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tv   New Day  CNN  July 7, 2015 4:00am-5:01am PDT

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with. >> here is the caveat. he admits he gave drugs, but never administered them. sara is here to parse these revelations. >> these are fascinating admissions from bill cosby. so many women who accused him accused him not only of sexual assault but they were drugged. they remember him fixing them a drink. in the newly released court documents, he's careful with his words. for so many years, he admitted to nothing. this is the first time we are hearing him admit to anything at all. a bombshell in the ongoing cosby sexual assault controversy. shockingly revealed in his own words. the admission surfacing in unsealed court documents. the comedian testifying that in
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2005 he obtained seven prescriptions of quaalude a powerful hypnotic and sedative admitting his attempt to drug young women he wanted to have sex with. a former temple university employee case was settled in 2006. in the deposition obtained and made public by the associated press, the plaintiff's attorney now questioning the 77-year-old cosby. >> was it in your mind you were going to use the quaaludes on women you wanted to have sex with? yes. you gave them to other people? yes. did you give them quaaludes without your knowledge, cosby's lawyer objects, telling him not to answer the question. the woman in that case accusing cosby of drugging and molesting her, giving her three blue
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pills. cosby's recollection with an encounter with a woman in las vegas. she meets me backstage, i give her quaaludes, we then have sex. cosby's lawyers insisting two of the accusers were aware they were taking quaaludes. more than 25 women publicly alleged cosby raped or assaulted them. >> it was very powerful. it came on very quickly. the room started to spin. at that point, i knew he drugged me. cosby has long denied drugging and sexually molesting these women and has never been criminally charged. barbara bowman an accuser, many credit for paving the way calls the revelations a game changer. >> i think we are going to be heard now.
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i think this is just the beginning. >> now, cosby fought the release of these court documents saying it would be embarrassing to him. his attorney could not be reached for comment. when you read through, you see hints of alluding to the fact quaaludes in the 70s were used in a party scene. this is the first time we are hearing his side or his version of these events. >> absolutely sara. that's what makes this so revealing. we want to bring in victoria one of the women who says bill cosby drugged and sexually assaulted her. good morning. nice to see you again. >> thank you, nice to see you. >> tell us how you felt when you heard the revelations of bill cosby admitting he fot quaaludes quaaludes, accusing women he wanted to have sex with.
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i was elated. i wouldn't stop screaming, you know? i was going oh my god! oh my god. obviously, we already knew. this was just validation. >> finally, finally because you have been telling your story for years and you have been telling the story you felt the night this happening, that you say he sexually assaulted you, you were drugged to incapacitation. >> absolutely. face in plate syndrome could hardly wrap my mouth around words. my legs were wobbly i was nauseated, fighting vomiting spinners spinners. it was a horrible situation. >> let me read to you what the court documents reveal him admitting for the first time. so these just became public.
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he was asked, during this deposition by the other attorney when you got the quaaludes, was it in your mind you were going to use them for young women you wanted to have sex with. big cosby said yes. after the defendant testified he obtained seven prescriptions, the follow temperature was elicited. he was asked, you gave them to other people. he says yes. why do you think he's admitting it in these documents? >> well that's a really good question. i have no idea. or basically, because he doesn't think he's done anything wrong. i really do i have always felt he was a sociopath. he has no moral compass. >> what about his contention or one that he may try to make hey, it was the '70s, people
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took quaaludes at parties. i did pass them out to people. what's the big deal? >> well i think -- look i can't speak to that. in the '70s, i wasn't in l.a. i wasn't taking quaaludes, i wasn't taking drugs, i was taking care of a baby and crocheting a lot, you know. >> that is a different -- you certainly were having a different experience. beyond feeling vindicated what do you think this changes? it was so long ago and the statute of limitations is up. >> i think the message has to be that fame and wealth and power cannot exempt you from justice. it cannot exempt anyone from the law.
