tv Forensic Files CNN June 17, 2015 11:30pm-12:01am PDT
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you are watching continual breaking coverage here on "cnn newsroom" i'm erin burnett. >> and i'm rosemary church. nine people are dead after a white gunman opened fire at a predominantly black church in charleston, south carolina. this tragic incident happened just a few hours ago. one other person was injured and is in the hospital. officials have not yet released the names of the victims. >> police chief greg mullens
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says he believes this is a hate crime. the mayor saying there is no other reason someone would do this. authorities are looking for a white male in his early 20s. >> people in prayer on a wednesday evening, a ritual coming together, praying and worshipping god to have a awful person come in and shoot them is -- is inexplicable, obviously the most intolerable and unbelievable act possible. >> the deadly shooting occurred at the emmanuelle african methodist episcopal church. this is images of people praying outside of the church after the shooting. a vigil is planned at another charleston church a number of
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hours from now. we have been connecting with cnn producer ashley who is on the scene and connects with us over the phone with some of the latest information. we did hear some aspects confirmed by the police a short time ago. what new information have you been able to gather? >> we are waiting to hear official update from some of the local police officers of the chief of police here. but the naacp, they just tweeted that they are talking to some of the local leaders on the ground. this is something they are getting involved in especially now that it has been labelled a hate crime. >> and you have the fbi, the atf helping local officials as well with their investigations. at last check we were meant to get an update from the police in the next half hour. how much activity are you seeing there considering the suspect is still on the loose?
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>> they still have a number of the blocks around the area closed down. we understand that some of that might open back up soon. and we hope to hear from one official here shortly. we're unclear if that is going to be just for the media or just information and updates on the investigation and the situation going on. but there still -- a few dozen people who came out tonight and gathered and prayed. and sang a few worship songs. they are calling for peace. they are calling for calmer heads to prevail given the situation at hand. but most of them are still here and they're just waiting to see what's going to happen next. >> and ashley, we heard from the police chief a short time ago. he called this a hate crime. what are people saying to you about that? >> yeah, well, people are --
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they are surprised. i just spoke to a couple of taxi drivers. and they were somewhat joking with me that they are nervous about picking up a young white man today. you know, they were joking and said of course they would but it did underscore the sense of unease that is happening tonight. they say they don't feel safe but are not running scared. that is their words exactly. but it is the middle of the night and a lot of people are in their homes. the chief of police did urge caution. they did not give details on where the suspect might be, but there is nervousness here tonight. >> reporting from the streets of charleston and we may hear from authorities in the next half hour but we may not. there was quite a delay for the first news conference. as soon as it happens we will
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bring it to you. >> now to another big story we are following, police in upstate new york have released enhanced mug shots showing what richard matt and david sweat might look like after two weeks on the run. they have expanded their hunt for the fugitives and handed out wanted posters across the u.s. border. >> we sat down with a forensic artist. >> imagining what the fugitives might look like after ten days is the job of a forensic artist. >> i'm looking at immediate ways to disguise a face. >> reporter: he received training for the fbi has been doing these sketches for 20 years. >> a former police officer and a forensic artist. when you look at this case in new york, do you think that these guys have totally altered their identities? >> well, i would say that that's probably a very good
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possibility. my experience has been that when they're out and they're trying to get away they're going to do everything they can to disguise themselves and make sure that nobody recognizes them. >> reporter: he is not involved with the new york case but we asked him to come up with additional ways that the fugitives might have changed their appearance. first richard matt, here is the original and the altered creation. >> he could evade capture? >> at least initially, definitely. i gave him a full beard. he could be dyeing his hair. >> and with eye wear, the public would have a difficult time recognizing him. >> well, i think they would think twice. i wouldn't say they would immediately pick him out. >> reporter: now david sweat. this is the original mug and this is what he could do. >> changing the clothing and
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extending the facial hair, and then also adding some eye wear to kind of distract people from looking at their eyes as well. >> reporter: hair on the face and head are the two main ways? which men could change their appearance. just like harrison ford did in "the fugitive". >> i didn't kill my wife. >> i don't care. >> reporter: they could be doing simple things to their faces and no one would spot them immediately. that's why these photos could be instructive or instrumental in cracking the case. >> reporter: anything that keeps the public aware and keep this case alive for people to be on the lookout is extremely valuable. >> reporter: dan timing, cnn, san jose, california. and we will take a very short break here. coming up, they are separated from their families and being
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forced to do terrible things. we will have the next installment of our report of young migrants traveling from egypt to italy. we're back in a moment. with it neutralizes stomach acid and is the only product that forms a protective barrier that helps keep stomach acid in the stomach where it belongs. for fast-acting, long-lasting relief. try gaviscon®. for fast-acting, long-lasting relief. across america, people are their type 2 diabetes... ...with non-insulin victoza. for a while, i took a pill to lower my blood sugar, but it didn't get me to my goal. so i asked my doctor about victoza. he said victoza works differently than pills, and comes in a pen. victoza is proven to lower blood sugar and a1c. it's taken once a day, any time. and the needle is thin. victoza is not for weight loss, but it may help you lose some weight. victoza is an injectable prescription medicine that may improve blood sugar in adults with type 2 diabetes when used with diet and exercise.
