tv Anderson Cooper 360 CNN September 21, 2015 6:00pm-7:01pm PDT
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good evening. thanks for joining us 9:00 p.m. in new york and 8:00 in wisconsin where scott walker is once again just governor walker. late today he quit the race. he called on others to do the same all in the name of taking on a candidate he all but named ex clearly condemned. >> today i believe that i'm being called to lead by helping to clear the field in this race
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so that a positive conservative message can rise to the top of the field. with this in mind, i will suspend my campaign immediately. i encourage other republican presidential candidates to consider doing the same so that the voters can focus on a limited number of candidates that can offer a positive, conservative alternative to the current front runner. this is fundamentally important to the future of the party and more importantly to the future of our country. >> governor walk we are a parting shot, obviously, there at donald trump unlike mr. trump he never caught the public eye. john king joins us now with the late details on that as well as new polling on the democratic side. a lot of ground to cover. let's start off with scott walker. >> bad debate performances and inconsistent in answers and didn't impress conservatives and thought he might be their guy. a number of reasons. he actually peaked in march. you might say that's not a ton
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but in the moment where he was a contender for a bit. look at the slide going down. this is what killed him, after the cnn debate he went to an asteric from 16% to barely registering. the peak in march he was considered the alternative, this is pretrump considered the alternative to jeb bush and lead income iowa nationally 20% among men and 1% now. 12% among republican women, doesn't register anymore and 12% in the tea party. doesn't register. fighting the unions in wisconsin a conservative hero. doesn't register anymore and fell through the floor in part because of trump and poor performance. >> let's look at the rest of the gop. >> it's not just governor walker. you heard him calling on candidates to get out. trump down after our debate, that's the biggest headline at 3 2% coming in. carly fiorina barely registering to 15% now. dr. carson down a bit.
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moo marco rubio up. interesting to watch why did donald trump go down? he's being tested. any candidate gets tested and we'll see if he can handle adversity from 41 to 29. the drop big among republican women. small declines among evangelicals and we'll see if he can recover. the beneficiary clearly carly fiorina taking support from trump and from carson and 3% to 14%. big jump. you see similar women. she went from nowhere to somewhere, her challenges to capitalize and mr. trump's challenge to deal with the first test of adversity. >> new cnn numbers on the democratic side. >> and a poll shows hillary clinton stabilizing. hillary clinton is in trouble and still losing in iowa and still losing in new hampshire. remember that. nationally, this is a bit of a stabilizing poll. 42% now, not her august number of 47 but she's moved up a bit
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there, bernie sanders down a tick within the margin of error and joe biden at 222. martin o'malley, if you take joe biden out of the race, hillary clinton jumps up to 57%, sanders at 28% and martin o'malley at 2%. no question biden not running would benefit hillary clinton but if you look more closely, look at among democratic women with biden in the race, hillary clinton gets 50%, without biden, she jumps up to 64 among non-white voters, blacks and latinos, with biden 55. bernie sanders goes up among the groups without joe biden in the race but just barely. hillary clinton goes up a bit and clinton is the presidential nominee without a doubt. if biden doesn't win, she's stronger. she still has issues in both iowa and new hampshire. >> stay with us. we want to bring in the panel, seasoned on servers and cnn political commentator anna navarro and he's a friend of the
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clintons and co-chair of a prohillary clinton super pact. paul, your thoughts on the new polls but first, you reaction on the news governor walker dropped out. >> the poll analysis is spot on. the guy had one out of four at the party supporters, which is probably the most exciting part of the coalition. they turn out and work hard and he collapsed and boy, it is just propositive running for president is hard this guy won 11 straight elections in wisconsin. consistent democratic state for president. he won 11 straight aelections including a recall and also seemed to be from reports the favorite candidate of the koch brothers, pledged to put $1 billion into this and yet, he's been steam alrearolled by donal. first of course is my old governor from texas rick perry and scott walker joins the crowd. he will not be the last one donald trump pushes out.