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from morality. from doing something to somebody against their will. >> i know that part of the pain that you have experienced is not only that you say that this trauma happened to you, this sexual assault, but then for so many years, decades, really you weren't believed by anyone. people stood by bill cosby. he was america's favorite dad. when the revelations cake out in the fall and we met you on "new day" and you felt a ground swell of 25 women banding together to talk about it still on social media, people didn't believe it they didn't want to believe it. one of those people was singer jill scott. she said that she couldn't believe, at the time we were talking about bill cosby and she wanted proof. she said i am standing up and respecting a man that's done
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more for people. that's what she said at the time. here is what she said last night. i believe we have a different twitter post to put up about bill cosby. >> sadly, his own testify offers truth of terrible deeds, which is all i required to keel it. >> i can understand someone not wanting to believe the worst about something they care about and someone they have only seen the positive side in. however, you know, he's an actor. there is the public side the animation personality, the character. that's not a real person. these are created characters. that's the character, the
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persona he wanted to present to the public. maybe that's who he wanted to be but the reality of him was this shadow side that the rest of us got sadly to see. you know? >> well it must feel good to hear people that denied it then when you came forward to be changing their tune this morning. you certainly look happy, victoria. there's been a load lifted. thanks so much. we'll see where this case and this story goes from here. thanks so much for being on "new day." >> thanks alisyn i appreciate it. >> great to see you. in our next hour we will speak with two more cosby accusers who you have seen and know well here on "new day." they want to talk about the latest revelations. barbara bowman and beverly johnson will join us on "new day." chris? >> thank you, alisyn. a man gets charged multiple
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times with crimes and deported only to sneak back into california. he's due in court today. the sanctuary city is also under fire. >> a lot of this comes from the man's own words saying in an interview he returned to san francisco was it was a sanctuary city. >> that's right. he knew if he came here he would be protected. now the mayor put out a press release trying to quell the uproar saying all agencies need to review their policies. he says san francisco doesn't have it in place to protect violent and serious felons. francisco did not have a record of being violent. he was deported five times. that's why there's so much outranl here. the sheriff's department did not
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notified immigrations officials because of the so-called sanctuary. take a look. >> i believe that ice needs to catch up. we need a court order or a warrant and ice was told this many many times and they have yet to produce that document. >> now california officials are saying we should take a collective deep breath here. immigration policy should not be reformed based on a single case. we should point out the steinle family is not getting in on the debate. they want to focus on their daughter and her memory. chris? >> thank you very much. we are going to talk to the sheriff you saw there in the next hour and test what happened in the situation. a disturbing video shows dionne dre john sonson punched a
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woman in the face. now, double trouble for the 19-year-old. he's been kicked off the team and he's facing charges. corey joins us with details. a real promising athlete this guy is. >> yes. good morning to you. he was suspended from the team when the news came out. it wasn't until the video came out that he was kicked off the team. >> johnson appears to get past the girl. she's trying to push him. court records say swelling of her left cheek and lip, bruising on her left eye. johnson has been charged with misdemeanor battery. a background on johnson, he was a highly talented quarterback out of florida. he wasn't expected to play much if at all this year he's just a freshman. now, he is off the team and will not be playing for them.
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johnson's attorney jose baez released a statement while it is clear johnson was not the initial aggressor, his family wants to take the lead to help him grow. >> he is extremely embarrassed. this isn't the first time florida state has been in the spotlight for bad behavior. jameis winston was accused of sexual battery by a fellow student but he was never charged. >> thanks for all of that background. the deadline for a nuclear deal with iran is today. both sides are still talking. cnns nic robertson is in vienna where they are hunkering down. i see you looking over your shoulder is there any development in there? >> you caught me doing that. i'm just checking again.
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we are expecting a statement shortly from the eu for a policy change. they have been at the negotiating table with john kerry, the french, jergermen and russians. they met last night as well. we may just begin to get an idea of what has been discussed, if they have managed to drinlg the gaps. we know that a key issue until now has been iran is saying it wants a weapons ban lifted. this is part of sanctions that are illegal. this is not part of the nuclear deal. they weren't signed up to the nuclear deal unless this u.n. sanction the weapons ban, the weapons import ban is lifted. maybe in a few minutes, we will get an idea of how it's done.
