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tv   New Day  CNN  September 1, 2015 3:00am-6:01am PDT

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a monmouth university poll shows rival ben carson tying trump in the state of iowa. this is the first time in a month there is a poll that does not give donald trump a >> also overnight a batch of hillary clinton's e-mails released whachlt's in them? classified information. does it matter to voters? >> hey there, good morning. new polls out from monmouth university, good news for ben carson. carson is at 23%, tied with donald trump. the trend line is they are very much up from july. in july, carson 8% and trump 13%. fiorina is bunched in there as 10%. cruz at 9%. the establishment figures not doing as well as they were in july. another poll, this is from the
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des moines register in bloomberg shows a similar trend. trump there, a 23%, carson 18%, walker who was supposed to do really well in iowa, 8%. cruz at 8%. bush 6%. if you look back, they have a trend line back to january. what it really shows is these anti sort of establishment figures doing well since january. we think we know why. the monmouth university poll showing the gop likely caucus goers, only 23% want someone with government experience. 66% want someone outside of government. that's why folks like carson and donald trump are doing so well. back to you. >> thank you so much. if you were all lucky enough to sleep last night, you might have missed the state department
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released a bunch of e-mails, thousands as hillary clinton's tenure as secretary of state. what is inside the latest batch? we were up all night pouring over the pages. >> you are not kidding, john. what we are looking at here is 125 of the 7,000 e-mails have information that was retro actively classified. they weren't marked classified at the time. they have been upgraded before releasing them to the public and parts have been redakted. once again, in the e-mails, we get a sense of the close relationship with former advisers who is constantly sending her advice about various issues. there's a memo from chelsea clinton reporting on her trip to haiti, frustrations on the ground after the earthquake with the clinton foundation. interestingly, e-mails suggesting state department tech analysts didn't recognize
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clinton's server when it worked with the state department. one of the e-mails, her aide, houma abedin says her e-mail bounced back. when they called the help desk, they had no idea it was you. there were several e-mails about clinton's new ipad. when it arrived, she said your ipad arrived. clinton said that's exciting news. she wanted instructions on a flight to ukraine. remember, she said she only used her blackberry, never mentioned the ipad. there's criticism from fox news. a lot of interesting political things. clinton always said politics was in her dna. some of these you had to be there at the time to know the back story. clinton wants an update. everybody last night on twitter was like, what is that? those of us that were covering
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the state department remember a trade dispute with israel, holding up a huge shipment of fish right before passover. clinton wants to know about that problem. back to you. >> it wasn't code for anything. it really was fish. >> thanks so much. let's bring back in nia-malika henderson. let's start with this poll. for the first time, donald trump is tied. he is at 23% as is ben carson. as you can see, carley fiorina, there's another headline. she's another 10% from 3%. if you look at the lower half of the poll, it shows the two people who most recently won in iowa, former governor, mike huckabee and rick santorum are
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barely registering as you can see here at 2%, basically. tell us what you see as you look at the numbers. >> the first thing, the carson number is interesting. he has not been in the media much, right? to the extent you can explain the huge trump bounce in the polls as partly related to media obsession with covering trump, right, if you look at there's been firms that have done this. if you look at the media coverage of trump and the rise in the polls, they are almost perfectly corelated. there's feedback. it has not been happening with carson. we have not been talking about him. he is not on the front pages of the media or on tv. there's something more organic going on with his surge in iowa that you can't just explain by a breakout debate performance of wall-to-wall media coverage. if you look at the favoribility ratings for carson, very high.
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he's got a ways to go. he may have the flavor of support. >> evangelicals said he has spent some money in iowa. he haven't been there that much. that rise is interesting. what i find interesting, nia, what is donald trump going to do about this? he's had a lot to say, not much of it nice, about his opponents. there's jeb bush, scott walker. he will go down the list and say something about even. he has never said something bad about carson. >> i talked to carson's folks yesterday. he doesn't intend to go after donald trump, either. trump called ben carson a good guy. he's described him as a friend. a friend of ben carson. also used the same language to describe that relationship. i think ben carson has been smart. he's been quietly waging a
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ground game in iowa. he's had these family festivals where people can come and ride ponies and eat popcorn and hear entertainers. he's gotten something like 6,000 people to the family festivals. he was up on the air with ads in iowa. he's got six staffers there. he has been there. he was there early. he's got independent organizations that are helping him and back in june, they had a lit dump, 10,000 homes in central iowa. they got a booklet all about ben carson. some of that, he hasn't been flooding the cable news airways, but he's had a presence in iowa. >> what happens to carson after iowa? >> look, you know, as one thing we should point out with the early polls is early primary polls are not good at predicting who wins it iowa caucuses or the
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new hampshire primary. as you pointed out, the last two winners, santorum and huckabee did not end up being the republican nominees. so, one, these polls don't tell who is going to win iowa. even if you win iowa, you may not become the nominee. a lot of early polls, it's easier when you call a vote in iowa to register a bit more of a protest vote because they are not really voting, they are talking to a pollster. we saw a couple cycles in the summer, the candidates often do well and the race changes as you get to february and people have to take a hard look at who they really want to be their nominee. but, on your question of what happened, if carson does win iowa, well, if new hampshire is a bigger state. it is a problem for an unsur gent like that. >> for the time being, put a damper on the donald trump
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discussion. there's now another name in that as well. if i could shift to hillary clinton for a moment, the e-mails, the 7,000 papers that came out. there's the fish and a lot of discussion here. at a certain point, there is nuting in here that reeks of illegality. but, does that matter now? because you have these releases and we will have more and the stench is out there. >> the stench is out there. like you said, this has happened a couple times so far. we went through them all and haven't found anything, so far. if you look at the numbers of the polls out from iowa, democratic caucus voters, 61% saying they don't think it matters, this e-mail conversation. the fact she had a personal e-mail and server rather than the government e-mail. hillary clinton is changing her approach to this. she was complaining about this before saying she felt like it was an attack, a political
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attack. now she's explaining it saying people have a right to ask questions about this. in some ways, these e-mails kind of help. there is nothing there. she's talking about the fish. she's complaining about the fax machine, not knowing how to use that. the ipad. in some ways, it's a window, a veep-like window into the mundane ways of working at the state department. >> if there's no smoking gun, when does the e-mail issue go away for hillary? >> i think it goes away when the justice department says we looked into this and we are not going to take further action, if that's what they say. i spent a lot of time last night going through them, too. one take away from the e-mails is, if you want to know what hillary clinton did as secretary of state, that's going to be a very important issue in the primaries and if she wins in the general election.
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i think there's a lot of politics in the e-mail. she has a lot of outside political advisers sending her advice on official state business and broader politics going on in the world. it's a sense, a few e-mails saying be careful how you engage in certain issues, it could damage you long term. if you read between the lines, that's some of the advice. john kerry has been a more active secretary of state than hillary clinton. i think because he's not worrying about running for president. he's finished with politics. that's one thing i took away from the e-mails, a sense of caution. >> that's interesting. thanks so much. we have a programming note. republican presidential hopefuls preparing to take the stage, once again. the gop debate september 16th at the reagan library in california. it begins at 6:00 p.m. in the
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east. it actually begins 6:00 p.m. west coast time. you will see the drama here on cnn. new details emerging in the fatal shooting of the sheriff's deputy in houston. he was found income tent on a felony charge. according to a texas prosecutor, that's the information we are getting. how is that going to impact the case? we get more in houston. >> reporter: good morning, new revelations about his checkered past and mental illness raising questions in the case that the prosecutor described in court like the cold-blooded killing of a deputy. this morning, new insight into the mind of alleged cop killer, shannon miles. miles, appearing in a houston
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courtroom monday. the clan king of shackles, the only thing breaking the silence as dozens of deputies stare him down. >> unloaded the entire weapon into deputy goforth. >> the suspect shooting him, execution style, a total of 15 times. the motive, prosecutors say, is still unclear. >> let's hope it wasn't because of uniform. let's hope it wasn't race related. >> reporter: now cnn learned the suspect was previously ruled mentally incompetent. back in 2012, he was charged with aggravated assault against a homeless man. miles, also homeless at the time was sent to a mental institution for six months. he was then ruled competent, fwu case never went to trial. one texas sheriff still suggests the killing could have some
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relation to the black lives matter movement, an ongoing uprising against police brutality. >> it isn't very far stretched to believe that kind of rhetoric could influence someone. >> reporter: leaders of the movement say calls for police reform cannot be blamed for the senseless murder. >> our mission is to end violence against black people. every 28 hours a black body is killed. >> reporter: as the houston suburb community continues to mourn the loss of their deputy. president obama called goforth's widow to give his condolences saying he will continue to stand-up for the safety of police officers wherever they serve. >> this crime is not going to divide us. this crime is going to unite us. >> reporter: cnn learned the defense team is meeting with miles in jail. they are evaluating him, determining their strategy, which we understand will include their own ballistics tests.