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>> anna, he didn't just say he's dropping out but called on other republicans to drop out but implied for the party to get beyond donald trump, the field needs to consolidate. >> last parting stroke to donald trump, all he had to say was hey, donald, i'm talking to you. very of youbvious who he was ta to. he wants the field to windle down so the anti trump field can go back to an optimistic message. i think scott walker is terrific governor of wisconsin just out of his league in this and had to face a financial reality running for president costs money. it's an expensive endooefer. you have to pay staff and cost and have to face a political reality. he did not have a path to the nomination and i think there say personal reality. it's tough to run for president when you do it for real achlt lot of travel and time away from home, away from his state, away from his wife and kids, away prm
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his bed. you know, it's a tough reality i think that between the finances not being there, the political path not being there, it didn't make sense. he didn't want to go into debt. >> john, who benefits on the republican side? >> some say 1% on the polls, what does it matter but a good organization and we've seen so far in the early hours, jeb bush getting some people and rubio getting others. we'll watch. he has a talented group of activists and i know he just dropped out -- >> some donors. >> and a lot of big donors, big, deep, pocketed donors. there is a lot of money to be raised from the scott walker network and candidates calling, again, jeb bush picking up some and marco rubio. interesting to watch how the talent spreads out with so many candidates in the race, you want the talent. >> hillary clinton maintaining her lead nationally, big variables, the first biden. we see how his entrance would affect both her and bernie
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sanders. >> yeah, just before we went on the air i tweeted i planed to overreact to the poll because this is the first good one since hilary had. let me tell the truth, it's good. i would rather see her up five points in a month than down. so far away from the election. here is what matters more to me. she's maintaining her lead with core democratic subgroups that john looked at and also this is subjective, but she's performing better on the stump and given more interviews now and seems to be more comfortable with that. she's campaigning i think morefectively. she's going to have bad days again. she'll have down polls and i don't want to overreact to one poll because it's good for my gal but a sign she's performing better. voters are seeing, i think, something out of her ask maybe a little grit that they like. >> anna, when you hear dr. ben carson saying a muslim shouldn't be president and donald trump say some think we maybe already have had a muslim president or have a muslim president, which is obviously a way for him to
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perpetuate the idea that president obama is a muslim, does it hurt -- among republican base, resa said he thinks it will help dr. carson. >> anderson, i don't know if it helps or hurts but this much i know, barack obama has been elected president twice overwhelmingly. he is about to start his last year in office. folks, turn the page. it's time to let this top pick die. you know, whether he is -- i believe he's an american. i believe he is a christian. but this top pick is over. he's -- his presidency is about to be overme. for god's sakes let's talk about the issues we care about and we're losing focus by talking about other things. >> anna, good to have you and paul and john king, as well. will bowe bergdahl face a court marshall and a long stretch in prison for leaving his postand falling into taliban
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captivity. we'll tell you what the general has to say about that and whether he things bergdahl sympathized with the enemy and exclusive details of the mission to rescue him and how one of the seals that took part in the mission is dealing with the physical and mental after effects. remarkable american. you'll want to meet him ahead. his battle to heal when "360" continues. and alissa anderson recently signed a 30-year mortgage on this home. they must be confident about the future. are you? buy in. quickenloans/home buy. refi. power.
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we'll know whether a court marshall awaits bowe bergdahl but the general in charge of investigating the disappearance says that jail time would be wrong for him. his testimony, a preliminary hearing covered ground including whether bergdahl was sympathetic to the taliban and why he left his post. it stirred up a hornet's nest in the mission to rescue him left deep scars, physical and otherwise among the seal team that tried him. in a moment, my conversation with a wounded member of that team. first, martin savidge joins me with the latest. so, for the first time we heard about why bergdahl left his post in 2009. what do we know about his plans? >> so much in the hearing, anderson, just off the charts as far as information up until now not released. the general says, the general that led the investigation into the disappearance, kenneth dahl says the reason he left was he