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chris? >> a deal a deal when will there be a deal. thank you so much. the confederate flag is a step closer to coming down. the senate voting to remove the flag with the final vote expected today. that's one step. it also needs house approval. is that going to come as quickly? nick valencia is in south carolina with the latest. what do we know? >> components to the confederate flag those who want to see it removed overcame a huge hurdle as state senators voted 37-3 to have the flag taken down. the special senate expected to meet today. it's pitted allies in the republican party against each other. >> it isn't part of our future,itis part of our past. i think we need to leave it at that. >> removing this flag from out
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front is not going to do anything to change this nation. >> the most emotional moment of that senate session yesterday, a moment of silence for the late senator clementa pinckney. the conversation to bring this flag down accelerated by the tragic event. today, it will need a two-thirds vote in the senate and the house to become official. michaela? >> we should point out the lawmakers from south carolina will join us on "new day." i have to show you this video, stage three of the tour de france and the chain reaction crash. look at this. a race leader who so badly fractured two vertebra. one rider clipped the wheel of another. they forced officials to stop the race for 20 minutes.
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i can manage it's a win that you feel some kind of way about. >> i'm surprised it doesn't happen more often. >> it does but people don't have to withdrawal. it's amazing what they walk away from you are right. it happens. it's part of pack racing a risk you take. all right. could a san francisco women's murder have been avoided with a phone call from local authorities? it's a provocative question of taking sanctuary cities and putting them under fire. a local sheriff is going to test the position. you decide. stay with us. when broker chris hill stays at laquinta and fires up free wi-fi, with a network that's now up to 5 times faster than before you know what he can do? let's see if he's ready. he can swim with the sharks! book your next stay at lq.com!
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big story across the country now. the murder of a woman in san francisco on a pier is lighting a flame under two debates. the first is immigration and why this man who is accused of killing her was in the u.s. after being deported five times. the second issue is the sat us of sanctuary cities. what are they and why would you have a parallel system of justice. to discuss, julie myers wood served as assistant for the department of homeland security for george w. bush. and assistant director.
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julie, let's start with you. why does a sanctuary city even exist? i know some people don't like that term but what is it and why does it even exist? >> it exists because there are some communities that were not happy with ice imforcement or immigration enforcement in general. they work together with cooperation from ice. an ice program that identified victims in jail. sanctuary cities have been around and the problem got worse as ice enforcement got more aggressive. >> there's two schools of thought. we need sanctuary cities because ice enforcement is random and chases a lot of people it shouldn't and discriminates. on the other side you hear ice -- i mean this is a federal government fighting with the local government. >> it's ridiculous to have two
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parts of our government fight with each other. we should come together and sit down like the mayor of san francisco said and rethink. no one wants violent, criminal felons to be on the streets. ice and san francisco should work together. >> san francisco says by the way, there are a ton of cities like this. don't look at us like we are somehow different and they are using this sanctuary city as way out there. they say ice doesn't have its act together. they have us hold people together. they can't get it together so we had to do what we had to do to manage the situation. do you buy that? >> they have a point with that chris. that's somewhat valid that if ice asked somebody to be held and it goes for too long of a time the city and state has to incur the extra offense cht they were a phone call away.
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san francisco did not have to house him or feed him an extra meal. i said call us when you are ready to get rid of him and they wouldn't have been in san francisco if they didn't want him. ice was in the middle of deporting him. because of a drug charge he was turned over to him. >> what do you make of the sheriff and ice's request isn't legally operative and we know that. >> i think ice tried to work with cities like san francisco by saying make a phone call. they didn't ask san francisco to hold them. they have a court order of removal in this case. they asked for a phone call not to hold them, not to have any expense in this case. >> they say, but you don't make -- you make the phone cull and nothing happens. you hold them forever. now you are telling people we set a murderer free. he wasn't a murderer when we had
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him, just a low level guy. we didn't for see him killing someone. >> that sounds like a lot of excuses. there are problems with interior enforcement and state and local cooperation. we need to stop making excuses and stop pointing fingers and look to how we can get to a better day. in the past there are times when isis held people and caused problems. ice is trying to be more flexible and nimble. the phone call could have prevented a lot of tragedy here. >> the old expression when you point a finger at somebody there's four pointing back at you. there's an outgrove of decisions among local and federal. >> ice is not dysfunctional. part of the reason for sanctuary laws this is every city in the u.s. he claimed he went to san francisco because they were a
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sanctuary city. in california so is san jose l.a. san diego. here in washington d.c. new york baltimore, chicago. >> good point. >> there are many sanctuary cities. part of the reason was it was to stop bullies. this was one of the attempts originally stop police during an arrest or traffic stop from saying are you an american citizen, prove it show me your papers. also a drivers license isn't enough. many states issue them to individuals not here legally. therefore, you would have to carry a passport. you would have to carry, if you look hispanic. i think the concern there, also was that the police were not asking blue-eyed blonds from scandinavia to prove their citizenship. this was going to happen to hispanic looking people. >> tom julie, thank you very much appreciate the perspective. >> all right, chris, there is controversy brewing over the
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confederate flag in south carolina. it's gained momentum. there are stumbling blocks in the a. we will discuss that with legislatures on both sides of the aisle. they are live on "new day" after the break. when you travel, we help you make all kinds of connections. connections you almost miss. and ones you never thought you'd make. we help connect where you are. to places you never thought you'd go. this, is why we travel. and why we continue to create new technology to connect you to the people and places that matter.
