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tv   CNN Newsroom Live  CNN  June 22, 2015 9:00pm-10:01pm PDT

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xfinity is perfect for people who want more entertainment for their money. still on the run, but evidence suggests that the new york escapees may not have gotten very far. and president obama used a very provocative word to make his point. a glimpse of life under isis. an exclusive report from a liberated town in syria. a warm welcome to our viewers in the united states and around the world. i'm zain asher. >> and i'm john vause. this is "cnn newsroom." we begin this hour with the
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newly focussed man hunt for those escapees in new york. cnn has been told investigators have found dna from richard matt and david sweat in a cabin in owl's head new york. >> it is about 20 miles or 32 kilometers from the clinton correctional facility where the two men escaped back on june 6. now police also say someone saw the men running into the woods over the weekend and investigators are look at a list of hotel guests in the area who may have checked in and known the escapees. >> sources tell us the tools matt and sweat used for the escape may have been smuggled inside a chunk of frozen hamburger meat. they were allowed to cook their own food. >> police have been shifting their resources to a small town called owl's head in upstate new
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york. it's a small vacation area dotted with a lot of cabins. >> reporter: the people who live in the tiny hamlet have never seen anything like this. >> we've developed evidence that the suspects may have spent time in a cabin in this area. we have law enforcement officers from around the state and around the nation here today searching for more evidence. >> reporter: the break suggests the men need provisions and are des pralt. right now we're in the area that these men could be, based on the didn't apartment the adirondack park is beautiful. this is the topography that the searchers are dealing with. these men could be absolutely anywhere. it's heavily wooded. anytime the police go in the woods they could encounter the men. everyone who drives into the area gets checked including residents and news media.
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hello, gentlemen. we're cnn. you want me to open up my trunk? >> yes, please. >> reporter: you want us to open our trunk? many residents have left others refuse to. shannon hart visited cabins he takes care of not far from the one the escapees were in. is there a little fear about what you might find inside? >> no. >> reporter: how come? [ clicking noise ] >> reporter: the cabin where the dna was found was up to the woods. the encloser you get to the cabin the more weapons and law enforcement authorities you see. police are well aware this could end violently in what has always been a peaceful small town. >> gary tuckman joins us. you say the police are aware this could have a violent end? >> reporter: these guys are
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capable of anything. after all, they have nothing to lose. they are considered armed and dangerous. they don't know for sure if they have weapons, but they will be acting like they do have weapons as they try to pursue them. >> why do you think officials believe that these escapees may have been monitoring police communication, and if that's true, is there any indication as to how they got ahold of a police scanner? >> reporter: it would help them a great deal if they had cell phones. but cell phones don't do much good a short distance from here. there's no cell service. but many of the vacation cabins have police scanners inside of them because people don't have cell phones. so there is a thought that perhaps these men had access to a police scanner inside a cabin where the dna was found. >> so that could be an indication as to why they've been able to stay one step ahead of the police. >> reporter: but they are reasonably certain the guys
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haven't gotten too far away from here. they only got about 50 kilometers from the prison. and that's when they had a chance to get away when no one knew they were gone. now they have about 1,000 police officers surrounding the area. they are reasonably certain these two men are close by. >> believe it or not, these two are not the only fugitives to evade law enforcement for several weeks. some have been on the run for decades and have never been caught. later on in the show we will be looking at some criminals in the united states who actually managed to run from the law. stay with us for that. on to some other news we're following here. u.s. president obama's going to be traveling to charleston south carolina on friday. that's where he will be delivering the eulogy for reverend clementa pinckney. one of the nine gunned down at the emanuel episcopal church.