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no bail was set yesterday and now miles is set to face a judge again in october, but take a look behind me. you can see the memorial growing for deputy goforth. we know he leaves behind a wife and two children. >> the president called his wife overnight. thank you so much. breaking overnight, a second arrest in the bombing of thailand. a foreign male suspect has been taken into custody near the thailand/cambodia border. he's being held in connection with the popular shrine there that killed 20 people and injured more than 100. now to europe's unprecedented refugee crisis. this morning, hundreds of migrants arriving. eu leaders including angela merkel calling for flexibility. many from war ravaged areas. fred is live in munich with the
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latest. fred? >> i'm in front of the munich rail station where a lot of people arrived and made their journey through a lot of europe. it's an interesting moment right now as we go live here because a bus just arrived. it's getting ready to take folks to temporary shelter. most of the people we have been speaking to in front of the station come from syria. many of them made the journey through turkey, then greece. macedonia, a difficult time and now made it here to germany. there has been a lot of criticism of the european union the past couple weeks and months because they don't have a common approach as to how to deal with the crisis going on. the hungarians have had criticism. the germans saying they are willing to take in anybody that is syrian. that is one of the reasons you are seeing the lines behind me that you are seeing.
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there's so many trains coming to munich. hats off to the german authorities, they are coping very, very well, making sure they don't spend too much time in the heat. they get food, water, medical attention and taken to shelters. the authorities here, like many european countries, very much overwhelmed with the flood of people coming to this town. >> we are having transmission problems, but so good to see and hear this from fred. a humanitarian effort in germany. president obama is taking on climate change deniers during a trip to alaska. he says the time to plead ignorance is past. the president is said to call for more ice breakers to be built and use zed in the arctic allowing the u.s. to expand foothold there. machel kaczynski is live with the latest. >> reporter: there's a lot going on on this trip. i'm report thag the president will ask congress for more ice
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breaker ships to keep pace with what other countries, like russia are doing. he's looking at glaciers disappearing. villages that have to move because of sea level rise. he's speaking at a climate conference and changing the name of mt. mckinley to denali. it's where residents in ohio are furious, calling it a political stunt. the white house calls it common sense. itis been known as mt. denali longer than mt. mckinley. they have been petitioned to change it for decades anyway. the president is having none of climate change deniers. listen. >> time to heed the critics and cynics and deniers is past. the time to plead ignorance is surely past.
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those who want to ignore the science, they are increasingly alone. they are on their own shrinking island. >> reporter: we are expecting more announcements during this trip as well as today. alisyn. >> thank you so much for all of that. an accuse zed cop killer in texas found mentally incompetent on a felony assault charge. now he's facing charges for the shooting death of the sheriff's deputy. was it mental illness or something else?
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magic. acutally, it's the samsung galaxy s6 edge, with discreet edge notifications. the man accused of fatally shooting a sheriff's deputy was ruled mentally incompetent. in 2012, shannon miles faced felony assault charges but freed after spending time in a mental hospital. he appeared in a courtroom packed with police officers. tim wise, author of, dear white america" and color blind." we have to start with the mental
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incompetence ruling back in 2012. if i understand it correctly, after serving time in a mental institution, he was then found competent to stand trial, but they couldn't find the man he was accused of beating. does this bring into question his mental health? >> it does. it is a significant development. it is significant in the aggravated assault case, him getting into a dispute of a homeless shelter. he's found incompetent. goes away for six months, he becomes better, move forward with the trial and they can't find the homeless person. it's a prior history of his mental status. the prosecutor is going to have to demonstrate he was mentally competent. >> they will do a mental competencety testing? >> they will. because of the facts in this
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case, which are so compelling and the intent, shooting an officer in the back of a head -- >> unloading his gun on him. >> what happens is the evidence is compelling. it points to him. the defense's only play is to look at his mental state. it is difficult in texas. the burden is on the defendant to demonstrate sanity. briefly, you remember, six months ago, we were talking the american sniper. he was convicted. people with the mental incompetence cannot be sentenced to death. >> let me bring in tim wise. there's been such a rush to -- there's so much emotion wrapped around this. because you see someone murdered, pumping gas, you see them gunned down, shot in the back multiple times. we have seen how the sheriff there, perhaps in a moment of
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emoti emotion, before the investigation is complete, the fact he is saying he believes this is linked to the black lives matter movement. first of all wharks are your thoughts on that? >> emotion or not, that's irresponsible. that is saying everyone that calls for education reform or teacher accountability is responsible and kills a teacher and she's at the classroom. this shooter had no -- let's be clear. in the year since the black lives movement burst on the scenes, the number of police shot has dropped by 25%. the first half of 2014, there were 24 such cases. first half of 2015, 18 cases. to say the black lives movement and the struggle is simply statistically false and irresponsible to shift the
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discussion away from the killing of young, unarmed black here. >> real quickly, you probably have seen some of this video circulating of a group chanting, you know, inflammatory. i don't believe it is the sentiment of the entire group at all. does that not undo the work that is trying to be done? >> i think it was an inappropriate chant. listen, black lives matter is not like the amissable church. i don't think anyone who is trying to link the chant in minnesota to black lives matter
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would appreciate it much if i say that obviously proves all cops are members of a hate group. it's an inappropriate comment in either direction. >> joey, here is the thing one of the suspects, court appointed attorneys didn't want to make it a race issue. that's going to be a challenge to do given the sentiment in the country, given where we are. do you think he is going to be able to do that? >> it could be a challenge. remember, mental health is very much an issue here. that is going to be a focus. what they are examining is the status of his mental health and whether he knew right from wrong. that is going to be the absolute. if krou combine that with what we spoke about, he was found mentally incompetent at a prior time, they are really going to do that. the judge, defense council or prosecutor is going to send him for that mental health evaluation and examined by experts and testifying at trial. >> we appreciate your analysis
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on this. coming up, in the 8:00 hour, we are going to speak with ron, the sheriff. we are going to ask him about the comments he made after the shooting that are drawing criticism. >> very interesting to hear how he addresses that. thanks. a judge expected to hand down a ruling in the deflate gate scandal. will it be a full four-game suspension or rule against the nfl. why the decision may not bring an end to this case.
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big day? ah, the usual. moved some new cars. hauled a bunch of steel. kept the supermarket shelves stocked. made sure everyone got their latest gadgets. what's up for the next shift? ah, nothing much. just keeping the lights on. (laugh) nice. doing the big things that move an economy. see you tomorrow, mac. see you tomorrow, sam. just another day at norfolk southern.
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i was going to the library to do my homework. it was a little bit of a walk to get to the bus stop. i had to wait in line to use the computer. took a lot of juggling to keep it all together. what's possible when you have high-speed internet at home? the library never closes. it makes it so much better to do homework when you're at home. internet essentials from comcast. helping to bridge the digital divide. here is a big headline from the political world. trump facing a challenge in iowa for the first time. it comes from another political outsider. there's a new poll that shows
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neurosurgeon dr. ben carson tieing trump at 23%. this is the first time in more than a month a poll does not find trump far ahead of all the other candidates. carly fiorina and walker round out the top five, but at least 13 points behind. >> hillary clinton e-mails released overnight. some 7,000 pages. 125 of the messages were deemed classified and redakted along with portions of unclassified e-mails. clinton has been criticized for using a private server while secretary of state. the u.s. supreme court ordered a county clerk in kentucky to issue same-sex marriage license immediately. she's been refusing because of religious beliefs. it's been rejected without comment. davis's lawyer says his client is praying over what to do next.
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state's exhibit funeral for adam ward will be held later this morning. about 1,000 mourners joined family and friends at his old high school to say good-bye. the memorial described as a celebration of life. ward and parker were gunned down last week by a former co-worker. after eight long months, we could have a decision on tom brady's deflategate punishment. andy scholes joins us with more. >> good morning. the hearing lasted four months before the judge dismissed both parties saying he would make a ruling by the end of the week, possibly by today. there are three outcomes. one, brady wins and the suspension is overturns. two, the nfl wins and the suspension is upheld. both of those result in a losing side. if brady is on the losing side. he would ask the judge to stay his suspension while he continues to appeal.
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if granted, brady would be able to play in the season opener. the other possible outcome is the judge rules for brady, but sends the case back to orb trags and an arbitrator would rule on the case, not roger goodell. the other story is what would tom brady's stech look like. the first one went viral. on the left, a little better. brady was in the second row. she says he still looks too much like lurch from "the addams family." >> can i see him again? i think it's better, much better, but he is lifting his chin rather than looking down. >> the cheeks are still there. >> she makes his hair look like he has horns. >> can i give you a programming
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note? i think i am talking to the sketch hour later today at 11:00. how she can make the most handsome man on the planet look like that. what can she do for me? >> can she sketch an interview with you at the same time? that would be genius. andy scholes, we appreciate you. a group of republican donors are planning to knock donald trump from the top of the polls. how do they plan to do that tha? we'll explore when "new day" continues. that's lactaid. right. 100% real milk, just without the lactose. so you can drink all you want... ...with no discomfort? exactly. here, try some... mmm, it is real milk. see? delicious. hoof bump! oh. right here girl, boom. lactaid®. 100% real milk. no discomfort. and for a creamy and delicious treat, try lactaid® ice cream.
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across america have benefitted. internet essentials is going to transform the lives of families. i see myself as maybe an entrepreneur. internet essentials from comcast. helping to bridge the digital divide. a new poll shows neurosurgeon ben carson neck in neck with trump among voters in iowa. carson and trump at 23%. now, cnn has learned that some republican donors could be cooking up the notion of putting some ads together to go after donald trump to knock him from the top of the polls before the primary season begins.
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>> cnn commentator kevin madden and cnn commentator paul. he is a senior adviser to a prohillary clinton superpac. thank you for being here. >> good morning. >> let's put up the stunning numbers, again. this is the first time it happened again. look what happened since july. ben carson has 8.5%. he's had a medeoric rise. >> these are three outsiders. the stylistic differences are interesting. dr. carson, you know, he said ak centric things, he's not bombastic. he's got bedside manner. he's a premier neurosurgeon. this is one of the greatest doctors ever.