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actor bill cosby admitted he obtained sedatives with the intention of giving it to women he wanted to have sex with. the information in documents unsealed from a 2005 sexual assault lawsuit which cosby settled out of court. he admits providing the quaaludes to one woman and, quote, others but never admits to drugging anyone. more than 25 women accuse cosby of sexual assault, allegations he denies. deal or no deal. negotiators try to get a deal before the deadline to drop an arms embargo to be among the issues holding up an agreement. the talks could extend past the self-imposed deadline. john kerry said tough choices need to be made and the u.s. is
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prepared to walk away if necessary. could edward snowden return soon? they think it could happen. the justice department may be open to a plea bargain to allow him to come home. his actions spurred a necessary debate on surveillance in america. >> listen to this finally found someone that would beat floyd mayweather. the rules. the world boxing organization stripping him of the title he claimed from manny pacquiao after he failed to pay a $200,000 fee by friday's deadline. he has 14 days to appeal. >> why a $200,000 fee? >> it was part of the deal. maybe it was on oversight, either way, he's got to pay or he will not get the belt. >> interesting. >> goodness knows he has the cash. i want to talk about what's going on in south carolina.
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lawmakers one step closer to removing the confederate flag from the state capitol. the senate poised to approve a bill to take the flag down voting 37-3 to move ahead. the bill will head to the state house of representatives next where it could face a more challenging opposition. joining us now are two members of the south carolina state senate. we have a democrat and republican. gentlemen, thank you for joining us. marlin resounding 37-3 in favor of removing the flag from the state house grounds. does this signal a resounding shift to you and how strong of a message does it send to south carolinans and people in the house? >> i think it sends a very strong message. we started the day with members who are in leadership positions exhibiting leadership. we had a vibrant debate.
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there are a lot of emotions a lot of procedural nuances. at the end of the day, we were on to something, a message of unity. a message of bringing south carolina to move forward to the 21st century. we will continue to work. this is not done we have to get two-thirds vote today and send that bill to the house. hopefully the same message will carry over. >> senator martin i understand you as a republican have been on the other side of this debate for some time and you sort of more recently had a change of heart. tell us about this and why. >> well the shootings in charleston the tragedy that befell our state, i think brought it more into focus, particularly after the families of those victims came out with a tremendous show of forgiveness,
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reconciliation grace that we have all talked about. heard the president speak about, you know this issue really came up about whether it was flying at half-mast or not. the initial reports that came out about it. that was one of those thing that is was on your mind and it wasn't supposed to but it brought attention to it again. the history in south carolina with the flag is recent. it wasn't up for 100 years. >> right. >> it was only placed on the dome for the centennial in the 1960s, but left there. the history of that tells us that it was left there for reasons other than honoring or commemorating our ancestors. it was left there primarily as a symbol against what was going on in washington and around the country at the time. south carolina is prone to be different and i respect that but
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it's time to move on. we don't need to live in the past. we need to look at what south carolina's future is about. >> senator, i want to ask you what you say to people that like for example, the majority leader in the state senate harvey peeler jr. who say that is won't change history. moving the flag won't change history. how do you respond to him? >> well i agree, it won't change history, but we are in a position now to seize the moment and bring racial reconciliation to the state and to the nation by moving this divisive symbol. you know there was a lot of talk about the soldiers yesterday. i read on the senate floor from excerpts from speeches by wades hampton and general e. lee. they were soldier who is fought in the war on the confederate
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side. they were very clear in their messages that it was time to deposit the weapons including the flag forever. so if the soldiers who fought in the war on the confederate side can send that message, then certainly the south carolina general assembly and those advocating for the flag to continue to fly can have a change of heart like the leadership that was shown by chairman martin and we are going to encourage the house to do the same. >> we know the house does face more of a challenge in the house, we know and we understand that. do you think this senator martin do you think it could end up being a popular vote and how do you think that would go in south carolina? >> well it's unconstitutional to have a popular vote or referendum vote on a state law. we are pretty well aware of that
