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tv   CNN Newsroom Live  CNN  July 21, 2015 11:00pm-12:01am PDT

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-- captions by vitac -- www.vitac.com terrorist killed. the u.s. confirmed the death of a senior al qaeda leader in syria. republican rivalries heat up as donald trump gives out an opponent's private cell number. a woman in this video was found dead in her jail cell not long after being arrested. hello and welcome to our viewers in the u.s. and those tuned in from around the world. i'm errol barnett. >> and i'm paula newton. thanks for joining us. this is "cnn newsroom."
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the u.s. military is claiming a victory against terrorism announcing it has kill advert ran militant in syria. officials say that he led the khorasan group that has been planning attacks on western targets. >> the u.s. put a $7 million bounty on his head. a missile hit his vehicle in northern syria earlier this month. isis is claiming responsibility for a pair of deadly suicide bombings in baghdad. at least 18 people were killed late tuesday in a commercial area. more than 43 people were wounded. >> you can see the video here and the aftermath of that explosion. rows and rows of buildings just obliterated. debris littering the streets. another car bombing in southeastern baghdad left two people dead and nine wounded.
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the u.s. military says it is stepping up its air strikes against isis targets in syria. >> but officials are tight lipped about what they're aiming for. pentagon correspondent barbara starr has more. >> reporter: u.s. aircraft continue pounding isis positions in raqqah syria. but the most recent targets are missteer yeah. blast walls like these have been bombed repeatedly in recent days. the so-called t-walls are barriers erected around command centers and buildings isis wants to keep secure. >> if you knock down a t-wall the infantry can maneuver more freely. >> reporter: whatever the walls were protecting it was on the priority target list for war planes. bombing the blast walls could open the way for ground forces likely kurdish, to move in
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unthinkable just weeks ago. u.s. commanders now have a network of intelligence on the ground. they are getting targeting coordinates around raqqah from the kurds who are strategically positioned just north of the city. >> they are heading with an assault force and good at coordinating u.s. aircraft to go against isis. >> reporter: these leafles air dropped into raqqah by the u.s. the message, freedom will rise. a not so subtle warning to isis, watch out. meeting with u.s. and coalition forces in jordan ash carter says in northern syria, ground operations are extremely effective. >> they couldn't have done what they did without you. and your impact as air power wouldn't be lasting without them.
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>> reporter: the u.s. intelligence community now watching closely for reaction from isis leadership. it's been a year since this abu bakr al baghdadi sermon surfaced with no new video yet to mark the end of ramadan, questions about whether baghdadi has bigger concerns about his safety. >> that was our barbara starr reporting from the pentagon. now the u.s. says it's working with iraq to uncover a drone that crashed in the desert south of baghdad. >> the pentagon confirms that the aircraft went down on its way to its recovery base. the drone was on an intelligence surveillance and reconnaissance mission when it experienced technical problems. there were no weapons on board. let's go to turkey now, crowds of mourners gathered to bury many of the victims from a horrific suicide bombing in the country.
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at least 31 people died in the explosion on monday. 100 others were injured. the victims were planning a trip to help rebuild the city of kobani. >> one suspect in the attack has been identified. investigators are looking into that person's domestic and international terror links. u.s. officials meantime are piecing together clues on what may have inspired mohammad youssuf abdulazeez to kill four u.s. servicemen last week in tennessee. sources tell cnn the motive increasingly appears to be terrorism based on his political and religious views. in writings dating back to 2013 mohammad youssuf abdulazeez made references to anwar at alllalwalkie. and he conducted internet
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searches on the subject of martyr martyrdom. flags will fly at half staff at the white house, capitol and other government buildings on saturday. donald trump, we knew this was going to happen drawing criticism after taking his feud with fellow u.s. republican presidential candidate lindsey graham to a new level. >> you can say a new low. at a rally in south carolina on tuesday with folks watching on national television you had thousands of people there in the room, trump gave out the senator's private cell phone number. >> gave it out twice. and that's not the only spat he's got up with at the moment. dana bash has the story. >> reporter: donald trump unbowed by a barrage of criticism. >> they say they didn't like the way, you know i'm a little
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loud. i'm a little too strong -- they don't like it. >> reporter: the reality tv star with a flair for drama took presidential politics to another level. >> i see your senator what a stiff. >> reporter: responding to fellow republican candidate lindsey graham saying this to cnn. >> he is becoming a jackass. >> i watch this idiot on television and he calls me a jackass. >> standing in graham's home state of south carolina trump retaliated by reading the senator's personal cell phone number. >> he gave me his number and i found the card. i don't know if it's the right number. let's try it. >> why did you read lindsey graham's cell phone number? >> so people with call him and he can get something done. >> reporter: graham now unable to be reached through cell responded saying donald trump continues to show hourly he is
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ill prepared to be commander-in-chief. all this amid a back and forth with iowa's largest newspaper whose editorial board called for him to pull the plug on his bloviated side show. he is buoyed by the personal warfare, and crowds like this. all told 1100 people in the main auditorium and an overflow room. many waited online for hours to get in. >> he's a doer. >> i think he's terrific. he tells the truth. >> not everyone is a supporter. >> he scares me. >> but you are still here? >> yeah. i want to see him. he's a celebrity. >> despite causing so much controversy about john mccain's war service, some veterans here in military rich south carolina came to hear him. >> he just disappointed me.