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was under a delusion his company, his entire battalion was led by incompetent leaders, not true but he believed it. he was going to leave the out post and run to enemy territory darkness and get to another base and meet with the general because he knew that his departure would trigger alarm bells. he could show up and say here i am, i'm who you are looking for and let me tell you how bad our men are being led. crazy but that's what the army says is his plan. he got captured and never made it to the other base. >> what do you say about the possibility of him serving time for desertion. >> giving mental problems which he admitted existed and factors they looked at, he did not believe jail time was appropriate and remember, this is a two-star general highly respected and thought that his investigation was extremely well
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done. >> what happens now? >> well, next these, the hearing officer will write up a recommendation as to whether or not he believes evidence warrant as court marshall that will be passed up and another general will eventually make this call, possibly in a couple weeks and one other big thing that came out of this hearing that was understood, the army will go to incredible lengths and the men and women that serve will try their very best to find one of their own missing. it was really, really amazing. >> did bergdahl say anything? >> he did not. other than to answer a few questions. his attorneys did speak and in fact, his own attorney thanked president obama but above all, thanked all of those soldiers who work so hard to try to bring about the rescue of bowe bergdahl. siring details of the mission to rescue sergeant bergdahl, one of the missions. i spent time with a remarkable
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individual that died in it. jimmy hatch wants people to know the sacrifices that he and so many others made to get this one soldier home. when was the first time you heard the name bowe bergdahl? [ laughter ] >> so we're sitting in this intel center, and me and a few guys in my crew and this guy walks one a piece of paper, basically information, bowe bergdahl and where he's from and his rank and that stuff the guy is talking to us and saying his guys said he walked off and i looked at the guy next to me and said somebody is going to get killed looking for this kid, killed or hurt. >> jimmy hatch had no idea how right he was. a week and a half after bow burg dahl disappeared, he said his seal team received intelligence where the young army private could be and who was holding him hostage. >> we had to plan quick, hostage rescue stuff is really hard and you have to be, you know, fast. so we planned it out.
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spun up, i was in a little task force, every service were represented, air force, marines, army guys, got on helicopters and took off, flew in and when we got close to the ground it was on. >> a night rescue as the two helicopters touched down, hatch says the team came under heavy fire. >> guys ha to immediately deal with a pretty major gunfight. >> at that point, what's the goal? >> the goal is to get that kid. >> find bowe bergdahl? >> yeah, fast and we were close because things started right away, you know, they had a big belt fed machine gun and shooting akas and as the search was going on, guys were hitting dudes with rpgs and chaos, man. >> hatch believes the intensity of the fight, the heavy weaponry, the enemy, signalled they were closing in on bergdahl. >> very unnerving to be a
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prisoner. >> despite the mirky details how he ended up a hostage, the objective was crystal clear. >> he was an american and had a mom. i didn't want his mom to see him get his head chopped off on youtube. >> that went through your mind? >> for sure. >> in the middle of the fire fight with every second counting, hatch split off from the team with two other men and a secret weapon, a dog named remco. >> at some point i could see a couple of guys, probably 4 or 500 meters away in flat field and moving and they kind of disappeared. so i'm like we got to, you know, we got to get over there. we went at them, put the dog in front of his because his body language will tell you if there is people close by for sure and we couldn't see. the dog was out probably two or three meters in front of us and we were moving good. i saw his fur and ears go up and he started to pick up speed and boom, boom, two rounds go into the dog and muzzle flashlights
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up with the guy that shot the dog. >> you could see the guy that shot the the dog? >> yeah. >> i start shooting that guy, bad guy and started spraying wildly with the ak-47. so one of those bullets got lucky and hit me. >> your leg was knocked from under you? >> just totally, i just started to put my weight on it. so i'm in the air and i'm like don't scream. that's what i'm thinking. don't scream, don't scream. >> you didn't want to scream? >> no, those dudes were right there. boom, i land, i started screaming. it hurt, man. >> the bone was shattered. >> yeah, sent kind of the bone, top part of my femur, hit me right above the knee and sent the bone out the back of my leg, so i was bleeding really bad. >> in a heart beat, hatch's mission changed from rescuing bowe bergdahl to keeping himself alive. >> i was laying there, initially thought i was dead because i'm
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so close and can't move and i hear my buddies, their guns and going to work and then i hear the guy throw as grenade, you know, flying around. the team finished off both taliban fighters and applied a tourniquet to hatch's leg. even though the fighting still raged around him, the helicopters were called back to extract the wounded seal. >> when i get hit, that changes the plan. so they have to take -- we have to kind of concentrate some resources on the screaming guy and get the helicopters in there to get him out and those dudes on the helicopters came back. they are the ones that dropped us off and didn't hesitate and flue ba flew back into the fire. >> he was evacuated and the dog. hatch's leg bandaged and bleeding and loply pop of