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>> the first lady and joe biden will also attend that funeral. the admitted killer dylann roof says he shot the black worshippers in hopes of sparking a race war. investigators are digging deeper into a 2,000-word manifesto on a website registered to roof. >> and cnn has more on what may have prompted roof's radicalization. >> reporter: the manifesto, arrest records and his own notes we can track his movements. his racist awakening comes with the death of trayvon martin in 2012. the unarmed florida teen shot and killed by george zimmerman who many accused of racial profiling. >> why is he uttering that word? other than that's how he feels? >> reporter: at the same time roof and martin are the same age, 17. according to the manifesto, he
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began researching the case online. more importantly, this prompted me to type in the words black on white crimes into google. three years later, roof begins to act on his hate. february 9, he registers his white supremacist website. police are called when he asks out of the ordinary questions at a mall such as the number of employees and when they come and go. he's taken into custody for having saboxen, a controlled substance that requires a prescription. we begin to see him posing on sullivan's island, south of charleston once the largest slave port in north america. later he's in elm wood cemetery which has a large section
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dedicated to confederate soldiers. april 3rd using gift money for his birthday, he obtains a gun. here dressed in black, standing at boone hall one of mesh's oldest working plantations. posing with two slave mannequins. april 17 we see the gun dylann roof's thought to have purchased. three days later here he is with the same weapon pointing directly at the camera. shortly after that he's back at charleston at another plantation in front of a faded wooden sign reading sacred burial graupd for our african-american ancestors. days later, he poses at sunset on the beach. it seems innocent enough until you look at his feet and see the number 1488. according to the southern property law center that is a
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common white supremacist code. he drinks heavily and takes pills while spilling increasingly threatening talk. >> i didn't believe him when he was saying he wanted to do something crazy and that he wanted a race war. >> reporter: roof concludes his manifesto saying i chose charleston because it is the most historic city in my state and at one time had the highest ratio of blacks to whites in the country. the last video is not taken by him but by a security camera at the emanuel ame church. the suspect now resides in the county jail under a suicide watch. his travels of hatred finally at an end. martin savage charleston south carolina. and some photos showing roof waving the confederate flag.
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which is adding to the debate over the flag at the state capital. >> nikki haley and other politicians have joined in the call to remove the flag from the capitol grounds. also walmart has said it will stop selling confederate goods in its stores and website. another retailer sears says it will stop selling products that bear the confederate flag. >> and amazon and ebay have been asked whether they will remove confederate products but neither site has responded. >> now that removal could be a reality in south carolina. we see a lot of presidential candidates weighing in. some say it should come down. others say it is a state decision and they're treading carefully. they want to stay out of t brianna keilar has details. >> reporter: with a political debate raging over the confederate flag in front of
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seiche's state house, republican governor nikki haley looked to ease tensions. >> today we are here in a moment of unity without ill will to say it's time to move the flag from the capital grounds. >> reporter: flanked by democrats and republicans, haley tried to unify her state as the flag controversy threatened to tear it apart. >> the murderer now locked up said he hoped his action would start a race war. we have an opportunity to show that not only was he wrong but that just the opposite is happening. >> reporter: several gop presidential hopefuls praised haley's moves. friday lindsey graham said this. >> there's a confederate war member or ral out front and an african-american memorial. >> reporter: but today he said it was time for the flag to go. before governor haley's announcement jeb bush reminded voters that in florida we acted,
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moving the flag from the state grounds to a museum where it belonged but he did not explicitly say south carolina should do the same. marco rubio who opposed bush's move in 2001 this weebsd said it was a state issue. >> that's the decision for the state to make and i think they've made the right one like they did in the past. >> reporter: and mike huckabee completely dismissed the issue. >> for those of us running for president everyone's being baited with this question as if that has anything whatsoever to do with running for president and my position is it most certainly does not. >> reporter: rand paul and santorum received money from earl holt iii. all three are donating the money to a fund to help families.
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all of this and the tweet from mitt romney. he condemned the flag on south carolina's capital grounds, creating a conundrum for republicans in the early primary state where the most confer tough part of the republican base determines the victor. brianna keilar, cnn, washington. and in the wake of the racially motivated shooting president obama has been speaking very candidly about race. >> now america's first black president used the n-word in a pod cast with marc maron. >> racism we are not cured of. clearly. >> reporter: the president with one word in a comedian's garage for a pod cast hits more bluntly than any speech. >> and it's not just a matter of it not being polite to say
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nigger in public. that's not the measure of whether racism still exists or not. it's not just a matter of overt discrimination societies don't overnight commitlypletely kree race everything that erase everything that happened 200 or 300 years earlier. >> reporter: he says it just came out. >> the president was merely making an argument in an informal setting. >> he had to have known that this was going to get a reaction right? >> i don't think he was surprised by that, but die think that it has prompted careful consideration of what he said. >> reporter: it's the latest of several strikingly yes motional statements after the charleston shootings. >> communities like this have had to endure tragedies like this too many times. i refuse to act as if this is the new normal. >> reporter: this may be the first time since the trayvon martin shooting three years ago
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that the president spoke directly personally enough that it was controversial. >> if i had a son, he'd look like trayvon. >> reporter: he has long fielded criticism within the black community, seeming reluctant to speak on race, and trying to temper his words and strike a perfect balance. >> there is not a black america and a white america and latino america and asian america. there's united states of america. the legacy -- >> reporter: as for the surprise of hearing the president say the n-word he did write it and refer to it more than a dozen times in his book "dreams from my father." more of which we're hearing now. some analysts are saying it is about time we hear president obama speak so directly on this issue. and of course not everybody's happy that he decided to use the word. and we're also hearing from people who say that they're
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surprised people are surprised by it. it's hard to imagine though that the president didn't think about the provocative power of using that word when he decided to even if it was on the spot. i mean this is a word that we don't even feel comfortable using when we're talking about that word. it's clear, though that this kind of discussion is exactly what the white house wants. michelle kosinski cnn, the white house. there is much more on president obama's most recent remarks on race on our website. cnn.com. and with that we're going to take a quick break here. when we come back, an isis commander is killed in iraq and the u.s. says he was linked to this attack in benghazi three years ago. we'll have a full report coming up. and a syrian town now free of isis but as arwa damon found out, there are still plenty of scars there. our report is just ahead.