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i want offended but disappointed. >> it's not a deal breaker? >> not yet. >> why is that? >> too far to go. he has tremendous background and a great ability to delegate. he can make a decision on the spot. but it also gets him in trouble. >> again that was our dana bash reporting. we want to take a look at where trump stands on some of the key issues. on immigration he said he would build a wall. to stop isis he said he would bomb the oil fields to end the cash flow going to isis. on jobs he said he could bring jobs back from china. and he promised to repeal and replace obamacare and end the common core educational standard which are highly controversial in this country. cnn political analyst ron brown
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brownsteen joins me now. let's look at what seems to be the republican's worst nightmare what a trump america would look like. is that in keeping what some of what americans want to hear on some of these issues right now? >> there is a part of the republican base that wants to hear it. we are unlikely to see a donald trump america. i think the clearest impact of the controversies is to narrow his base of support and put a ceiling on. that second, in the time he is commenting on public affairs over the course of his business career he has taken both positions on every major issue. it's hard to know where his center of gravity is. but having said that he has evolved in this race into a fairly conventional very conservative republican. he is pretty much unand down the
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line with conservative views expressed in visit ree controlic terms but he has skepticism of trade, opposition to obamacare, that animate the most ideologically cutting edge of the republican base. >> for everyone who doesn't want to take donald trump seriously, can it be argued that in fact he is moving the republican party exactly where he wants them that through all of this name-calling at the same time he is moving policy issues to where he wants them even if he doesn't become the republican candidate or become president? >> i think that's a really good point. what's happening is -- what donald trump is doing is energizing and coalescing a strain in the republican party. the republican party divides now almost exactly in half between a college educated white collar managerial side that wants someone to cut taxes, cut
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regulation and cut spending but not to usher in a revolution. the other half of the party is the blue collar and evangel ka tea party, rural. it is disaffected from many things in american life from the demographic change and the cultural change. they want someone to go to washington to throw rocks through the window. and trump is energizing that portion of the party. in the end he is unlikely to be the nominee but he is creating a dynamic in which the party is going to have to respond more to those sentiments than it anticipated when the campaign began. and that is a challenge in the general election. >> and the republican party things he is an enemy but we are not talking about clintonhillary clinton right now. i know you have a theory about him tapping into what nixon called the silent majority.