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it might be that iowa republicans are trying to figure out do they want the bombastic trump or soft spoken carson. they don't want anybody from this zip code where i'm sitting. they want to capture the building, but nobody that has been in washington before. >> not political job experience. i want to put the numbers back up. 56%, if you look at iowa, 23 plus 23 plus ten, i think that equals 56%. they don't want anyone with job experience. you may hear establishment type, republican donors might want to go after donald trump with ads. isn't there a risk to that given there's an antiestablishment ad out there. >> many donors see the bigger risk, that we nominate somebody or somebody like donald trump takes over the nominating process in a way that makes the
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nominee, who is unelectable or pulls our eventual nominee so far to the right they can't win in a general election. that is what many wealthy donor who is fund the groups put a premium on. can somebody win? i have to say, probably not too happy, either, about trump's position on things like immigration reform and saying he wants to tax hedge fund managers, he wants to tax the wealthiest. those are policies that add to a lot of the class inside the republican party. so, the bigger risk, though, is, once the outside group is left to do the dirty work, the campaigns seed a great deal of their message to an outside group they don't have control on. it will be interesting how it affects the strategies and decisions made inside the other campaigns like jeb bush, marco rubio or scott walker.
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>> one thing we like to do during the show is check donald trump's tweets because they are always interesting. he is not going after his fellow gop opponents today, but rather president obama because of the name change from mt. mckinley to denali that president obama talked about. here is what trump says. president obama wants to change it after more than 100 years. great insult to ohio. i will change it back. >> it's interesting he is taking on the president as though we are in the general election. >> right. if there's one thing, nothing united the people of earth. republicans are all over the map. what unites them is they hate the president. the independent governor, two republican senators, there's consensus up there. i'm the father of an alaskan fishing guide up there. everyone calls it denali, they
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hate the name mckinley. he knows ohio has more electoral votes than alaska so maybe he's thinking ahead and sucking up to the people of the buffalo state. >> nobody can ever accuse trump of being dumb. >> kevin, let's talk about e-mails now, shall we? overnight, 7,000 e-mails were released. they talk about fish. there's a lot of indication of bloom bloom bloomenthal. the des moines register poll from earlier this week where voters were asked, how important are hillary clinton's e-mails. 61% say unimportant. 21% say somewhat important. so, do people really care about this? >> look, i think they do. i think hillary clinton has suffered some permanent damage on the character issue that is voters take into account when
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they choose their candidate. is this somebody i can trust? is this somebody that doesn't have something to hide? the way this process has been handled by the clinton campaign brought up more questions in that regard. in that poll, you have a lot of democratic voters asked that question. 21 is actually pretty high. that's the kind of concern that will lead people to start to look. maybe i can support bernie sanders. maybe he has less of an issue that republicans are going to use to exploit and therefore maybe i should look at offering support to bernie sanders. it will continue to be a question for hillary clinton. i can tell you, the republicans aren't going to let it go. it will continue to be a question that distracts from her ability to get on message and offense with so many voters. >> guys, we are out of time. paul, i think we know how you feel about this. >> i have to be able to defend
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my gal. nothing classified, nothing controversial. this is a story the press needs to report the e-mails exonerate and clear hillary clinton. >> there you go. thanks so much. michaela? there is a migrant crisis gripping europe. thousands of refugees are pouring into austria and germany. is enough being done? we are going to take a closer look when "new day" returns.
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i was going to the library to do my homework. it was a little bit of a walk to get to the bus stop. i had to wait in line to use the computer. took a lot of juggling to keep it all together. what's possible when you have high-speed internet at home? the library never closes.
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it makes it so much better to do homework when you're at home. internet essentials from comcast. helping to bridge the digital divide. welcome back to "new day." emergency meeting on the agenda for eu leaders to discuss the growing migrant crisis. they are trying to slow the surge but it's not working as planned. hundreds arrived in germany and hundreds of thousands in europe with no slowdown in sight. where are they coming from?
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where are they trying to get? bobby ghosh is here with me. so many people now going from syria, war torn regions like syria trying to get to europe and afghanistan, the war has been raging for over a decade now, trying to get to europe. why not go somewhere closer by. if you are in syria, go to jordan or the gulf states or pakistan? >> from syria, they are going to jordan. they have over 600,000 people, refugees, turkey, 1.6 million and lebanon 1.1 million. they are overwhelmed. from afghanistan, if your neighborhood is pakistan, you can understand why you don't want to go there. they want to get to europe because they have a history of taking refugees. once they can get through difficulties, there's an expectation they will have
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opportunities to work, to live with dignity, freedom from persecution. they don't -- there's no expectation of that from their neighborhood. there's no expectation, for instance, for if you are an afghan refugee, grow to pakistan, you have the opportune toy work and live with dignity. a lot of countries won't take them, all the oil-rich countries they don't want the refugees. >> even if you could solve those problems, it wouldn't solve the migrant crisis. you are seeing a flow in africa. you are seeing people flow in from kosovo through europe. a big flow of people from nigeria as well. the numbers are pouring in. >> the numbers are huge. not all of them are from war torn countries. i would ad lib ya. the vast majority are coming
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from war torn countries. if you can deal with those, it may not stop the flow, but greatly reduce it. that's the challenge. the risks people are willing to take to get to europe point to something. people will not take that and get on a rickety boat to cross the sea to get to europe if they didn't absolutely have to. >> look at where they are going now. look at a map of europe. you can see the countries so many people are trying to get to. germany, by far, is the destination of choice. why germany? >> because germany will take them. people are going where they are most welcome or least unwelcome. a lot of them would prefer britain, by they don't want them. they would love to come to the united states, if they could. we are too far away. they will go where they are allowed to go.
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a lot of them wind up in northern country, scandinavia and germany. if you think about it, they are people from warm, desert countries. they don't want to be in cold climates. >> leave the map up, if you can. you see greece, hungary. they are countries economically not doing as well. can they handle this inflow of immigrants? >> there's philosophy, clearly they can't. you have countries like hungary with 100 mile barbed wire fence, now a wooden barrier behind the fence. they don't want to. the trouble is, no fence is going to stop this huge tide of people. they are going to need help, these countries, in order to take these people. they should be getting more funding from international bodies and more funding from rich arab states that do have
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the money. why shouldn't saudi arabia help hungary and bulgaria? >> it's interesting. bobby ghosh, thank you so much. we are following a lot of new this is morning, let's get to it. >> insight into the mind of alleged cop killer, shannon miles. >> he deserves it book thrown at him plus the death penalty. >> let's hope it's not race related. >> i don't think anyone is promoting violence against police officers. ben carson is giving trump a run for the money. >> the pediatric surgeon is running neck and neck. the appeal may be their lack of experience. >> they are furious at the republican establishment. >> a new batch of e-mails. hillary clinton doesn't want us to know what she's doing. >> i thought it was surprising
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somebody would think it was okay to have a private server in your home. announcer: this is "new day" with chris cuomo, alabama syn camerota. the all important state of iowa. overnight, a new round of hillary clinton's e-mails released by the state department. what is inside them? do they include classified information? more importantly, do voters care? cnns senior political reporter, nia-malika henderson. >> good news for ben carson this morning. poll numbers out showing him tied with donald trump. we will look at them here. carson is at 23%. trump at 23%, too. fiorina is on a bit of a rise to 10% and 9%. the other folks, establishment
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figures not doing as well. carson up from 8% in july. another poll shows trump at 23%. carson well within striking distance. walker on a slide with only 8%. cruz and others in single digits. if you look at january, you have a trend line here, which shows those antiestablishment, a non-political figure on a rise dating back to january and up until now. and we know why. monmouth asked iowa gop caucus goers who kind of president they want to see next in the ovl office. 23% say they want someone with government experience. 63% want someone outside of government. there you go. i think that tells the story of this campaign. >> a strong sentiment folt right now.
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thanks for that. >> yes, we brought you the interview with become promoting his book with his daughter, liz. the former vice president now weighing in, sort of, on donald trump's remarkable summer. >> okay, get your popcorn ready. it is the summer of donald trump, ladies and gentlemen. >> what do you think of donald trump? >> i don't know the man, i have never met him. >> watching this spectacle, what do you think? >> he's a candidate and i don't want to be in the business of rating candidates, grading them. i have not signed on with anybody and don't plan to today. >> you are not endorsing donald trump today? >> that's a given, i'm not endorsing donald trump. >> let me try it this way, why do you think he's doing so well in the polls. >> i am surprised he has done as well as he has.