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painkillers, the end of his mission. >> jimmy hatch has complicated emotions in the aftermath of the experience and witnessed. he talks about the dark place that he ended up in and how he's getting through it with the help of his family and dogs, like the one that was killed during the mission. >> let's go get a ball. hey mcmellin' you gellin'? i'm gellin' and zinfandellin'. and so is my new bride, helen mcmellin' i'm so happy my eyes are wellin' dr. scholl's massaging gel insoles are so soft they make your feet feel outrageously comfortable. i'm gellin you're so not gellin' dr. scholl's
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more now of my exclusive interview with retired navy seal jimmy hatch about a mission that until now, has been little spoken of, the attempt to rescue bow bergdahl who could know whether he'll pace court marshall. jimmy hatch is speaking publicly for the first time because he says people need to know the sacrifices so many people made in that rescue mission. i asked if he thought of it as a failure. >> to me it was in the sense that we didn't get him. >> do you know if he was there in that area where you were? >> you know, i was told that he for sure was in that area, that found things on dead guys that,
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you know, indicated that he was there. >> does it matter to you? i mean, is that a component of that you were wounded on a mission which didn't succeed in what the objective was? is that something that resonated with you? >> i took a lot of that on myself. i felt like if i did things differently, not gotten hurt, you know, the mission wouldn't have failed, you know, no way to know that. at the time i certainly, it was a file your to me and i was the cause of it. >> hatch was awarded a purple heard and bronze star for his actions that night by secretary of the navy. >> will not lose this war because that's deep. there's a lot of layers and we're all blessed. >> hatch felt tremendous guilt for as he saw it failing on the bergdahl mission and for leaving his brothers on the battle field to fight without him. that along with the wound to his leg that ended his 21-years as a seal, it all added up and sent
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him to a dark and dangerous place. >> pain meds, you know, chasing them with vodka and i basically became, you know, just this pathetic human. >> did you think about killing yourself? >> oh, yeah, i had had a plan for sure. >> you made out a plan? >> oh, yeah. >> because that's when, you know, psychologists, whenever somebody goes to them and says i'm thinking about killing myself, that's the first question they ask is have you taken out the next step of making a plan. so you had? >> for sure. it was a planner. so this incident happened where a gun, gun in my mouth, crying, and -- >> you put a gun in your mouth? >> in front of my wife and my wife somehow, i don't know how got the gun away from me. >> hatch was sent to a psychiatric hospital for protection. another seal, the same one that got him to safety in afghanistan that made sure he got there. >> he's going to, you know,
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drive me to this hospital, and, you know, there are no medals for driving your buddy to a psychiatric hospital. so we get in the car and i looked at him and i said man, i'm running. i'm not doing this. he's like listen, you got to fix yourself. you got to do it for yourself and for your family and for us because you're the beginning. there's going to be more like you and it might be me and that just, you know, stunned me. the guy saved my life. >> with those words. >> twice. >> every since jimmy hatch has been on a path of healing and today he continues to honor those who saved his life
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including the dog killed on the bergdahl mission remco. >> wow, she's fast. >> she's an athlete, man. >> he started an organization called spikes canine fund to provide medical care and proper protection for police dogs, search and rescue dogs, dogs that can be hurt or killed in the line of duty. >> i'm not going to let her run really fast at you. >> i'm good. i'm ready for it. >> a former naval dog handler himself, i asked hatch to show me some of what his dutch sheppard mina can do. >> punish him. >> with incredible precision, she took me down again and again and again. i felt the full weight literally of hatch's respect and love for these brave working dogs while hatch has come so far from those dark days after the mission to rescue bow burg daergdahl, the n
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that ended his life as he knew it, he wants the man that put him and so many in harm's way to be held accountable. >> i want that kid to have his dang court day. he's an acan and has that coming. people say maybe he suffered enough because he was held captive. that's like saying if i go out and drink a bunch of vodka tonight and slam into a car with children in it and hurt them but i get paralyzed from the waist down, i've been punished enough. no, i still need to be held accountable for the decisions i made and that's the case with mr. bergdahl. i feel pretty strongly about that. he needs to know, you know, how much was risked. >> that's i'm important to you he knows that? >> yeah, it's important that americans know that.