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>> it emerged in an intense racial tension time in the united states. and richard nixon talked about white middle class voters who were you know felt overlooked by the focus on youth protests on inner city protests and the sexual revolution that america is going through. and donald trump who cited that phrase in his bigger speech in phoenix is trying to appeal to that same sentiment. the core of his support are working class white voters. he was 33% among those who didn't graduate from college and they are feeling they are being economically demographically and culturally eclipsed by changes in america. when he talks about taking back
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america he reflects that sense of embattlement and defense of nationalism that is manifest in skepticism about immigration and trade. and even though he is unlikely to be the nominee he is energizing that portion of the party in a way that the eventually nominee is going to have to respond to. and that is going to make the general election more complicated. >> everyone who said that donald trump would be a joke on the campaign trail, the joke is on them. ron, appreciate it. >> thank you. and now to something we talked about this time yesterday, the vatican's conference on human trafficking and global warming. >> the pope is urging the world to take action on both issues and he is explaining why they are linked. delia gallagher has her story. >> reporter: mayors and governs from around the world applaud pope francis as he signs a
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declaration calling for bold action on modern slavery. part of a two-day vatican summit on climate change and human trafficking. a conference paper explains that global warming is one of the causes of poverty and forced my graduation and he sees the two issues as interconnected emergencies. >> translator: it's not a green encyclical. the social life of people we cannot separate the care of the environment. one of the things we notice the most when the environment, the creation is not well cared for is the disproportionate growth of cities. it's as if the heads, the big cities get bigger but with rings of more poverty and misery. rome's mayor faced it head on. >> translator: slavery still exists despite the fact that it is illegal and punished many
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most countries. it assumes many forms and affects people of many ages sex and background. >> reporter: pope francis hopes that the united nations will take a strong position on trafficking and has great hope on the paris summit in december saying that he hopes that a fundamental basic agreement is reached. delia gallagher, cnn, rome. t human trafficking and a new documentary called "children for sale" spotlights crimes that are happening in the united states. we should say, just a few miles from here. >> that's right. in the clip you are about to see here jada pinkett smith
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introduces us to a sex trafficking survivor and listen why she explains that american strip clubs are sometimes fronts for brothels. >> to me coming up being an independent woman was being educated and being able to stand on your own and it shocked me that these days to be the independent woman and getting the lifestyle you want you get on the stripper pole. >> i don't remember a time in my life where i didn't know what sex was. >> rachel's journey into the life started very early. >> i do think it does go back to being abused young -- at a young age. at the age of 7 i was introduced to pornography. >> like thousands of children each year, rachel was sexually abused and didn't get the help she needed.
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>> i'm from a small town in georgia. as the years past i continued a destructive lifestyle that everybody ignored. she is just rebellious. she just has problems. >> reporter: her destructive lifestyle soon landed her in a strip club. >> for me it took about a year and i started being exploited by the club management. i was told you can make more money this way. >> reporter: this way meant giving the men much more than a lap dance. >> the club that i worked at i would tell anyone it's a modern day brothel. you would come in and say i would want an african-american girl. i want a small girl. i want a girl who looks underage. >> and we invite you to join us all week for an in depth look at the global problem.
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watch the documentary "children for sale" wednesday at 8:00 p.m. in london 9:00 central european time on cnn international. a traffic stop escalates into a heated showdown and an arrest. we are just getting a look at this dash cam video as police investigate the mysterious jail cell death of the driver. i'm gonna crack like nobody's watching and eat like i skipped lunch.
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in texas the arrest video of a woman who later died in police custody is raising more questions about what happened. the dash cam video shows a tense confrontation between a state trooper and the driver. she died three days after her arrest. >> we at cnn have watched the video closely released by the texas department of transportation and we noted there are irregular lairties in what was released. we don't know if it has edited but what you are about to hear is a tense exchange between the officer and the driver. >> you mind putting out your cigarette, please if you don't
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mind? >> i'm in my car. >> you can step out. >> i don't have to step out. >> step out of the car. >> why am i -- >> step out of the car. step out of the car. >> you do not have the right to the that. >> i do have the right. >> i refuse to talk to you other than to identify myself. >> step out or i will remove you. >> for a -- >> step out or i will remove you. i'm giving you a lawful order. get out of the car now or i'm going to remove you. i'm going to yank you out of here. >> you going to yank me out of my car, okay. all right. let's do this. >> we're going to. >> don't touch me. >> get out of the car. >> i'm not under arrest. >> you are under arrest. >> for what? for what? >> get out of the car. get out of the car now! >> why am i being apprehended?