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most of us have, on the republican side. he is a major fok tor going forward and we'll watch developments with interest. >> liz, why do you think he's doing so well in the polls? the vice president is punting on his question. >> hoping i will dive in. no, i think it's this notion that people are frustrated with the president who doesn't seem to believe in american greatness, mile an hour exceptionalism. i think people are frustrated with washington. donald trump is tapping into a lot of that? >> would you vote for him? >> i will support the nominee of my party as i always have. it's very important. >> you can see more of the interview on "ac 360" tonight and tomorrow. you will see it here on "new day." >> we look forward to that. after the summer of trump, how has ben carson managed to surge to tie trump? >> we have a conservative radio
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host and ben carson's business manager and confidant. good morning. >> good morning, alisyn. >> let's pull up the poll that shows carson had a rise. since july, 8% in iowa. now he's at 23%. he's tied with trump. what happened in iowa over the past month? >> well, alisyn, team carson calls it hard work, stayed on message, not being distracted, being sincere, authentic and, the good news is that the media no longer gets to fine dr. carson to the american people. when he is in iowa, new hampshire, south carolina, nevada, it resinates with them. they like to talk about their personal story, which is remarkable. what is neglected is dr. carson's rapid understanding of
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foreign policy. dr. carson's understanding of issue that is people care about that they relate to him directly. they believe that he is sincere and, obviously, it's easy to say it's anti-establishment. if you look at the case with senator clinton and the top three on the republican side, there may be an anti-establishment sentiment, but it's because americans across this country believe something is not working for them. what happened to is shiny city on the hill that ronald reagan talked about. what about young people expected to have job opportunities and not having to go home and live with their parents? these are the kind of things the media cannot capture, connecting with every day americans. >> you used authentic and sincere. in the past week, the media used soft spoken, humble, sleepy, sop
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riffic, low energy, a mumbler. these are not normally the words associated with a winning presidential candidate. do you think that his style of being soft spoken plays outside of iowa? >> well, dr. carson, if you know anything about him, and i think he's introducing himself to the american people every day. there are so many people who don't know who dr. carson is. there is something to his gift at hands. when you are a surgeon, quiteness, understanding the complications of the most complicated surgeries performed under his watch, you have to become -- you have to be really, really immersed in details. on a moment's notice something could change in the operating room and you have to make split second decisions that mean the life and death of that child or whoever is under his care. while the american media may not understand that, people that
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understand their role, that calmness is a gift. while he's trying to translate that to politics, he's soft spoken, but never underestimate it for being weak, not firm and not strong. never underestimate his soft spokenness of being out of touch and not listening or hearing. it's the complete opposite. people like to judge people in soundbytes. while dr. carson is on the road, they are getting the view of who this person is. guess what? not only do they respect him because of his history as a neurosurgeon, they respect his intellect. they respect he is very bright, a quick learner and prepared himself in leadership. most people in the media tried to dismiss dr. carson as the loser, he came in at the bottom. that was the media's version.
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why? we don't understand it and we don't care. after the polling numbers came out, which debate did they watch? they saw a man very presidential and elegant, soft spoken and firm. there is fire in the belly of dr. carson as you can see and he continues to be on the role and they continue to understand him. >> i want to ask you about news of the day and how dr. carson views it. people have refused licenses to marry gay couples. yesterday, the supreme court refused their appeal. in other words, now marriage licenses must be issued. how does dr. carson view that? >> the good news, alisyn is dr. karlson is on vacation and we don't know what he feels about this. certainly, we will engage in
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that and answer for you. on that issue, i cannot answer today. >> you are not on vacation, but dr. carson is on vacation. i like how that works. that is a -- last, i want to read you something that is provocative from an op-ed in the washington post and get your comments to it. jonathan capehart writes about dr. carson. the republican answer to obama. a role that was herman cain's. see, we have our own brilliant black men. do you think it's because dr. carson is black? >> dr. carson's appeal is that he, as american as apple pie and chevrolet and football and baseball. he's as american as serena williams who we hope to catch her slam.
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dr. carson relates to the american people. you cannot put him in a box. yes, he understands racism because he grew up in poverty. he grew up with discrimination. he was often mistaken as an orderly at john hopkins. >> she is not defined by race. he is defined by the rise out of poverty, embracing the american dream like many who came here. hardwork, discipline, faith in god and sacrifice. that's what we are. that's who dr. carson is. >> armstrong, you are working hard this vacation week. great to see you. don't forget you can watch ben carson and more than a dozen other presidential contenders debate at the cnn gop debate at the reagan library september 16th. coverage at 6:00 p.m. eastern on cnn. >> a busy night for reporters.
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the state department released 7,000 pages stuff. some of it was classified. how will this affect the clinton campaign? elise n our washington bureau. what have we learned? >> well, john, 125 of the 7,000 e-mails have information that was retro actively classified. they weren't marked classified at the time, but they have been upgraded before the state department released them to the public. several parts of them have been redacted. there's a memo, a detailed memo from chelsea clinton, reporting back on her trip to haiti after the earthquake with the clinton foundation.
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interestingly, there are e-mails that didn't recognize clinton's server. in an e-mail, her aide says an e-mail bounced back from someone on the state department's system. we have a screen grab there. when she called the help desk, they had no idea it was you. there were several e-mails about clinton's new ipad. her aide says your ipad arrived. clinton saying that's exciting news. she wanted to get the flights to crew crane. clinton said there was only one device she used. some of the e-mails you have to be there at the time to know the back story. there was one that got a lot of buzz about a fish problem. there was a huge trade dispute holding up a shipment of fish to
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israel before the passover holiday. sometimes they are not in code. sometimes a fish is a fish. >> i have said that so many times, i lost count, actually. thank you so much. ten minutes after the hour. the suspects in the execution style murder of a deputy spent six months in a hospital after he was found mentally incompetent to stand trial. prosecutors say shannon miles emptied his gun, some 15 rounds he fired into that officer. we get the latest from rosa florez in houston where the community is grieving. >> reporter: good morning, michaela. the prosecutor and the defense tight lipped about the motive in this case. you can't ignore the clues they are putting forth, like information about the suspects criminal past and his history with mental illness. this morning, new insight into the mind of alleged cop killer,
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shannon miles. miles, appearing in a houston courtroom month, the clanking of chak shackles that has deputies stare thim down. >> reporter: prosecutors say the 30-year-old ambushed deputy darren goforth at a gas station. the suspect shooting him execution style, a total of 15 times. the motive, prosecutors say, is still unclear. >> let's hope it wasn't because of uniform or race related. >> reporter: he was previously ruled mentally incompetent in 2012. miles was charged with assault against a homeless man. miles, also homeless at the time was sent to a mental institution for six months. he ruled competent, but the case
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never went to trial given his health history. they suggest the killing could have some relation to the black lives matter movement, an ongoing uprising against police brutality. >> it isn't far stretched to believe that could influence someone. >> leaders of the movement say calls for police reform cannot be blamed for the senseless murder. >> end violence against black people and the fact that every 28 hours a black body is killed. >> reporter: the houston suburb community mourns the lass. president obama called the widow saying he will continue to stand-up for the safety of police officers wherever they serve. >> this crime is not going to divide us. this crime is going to unite us. >> reporter: as we take another live look here, you can see a memorial that the growing for
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deputy goforth. there is a group of organizers here, just people from this community coming together to raise money for his family. now, the latest we have heard about a quarter of a million dollars has been raised. >> my goodness, what tremendous support for that family. thank you so much. next hour, we are dpoung to speak with ron hickman, the sheriff of the county. and we are going to ask him for an update about the crime and the suspect and the comments he made after the shooting drawing criticism. . this 74-year-old has a history of views but none of the victims was jewish. breaking overnight, a second arrest in the bombing of
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thailand. a second suspect taken into custody near the thailand/cambodia border. the shrine killed 20 people and injured more than 100. a major shift from the pope. pope francis says that women who have had an abortion can be reinstated simply by going to confession. they had to seek a bishop's permission to reverse their abandishment from the church. it has long been viewed as a reason many women never return to the church. for now, the change is only for the holy year, which starts december 8. >> just when you think you have heard everything, this pope continues to surprise. everybody is so surprised. >> there will be rumblings. it is interesting. interesting is the reaction as this reaches congregations. >> and as he comes to the united states.
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he's trying to attract many people back to the church. meanwhile, we have more to tell you about the shooting of the sheriff in texas. the suspect ruled unfit to stand trial. a few years ago. my name is phil zietlow, and i've been an engineer on the cheerios team for 51 years. about five years ago, i found out that if my daughter-in-law, joyce, eats anything with gluten in it she feels pretty darn terrible. so my team and i came up with a way to remove the grains that contain gluten, from the naturally gluten free oats that cheerios are made of. so now joyce and i can have cheerios together anytime we want. and if you love someone with celiac, or gluten sensitivity, you can too. i've had moderate to severe plaque psoriasis
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the man accused of firing 15 shots at a sheriff's deputy, killing him at a texas gas station has been deemed mentally incompetent to stand trial on
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felony charges three years ago in a previous case. shannon miles appeared in court monday in a courtroom packed with police officers. i want to bring in cnn law enforcement analyst, i was struck as i looked at the courtroom. the walls lined with officers and sheriffs. law enforcement there to watch as the suspect was brought in, accused of firing 15 shots, emptying his gun as he was allegedly attacking sheriff's deputy darren goforth. what's it like, as an officer, to sit there and watch that kind of thing? it must stir up emotion. >> i'm going to be honest with you. it was a brutal slaying. it was painful for any of us to hear about. those officers that were in the courtroom was there in show of their support for their fellow officer who recollects they work with every day and who they
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share experiences with, who they have gone on dangerous calls with and they have survived a number of situations together. there's a sense of friendship, a sense of camaraderie and showing support. here is what is unresting, michael. in any profession, you will find that people that work closely together come together at a time such as this. if you look at that community where that deputy was killed, you are seeing that community come together and show support. it's a variety of people. it's a cross segment of folks in that community who are saddened by this tragic loss of life. >> there is a notion out there. you hear it from some in the law enforcement community and some from the political community that law enforcement is under attack. people are targeting officers politically for the way they go about their practices.
