i want to shoot at that orange house and he said go for it. and we fired. >> the israel defense forces issued a statement saying in part, as in the past, breaking the silence refused to provide the idf with any proof of their claims. such conduct makes any
10:26 pm
investigation by the relevant bodies impossible and does not allow for the claims and incidents brought up to be dealt with in an immediate and appropriate manner. a new york police officer shot over the weekend has died. brian moore and his partner were about to question a man suspected of carrying a weapon. police say the suspect opened fire and fled. blackwell was later arrested and identified by the surviving officer. if convicted he faces 15 years to life in prison. >> we head to boston now. dzhokar tsarnaev has shown little emotion in the past few months. but all that changed on monday. >> it was subtle, but it was the most emotion we've seen from the boston marathon bomber. dzhokar tsarnaev seeming to tear up while one of his aunts was on the stand. she was so inconsolable when she got a look at him that she was
10:27 pm
crying and hyper ventilating. instead, they heard from five other family members. aunts and cousins who talked about the little boy they once knew. they hadn't seen him since they moved to the united states when he was 8 years old. they talked about him as a quiet young boy who liked the movie "lion king." they also testified that it's customary for a younger sibling to follow in the footsteps and look up to an older sibling. they also talked about the last time they saw tamerlan. she said it had become clear to her that he had become radicalized in thinking about islam. friends from high school and college talked about the young man they once knew as the defense fights to save his life. short break here. when we come back, sunday's
10:28 pm
shooting in texas is not the first time a prophet muhammad cartoon has led to violence. >> also many people say they still haven't received help after nepal's earthquake. and the government, still being blamed. at 62,000 brush movements per minute, philips sonicare leaves your mouth with a level of clean like you've never felt before. innovation and you. philips sonicare. bring us your aching and sleep deprived. bring us those who want to feel well rested.
10:29 pm
aleve pm. the only one to combine a safe sleep aid... plus the 12 hour pain relieving strength of aleve. be a morning person again with aleve pm. something we do to show resolve. to defend ourselves. to declare victory. so cvs health provides expert support and vital medicines. make a fist for me. at our infusion centers or in patients homes. we help them fight the good fight. cvs health, because health is everything.
10:31 pm
welcome back, everybody. wherever you are, you're watching cnn newsroom live all around the world. the headlines this hour. the fbi is looking into whether the gunmen in sunday's attack had international terror ties. one of the men lived in pakistan in the '90s and the other linked himself to isis online.
10:32 pm
a report find israeli advocacy group is harshly critical of the military's actions. the group, breaking the silence, says they inflicted massive harm to palestinians. pictures now from the sicily port where hundreds of migrants are arriving after an ongoing rescue mission. this comes after the busiest weekend for rescues this year. more than 6,700 migrants were saved by the italian navy and other vessels. they are trying to reach the safe haven of europe escaping the turmoil in their home countries. back now to the main story, the shooting in texas. it's not the first time the prophet muhammad cartoons have led to deadly attacks. >> cartoon images of the prophet
10:33 pm
muhammad have sparked vie lengths, even murder around the world. this weekend's shooting in texas was the first to strike the united states. >> shots fired. shots fired. >> cartoon contest offering $10,000 to the winning muhammad cartoon left two armed assailants dead, shot and killed by one of several police guarding the event. in france in january, two armed men stormed the offices of the magazine "charlie hebdo" in paris killing 12 employees after it published several cartoons of muhammad. during the attack, the gunman said, god a great and that they were avenging the prophet muhammad. a month later in denmark, a gunman attacked a forum featuring a controversial core toonist killing two. >> bang, bang, bang, bang, and what's going on here? >> the attack ended with a
10:34 pm
shooting outside a synagogue. >> the scope of terrorism has increased. the intensity and that it's not being confined to one location. >> the violence first erupted ten years ago when images sparked protests around the world. embassies torched. cartoonists on al qaeda's hit list. the then malaysian prime minister claimed a huge chasm had opened between the west and islam. the images reigniting a debate on whether the cartoons are free speech or religious. to the organizer of this weekend's event in texas, the answer is clear. >> it's ill lus trytive of the violent assault on the freedom of speech.