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why am i being apprehended? >> i'm gingving you a lawful order. get out it have car! i will light you up! get out! now! >> really for a failure to signal. >> get over there. yeah let's take this to court for a failure to signal, yep. >> just to clarify you heard the officer say i will light you up. the district attorney says a grand jury will ultimately decide whether what happened in the jail cell was a suicide or a homicide. ryan young has been closely following this story and has more on her mysterious death. >> reporter: we got access to sandra bland's cell number 95 and see where authorities say she hanged herself inside that cell. as you walk through you got a
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sense of what she was dealing with for those three days. >> for a failure to -- >> step out or i will remove you. >> reporter: for the first time we are seeing police dash cam video of sandra bland's arrest. >> you are going to yank me out of my car? >> reporter: pulled over for failing to use a turn signal. you can hear the tense interaction between the two. >> we have procedures in place and he did not comply with those procedures. one of those procedures is letting the individual know in terms of what action is going to be taken. >> reporter: but what it doesn't show is a struggle captured by a witness with a cell phone showing bland pinned to the ground and screaming she is a victim of excessive force. she was brought here to the jail and three days later found dead hanging from her cell. video shows no one walking along the hall to enter or leave the
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cell before she was found dead. >> this is cell number 95 where sandra was staying those three days. the food is still sitting here. the bed is still in the same arrangement but there is attention being paid to the trash bag like this one and this trash liner. this trash liner is what was used to string up here and for sandra bland to hang herself. >> there were four female inmates three and a half feet across from her. they gave statements. nobody did anything to her. >> right. >> and based on that it's an absolutely tragic incident here of her committing suicide. >> reporter: but state officials and the fbi are investigating the case and the district attorney is treating her death as a murder investigation and bland's family says the 28-year-old would not have taken her own life. >> seven days later, i still don't know what happened to my
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baby sister. >> reporter: this remains an active and involved investigation. you can split this into two separate incidents. what happened at the traffic stop and what happened at that cell, a lot of people are calling for the d.o.j. investigation and the fbi and texas rangers are investigating to see what happened here but this is far from being over. ryan young, cnn, prairie view, texas. and unfortunately we can report on another police investigation, this one in the u.s. state of ohio. an unarmed black man was fatally shot by a white officer during a traffic stop. according to the police, the officer pulled over 43-year-old samuel debose for driving without a front license plate on sunday. there was a struggle between the two and police say debose drove away. the officer then fired once hitting debose in the hair. >> family and friends held a rally tuesday demanding answers. police say the officer who works for the university of cincinnati
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was wearing a body camera at the time and he is on paid administrative leave. video will not be released until the investigation is over. technology is outpacing the laws to control. how a u.s. teenager's college project sparked a federal investigation. stay with us. ♪ if you can't stand the heat, get off the test track. get the mercedes-benz you've been burning for at the summer event, going on now at your authorized mercedes-benz dealer. hurry, before this opportunity cools off. share your summer moments in your mercedes-benz with us.
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welcome back. to those of you tuned in the states and the around the world. i'm errol barnett. >> i'm paula newton. the pentagon says it has killed a veteran terrorist
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leader in syria on july 8th. he was the leader of the khorasan group, an offshoot of al qaeda that had been planning attacks on western targets. two british men are being held on terror charges in london right now. the uncle and his nephew were accused of planning to join isis in syria. greek lawmakers are voting today on a second package of reforms. the bill includes new eu rules that guarantee bank deposits of up to 100,000 euros and it implements civil justice reforms designed to speed up court cases and reduce costs. we expect some results on that vote in the next few hours. israel is racing to develop
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an antitunnel device to find tunnels that infiltrate israel. >> they call it the iron dome of the underground. >> reporter: this could be a video from last summer's gaza war, militants in a tunnel but it's not. hamas is building new tunnels and finding them has become a top priority ever since the gaza war. along the border with gaza israel is testing a new tunnel detection system working with the united states. this major says it is a dangerous game of underground hide and seek. >> every time that we find that there is a new tunnel that previous method didn't manage to find we test ourselves and analyze that case and find a new method to find the next one. >> reporter: during the war, hamas militants launched
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surprise attacks from tunnels that crossed under the fences into israel. they destroyed more than 30 tunnels. the idf says there were nearly 60 miles of tunnels along the gaza border. captain daniel elbow took us into one of the tunnels. israel intelligence knew hamas was building tunnels but had trouble pinpointing them. when the soldiers stepped into the tunnels they were stunned by the construction. >> there was one "a" lot of room here to move quickly here. someone could run easily carrying weapons and there is enough room for a motorcycle and the surface is flat enough that you can move quite quickly. >> the next tunnels will be at least as good as this one. and hamas did not stop the digging process. >> reporter: tunnels are not just a tool of the past they are a battleground of the future. >> it's going to be our problem
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for the -- at least five decades from now. one of the main tools to a struggle and to be a -- let's say kind of a fair fight, it's to go underground. >> reporter: israel won't say much about the tunnel detection system but the idf is constantly working on improving the system. before the gustav war, the idf developed iron dome. now they are testing the iron dome of the underground to protect against tunnels. now video of a handgun firing from a drone has gone viral and has sparked a federal investigation in the united states. >> that's right. take a look. the gun appeared to be shooting on private property in connecticut. so far officials cannot see any law on the books has been broken. but the faa is looking into this. >> in the video, clearly it would get your attention.