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welcome back everyone pentagon said an isis operative was linked to the attack in
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benghazi is now dead. >> he was killed by a u.s. drone strike in iraq. >> reporter: the pentagon is now confirming that a us drone strike on june 15th killed ali al harsy. he was a suspect and linked on the attack in benghazi. pentagon is hoping that his death will help stem that flow of recruits. after the strike took place, the white house first informed families of the bsz attack that al harzi was dead. jim sciutto, cnn, washington. a town in syria is now
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waking up from a long nightmare after two years under isis occupation it was finally liberated by kurdish fighters. >> and cnn was able to get to the town and we're now learning from residents there just how difficult life has been under the control of these militants. in this exclusive report arwa damon went to harrowing places where isis delivered its own form of brutal justice. >> reporter: we traveled to the town with the ypg that is currently in control of the town. and in just the brief few hours that we were there we were still able to get a bit of an insight into just how chilling life under isis really was. no one is around to tell us who was held here. or what horrors transpired at the tal abyad prison.
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on one cell, splochs of red. a piece of paper about what is considered a crime under isis. in this case, taking god's name in vain. among the many draconian directives of isis rule. another forbidden act, smokering. this is the first time that cigarettes are being sold in the street this man was saying and this is the first shipment he's brought in. he's saying that there's a cage at the roundabout down the street that they would put people in for punishment for doing things like selling cigarettes. we're taken to see it and told the story of a man who spent three days here for flaying cards, also banned. the streets of tal abyad also clean. they ordered those accused of crimes to pick up trash.
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the ominous black flag dom fating every wall, lest any one forgets who is in control. and we find blank pads. store front after store front is painted with a word in red meaning that it was property of islamic state. there is a group of men who don't want to be on camera because they still have relatives in raqqah. but they talked about how wretched life was. how no one dared stand up to them or speak out, but they chose to continue living here because what they have here, that was everything that they possessed in life. and trying to survive as a refugee would be just too difficult. and all of them when we were speaking to them pointed to this roundabout. this was called the roundabout of death, because it was here that isis carried out its
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executions. the remnants of isis plague this town where it seems that reality was worse than what most could ever imagine. isis may have been driven out of tal abyad, but the future of so many still remains uncertain. >> thanks to our arwa damon for that report. but militants now gone life really has not returned to normal. >> arwa spoke with residents about life after isis. and she learned that the impact of those two years is still being felt there right now. both physically in the form of explosive traps and psychologically as well. >> reporter: a certain unease emanates from the adults anger evident in their voices. their answers short and sharp. this man says isis forced him to
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purchase from them black clothing for his little girls. the three say they were sometimes scared. now they are just enjoying being outside without head scarves and they want to go back to school. >> and arwa is moving an exclusive view inside the city concludes tomorrow, right here on cnn. you won't want to miss it. when we come back u.s. and chinese officials are set to meet for annual talks. this time it's the timing. it's just it's a little complicated. the u.s. believes china is behind a massive hacking scandal which seems to get bigger by the deal. plus european leaders say they're making progress in the greek debt crisis but will it be enough for the country to avoid default. you know, when i started my business, a lot of people didn't believe in me. but things took off when i got a domain and built my website all at godaddy. now i can tell the doubters to stick it.