10:35 pm
nepal government is urging rescue workers from around the world to head home. that's because hope of finding more survivors is now starting to fade. they say experts in clearing the rubble can say otherwise local workers are expected to handle the remaining operations. the quake has killed more than 7,500 people. many remote areas of nepal say they're still not getting aid quickly enough. there's been a lot of criticism of the government which says it's doing the best it can. >> for the first 72 hours, the focus was on search and rescue, sending rangers to the worst affected parts of nepal. a week on, as nepal moves to the relief and rehabilitation phase. >> there's accusations of stockpiling, a bureaucratic
10:36 pm
bottle neck. on the ground, we're seeing goods move pretty quickly. most of these temporary warehouses are empty. >> this is a staging area set up by the united nations world food program. >> the problem is getting enough aid to meet the scale of this disaster into kathmandu. that's very challenging. the airport is small and the roads are difficult. so that's problem number one. the second is of course reaching the affected population. most of which are in very, very remote mountain communities. >> is there an issue of customs of stockpiling? inefficiency in terms of the government here? >> no, not that we've seen. we've had customs extremely well facilitated to be honest. the aircrafts that arrived last night, that cargo is here and ready to go. so we haven't had the challenges that one may think we could have. >> the army says 60% of the relief material has been
10:37 pm
delivered. on average, helicopters are doing a hundred a day and trucks the same. this is where it's being airlifted. you have blankets from china, rice from myanmar, all of this waiting for the helicopters to arrive to be dispatched. >> the helicopters take some time to arrive. there's only 20 of them. many of those who need aid most have yet to receive it. >> translator: it's true, many villages have not received relief because almost all villages are destroyed and our villages are spread out. >> people hear about all this relief coming into nepal and it's not getting to them in the villages so they're getting frustrated. where is the holdup? >> translator: it's not that there's a holdup, we just haven't received enough supplies. in the early days, we also had a
10:38 pm
problem moving goods because of the weather. there was a crisis, but now it's running smoothly. >> the u.n. says there's still a backlog. many relief planes from all over the world waiting to land. but the airport is simply not fit to accommodate the demand. nepal says it's doing what it can to its best ability. but for those who need it, the aid is not moving fast enough. cnn, kathmandu, nepal. still to come here, the republican field is getting bigger for the 2016 race for the white house. we'll have details on the newest candidates who've launched their campaigns and what they bring to the table. t-mobile is breaking the rules of wireless. and the samsung galaxy s6 edge is breaking the rules of design. can't get your hands on it because you're locked down by a carrier?
10:39 pm
break free t-mobile will pay every penny of your switching fees. get ahead of the curve and get your hands on the galaxy s6 edge for $0 down at t-mobile today. man: you run a business. could be any kind of business. and every day you've got important decisions to make, like hiring. where are you gonna find those essential people you need? with ziprecruiter, it's simple. we post your job to over 100 job boards with just a single click, so you can reach millions of qualified candidates. then we'll give you the tools to help you manage, screen, and rank your applicants, all so you can find the right one. try zip recruiter for free today.