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the father of the 18-year-old student says his son created it for a college project. no one was harmed. drones fall into a gray area legally. >> but a drone with a gun sounds like a bad idea. heavy rain flooded mumbai on tuesday. we have our meteorologist ivan cabrera joining us to talk about what is happening. >> drones are helpful in the weather. we can get a scope -- >> just don't put a weapon on them. >> i just want my packages delivered. that's terrible. let's talk about the rainfall. it's incredible. sometimes you don't get enough rain and you have problems in india with the monsoon, you get too much and you get the flooding. we're in that right now, torrential downpours in mumbai. high water rescues underway in some pockets and the rain is going to continue to come on in.
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anywhere from about 45 47 to 104 millimeters of rainfall. 2 to 4 inches in the last couple of days. but that comes on top of 2 to 4 inches the day before that and the day before that. and you get the idea. this is the pattern that will continue to be the pattern from the arabian sea. and this western flow into mumbai. torrential rain in the next 24 to 48. this is the time of year we do this and we're going to do it very well over the next few days across the interior states heavy rain as well. 150 millimeters are not out of the question. in europe do you see the problem here? we have no clouds across portions of central and southeastern europe. a few fair-weather clouds. the heat are relentless. the storm track is well to the north. the temperatures in the upper
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30s as we head through later this afternoon. paris in the upper 20s and showers in the forecast for the southern part of france and that is important later on today. could be talking about downpours and the potential for thunderstorm activity. the legs rested on tuesday were bag in the tour de france. and that is going to be for today with temperatures in the mid-20s by the time we get into the afternoon hours. we'll still in the mid-20s with showers and thunderstorms beginning to bubble up. we'll have to watch that. had to throw in the tour de france there. >> you are a cyclist. >> let the viewers know. >> i did 200 miles this year and i think i'm chris froome. >> that's exciting. you got the get up and everything. >> still standing. >> barely. >> thanks we'll see you later. an impressive earnings report from apple boasting $50
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. workers in new york may get their wish. the labor board will discuss the proposal to raise the minimum wage to $15 an hour. that's an increase of 70%. >> governor andrew cuomo says this is the first step in raising the minimum wage overall in the u.s. only los angeles and seattle have raised their minimum wages to $15 an our. shares in apple plunged after hours even though the
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company reported $49.6 billion in revenue in the third quarter. >> they sold 47 1/2 million iphones. and the company didn't reveal sales data for the apple watch. >> joining me now is a senior writer for cnet news and has covered apple extensively and joins us from san francisco. with revenue of 49 to $50 billion why are some down beat on these numbers? it's what any other company would die for? >> for apple it wasn't the blowout that everybody has come to expect. ever since they launched the iphone 6 they have been reporting crazy quarters tons of demand for their new phones. this time they didn't sell as many iphones as everybody was expecting and their forecast for the current quarter was a little bit weaker than what analysts
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are look for. >> let's get into the why there. 47.5 million phones sold in the recent quarter. that's a 35% jump from last year. apparently people are spending more per device than before. but just explain why that enthusiasm is expected to top out now. >> so this quarter is always apple's weakest. it's kind of in between the dads and grads season and the back to school season. and the biggest thing that hurts the quarter every time is that people know there is a new iphone coming in september. if you are looking to buy a new phone it doesn't make sense to purchase a new iphone even if you want the iphone 6 in september it will be cheaper with the new one coming out. that is something that has always really hurt apple. their predictability has worked against them. the hope was this time that china and maybe some of these other markets would kind of
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lessen that difference a little bit. but, you know it just wasn't quite as good as what wall street is expected. >> and we are expecting that the iphone 6s is a nominal upgrade. and now the apple watch is in another category. they don't report its numbers the same way. but tim cook suggested that says that it could save the company in the holiday season. >> yeah they are trying to build inventory and trying to get more of these out there because they think it's going to be the perfect stocking stuffer. if you think about it most people have phones a lot of people have tablets and computers. so if you are looking to buy an electronic gift for someone, a wearable does make a lot of sense. but the problem for apple and the smart watch market is finding a good reason to have one of these. but if you are buying it as a
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gift for someone else like your nieces or nephews, your children your parents, it's easier to say, oh, yeah you know i'll get them this. they'll find a reason to use it. >> and there are some studies out showing that early adopters are happy with the device. but how many find it functional and worth the money. quickly in the minute left iphones are outselling samsung devices in south korea. how significant is that? >> that's crazy. you know samsung has been struggling for the past year. they have had a lot of issues getting people to buy their devices. but this happening in their home country is a very big deal for them. >> all right joining us from san francisco, thanks for your time today. >> thanks a lot. >> appropriate for some but no apps or wearable devices for
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you? >> i can't even handle this. a u.s. restaurant owner is getting grilled online for this. watch. >> i turned around slammed both hands on the counter and pointed at the child and said this has got to stop. >> what has to stop? and why? answers after the break. leave early go roam sleep in sleep out star gaze dream big wander more care less beat sunrise chase sunset do it all. on us.