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tell your doctor about all the medicines you take and if you have any medical conditions. taking victoza with a sulfonylurea or insulin may cause low blood sugar. the most common side effects are nausea, diarrhea, and headache. some side effects can lead to dehydration, which may cause kidney problems. if your pill isn't giving you the control you need... ask your doctor about non-insulin victoza. it's covered by most health plans. then boom... what happened? stress, fun, bad habits kids, now what? let's build a new, smarter bed using the dualair chambers to sense your movement, heartbeat, breathing. introducing the sleep number bed with sleepiqtm technology. it tracks your sleep and tells you how to adjust for a good, better and an awesome night. the difference? try adjusting up or down.
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you'll know cuz sleep iq™ tells you. only at a sleep number store where you'll find the best buy rated mattress with sleepiq technology. know better sleep with sleep number. back to our breaking news coverage in the u.s. police say nine people are dead after a mass shooting at a predominately black church in charleston, south carolina. the suspect is still at large at this hour. authorities say he's a white male in his early 20s wearing a gray sweat shirt and blue jeans. police have yet to identify any of the victims. a vigil is planned for noon at local time at another church in charleston. and the center doesn't provide a date for this photo. but the group tweeted its support for the congregation and the community there. it says and i'm quoting here, we
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have to be conscious of how our social media response can cause unrest or be detrimental and urged the charleston police to be vigilant in apprehending the person or persons responsible. ♪ this week we have been telling you about the dangerous journey being taken by young migrants from egypt to italy. >> now while some may end up in state care others end up suffering a worse fate forced into prostitution or the drug trade for survival. >> reporter: a man approaches a boy for sex at a train station. two boys holding drugs for criminal gangs.
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these are just a few of the stories of children exploited and trafficked for criminal gain right here in the heart of rome. rome's station is one of the country's main rail terminals. this is where thousands of illegal migrant children arrive, desperate to make money however they can. we've been directed here by local contacts who tell us the boys work the corners on the streets outside. as we drive past as if on cue we see a group of egyptian kids approached by an italian man. furtds down the street other kids seem to be on the lookout. we watch as money and something else is exchanged. it's broad daylight and we are right in the center of rome and groups of boys were clustered together. we saw them, in a known pickup location. as soon as they saw the camera, they disappeared.