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. thanks for staying with us everybody. are you watching "cnn newsroom," live all around the world. i'm john vause. >> and i'm zain asher. in the wake of last week's shooting in south carolina the state governor and several senators say it is time to remove the confederate flag from the state's capital. the killer who is pictured holding the confederate flag says he shot at the church goers to spark a race war. and a man tied to the attack on the u.s. consulate in benghazi has been killed.
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he worked throughout north africa and the middle east. the european space agency has successfully launched a satellite into orbit. sentinel two will gather information on agriculture, forestry and pollution. in the meantime we take you back to one of our top stories. police in new york say they have a confirmed lead for escaped murders richard matt and david sweat. their dna has turned up in a cabin near the prison in a town known as owl's head. it's a popular area in the mountains. >> other sources say that the tools that they used to break out may have been smuggled into the prison inside frozen hamburger meat. they've been on the run since june 6, going on two weeks or 18 days. these aren't the first fugitives
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to be on the run in the united states. >> here's the thing. for every bad guy that is captured dozens more escape roam free. >> reporter: it is a tale as old as time. billy the kid, bonnie and collide and jochbhn dillinger. most recently eric frain. law enforcement laser focussed on where to move next. >> things they did, the personalities that they have and we draw a personality profile on them. figure out pretty much how they think. >> reporter: and each one thinks differently. last fall, there was eric frain. the man hunt for him lasted a long 48 days.
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accused of murdering a state trooper and injuring another, authorities lost sight of him as he evaded capture in the dense woods of pennsylvania. >> everyone has one mission, and that mission is to apprehend this individual. >> reporter: u.s. marshals stumbled upon frain at an abandoned airport. he wasn't armed at the time although authorities did find weapons close to him, including a sniper rifle. christopher dorner kept nearly all of los angeles on edge two years ago. the fired lapd sharpshooter had authorities guessing for nine days. suspected of shooting four people police got a tip he was in the mountains east of los angeles, a man hunt ensued and dorner panicked scaring locals with his gun, carjacking a truck, finally engaging in a shootout with fish and wildlife agents of the fugitive barricaded himself inside a log
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cabin. gunfire echoed through the mountains. the cabin he was in then went up in flames as the whole country watched it unfold live on tv. dorner's body was found in the charred remains. it took law enforcement five years to find eric rudolph. responsible for a bombing in atlanta's centennial park. in 1998 he was added to the fbi's most-wanted list. five years later, rudolph is captured and arrested in north carolina by a rookie 21 year old police officer. these fugitives were caught. but what about the ones who get away? never to be found? according to the u.s. marshal service, there are currently 18,000 active federal warrants representing people the law is looking for but still hasn't
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found. gene ca sar jean casarez, cnn, new york. a massive breach of security is said to be believed four times than first thought. now u.s. officials say the number is estimated to be 18 million people having been hacked. >> investigators blame china for the hack. but chinese say they weren't involved. it's a touchy subject, especially since u.s. and chinese official rgs meeting in washington tuesday for talks aimed at improving trust and cooperation. >> the irony is clear. we want to bring in david mckinzie live for us in beijing. so david these talks are taking place under a cloud of suspicion, mistrust. i guess the question is how is this hack going to affect u.s./china relations in the long term? >> well certainly this issue and many previous accusations
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against china for hacking into u.s. corporation, government and in this case some 18 million federal prospective current and former employees as you just described according to u.s. officials will put an bit of a dampen on the talks. officials want to have very constructive and blunt talks with the chinese. several hundred chinese officials have descended on the u.s. to conduct these seventh round of strategic economic talks, and they are a very important set of talks. i think it will have an issue and be a major topic of conversation certainly behind closed doors there, but the u.s./china relationship is complex and is around a whole lot of issues both economic and strategic. so it remains to be seen if they come with some kind of concrete proposal on how to lessen the impact of these accusations. >> no doubt these talks will be awkward to say the least.