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it could be, perhaps violence. i want you to listen to what senator, ted cruz, who is running for president, said about this. listen. >> cops across this country are feeling the assault. they are feeling the assault from the president, from the top on down as we see whether it's in ferguson or baltimore. the response of seeing your officials at the attorney general is to vilify law enforcement. that's wrong. it's fundamentally wrong. it's enduring safety and security. >> the senator is taking it far there. he's blaming the president and politicians for going after law enforcement. that is an extreme notion. on the other end, you speak to people in the community who feel an intense scrutiny now.
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>> this is a very difficult time for policing in this country. at the end of the day, the greatest majority of people in this country support people in their communities. the majority of men and woman doing this job are doing a fantastic job. we have to take into account, over the course of the last year, when all these events began to emerge that created so much concern in communities across america, police departments, sheriff's departments, law enforcement have made significant strides and efforts to connect, to begin to look at the way they do business, to look at the hiring, recruitment, training and how to de-escalate situations. law enforcement across the country is moving forward in a positive way. anytime we get negative rhetoric in regards to police, it is not a good thing. no one should be able to say things that are going to be
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inflammatory, regardless of what that group or organization would happen to be. these men and women have a tough enough job. we have to support police across the nation and understand it is a very difficult job, particularly now. we must continue to support them. >> the president called the widow of deputy goforth. let me read what the president put out. >> i promise i will highlight the bravery police officers show in the community every single day. they put their lives on the line for safety, targeting police officers is completely unacceptable on a front to civiled society. there's a lot of focus on race since the days he was killed. we have a mental health issue now. the suspect hapd been looked at for mental health issues in the past. here he is with not one but two weapons inside his house.
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>> that's continuing to be an emerging issue in what we are learning going forward, that there is some indication, strong indication, evidence presented or reported that he has a mental health history and that may be the imptous of his attack. we don't know for certain. as this investigation continues, i think we will learn more. here, let me say this on behalf of the family of deputy goforth and that sheriff and the men and women in that department, hi heart felt condolences go out to your loss. this is a very painful time for them and that community. >> the country mourns alongside. thank you so much for being with us. >> thank you for having me. >> michaela? thank you. republican white house officials want to undo something done by president obama. changing the name of a mountain. why donald trump says he will change it back. that's with john king after the
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a new batch of hillary clinton e-mails released.
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some 7,000 pages released. 125 of the messages were deemed as classified and redakted along with portions of unclassified e-mails. clinton has been criticized using a public server for business as secretary of state. a rise in murders. milwaukee has seen the biggest spike, 76% this year. 104 people have been killed so far and there were only 86 homicides last year. dozens of cities reported increases in murders, notely new orleans, baltimore, washington, d.c., and st. louis. a temporary reprieve for bob mcdonal. he was sentenced to two years behind bars in january for doing favors for a businessman who gave him $165,000 in gifts and loans. another busy day in politics. let's turn to john king and
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inside politics to take a look at all things, mountains in alaska, e-mailing. you have a few things to delve into. >> we do. we'll see if we have humor this morning. thanks, michaela. with me, nia-malika henderson. the clinton e-mails. 7,000 pages. 125 of them deemed sensitive, there are, redacted. secretary clinton said, publicly, when they were sent and received, they were not. so far, in all the e-mails released tharks holds up. there are still questions, why did you set up a private server? to the point, can she look the public in the eye, when they were sent and received they were not, that's correct, right? >> that's right. that's what you hear her saying over and over again. i didn't send e-mails marked as classified at the time. she's much more explaining and
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talking about requests and saying, even if i had been on a government e-mail, they would have done this review of the e-mail to figure out which were retro actively classified. we'll see what sticks. the poll shows 61% of democrats don't care about the issue. i think it might be the bloomberg poll. >> they say they don't care, yet her honesty and trustworthy numbers are down. democrats are going to stick with hillary clinton on the issue. anything, robert? you look for republicans going through these, too. i guess the other democratic campaign. so far, they resisted going down this road. one e-mail shows they were aware. houma abedin says her e-mail bounced back and somebody didn't know because it came from a hillary clinton e-mail address. they didn't know it was her. they e-mailed. so, they were aware within the
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state department it could cause an issue. is that a big deal? >> it's not a big deal within the democratic primary. her rivals are not making it an issue. sanders doesn't want to go negative. he's not going to get the nomination on e-mails. this could be a general election thing for the clinton's. it's the drip, drip, drip on the e-mails. can we make her more vulnerable even though she's got a lot of backing from people. >> you see the mundane business from government and outside advisers and a lot of people roll their eyes. the obama white house would not allow a job at the state department. no, no, no, they view him as toxic. a masked man robbed a bank in virginia. she said should i be flattered a little bit?
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depends on the secret service. a little fun in the e-mails there. >> that's right. you is that true before the e-mails where she couldn't figure out the fax machine. there was a veep-like quality going on here. some mundane government work. >> i like that. the ipad, they call it the hpad. you have to show me how to use that. the president is in alaska. he was at a climate change president yesterday. president obama is on his way out, his final term is winding down, injecting himself in a major way in the 2016 campaign. he's making the case that voters should old all candidates, even republicans accountable. >> the time to plead ignorance is surely passed. those who want to ignore the science, they are increasingly alone. they are on their own shrinking island. any leader willing to take a
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gamble on a future like that, any so-called leader who does not take this issue seriously or treats it like a joke, not fit to lead. >> he's taking issue with the entire class of republican candidates. >> i think that's right. you know, this also comes as he's going to open up the arctic to drilling and hillary clinton, of course, has been to the left of him on that issue. she's had some problems in terms of really rallying the greenies of the democratic party. he wants to lay down the marker for republicans. >> how big of a deal is the mckinley/denali debate. he's going to rename mt. mckinley. the republicans in alaska want this. they have called it denali forever. it is their heritage, their culture. if you are john boehner, from
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ohio, you say this is an outrage and horrible. president obama wants to change the name after 100 years. a great insult to ohio. i will change this back. >> it's not a big issue. it's fascinating to watch the republican field. >> one person recognizes there's another angle to go after president obama. >> we talked at the top of the show, this is fascinating, the poll in iowa. don't put too much stock in one poll. the monmouth poll puts carson and trump in a tie. dr. ben carson never held office. donald trump, never held office. fiorina never held office. sorry, if your name is senator or governor, go away. >> does that stay in iowa? does that stay in the summer or continue into the fall?
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those folks couldn't be more different who are bunched up in the antiestablishment. >> they are all outsiders. >> that's the thing. in terms of temperment and style -- >> maybe iowa is the place to go if you are an outsider. you are now new hampshire. >> we were joking about math. i don't want the nuns to remember me from my youth and get back with me. the three non-politicians are carrying a huge basket of votes right now. can they organize it and turn it out? >> iowa is always rewarded outside zers. huckabee in 2008. santorum in 2012. you can get a bounce there if you are an outsider. >> if you are scott walker, he was 22% in this poll a couple months ago is down to 7%. the voters are sending you a
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message. >> tough be worried if you are huckabee. the vote is going to cruz and carson and to a lot of iowa caucus voters. huckabee and santorum are old news now. >> he was a republican and served on the republican -- we sat down with the former vice president and his daughter. what do you make of this trump guy. this is fun. >> you are not endorsing donald trump today? >> you can even -- that's a given, i am not endorsing donald trump today. >> trump loves it. the republican establishment doesn't back me. >> it helps trump. >> he says he's not doing it today, he could probably add or ever. >> there's still room for dick cheney. >> just get in. >> he's looking good. >> someone mentioned michael
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dukakis. >> i lived that one. that was my first campaign. john king covering michael dukakis. good job, good wages. >> you are throwing it out there. go out on a limb. thank you. see you tomorrow. another victory for gay marriage. the supreme court rejecting a kentucky clerk's objection to issuing gay marriages to same-sex couples. we will talk to the clerk about what he will do next. brain food, hmmm. ensure has b vitamins that help support brain health - now that's smart nutrition. ensure's complete balanced nutrition has 26 vitamins and minerals and 9 grams of protein. ensure. take life in.