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based on supreme court precedence. it would be a very divisive thing, even if you can do it. the problem is that we need as the elected representatives of people of south carolina to make this decision and i certainly join the house colleagues to move forward and do some in a way that reflects bringing the state together. >> right. >> trying to build this reconciliation that has been talked about. south carolina has demonstrated in my view a strength of character that is really really been a blessing to all of us. we need to continue that not destroy history or erase our history, but do so resprektfully of one another. >> let's hope it continues. it has been a delight to have you. thanks for joining us on "new day." chris, alisyn? >> back to this story that has
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gotten so much attention. 12 prison workers put on leave after the escape of david sweat and richard matt in upstate new york. a lawmaker joins us to tell us why the officials are not to blame.
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12 prison employees on administrative leave from clinton correctional as the investigation deepens into the escape of matt and sweat. should all officials be fired? good morning, miss dupree. >> good morning. >> should all the officials and officers be fired? >> my concern is we have done a rush to judgment. the original intent was that and the inspector general is there now doing what appears to be a very thorough investigation, interviewing a lot of people and co-incidentally some of the folks put on administrative leave were never interviewed. those of us who know how the system should work and usually does work we are embarrassed. we are upset about this.
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the fact that one woman brought the system down. for anybody who was involved whether it's corrections officers or whoever had a part in it or responsibility for it let the system play out. let the investigation play out and let them be dealt with appropriately. >> yeah i mean -- >> also, let's -- >> i just want to get in there. you say, let the investigation play out. >> yep. >> we know pretty damming things already. for instance hacksaws a chisel and other tools were smuggled into the prison as you mentioned. the woman, joyce mitchell had an inappropriate relationship prior to their escape. she was warned about that and allowed to still work there. as you know the prisoners made a dry run the night before they escaped as david sweat admitted to. they made stuffed dumbies, they put them in their bed, which weren't detected for seven
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hours. how can anyone keep their job after this cascade of wrong doing? >> first of all, i'm not sure i believe everything david sweat is saying but that's a personal thing. there are 98 or 99% of the correction officers who work in that facility who had no relationship with the "a" block, with the honor block, with joyce mitchell. >> well sure. those people shouldn't lose their jobs. >> they feel strongly -- nobody is sure right now. there's a couple people on that list who really did not have any relationship at all. they happened to be in the wrong place at the wrong night on that particular night. not a record of having worked that shift and doing that. you know let's face it somebody at the top is probably going to be let go. i can tell you, superintendent steve is one of the best
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correction superintendents in the state of new york. he was there a little over a year. he went into a mess. i asked him to go in there. he did a great job of building moral and bring it back. yes, it happened on his watch. >> how do you explain that? >> he will probably be removed. >> i know you support him and think he was turning around clinton kraxcorrectional. >> he was. >> how do you explain the oversights on his watch? >> i'm depending on the inspector general to come in. this is unimaginable. 150 years nobody got out of that facility. i don't know who, whether it was civilians, whether they are going to be other officials involved. i think there has to be. but, i think we need to figure that out. i also think that i need to be a voice, for, again, that 98%-99% of those guys. men and women, they are still
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working 16-hour shifts they are exhausted. there are community leaders on the outside, volunteer firefighters baseball softball soccer coaches. they have a tough job. they are working with people who are not good people. those men are in there as inmates because they have committed serious crimes. the implication and you are doing it yourself this morning, is that they are all bad. that's absolutely not true. i just want everybody to get a fair shake in this. punish those that are, but exonerate those that aren't. if i be that voice because they can't be. we have a lot of work to do. i'm firmly committed. i have a great relationship and built one over the last nine years with the department of corrections. we can make this system i believe, better across the state of new york if we all work together and we will. >> assemblywoman janet dupree
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the guilty should be punished the innocent should not be. correctal officers are very hard working. thanks for being on "new day." >> thank you. >> up next a mystery that plagued cape cod for years. the search for justice doesn't seem to be over soon. a sneak peek at a cnn special, ahead.