10:40 pm
but first, we have a very special guest. come on out, flo! [house band playing] you have anything to say to flo? nah, i'll just let the results do the talking. [crowd booing] well, he can do that. we show our progressive direct rate and the rates of our competitors even if progressive isn't the lowest. it looks like progressive is not the lowest! ohhhh! when we return, we'll find out whether doug is the father. wait, what? having a perfectly nice day, when out of nowhere a pick-up truck slams into your brand new car. one second it wasn't there and the next second... boom! you've had your first accident. now you have to make your first claim. so you talk to your insurance company and... boom! you're blindsided for a second time. they won't give you enough money to replace
10:41 pm
your brand new car. don't those people know you're already shaken up? liberty mutual's new car replacement will pay for the entire value of your car plus depreciation. call and for drivers with accident forgiveness, liberty mutual won't raise your rates due to your first accident. switch to liberty mutual insurance and you could save up to $423 dollars. call liberty mutual for a free quote today at see car insurance in a whole new light. liberty mutual insurance. we're just two days away from one of britain's closest election in decades. right now it appears no party
10:42 pm
will win an outright majority. it shows a tight race between the conservatives and labor. they're in a dead heat, 33 percentage points each. previous polls have shown these two parties remaining pretty much neck and neck. and a clear lead over the greens. prime minister david cameron and the opposition labor party member met monday trying to sway those voters. his opponent asked voters to elect a labor government which will make the country work for working people. >> in the united states the presidential election is more than a year away, but new candidates keep popping up. mike huckabee is expected to announce his bid on tuesday. he will join four other republican candidates already officially in the race. that includes ben carson and
10:43 pm
carly fiorina. fiorina a former hewlett-packard executive. both announced their bids on monday. we take a look at their backgrounds and the challenges they face. >> a black gospel choir in detroit singing eminem's songs. >> i'm ben carson and i'm a capped for president of the united states. >> in a more settle online video, carly fiorina became the only woman in the 2016 gop field. >> our founders never intended us to have a professional political class. >> a pair of presidential campaign kickoffs, notable not because they're front runners, but because they're even interrupting running at all. ben carson, a sob of a single mother. >> i do have a lot of experience
10:44 pm
in solving problems. complex surgical problems that have never been done by anybody before. >> carson was largely a-political until this highly political speech two years ago. >> we spend a lot of money on health care. twice as much per capita as anybody else in the world. yet not very efficient. >> that catapulted carson into republican super stardom. he also became notorious for controversial remarks. >> a lot of people go into prison, go into straight and when they come out, they're gay. >> he later apologized but today owned his ga. >> i'm probably not going to be politically correct because i'm not a politician. >> carly fiorina was a former ceo of hewlett-packard. nominate her and you take the first female president name off the table for hillary clinton. >> like hillary clinton, i too
10:45 pm
have travels hundreds of thousands of miles around the dploeb. but unlike mrs. clinton, i know that flying is an activity, not an accomplishment. >> she laid off thousands but left hp with more than 20 million in severance. >> and our thanks to da na bash for that report rget we go to france now. they have suspended its founding father over controversial remarks he made over world war ii. he called a disciplinary meeting after he repeated his opinion that nazi gas chambers were just a detail of the conflict. the party announced the decision. his daughter who succeeded him says he does not speak for the national front. he says he will fight the suspension. mom and dad have named the newest member of the british monarchy charlotte. and that's just the little princess's first name.
10:46 pm
her full name and who she's named for when we come back. if you can't put a feeling into words, why try? at 62,000 brush movements per minute, philips sonicare leaves your mouth with a level of clean like you've never felt before. innovation and you. philips sonicare. we don't collect killer whales seaworldfrom the wild. to know. and haven't for 35 years. with the hightest standard of animal care in the world, our whales are healthy. they're thriving. i wouldn't work here if they weren't. and government research shows they live just as long as whales in the wild. caring for these whales, we have a great responsibility to get that right. and we take it very seriously. because we love them. and we know you love them too.
10:47 pm
create your own seafood trio... ...if it looks tasty, you order it. choose 3 of 9 dishes for just $15.99. like baked lobster alfredo. brown butter shrimp scampi. and soy-ginger salmon. hey, this is my plate. get yours while you still can. about data breaches in the news. more it's possible your personal information may be at risk. research shows that if your information is compromised due to a data breach, you are 6 times more likely to become a victim of identity theft. now is the time to get protection. sign up today and lifelock will begin monitoring your personal information, including your social security number, alert you about suspicious activity, and if needed, take steps to help restore your losses. you only have one identity. protect it with the best. lifelock.