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as i mentioned, we're hearing that these talks, this hack rather, is four times larger than predicted. we're hearing that 18 million people could be affected by this. any idea how the u.s. government managed to underestimate the impact of this hack by so much? >> reporter: well their accusations from intelligence officials is that these groups of federal agencies, like the office of personnel management which it's effectively holding company as it were, a section of the government which works with a lot of different government agencies. they say that the level of cyber security was weak, that once even they were previous hacks announced they didn't put in even basic security including encryption. now those closed door meetings and hearings in the senate are certainly poking holes in the defense of the u.s. they have said that china's responsible, but interestingly,
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the obama administration hasn't directly accused beijing of anything and no evidence has come through yet or concrete evidence. so that might be because the investigations by the fbi and others are ongoing, but certainly, in previous accusations they gave much harder or clearer evidence they said that pointed to specific wings of in particular the people's liberation army here in china, involved in hacking attacks. the chinese for their part have said this is irresponsible and at that they themselves are a victim of hacking. so you know it's a kind of he said/she said at this point, zain? >> all right, david mckinzie, thank you. it's something to note that this hack went on for nearly a year. and china continues to deny it saying these accusations are irresponsible. thank you so much. we'll stay in china where analysts fear a stock market
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bubble may be about to bust. the shanghai has lost more than 13 points in the last few trading sessions. that's the worst tumble since 2008's financial crisis. let's take a look at the numbers. the nikkei in tokyo up 1.5%. the shanghai composite, well that is not actually right. because it is now down according to the latest numbers, just by 2.5%. the hang seng as you can see, up by a touch of .22%. and the s&p asx up by 1.28%. euro zone leaders say they are making pro guess toward a greek debt proposal. >> over the weekend they have received some support from the country's creditors. angela merkle remains cautious.
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listen. >> translator: all the participanting in the discussion want greece to stay in the euro sown. while greece presented today certain progress but the discussion made it clear that there is still a lot of work to be done and that the time left is very short, therefore we really need to focus on the work. >> time is running out for greece. they have about one week to secure a new deal or risk missing the june 30th repayment deadline to the imf. a lot of people fearing they could go into default or worse greece leaving the euro zone. we'll take a short break. when we come back not a lot of relief in sight for pakistanis who have been sweltering in record-high heat. we'll tell you what's making it so much worse, just ahead. ♪ ♪woo-oo-oo woo-oo-oo-ooooo♪ ♪ ♪woo-oo-oo♪
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♪ whoa what are you doing? putting on a movie. i'm trying to watch the game here. look i need this right now ok? come on i don't want to watch that. too bad this is happening. fine, what if i just put up the x1 sports app right here. ah jeez it's so close. he just loves her so much. do it. come on. do it. come on! yes! awww, yes! that is what i'm talking about. baby. call and upgrade to get x1 today. ♪ we have this just in to cnn. flights in new zealand are back in the air after being grounded.
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there was an internal network problem and flights were suspended as a precaution. flight radar 24 data shows that there are flights back in the air right now. there have been multiple departures from christchurch. now pakistan's largest city, karachi is stifling with a heat wave responsible for 140 deaths. >> many pakistanis are observing ramadan, so they're foregoing food and water during the day. >> pedram javaheri joins us. we know it's a hot country, but this is out of the ordinary. >> it is. >> and it's made so much worse with an infrastructure that cannot deal. >> 20 million plus people living in karachi. these temperatures are in the mid-40s, about 115 to 125
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degrees. >> we're not talking air conditioning. that's just in a few places in karachi. you don't even have a ceiling fan. >> that's right. your body does a fantastic job. >> people are overwhelmed by what's going on. we saw something similar happen in india where 2,000 people died. >> you can't go to the tap to get a drink of water, because the water's not safe to drink. >> that's right. >> many people would think go get a clean bottle of water. >> a few weeks will be when the cooler temperatures will trickle in. we could see 1200 to eventually 1500 fatalities. >> in san diego it's not the heat but the smog? >> you don't hear about that too often. india, china, and we have the andes mountains acting similar
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in china with los angeles with the mountains, and they're in winter now across the southern hemisphere. so you take a look at the perspective. the scale of it is beautiful when you think of the andes mountains, but sants iago has done everything to keep this from happening. officials putting a pre-emergency in order. they shut down 700 factories, but the air quality just shooting through the roof. we know the chilean coast range, the large bowl-shaped valley makes it a prime location when you have stagnant air. and that's precisely what's happening. the weather pattern has not been helping. the a rainfall absolutely nonexistent. air quality in the unhealthy katz gor category. you can pick out the valley filled with smog even from
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space. it's taking place because of the pollute tantss being trapped at the lower levels. the forecast unfortunately remains rather dry. you take a look at the smoke and smog perspective and the images are remarkable coming out of the city. we know football tournament copa america taking place in a couple days. officials haven't decided if they're going to shut the match down because the air is unusually unhealthy for this part of the world. >> it's going to be bad if that happens. >> it is. >> thank you, pedram. samsung is apologizing for its medical center's handling of the mers outbreak. an official apology was offered to the people of south korea and condolences for those affected by the virus. >> the company says it will take full responsibility for the treatment of all remaining patients and will support the development of a vaccine against
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this virus. so far, 175 cases of mers have been confirmed. okay. coming up after this short break, puff daddy or better known as p-diddy, arrested. we'll take a look at what led to a worldwide superstar getting locked up in los angeles. it's a good thing they land on their feet. one cat's perilous ride in the skies.