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so far more than two million people across america have benefitted. internet essentials is going to transform the lives of families. i see myself as maybe an entrepreneur. internet essentials from comcast. helping to bridge the digital divide. the supreme court striking down the case of a clerk in kentucky planning religious objection to issuing same-sex marriage licenses. now, they must all issue licenses to gay couples. mr. davis thanks for being here. last night, you lost the battle. kentucky must now issue same-sex marriage licenses. what is your plan? >> my plan is to keep trying to
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get the message out that there is a lady presently in danger of jail or fines. >> you mean the other county clerk who was at the heart of this case? >> yeah, miss davis. that was the purpose to try to raise awareness of what's going on and the severity of a christian lady that has done nothing wrong, nor have i, tried to prevent anyone from getting their marriage license. they can go to any other county around and get those. we have never tried to prevent. we have only tried to exercise our first amendment rights. i think that she's doing that, i'm doing that, we are all doing that. as press, freedom of speech is part of the first amendment right. i think that we are all due that. there's a lot of people that died for that right. i think we should be able to exercise it. >> sure. >> i have -- >> sorry, i just want to mention
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a couple things that you said there. you are on this bike ride. you are traveling across country from louisville to the west coast and you are free to speak your mind, of course. according to the supreme court you must issue marriage licenses to couples who come to you in your county. you say you have not stood in anybody's way, but you have refused licenses. will you now abide by the supreme court? >> what i want to -- what i want to say is, i cannot go against my conscience or my convictions, i cannot. there is a solution. there is a simple solution that that's part of the reason for the bike ride, to let people know there is a way that everyone can be treated fairly in this. >> okay, what is it? >> there's an idea that i have pitched over and over again and going to share it with you right now. there's a way that marriage
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license can be received in the county of which ever county it may be that these folks live in, that check get the marriage license without someone having to issue them, that may have an objective to it. >> yeah. >> it's already in kentucky, there is the law. there has to be five people present at every wedding. there has to be a person that does the wedding, and two witnesses at every wedding. the person that sol omizes the wedding has the discretion to say yes, i will perform it or no, i will not. simply, what i'm asking is that the legislative body be allowed to convene so they can -- so they can change the statute, take the issuance of marriage license out of the state all
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together. let the person that does the wedding, authorize the wedding. at which time, they would bring the license back to the county clerk's office for recordation. >> i hear you. i understand your alternative. here is suggesting this might be a win/win for everybody. however, they took up this issue. they banned gay marriage and supreme court now overruled that. the supreme court, your idea may make sense, but the supreme court is higher than that authority and they have decided in kentucky, you must issue gay marriage licenses. your idea, it's too late, in other words, for your suggestion. >> that's the whole -- that's the whole idea of the governor doing his job and letting the legislative body convene. if he would do that, they could take the issuance of license out of the hands of a human that
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would have an objective to this. that could be done simply and quickly. we have it on paper. >> mr. davis, do you have a feeling that you are above the law? >> no, ma'am, i do not. i do have a feeling there is a power above whatever man may put on paper and i think that authority is of a godly nature and of a nature itself. i think that none of us can -- none of us can say when we are leaving this life and none of us can predict how long we are going to live. we are not going to live forever. nature's law is going to prevail, eventually. >> i want to read you to what your governor has said about this and about you. i advise i respect his views,
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however when he was elected he took a constitutional oath to uphold the united states constitution. one duty is issue marriage license. they say they require those marriage licenses to be issued regardless of gender. when you get back from your bike ride, will you adhere to the oath you took or will you fight it? >> i will adhere to the oath i took. that was that i would support the constitution of the united states and the constitution of the commonwealth. the constitution of this commonwealth says marriage is between one man and one woman. section 26, i suggest people take time to look at section 26 of the constitution. >> that's been overruled. it's been overruled by the supreme court's decision. >> that is, however, our state constitution in section 26
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clearly says that no higher power, no higher authority shall interfere with what is in our state's constitution. anything that they do rule on that's contrary the state's constitution shall be deemed void. that is the language. and i think that needs to be looked at. house bill 279 that was passed 2013 says that the government has a duty to when someone has a ko conscientious objective, has to find a way that they don't go against their conscience. >> we'll follow what happens when you do return from your bike ride. we appreciate you being on "new day." casey davis, thanks so much. kanye west says the
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some jokes about the 2020 race already. thanks to kanye west's presidential ambitions jimmy kimmel matched up trump and kanye, their biggest hits to date together. >> kanye says he's running for president in 2020. he has a great deal in common with another famous person who wants to be president. >> i have decided in 2020 to run for president. >> i am officially running for president of the united states. >> i'm not no politician, bro. >> how stupid are these politicians? >> i just wanted people to like me more. >> i think they like me in a certain way, which is nice. it's nice to be liked. >> they got them more rates.
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>> the only thing they care about is rates. >> there you go. >> oh my goods neness. >> is donald trump's front-runner status in trouble, not because of kanye west, but a new poll showing ben carson sneaking up. what is behind the benmentum, if that's a word? >> i don't think that's a word. imagine - she won't have to remember passwords. or obsess about security. she'll log in with her smile. he'll have his very own personal assistant. and this guy won't just surf the web. he'll touch it. scribble on it. and share it. because these kids will grow up with windows 10. get started today.
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two guys who have never held political office leading the race. >> how concerned should the republican establishment be at this point? >> 125 of the 7,000 e-mails upgraded to classified. >> classification is not an exact science. >> there's new revelations coming out every week. >> she didn't break any rules. >> 15 shell cases. you can do the math. he unloaded the entire pistol into deputy goforth. >> let's hope that it wasn't because of a uniform. >> we have another incident of somebody with mental illness being able to get a gun. >> this is "new day" with chris cuomo, alisyn camerota and
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michaela pereira. >> good morning. welcome to your "new day." it is tuesday, the 1st day of september. it is 8:00 in the east. is donald trump losing his appeal? neuro surgeon ben carson even with trump in that political state of i.a.e.ey iowa. >> let's get right to mall lni l henderson. >> he's about 23% in these new polls tied with trump there. you see fiorina at 10%. a lot of the newcomers doing really well. if you look at carson there, he's up from 8% from july. fiorina is up from 3% in july, now at 10%.
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another poll from the des moines register and bloomberg also shows the same thing. trump there at 23%. carson at 18%. basically neck and neck there within the margin of error. people like huckabee not doing so well. he's at 4%. if you look overall at these numbers dating back to january, what you see really is this trend with these outsider, antiestablishment, nonpolitical figures doing really, really well. and one of the reasons is that folks in iowa, these likely caucus goers, when you ask them what they want their next president to be like, 23% say they want someone with government experience. 66% say they would prefer the next president not have any government experience. and that's why you've got people like that pediatric neurosurgeon named ben carson and that reality tycoon named donald
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trump doing so well. >> thank you so much. while many of you were sleeping the state department released some 7,000 pages, e-mails, new e-mails we haven't seen before from hillary clinton's time as secretary of state. some of them now considered classified, but not before. more on what is inside these documents, elise. >> reporter: john, we're talking about 125 of the 7,000 e-mails have information that's now been classified. as you said, they weren't marked classified at the time. but the state department has upgraded them before releasing them to the public, several parts of them redacted. once again we get a sense of her close relationship with former clinton advisor sidney blum
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blumenthal. interestingly, there are also e-mails suggesting that the state department tech analyst didn't recognize clinton's server. we have a screen grab of one of them. one of her aides says an e-mail bounced back from someone on the state department system. when this person called the help desk, she says they had no idea it was you. her ipad. she was excited. wanted to get some sbrinstructi object a flig-- on a flight to ukraine. one of the buzz was about what
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clinton called the givelte fish. it was holding up a huge shipment of fish right to the passover holiday. >> thank you for explaining the fish connection. that was very helpful. thank you so much. now joining us this morning to weigh in on all things politics and to preview a rally opposing the iran nuclear deal, senator lindsey graham. good morning, senator. great to see you. let's talk about this newest monmouth poll. ben carson is tied with donald trump at the top, 23%. senator, we go all the way to the back of the pack and we see lindsey graham at 0%. senator, what is going on here? >> i've got a lot of growth
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potential. you know what i think is going on -- well, i do. ben carson is a nice guy. i think he fits iowa much better than trump. what we'll see overtime is the electorate start to think about who do we want to be the next commander in chief. i don't know what mr. carson has done over the last year, which is surgery which is amazing. but i've been going to iraq and i'm ready to be president on day one and destroy isil. and the other candidates, i haven't heard a real concrete plan much different than obama. i think that will matter overtime. >> one of the things you've done, one of the tactics you've used in your campaign is to go against donald trump, to verbally spar with him. you've said some colorful things about what you would like to do, in fact, to donald trump.