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>> we hope now they do, a word on the making of the story, we corroborated the story with two other military personnel and two other sources and asked the u.s. navy to verify and while the navy confirmed the long and distinguished career as a seal, they could not comment about this particular mission. if you want more information on the nonprofit organizationization that jimmy hatch founded or if you want to donate money, go to spikes canine fund.org. one word, no apostrophe or anything, again, spikesk 9 fund.org. check it out. he's just an amazing, amazing guy and real privilege to meet him and his family. just ahead, details tonight in the death of a 2-year-old bella bond. what the prosecutor says the mom and mother's boyfriend did to this little girl on the last day of her life. plus, more than 700 other cases remain unsolved tonight.
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700 cases remain unsolved. children who die but haven't been identified, what's being done to track down their names. we danced in a german dance group. i wore lederhosen.man. when i first got on ancestry i was really surprised that i wasn't finding all of these germans in my tree. i decided to have my dna tested through ancestry dna. the big surprise was we're not german at all. 52% of my dna comes from scotland and ireland. so, i traded in my lederhosen for a kilt. ancestry has many paths to discovering your story. get started for free at ancestry.com. hp instant ink saves you up to 50% on ink ♪ ...so you can print all you want and never run out.
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misswill turn anan asphalt parking lot into a new neighborhood for san franciscans. a vote for "yes" on "d" is definitely a vote for more parks and open space. a vote on proposition "d" is a vote for jobs. campos: no one is being displaced. it's 40% affordable units near the waterfront for regular people. this is just a win-win for our city. i'm behind it 100%. voting yes on "d" is so helpful to so many families in our city.
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in boston today the man accused of killing 2-year-old bella bond was arraigned. michael mccarthy denied bond and the judge set bail for rachial bond at $1 million. bella bond's body was found in a trash bag along with the boston harbor shoreline for nearly three months. she was known as baby doe until a tipster call aid authorities with crucial information. prosecutors revealed today was incredibly disturbing. randi kaye was in the courtroom and joins me now. so tell me what was revealed here. >> reporter: anderson, first of all, prosecutors made it clear bella bond was actually murdered back in may. it happened one night late when the assistant attorney said she was unwilling to go to bed so michael mccarthy went to the back room and apparently tried to calm her and when rachial
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bond her mother heard things got quiet, she went to check on them and told police she found michael mccarthy striking and punching bella bond in the st stomach killing her and when she asked what he had done, he said bella was possessed with demons and it was her turn to die, anderson. >> i know authorities have been trying to identify her body for three months now. how did the case finally come together? >> it all came together with this long-time friend of michael mcelderry cooeccarthy. he was living with michael and rachial and bella and one day noticed bella was not there so started asking questions apparently and michael mccarthy told police had told him bella had been taken away by the department of children and families like two other children had been removed from the home but just last wednesday, anderson, he asked rachial bond when they might be getting bella back and he told authorities
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that rachial told him that michael mccarthy had killed bella punching her in the stomach. so it was stunning for him. he immediately called his sister and told authorities who showed him computer images we've been seeing of the image where they were trying to identify the girl that washed up on shore there in boston and then he also saw that investigators had released that picture of that zebra blanket and that was key for him because he remembered seeing a zebra blanket in bella's stroller when living with mccarthy and rachial bond and the family. that was key. he called authorities right away and so did his sister and made the arrest charging mccarthy with murder every aand rachial charged with accessory. >> you talked to bella's biological father in court today, right? >> i did. he was very emotional. he never even met his daughter but talked to her on the phone and had pictures of her and her favorite beads with him she used to sleep with all the time and
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right there able to see the man now suspected of killing his child and then he also was able to see rachial bond, as well, and he was almost thrown out of court, anderson, because he was making gestures with rachial bond trying to show her the beads and got up at one point and yelled at michael mccarthy, he'll last one day in prison and another woman, anderson, got up in court and screamed at michael mccarthy saying he should rot in hell and using the f word. dramatic day in court. >> still so unbelievable. appreciate the reporting. for nearly three months, before they knew her name, this is all they had to go on, this image created that turned out to be remarkably accurate and led to the break in the case. we wish we could say bella is a rarity but the horrible reality is hundreds of kids are found dead every year with very few clues about who they are. jason carroll reports tonight on the efforts to solve these hundreds of mysteries. >> reporter: they come from all
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over the country, every race, ethnicity and background but all share the the same last name. doe. their real name is a mystery. these are the faces of 715 children in the united states whose deaths remain unsolved. >> sometimes with these cases, i mean, these children remain unidentified for a ton of reasons. >> reporter: their cases are investigates here today national center for missing and exploited children head kwaurers in virginia. >> all the faces -- >> reporter: the senior forensic care specialist. >> we will never give up hope or stop looking to identify these kids and give them a name and find justice. >> reporter: this is a key facility for law enforcement looking to solve cases involving children since 1984. here forensic imaging specialists use computer programs to create faces of the unidentified. before bella bond's name was discovered, she was known as baby doe and this is where a