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growing up, we were german. we danced in a german dance group. i wore lederhosen. when i first got on ancestry i was really surprised that i wasn't finding all of these germans in my tree. i decided to have my dna tested through ancestry dna. the big surprise was we're not german at all. 52% of my dna comes from scotland and ireland. so, i traded in my lederhosen for a kilt. ancestry has many paths to discovering your story. get started for free at ancestry.com. ♪cause you really hold me down like that♪ ♪cause you really know what's down like that♪ ♪like the universe is singing a song♪ ♪(hoooo-oo, hooo)♪ ♪do you feel it when you write like...♪
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we have this just in to cnn, a small plane registered to james horner has crashed, killing the pilot. we don't know at this time if horner was flying the plane. the faa says the crash happened monday morning in santa barbara. he is none forknown for writing the music for titanic and avatar. taylor swift is one of the most powerful voices in music right now. >> in this posted on tumblr
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taylor swisft released her decision to withhold a song. shirley halpin says it's part of an ongoing struggle as the music business adapts to the digital age. >> i think what we're getting to is a new economic model that really decides what the value of music is. and that's something that taylor swift put out there just by addressing the matter in her letter to apple. >> and apple seems to listening and an executive tweeted what appears to be a reversal of that policy, saying i am elated and relieved they listened to us. >> she says she was doing it on the part of newer artists, not for herself. >> someone like taylor swift doesn't stand up to the big companies, no one else will. in the meantime shawn dead
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he kooms has been arrested. >> he was accused of using a kettle bell in the alleged assault. no one was seriously hurt. the son plays football at the school and the bail was set at $50,000. we move on to cats. >> john loves cats. >> she was an accidental stow away on an ultralight flight. jeanne moos has more. >> reporter: this is the story of an instructor and a passenger flying in an ultralight airplane when suddenly the cat's out of the bag or at least out of the wing. not that anyone noticed at first. the two were flying over french guiana when the pilot did a
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double take. there's a moment when your eyes go up. >> that whoops moment. >> reporter: as in whoops how did i miss the cat asleep or hiding in the fabric of the wing when doing the pre-flight check. she was already the flielt school's mascot. now fur blowing in the wind she earned her wings. is she meowing? >> most powerful meow. >> reporter: she may have been a no-name cat before but now they're thinking of calling her stow away. not since cats parachuted. ♪ i believe i can fly ♪ >> reporter: in an insurance company ad has an airborne feline been so popular. the pilot immediately headed back to the airport. this was no twilight zone episode when william shatner saw a monster on the wing got
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out his gun, got sucked out and shot it. the goal here was to not freak out the cat. commenters wonder why the lady didn't reach out to the cat and get ahold of it once they touched down. the answer was obvious. they didn't want the cat to do what she did when the pilot reached foreher on the ground. but up there high above earth, stow away must have thought she crossed into -- >> the twilight zone. >> reporter: jeanne moos cnn. new york. >> hold on tight. >> yeah kiltsy. thank you for joining us. i'm john vause. >> and i'm zain asher. we'll be back with another hour after this break, don't go away. hosting. ♪ an hors d'oeuvre for the table? ♪ perhaps even an elegant gesture for the neighbors.
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huh, hm, ohh... monster? she seemed so nice at dinner. i'm back! ahh! uhh... whatcha doing? ohh, just... watchin' law & order. awww, you're nervous. that's so cute. xfinity internet and tv customers call today for your free x1 upgrade and self-install kit. ♪ two weeks on the run may be coming to an end. there are new clues in the man hunt on the killers who escaped from a new york prison. politicians weigh in on controversial symbols, the very ugly past. and what could be the worse hack on the u.s. could be worse

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