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you're at a restaurant enjoying this great food and someone's baby won't stop screaming. what do you do? >> you bite your tongue, enjoy your food. and apparently, glare at them. that works. >> that could have happened. in one incident in maine, the owner of a restaurant took a different approach. here's jeanne moos. >> reporter: there's nothing appetizing about a cry baby in a restaurant. here at marcy's diner in portland, maine -- a crying 21-month-old has provoked an outcry all because owner darla neugebauer did this. >> i slammed both hands on the
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counter and pointed at the child and said this has got to stop. >> reporter: that's not how the toddler's mother remembers it. she says that the owner was -- >> screaming in her face like shut the hell up. i was in pure shock. i had never seen behavior like this before. >> reporter: the stories diverged in other ways. >> after 40 minutes i had had enough. >> reporter: but the mother says the toddler was crying and not screaming for a little over ten minutes, not 40. the owner asked the parents to take the child outside at least once before but the mom says it was raining. the parents vented their anger on the marcy's diner facebook page. the owner is an absolute lunatic may karma bite you in the [ bleep ]. in her f-bomb laced responses the owner called the toddler
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that monster and the beast. the back and forth prompted a deluge of comments proand con though way more sided with the owner. >> and her parents said are you screaming at a child? yes, i am and she shut up. >> reporter: so far, the egg seems firmly on the grill rather than on the owner's face. jeanne moos, cnn. >> this has got to stop. >> new york. >> i love it. you know here's the thing, though beyond the fact that you should have taken the child outside of the restaurant. >> agree with you there. >> but i have children. you do not, do you feel that people who don't have children have like they've had it with people taking liberties with their children and having them wreak havoc. >> and i think parents of young kids are used to the screaming and the noise. and they tolerate it more. that diner is a small place. >> and all the -- that's what i
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mean. you wonder why it wouldn't dawn on the parents. we have a horror -- on a flight. >> don't take that baby on a plane. much less tolerant. this is a baby that doesn't scream. his father has called him a monkey. prince george is celebrating his second birthday in private. kensington palace did give us a photo. >> a toothy smile there. the image taken on july 5th. he also photographed princess charlotte following her christening. >> you can see a gallery of photos on cnn.com. he is adorable and as his father says a complete monkey. you are watching "cnn newsroom." i'm paula newton. >> i'm errol barnett. take care of your screaming
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babies if you need to. but do stay with us. another hour of "cnn newsroom" is next. nothing fits, huh? not surprising... ...with that bloated belly. you got gas. i can see it and i know you feel it. get gas-x. it relieves bloating in minutes. plus that uncomfortable pressure. no wonder it's the #1 gas relief brand.
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i like your place. oh, thank you, make yourself at home i'll be right back. hm. she's got x1. alright. 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. call and upgrade to get x1 today. ♪ the u.s. has killed a
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terrorist leader that believes was a real theft. pope francis speaks out against climate change and human trafficking and calls on the united nations to do something. donald trump makes new enemies on the campaign trail after he reveals the personal phone number of a rival candidate. welcome to our viewers in the united states and around the world. i'm paula newton. >> i'm errol barnett. thanks for being with us, this is "cnn newsroom." -- captions by vitac -- www.vitac.com the u.s. military is claiming a victory in the fight against terrorism announcing it killed a terrorist leader in syria. his name is muhsin al fadhli. pentagon correspondent barbara

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