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specialist create that image of her that went viral. >> that may be something that helps spark recognition with somebody. >> reporter: joe mullins worked on hundreds of cases. this is one from a teenage girl whose remains were found in ohio in 2007. >> this is actually a picture of her skull. >> reporter: next, a digital scan of the skull is created. >> your skull is just as unique as your face. >> reporter: a computer program gives mullins the brush strokes needed to recreate a face filling in features ripped away by time. >> when we go home and close our eyes, we have a flash of the faces we saw during that day and can't help but get emotionally attached and you want to give this girl her name back. >> reporter: back at coarol's desk, bella bond hangs at her computer. >> i have a daughter around her age and i think it was just really hard for me to concept n conceptionize the lack of care
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and how she was disposed of and found. i think that was probably the hardest. >> reporter: there are other pictures close to her. this little girl whose body was found in los angeles in 1985. she is still waiting for her name. >> the medical examiner was also able to determine that malnourished. >> reporter: and this face found in 199. the most recent case, a toddler's remains found three weeks ago on chicago's new west side. sadly, soon, his face will be added to the list. >> somebody knows these children. there is somebody out there that knows every single one of these children. we just have to find them. >> jason carroll joins us now. incredible to think there are 700 kids found and not identified. somebody watching this right now, what can they do to help find the names for all these unidentified kids. >> you're right, anderson, it is a sobering number and there is one simple thing anyone can do.
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go to the facebook page at the center for missing and exploited children set up titled help id me. again, help id me. anderson, you can go to the facebook page, log on by state if you're living in california or texas. you can see who is missing in texas and who they found in california. you can see some of this imaging, some of these faces, see if there is anyone you recognize from talking to so many people there, anderson, they say they can look at cases going back to the 1950s based on the new technology they have and they are not going to give up until all of these children are identified. >> i mean, for the people that work there, this has to be haunting to see these kids images kind of calling out to them every single day. >> and when we got into a little bit of that with one of the forensic imaging specialists that we spoke to. he says when he goes at home at night, he says i dream about these children. i cannot impress how dedicated these people are that work there and say what drives them, what
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gets them through the dreams is hoping one day they cannot only put a name to a face but also get these children the justice that they deserve. >> jason, appreciate that reporting, thank you. powerful story. breaking news in the killing of joseph gliniewicz plus i'll talk to the officer's son. just like eddie, the first step to reaching your retirement goals is to visualize them. then, let the principal help you get there. join us as we celebrate eddie's retirement, and start planning your own. withof my moderate to severe rheumatoid arthritis... ordinary objects often seemed... intimidating. doing something simple... meant enduring a lot of pain. if ra is changing your view of everyday things orencia may help. orencia works differently by targeting a source
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joe gliniewicz was found dead and his killing you may recall sparked a major manhunt north of chicago. short time ago officials said they received results on two key tests gun residue and boll list ticks and also talked about dna evidence found at the scene. >> those reports, gunshot residue and ballistic tests do not support or exclude any specific theory in this investigation. all theories are dill ginvestig and looked at. unknown source dna at several locations at the scene, more
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than one. one of the samples we collected is currently being worked through the system, meaning being run against the entire database. >> the task force speaks man said the case is being investigated as a homicide with authorities pursuing more than 300 leads now. last week officials said for the first time they were considering both homicide, suicide and any other possible scenarios. joining me is d.j. gliniewicz, his son, told you during the break i'm so sorry for your loss and appreciate you speaking with us tonight. tell us about that, what kind of guy was he? i talked to one young man in the scout program, mentor ship program that your father did and said so many incredible things about your dad. >> my pather, you kn e father ld his job and more than just friends and job, he loved his family most importantly and had a really huge sense of family
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fundamentals and always a happy guy, always miling and se smili hi and man's man and great guy. >> you consider not just a dad and mentor but your best friend? >> yes, most certainly, you know, it's a tragic loss and people heard me say it many times. i didn't just lose a father, i didn't lose just a coach, i didn't lose a trainer or mentor. my father was my best friend and always be there for me since day one whether i needed advice or help in a situation or i just was having a bad day in general. he was always there and a phone call or text message away and the situation was vice versa, you know, wherever he had difficulties or a bad day at work, he would call me and we talk things out. nice having someone there and me saying he was there. >> obviously, the investigation has to be incredibly frustrating for you. you know how these things work.