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but some of the other candidates seem to be taking almost a page from his play book. let me play for you how scott walker and chris christie seem to be sounding a little trump-like and get your response. >> we want to build a wall north of the border. >> some people have asked about that in new hampshire. they've raised some legitimate concerns including law enforcement folks that brought that up to me at a town hall meeting. that is a legitimate issue for us to look at. >> at any moment fedex can tell you where that package is, yet we let people come to this country with visas and this minute they come in we lose track of them. i'm going to ask fred smith, the founder of fedex, come work for the government for three months. >> senator, do you think they're letting donald trump set their tone on immigration? >> i think building a wall between us in canada is not a good idea. the canadians come to myrtle
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beach in march and they go swimming. we're glad to have them. it's too cold for us. the bill that i've worked on multiple times has a way to secure the border. it doubles the border patrol, triples the drones. and we have a visa tracking system to let law enforcement know if you've over stayed your system. so this idea of building a wall between us and canada and treating people like packages is probably not helping our overall cause. >> he says that he plans to make hedge fund managers millionaires, multimillionaires, pay a higher tax rate, though it's not going over well with everyone. let me play this for you and see how you would respond. >> i would say to the head of ford sorry i'm not going to approve, you're going to pay a tax, every car and truck and part that comes across that
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southern border you're going to pay a 35% tax, okay? and i would let people making hundreds and hundreds of millions of dollars a year pay some tax. i want to lower taxes for the middle class. >> senator, what's your answer to taxes? >> well, number one, you've got to get taxes through the congress. he's not king even though me may think he might be. there's no way the congress is going to do what he says regarding ford motor company. we have a trading relationship with mexico. they're one of our largest trading partners. if we start taxing their goods, they'll start taxing ours. as to hedge funds, i would change the tax rates if it were part of an overall deal to fix the broken entitlement system. to systems listening i will change the hedge fund tax system if you will help me change the age retirement for younger
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workers and reduce benefits so we don't have medical care and social security to go broke. >> senator, let's talk about the iran nuclear deal and whether or not congress -- there are enough votes in is there and how congress is feeling about it and what your plan is today. >> number one, we're going to have a rally. this is a terrible deal. when somebody says they want to cut your tloehroat, the last th you should do is buy them a knife. the ayatollah gets a hundred million dollars. he gets a pathway to a bomb and money to change it all. i promise you this, the money we're going to give iran is going to go into their war machine, not roads and bridges. in 15 years they're going to have a nuclear device even if they don't cheat, with a missile to deliver it. the terrorist organizations that
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mean to hurt us and israel will have more money. you might as well write the check to hezbollah and hamas because that's where the money is going to go. >> the people on the other side say you don't have to like it, but what's the alternative? sanctions actually were not working to keep them from their march towards a nuclear weapon. >> sanctions did work. they were at the table because of sanctions. to my friends who say it's this deal or a war, that's a false choice. it's between a bad deal and a better deal. president obama said you'd have to be crazy to oppose this deal. to my friends on the other side, you'd have to be crazy to trust this ayatollah. they can buy weapons in five years. so at the end of the day you've empowered the ayatollah. and if he'll kill his own people, what do you think he'll
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do to us and israel? this guy is a religious nazi. and he will overtime use whatever weapons he develops or buys against us and israel and this is the biggest miscalculation since the '30s. president obama has made the world a far nmore dangerous place. >> we only have a few seconds left but i do want to get your reaction to hillary clinton's e-mails. voters in the latest polls seem to suggest they don't consider this a big issue. they have bigger fish to fry. do you believe that the e-mail controversy or questions surrounding it will go away soon? >> i don't know. but my big fish to fry with her was where were you at as secretary of state when people in benghazi requested additional security five times and nobody helped them. where were you on the night of
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the attack? why would you tell the families we're going to find the guy who made the video? it's always been about her leadership or the lack thereof that led to the death of americans. >> we appreciate talking to you. thank you so much for being on "new day." >> thank you. >> be sure to join lindsey graham and more than a dozen other republicans vying for the republican nomination for the next gop debate. cnn will host the debate september 16th at the reagan library in california. new details are emerging on the fatal shooting of a sheriff's deputy in houston. the suspect was found mentally incompetent to stand trial on a felony assault charge back in 2012. >> reporter: new revelations about the suspect's background,
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about his criminal past and also his history with mental illness. raising new questions this morning. and a case where a prosecutor described what happened here at this gas station like a cold-blooded killing of a deputy. this morning, new insight into the mind of alleged cop killer shannon miles. miles appearing in a houston courtroom monday. the clanking of his shackles the only thing breaking the silence as dozens of deputies stared him down. prosecutors say the 30-year-old ambushed deputy goforth at a gas station. the suspect shooting him execution style, a total of 15 times. the motive, prosecutors say, is still unclear. >> let's hope that it wasn't because of a uniform.
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let's hope that it wasn't race related. >> reporter: now cnn has learned the suspect was previously ruled mentally incompetent back in 2012. miles was charged with aggravated assault against the homeless man. miles also homeless at the time was sent to a mental institution for six months. he then ruled competent, but the case never went to trial. even given the suspect's mental health history, one texas sheriff still suggests the killing could have some relation to the black lives matter movement, an ongoing uprising against police brutality. >> it isn't a far stretch to believe that kind of rhetoric could influence someone. >> reporter: leaders of the movement say calls for police reform cannot be blamed for this senseless murder. >> our mission is to end violence against black people and the fact that every 28 hours a black body is killed. >> reporter: as the community
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continues to mourn the loss, president obama called goforth's widow to give his condolences, saying he will continue to stand up for the safety of police officers where they serve. >> this crime is not going to divide us. this crime is going to unite us. >> reporter: as we take another live look here, you can see a group of organizers raising money and awareness for this deputy. there is a bear there with the purple heart. someone dropped it off in honor of this deputy. this memorial growing with not only flowers and balloons and notes that say this man is a hero. >> moving tribute. thanks for sharing that with us. in few moments time we're going to speak with ron hickman, the sheriff. we'll talk about the suspect. we're also going to ask him about the comments that he made after the shooting that are
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drawing some criticism. we do have some breaking news. brace yourselves, folks. looks like an ugly day on wall street. futures have been tumbling. does this mean we are in for another bonkers week in the market? >> doesn't look good so far, john. awful august. starting out as a sorry september. you've got the dow futures down 355 points. if this mood holds into the opening bell you're going to have another big pullback for stocks. look at european stocks, all down sharply. and over in asia, a really bad performance there. here's why, another number from china about manufacturing was weaker than expected. it underscores this worry about how slowly china is growing right now. maybe more slowly than chinese officials and statistics are
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telling us. that's what people are concerned about here in the u.s. i want to show you oil prices. they're down a little bit here again today. take a look. i'm going to give you the last six months here. look at all the way over here on my left. big, big jump in oil prices. a three-day jump in oil prices over the past three days. it's mitigating a little bit this morning. but something to keep watching here. there were some supply numbers that were a little bullish for oil. but that big jump has a lot of people saying, wow, the speculators have been in the oil market and have been making a lot of money there. watch oil. we have another hour to go until the opening bell. and it looks like for your 401(k) it's going to be another rough morning. well, act now or condemn the world tonight mare, those words from president obama blasting climate change deniers. the president set to call for more ice breakers in the arctic, allowing the u.s. to expand its
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foothold. michelle kosinski is live with the latest. >> as the arctic becomes more navigable because of less ice, the president announced he wants more u.s. ice breakers in the region, also to keep pace with other countries like russia are doing there. he'll also announce more monitoring of the climate and environment. while he's in alaska he's visiting glaciers that are disappearing. villages having to move because of rising sea level. he is having none of the climate change deniers. listen. >> the time to head the critics and the cynics and the deniers is past. the time to plead ignorance is surely past. those who want to ignore the science, they are increasingly alone. they're on their own shrinking island. >> and there is some controversy of this trip over his name
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change of mt. mckinley to denali. he's also allowed shell to do some exploratory drilling there. that's raced some questions. >> all right. quite an event fuful trip. sometimes we need just a little cuteness. wouldn't you guys agree? adorable game of peek-a-boo between a toddler and a guerilla. he pounded his chest and that got the guerilla kamali's attention. this is what followed. five minutes of absolute bli blissful play until the pair was worn out. >> that is adorable. >> it's too cute. >> i mean, it's adorable, right?
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>> this is out cynical john berman. >> it's too cute. >> meanwhile, one of our top the stories to tell you about. the man suspected of gunning down that texas police officer was ruled mentally incompetent three years ago, we are talking to the sheriff next.
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that emotional moment as the alleged sheriff's deputy killer is walked into a texas courtroom passing a blue wall of officers, all there showing support for their fallen colleague. the alleged killer ruled mentally incompetent back in 2012. what effect is that going to have on this case? with us this morning, sheriff ron hickman. deputy ron goforth was a member of his force. first of all, we are asking how you are doing, how the wife of your fallen officer is doing. >> clearly this kind of incident dw dev dev devastates the entire family. >> have you had a chance to hear how she reacted to that call? >> i have not spoken with her about the call, although the
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white house reached out to us yesterday. i spoke with one of the executive shall have taffers in department and made the arrangements for that connection. we are relieved that the white house has reached out to the family. >> i can imagine that was a relief. i'm sure it did comfort her a bit. i have to ask you that scene that we just saw play out on video of the suspect being walked into the courtroom, i know, sir, you were there. that must have had a profound effect on all of your officers. >> it has an effect on every officer to know that an individual who is accused of taking the life of a police officer is being brought to justice. >> so, sir, we want to talk about the motive. right now the investigation is ongoing and we know there's probably things you can't tell us. but have we learned anything further? i know we've learned that mr. miles was accused of a crime and was found mentally incompetent
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to stand trial back in 2012. he spent some six months in a mental hospital. are you concerned how this is going to impact the case? >> well rk, certainly that's a concern for us. whether he was incompetent at the time he committed this offense, will be something for the district attorney and the court to determine. as you mentioned earlier he was ruled incompetent and then ruled competent and released. questions will araiise about wh influenced him, what factors motivated him. when we ruled out any other contact between the officer and the suspect, one's left to speculate exactly what kind of influences caused him to do this. >> that lead me to some comments you've made. you often and law enforcement often caution us in the media to tread slowly in the beginning stages of an investigation because we know they certainly
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do take time. to that end, are you now regretting at all the comments that you made linking this to perhaps the black lives matter movement? >> no, i don't. as a matter of fact, you know, i would like to clarify that my statements were about the extremism. you know, some people would like to pervert what i said for their own political purposes. but what i said was extremism in those views, much like some of the chants coming out of minnesota this week. certainly those kinds of extreme rhetoric can lead to unintended consequences. surely people who have a degree of susceptibility or some mental instability can be influenced by such comments. >> but is it too early in the investigation, sir, to make that kind of statement, given the fact that investigators are working right now to try to clearly understand what exactly what happened? >> we know for certain and have
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ruled out any contact between the two. so what you're left with is the fact that the deputy was wearing a uniform. so absent any other influence, absent any other contact or motivation, the fact he's wearing a funiform is left as te only target. >> i say this with all due respect, but a guest on our show made the interesting point that when you blame the group calling for reform, by that logic those who want greater reform in schools are to blame for somebody shooting up the form. >> is killing cops the kind of reform they're looking for? >> that's not what all of the people who are part of the black lives matter movement are calling for. you can understand there are a lot of people that are concerned the rethetoric is getting rampe up. >> exactly what i spoke of is the rhetoric being ramped up to
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that level. if the dialogue of the black lives matter movement is going to be heard in a reasonable fashion, we have to separate that from this extremist rhetoric. we start talking about pigs in a blanket, fry them like bacon, killing cops, taking pictures of dead people, that's a rhetoric that has to be separated and held accountable. >> and black lives matter has come out and spoken out against these comments. they believe those were from a splinter group that had nothing to do with them. there's a time for these other conversations. obviously right now we know that your department is in mourning, the wife of this deputy is in mourning. we'll stay in touch with you, okay? >> thank you. >> thank you, sir. another batch of hillary clinton's e-mails released overnight. thousands of pages coming to light. but do voters care what's inside of them? we'll discuss. ♪
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here we go with the five things. number one a new poll revealing that ben carson is tied with donald trump in iowa, both at 23% among republicans. surging in the polls. meanwhile a new batch of hillary clinton e-mails released by the state department, more than 7,000 pages from her tenure as secretary of state. some 125 were retroactively classified and redacted. the suspect who killed the texas deputy was found mentally incompetent to stand trial on a felony assault charge back in 2012 and spent six months in a mental hospital. the funeral for slain cameraman adam ward is today. ward and reporteder alison parker were killed last week by a foreman coworke-- former cowo.