10:49 pm
10:50 pm
head while using a treadmill. he was the ceo of surveymonkey and the husband of facebook executive sheryl sandberg. 47 years old. admired by all those who knew them. a large storm in new zealand has sent massive waves across the mipi pacific. it's not often you get one of these events. >> yeah, multi-nation impact here with this. getting new video coming out of southern california want to share with you off the top. look at the seas out there. this guy was trying to surf right across some of the massive swells across this region. a high surf advisory in effect until 11:00 p.m. until tuesday. six to 10 foot waves across south-facing beaches. very dangerous swimming
10:51 pm
conditions. people standing too close to the waves could be swept off their feet f. you have plans to head out to these areas, keep that in mind. these swells, pretty extraordinary. here's the setup as far as the high surf advisory in effect. we often talk about this when it comes to the rip currents that set up. we have these breakers, sand bars help create these breakers out over the open water. the waves kick up and interact with the coastal region then you have rip currents form that push back out toward the open water. the best bet is to swim parallel to the coastline. if you want to go out, then you can come back parallel towards the coastline. it's an extremely dangerous situation. officials telling us they've had to rescue a record number of people in 2014 than they ever had to do over the past 12 months. so this is a serious situation. the storm system set all of this
10:52 pm
in motion some seven days ago. thousands of kilometers across the pacific ocean and turned deadly across portions of ecuad ecuador. chile also dealing with this. you see people standing on the beach there taking photographs. just like that, the water takes over. this will create new coastlines for some of these communities and widespread damage. any time you put these waves in morgs, they won't come to a stop until they interact with land. you can see just about everyone in the path of it on those coastal communities dealing with this in the next couple days. >> surfs up, but not in a good way. the newest royal baby name -- baby rather now has a name fit for a princess. the big question, what will her royal nickname be. >> what says hoo ray, it's a girl better than artillery, guns
10:53 pm
and landmarks lit up in pink celebrated a baby formerly known as princess what's her name. >> we have a name. >> everyone together now. >> charlotte elizabeth diana. >> that's perfect. that makes me cry. >> it made whoopi adopt an english accent. >> her name is charlotte elizabeth diana windsor, johnson. i just through the johnson in there. >> will and kate honored three royals with one baby's name. charlotte is the feminine of charles. elizabeth is queen elizabeth and diana is princess diana. this is probably the most famous charlotte these days. >> charlotte. >> i think you are the sexiest woman i ever met.
10:54 pm
>> harry! >> not to be confused with this harry. charlotte's older brother even managed to wave to the press. his mom looked so good that a russian paper quoted women questions kate's pregnancy saying she much had a surrogate. here's one of charlotte's first portraits made by an artist. you know who really blew it? the corgis. a british betting company staged a race to predict the royal baby's name. >> and they're off. >> oh, they were off all right. charlotte wasn't even in the running. we just found out her name and already people are trying to guess her nickname. >> wonder if they'll call her charlie. >> if it's good enough for revlon, it's good enough for the house of windsor. cnn, new york.
10:55 pm
don't think so. okay. u.s. president barack obama returned to late night television on monday. this time on the late show with david letterman. he signs off from cbs on may 20 three of them as president. and he revealed what he plans to do once he is out of office. >> what will you do when you are not president? >> well i was thinking you and me we could play some dominos together. >> dominoes. >> all right. well, all right. >> we can -- you know? go to the local starbuck's. you know, swap stories. >> i want to say something that the president said to me during the commercial break that i was very impressed by. he said to me, so when, when, retire, what are you planning? he says like me, when i leave the office, i plan on taking a month off.
10:56 pm
10:57 pm
if you can't put a feeling into words, why try? at 62,000 brush movements per minute, philips sonicare leaves your mouth with a level of clean like you've never felt before, giving you healthier gums in just two weeks. innovation and you. philips sonicare. and when you bundle your home and auto insurance through progressive, you'll save a bundle! [ laughs ] jamie. right. make a bad bundle joke, a buck goes in the jar. i guess that's just how the cookie bundles. now, you're gonna have two bundles of joy! i'm not pregnant. i'm gonna go. [ tapping, cash register dings ] there you go. [ buzzing ] bundle bee coming! it was worth it! saving you a bundle when you bundle -- now, that's progressive. [ male announcer ] diagnosed with cancer, he didn't just vow to beat it. i vowed to eradicate it from the earth.
10:58 pm
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, 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. ♪
10:59 pm
11:00 pm
attack in texas. we have learned one suspect pledged loyalty to isis whose family is now speaking out. plus, cnn is inside north korea getting a rare look at the demilitarized zone. getting an exclusive interview with the new york university student who is detained in the country. >> and the uk election is just two days away. and errol barnett is on assignment in london. errol? >> good morning to you, rosem y rosemary. the time literally ticking for candidates to make their case to every last voter. the polls are neck and neck between labor/conservatives. looks like no party will
128 Views
Uploaded by TV Archive on