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a woman pulls into her garage in cape cod and winds up dead. but who did it? this is a mystery that has haunted a small massachusetts community for years. tonight, cnn takes a closer look
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at the case of 51-year-old shirley rainy. the twist is that friends say in the years leading up to her death shirley had reason to believe someone was plotting to kill her. take a look president . she got a call from her lawyer. word had trickled down through the state police that there had been a hit put on her. >> who actually put out that hit? friends say shirley was never told. >> she was afraid. when we'd come out of the movies, she never when she turned her car on the it was going to just blow up. i don't know how she lived like that. >> i said oh cut it out. they're just pulling your leg. they're just trying to scare you. little did i know -- >> little did loretta know that according to john rams a plan to kill shirley was already being
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hatched. did todd rainy ever tell you that he wanted to kill shirley? >> he said he wanted to absolutely. he had a plan and everything. he wanted me to go in her house and shoot her for him. >> john insists he never agreed to do it but todd was determined to make it happen with or without him. >> he was determined to make it look like a mob hit. >> did you warn authorities after talking to todd? >> absolutely i did. >> randy, very scrutinizing there because john rams was charged in 2001 for the acquitted last year. >> he still claims that he is innocent. he says he has nothing to do with this. but i should point out that john rams has a long criminal history. he was convicted in the 2002 burglary of shirley's home along
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with todd rainy her stepson. he does say he's innocent and has nothing to do with this, but he has a history. >> what is the general history of what was going on here? >> she was married to this guy who had a long history in the community. melvin rainy, sr. he had a long history in the community of harassing people. he had been accused of even harming people before. but in this case in shirley rainy's murder a lot of people were pointing to todd rainy, her stepson. but the d.a. said there wasn't enough evidence. it's still an open case right now. >> let's see where you take us tonight. randi randi, thank you so much. watch cnn's special report murder on cape cod, who killed
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shirley reine. >> another big story. a stunning admission from bill cosby for the first time. we will be speaking with two women, both of whom say that cosby sexual assaulted them and drugged them. shopping online... ...is as easy as it gets. wouldn't it be great if hiring plumbers carpenters and even piano tuners... were just as simple? thanks to angie's list now it is. start shopping online... ...from a list of top rated providers. visit angieslist.com today. when laquinta.com sends craig wilson a ready for you alert the second his room is ready ya know what he becomes? great proposal! let's talk more over golf. great. how about over tennis? even better. a game changer! the ready for you alert, only at lq.com. when you're not confident your company's data is secure the possibility of a breach can quickly become the only thing you think about. that's where at&t can help.
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. after so many allegations bill cosby himself has admitted to obtaining drugs. >> bill cosby testified back in 2005 that he got quaaludes with the intent of giving them to young women that he wanted to have sex with. >> fame and wealth cannot exempt you from justice. >> this negotiation could go either way. >> the tense negotiations are in the final stages. >> agreement or coercion? >> francisco sanchez charged with murdering catherinekathryn steinle. >> sanchez should not have been in this country. >> hillary clinton's first major tv interview since the start of her presidential campaign. >> you she keeps reporters on a short leash, literally.
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>> this is "new day" can kwiswith chris cuomo. >> newly uncovered testimony from bill cosby reveals the comic admitting he obtained prescription sedatives with the intent of giving them to women he wanted to sleep with. >> cosby admits he gave a quaalude to one woman, but not admit he gave them to women against their will. >> this is really a fascinating admission by bill cosby because not only did these women, many of these women say they were sexual assaulted, but many of them say that they believe that they were drugged first, that they remember cosby fixing them a drink and giving it to them and after a few sips they felt incapacitated. many of these women said that. and in the context of this that's important. now, in this deposition

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