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who do you make of what you're hearing from police so far? >> well, so far with the information that they have distributed to the public and everything like that, obviously, with being an explorer for such a long time and my father being in law enforcement for so long, i understand how these investigations work. this isn't something that you get a dna sample or get gunshot residue, that's not something you get back in an hour. i mean, you're talking week, two week's time you get that analyzed and get the the information back and i prefer that major crimes task force is taking the thorough task because i know they are working around the clock and they ensure this is done properly and 100% correct regardless of how long that may take. >> they are obviously a lot of potential theories that they are looking at. have you ruled anything out in your mind? are you concerned that they are looking at things so broadly? >> obviously, every
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investigation that law enforcement takes is you have to look at it as eat aeither homic accidental cause of death or suicide. i know my father. my family knows his pafather an closest friends, he is not someone whoever contemplated suicide or had suicidal tendencies. that's just a rumor and that's that. it is a rumor. something somebody made up because they wanted to interpret the story on their own. i whole heartily disagree with that statement although i can't change that person or that individual's mind of creating, you know, that saying. >> well, obviously, let's hope this gets resolved as quickly as possible. d.j., appreciate you talking with us and condolences to your family. we'll continue to stay on this. thank you. >> thank you so much for having me on the show. >> we'll be right back. working on my feet all day gave me pain here. in my knees.
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time now for the rediculist. a gentleman named mike recently planned on having a chill day. >> so i ordered some pizza. i thought i had the day off and i was going to sit home and enjoy my relaxation. >> doesn't get better than that, does it? a little mike time, if you will. kind of a day for him. he deserves it. got some dominos delivered, ate one slice and put it in a fridge. then it turned out he had to go to work. that's not a bad thing, in mike's case, there was a big surprise, as well. >> at about 5:00 a.m., i got home from work and looked in my refrigerator and pulled out what i thought was wings and turned out to be $1300. >> 666 here and 632 here for about 1300 total. >> i wanted to keep it, believe me.
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but i can't do it. >> apparently the deliver delivery was on his way to theback and had put the cash in a wings box for safekeeping, which sounds like a solid plan, but he promptly handed the wrong box over when delivered to make. luckily, mike is a stand up guy, turned the money over and got his karmic reward in 15 minutes or less. >> we're going to offer you free pizza for a whole year. >> say what? free pizza for a whole year? if you're going to have a problem with your pizza delivery, this is the kind of problem you want to have unlike here in new york city where you have to be on guard because at any time a rat could haul off your pizza and drag it to the subway station. forget miracle on 34th street and manhattan and breakfast at tiffany's. this is the most new york scene ever. i have another theory about the domino's thing, though. maybe we can only hope it's a
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harbinger of the return of the noid. in case you blocked out the 1980s, take a look. >> a noid hates hot quality pizza. he loves to make your hot pizza ice cold. call domino's pizza and avoid the noid. >> i think it's the only explanation. the noid is back and now he's turning hot pizza into cold, cold hard cash, at least on the ridiculist. that does it for us. we'll see you at 11:00 p.m. with another edition of 360. cnn with don lemon starts right now. >> this is cnn breaking news. >> breaking news, scott walker trying to shake up the republican presidential race and knock donald trump out of the lead. walking ending his campaign and saying this. >> i encourage other republican presidential candidates to consider doing the same so that the voters can focus on a limited number of candidates who can
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