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one of the boys later agrees to talk to us. he is one of the thousands of egyptian children that have disappeared out of the italian care system. for his safety we disguised his identity and his voice. he calls the sex trafficking and the drug selling he is involved with is the illegal stuff. >> the illegal stuff is the easiest. a friend will be working in these kind of things will say come i'll help you. >> reporter: i ask if it's hard living this way? >> yes you but what are the options. our parents spent thousands to get us here. >> reporter: table football, ping-pong, typical teenage pursuits but this is not a usual local youth center. this center is a refuge for these unaccompanied children. it's somewhere where they can
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have a meal, meet friends, perhaps even remember how to be children again if only for a little while. we had come to rome as part of an investigation retracing the steps of the unaccompanied egyptian children arriving in italy in the thousands. children smuggled here can remain in the country legally. impoverished egyptian parents are paying thousands of dollar first the mirage of a better life. thousands of them disappear making their way to the big cities. they are ready to do whatever they can to earn money. and this means very often exploitation. unfortunately, they found another alternative, which was prostitution. so either they were exploited or they thought that this was the only option available to earn money and send them back for
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their families. very often we have heard children crying and saying they didn't want to come. they didn't want to stay. they would love to go back to their families, to their country. >> reporter: mahmud works for save the children. he listens to their stories. the families are not really -- they don't care. they only care for the money that arrives here. they don't ask how did you get the money? they don't ask about nothing. and we tell them that they are making something illegal, i don't think they would mind. they would say okay if he send me money, never mind. >> reporter: this is the chief of police in the station. he has seen some of the worst of the child exploitation up close. sex trafficking, drug selling
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and robbery to the gangs, the children are an invaluable asset. >> translator: they use children under the age of 14 because according to italian law they cannot be taken to trial. >> reporter: the team has found cases of children who paid for them to be smuggled into italy who are trafficked by the same criminal network for the purpose of committing these crimes. but his jurisdiction is limited to this station. >> translator: we need to fight the abandonment of the children by the parents. >> reporter: but the parents, of course, are far, far away. and whether they don't know the truth or don't care, the tide of children flooding italian shores floods on unchecked bringing with it lost childhoods and young lives destroyed, perhaps beyond repair. cnn, rome.
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release a long awaited and highly controversial letter on climate change. let's zero in now on places around the world where climate change is having a major impact. brazil, india and china. >> in beijing you get a sense of china's breakneck growth. and china is the world's largest emitter of greenhouse victims. and in coastal areas, droughts are hurting. this coal pour plant has been shut down by the authorities. they want to cap emissions by 2030 here in beijing and across the country to try and limit china's carbon footprint. david mckenzie, cnn, beijing. hundreds of millions of people live in areas like this,
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many sleeping and living in the outdoors, some with makeshift she shelters like this. making them susceptible to heat spells, cold spells and flooding and cyclones. the poor don't have access to the most basic of resources. they don't have reliable electricity or running water. they store water in these containers over here. some of the reasons why more than 2,000 people died in the heat wave a few weeks ago. in a country that is hugely dependent on the weather, the yearly monsoons in particular, experts say these recent erratic weather patterns are not only affecting foot output and the security of the economic but people's lives in general. cnn, knew delhi. southeastern brazil has been hit by the worst drought in over 80 years.
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that means water rationing with many families going days or weeks without water. deforestation in the amazon and climate change have been blamed. in some cities police have had to escort water tankers. reservoirs are at historic lows. some are building their own wells. for those who can't it means spending a small fortune on water tanks and praying for rain. the rainy season is still more than four months away. cnn, sao paulo. we want to recap our top story, the breaking situation out of charleston, south carolina. >> police say nine people are dead after a white gunman opened fire at a predominantly black church just a few hours ago. one other person was injured and is in the hospital.
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officials have not released the names of the victims. >> police chief greg mullens says he believes this was a hate crime. authorities are look for one man in his 20s. the emanuel african methodist episcopal church is the oldest in the southern u.s. more on the shooting is coming up after this short break. do stay with us. look aon tripadvisor.l hotel wait. why leave the site? don't you know the tripadvisor you've always trusted for reviews, book! now checks over 200 websites to find the best price?
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-- captions by vitac -- www.vitac.com hello again and welcome to our viewers in the united states and all around the world. i'm rosemary church. >> i'm erin burnett. thanks for joining us. >> we are following breaking news in the u.s. from south carolina where several police agencies are searching for a gunman who opened fire at a church in charleston. >> the police chief says the white suspect believed to be in his early 20s shot several people in the historic american church on wednesday night. at this hour, nine people have died from this incident. earlier
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