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tom brady and roger goodell appeared in court but were unable to settle their dispute over the quarterback's four-game suspension. > . donald trump, ben carson, all tied up in a new i.a.e.ey i. and a new internet battle between donald trump and jeb bush. man oh man did things just heat up.
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. growing support among iowa republicans for neurosurgeon ben carson. he is now tied with donald trump. each at 23% according to a new poll. but the big news this morning just moments ago a brand new salvo in the internet battle between donald trump and jeb bush. this is getting real, folks. here to discuss jeffrey lord and republican strategist. let me bring you up to speed,
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gentlemen. donald trump on his instagram posted something about jeb bush and the issue of immigration. let's watch that quickly. >> yes, they broke the law, but it's not a felony. it's an act of love. >> all right. that was donald trump on jeb bush. how would jeb bush respond? now we have the answer because just minutes ago, jeb bush putting out this youtube video and he's tweeting out the link, which all in all calls donald trump a big, fat liberal. watch this. >> i lived in new york city and manhattan all my life, okay. so my views are a little bit different than if i lived in iowa. >> partial birth abortion, i'm very pro-choice. i am pro-choice in every respect. and as far as it goes. as far as single payer, it works in canada. it works incredibly well in
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scotland. >> using donald trump's own words to paint him, alex, as a liberal. who won this internet battle? >> well, both of them. it's early in the process. a lot of republicans are concerned they're lu ee're losi country, their country is in decline. they want a president as big as their fears. they want an alpha male. donald trump certainly is that. that helps him. but you're also seeing jeb bush stand up to the bully, very strong presentation there from jeb. this actually helps both of them. >> jeffrey, you know what donald trump's changing of positions used to be called is flip-flopping. but in this campaign it seems to be that he's evolved. will voters hold him responsible for the very liberal things he used to say? >> i don't think so. they didn't hold ronald reagan responsible either.
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what's interesting is in the 1976 ford/reagan standoff, ronald reagan campaigned in the texas primary saying he used to be a democrat and the people in the republican establishment of the day attacked him for being a democrat and cited his positions of the day. we've sort of been there and done that. i don't think this is going to have much steam. >> alex, is donald trump ronald reagan? >> i'm stunned when jeffrey says that. >> i didn't say he was ronald reagan. >> you keep comparing him to ronald reagan who recollects had a core, a conservative core even when he was a democrat and certainly that conservative core defined his presidency. are you really saying that donald trump is an idealogical
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conservative? >> they did it to ronald reagan. >> no, jeffrey. the point is ronald reagan had believes. donald trump has no beliefs. >> he's an alpha male. >> when you show what donald trump used to believe versus what he says today, can't it leave the impression that he does things for political expediency? >> you know, that works against his persona. his persona is he says what he believes here. i think that is so well established over decades, that i don't think this affects him. i don't think people will believe it. >> there's another way to look at it. we know he is a fairly ruthless businessman. one thing we know about trump is he says what works, not
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necessarily what he believes. and it doesn't really tell us anything about how he'd govern. a lot of people in the political party are concerned about trump because they'd actually like the nominee for president to be a republican. and donald trump isn't. >> you know smiling about this right now? dr. ben carson. let's shift gears to dr. ben carson right now, tied with trump in the polls right now. on vacation and smiling as donald trump and jeb bush go negative at each other. so does carson have a ceiling, alex, and does donald trump or anyone else have the guts to go after him? >> i don't know what donald trump will do. you can look at the republican outsiders, the top three in the republican field, trump carson and right now fiorina in that poll in i.a.e.eyi.a.e.aeye -- i.
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when you add them up they're either equal to or larger than donald trump. i think that's where this primary is going. it's heading in a conservative direction, not in an unprincip e unprincipled angry direction. >> i would add ted cruz to that field. what is significant is that collectively they're about 65% in one of these polls. that tells you all you need to know about the antipathy. ed burns finally seeing his project through to reality. it took it like 20 years to come to fruition. he's going to join us ahead with a preview of his new series.
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what did iran's supreme leader get in the nuclear deal? to start with, $100 billion. they keep their nuclear facilities and ballistic missiles. there won't be surprise anytime-anywhere inspections. and after ten years, restrictions are lifted and iran could build a nuclear weapon in two months. congress should reject a bad deal. we need a better deal.
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this isn't complicated. you've been doing this a long time. you know the rules. we didn't mix them up on you all of a sudden. just like us and your father before you, you agreed to play by those rules, no? here's the deal. we want our money. we want it now. if you don't get it, you are going to jail. >> what if i don't have all of it? >> are you kidding me? didn't i warn you about this? i'm walking out of here today with our money or with you. it's your call. >> it's your call man. it's your call. that's the fantastic edward
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burns and his new show about the gritty world of vice cops. t he's here with me this morning. a pleasure to meet you. >> good morning. >> congratulations on this. from what i understand, this is a baby two decades in the making for you. >> yeah. it's sort of came about by marrying two passion projects that i've had for a long time. years ago on the set of private ryan, my father and my uncle came to visit. they met steven. they were telling steven these stories about what it was like to be a cop. both retired nypd. afterwards steven said you need to make a movie about those guys. and then i wrote a script for dreamworks, sort of my attempt
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at an irish-american godfather. couldn't get that movie made. my great grandfather was this hell's kitchen character. we have these old photographs of of him with these champion pit bulls that he used to fight up on a roof in hell's kitchen. so we have this gangster side to the family. when i found these photographs, i became obsessed with hell's kitchen history and gangsters. and then i had four scripts abouthell's kitchen gangsters i couldn't get made. i said why not take the two passion projects and put them together. >> it's interesting to see how those projects that would have been big films are making their way to bigger audiences and getting some good budgets and getting to do like bigger, meatier pieces in cable. did it give you more freed or
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add more pressure to you as the creator? >> a little bit of both. there are a couple of things happening in cable television which is very exciting. one is the people who used to go to the arthouse theater to watch independent film, they now know cable tv is where i'm getting that kind of story-telling. the other thing is, you know, the executives are sort of reminding me what it must have been like in the '60s and '70s when you had the studio executives giving creative fr d freedom to all those great film makers amid we h makers and we had that golden age of cinema. >> this must have felt like a mix of a postcard from the past and a bit of a love letter the city that you love and grew up in. >> it's both. one is i -- when i first moved into manhattan, had no money.
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so the only thing i could do was walk around. i would cover every neighborhood. i was always a little bit of a new york city history buff. you'd walk down certain streets and see an old building, do a little research as to what that building was, what that neighborhood was like. that certainly informed sort of those old scripts that i wrote and informed this. and other thing was, you know, i was just always obsessed with all things new york, movies and television. so the show not only pays ho homage, but i'm also dipping into french connection. pulling from whatever that is, 60 years of filmed entertainment that i've been obsessed with and brought it all into the show. >> i love it. this is going to be a new obsession for me. thanks for that. make sure to tune into "public
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morals" tuesdays at 10:00 p.m. on tnt. the good stuff is coming right up. diabetes, steady is exciting. only glucerna has carbsteady, clinically proven to help minimize blood sugar spikes. so you stay steady ahead. have you touched the stuff?. it's evil. and ladders. sfx: [screams] they have all those warnings on 'em. might as well say... 'you're gonna die, jeff.' you hired someone to clean the gutters. not just someone. angie's list helped me find a highly rated service provider to do the work at a fair price. ♪ everyone can shop, but members get more with reviews, live customer support, and better pricing. visit angieslist.com today. imagine - she won't have to or obsess about security.
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a total stranger made lemonade when life game him lemons. he's battling cancer. it's kept him off the job for months. but an unlikely hero stepped in to help. >> i just wanted to because i wanted to raise money for the police officer because he has kids. >> i love tyler. >> i should have warned you. that's six-year-old tyler. he heard the officers story and without any prompting he started a lemonade stand for the officer's medical bills. >> i love it. >> word got out. hundreds of people showed up, including the entire police department. before you knew it, tyler's lemonade stand raised more than $1500.
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this is really magical. a six-year-old. with that, we send it over to "newsroom" with carol costello. >> thank you so much. you already made my day. have a great day, guys. "newsroom" starts now. happening now on the "newsroom," tied with trump, ben carson catapults to the top of the polls in iowa. >> i think what dr. carson brings to the table frankly is the power of nice. plus, just weeks ahead of his visit to america, pope francis says women who have abortions can be forgiven. how will pro-life candidates

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