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tv   New Day Saturday  CNN  August 6, 2016 3:00am-6:01am PDT

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it's at. ♪ welcome to it all. comcast nbcuniversal is proud to bring you coverage of the rio olympic games. ♪ we're so gad to have your company, i'm christi paul. >> i'm victor blackwell. i support and endorse our speaker of the house paul ryan. i hold in the highest esteem senator john mccain and i fully support and endorse his re-election. i also fully support and endorse senator kelly ayotte of new
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hampshire. >> i may have short-circuited and for that, i will try to clarify. newly released dash and body camera videos show the dramatic moments leading up to a deadly police shooting in chicago. the officer who fired the fatal shot is wearing a body camera but it was not recording. investigators trying to figure out why. the excitement and the enthusiasm finally building around these olympics. well, again, we are so pleased to have your company. >> good to have you on "new day." is that righting with donald trump changing his tune. now endorsing house speaker paul
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ryan and senators john mccain and kelly ayotte. >> this coming off of controversy refusing to endorse ryan and mccain and ayotte and coming off the talk of soldier khan. >> reporter: christi, donald trump wrapping up his campaign here. it's very clear that this campaign needed a reboot, a reset after the disastrous week it's had. many expected donald trump to come out and endorse paul ryan in green bay. but he went a step further also endorsing senator john mccain and senator kelly ayotte. >> in our shared nation, to make america great again, i support and endorse our speaker of the house paul ryan.
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paul ryan. good, a good man. he's a good man and he's a good guy. and we may disagree on a couple of things, but mostly we agree, and we're going to get it done and we're going to do a lot of wonderful things. he's a good man. and while i'm at, i hold in the highest esteem senator john mccain. for his service to our country, in uniform and in public office and i fully support and endorse his re-election. i also fully support and endorse
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senator kelly ayotte of new hampshire. a state i truly love, primari because that was my first victory, but i love new hampshire. i love new hampshire it's one of the most beautiful places. she's a rising star and will continue to represent the great people of new hampshire so very well for a long, long time. >> reporter: donald trump quoting ronald reagan in green bay, wisconsin saying there needs to be a big tent. the republican party needs to be unified. the question is, going forward after all of the campaign's missteps after all of the candidate's missteps, will this be enough to turn the page. victor, christi. >> jason, thank you so much. >> let's bring in scotty hughes political commentator and donald trump supporter and also a. scott bolden, former chairman
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and political editor of right alerts.com. let's get that in. let me start with you, scottie, to both of you, is this enough, scottie, to turn away from that really bad week that donald trump had? >> well, are you breaking out your charcoal and marshmallows and making your s'mores again, it seems like there was a great kumbaya fest going on. you kind of have to wonder. the truth is, when you look at it, this is done not just because of paul ryan, it's because of senator mccain, senator ayotte. it's about party unity right now. they're not going to be successful going after this major clinton machine also we have everybody on board. >> yeah, you can count on both hands and still have a few toes and ask is this donald trump turning the page. let me turn to you, scott, as
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scottie said there, this is unit tishgs and immediately after that statement, he turned towards attacking hillary clinton. he had some strong fund-raising numbers for the month of july, is this a donald trump who can fuel out a wish that should concern the democrats. >> well, i think if i were republican i'd be more concerned about that. listen, i agree with scottie that they needed this, but it's forced unity. none of the wisconsin or political leadership were present. it's interesting that donald trump was reading from a script it seemed about endorsing these individuals. 72 hours ago, he was attacking mccain and attacking paul ryan and nottence accordinging him. it reminded me of 5 year olds in the sand box fighting and the parents force them together and say is i'm sorry and go play nicely. the real deal here is politically, can these endorsements unify the republican party, put money and resources on the ground in these
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purple states, as well as red states. because the polling shows that she's pulling not only ahead but pulling away. and that's a real problem for the republican party. >> we should is say scripted endorsement is nothing new or unique to the republican party. we saw that in the convention for the democrats and we saw that in the convention for the republicans. you may have another horse in the race. but in the end, you have to get behind the person who is winning. we see that from both sides, don't we? >> maybe. but the difference here is donald trump's personal attacks at the core of these individuals, not necessarily with paul ryan, because they played tit for tat. but mccain, calling him not a war hero. saying he hadn't done enough for the veterans. that tears at the core of mccain and who he is and who he is for this country and republicans, kwiec quite frankly, all of the voters. 72 hours you say he's not endorsing and then say, hmm,
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okay we got unity here, allow it be implemented. he's behind in 10 or 15 points in several polls. is it enough to put troops on the ground, if you will, money and organization and repeat. and if donald trump stays on message, which is another open question, that's going to define whether he can move out or not. >> scottie, let me come to you with the former cia director michael morell endorsing hillary clinton in an op-ed. saying, the first, mrs. clinton is highly qualified to be commander in chief. i trust she will deliver on the most important duty of the president keeping our nation safe. second, donald j. trump is online unqualified for the job, he may well pose a threat to our national security. in the midst of our concerns over clinton's e-mail usage and we'll get to that again, another leader in the intelligence community is coming up behind hillary clinton. let's hear your response.
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>> well, morrell is about undiased as loretta lynch. this is a gentleman when he stepped down from the cia he was immediately put on one of obama's task force and he got caught up in the benghazi scandal. and he took to defense of barack obama saying they did not go after aisis because they did not want to hurt the environment. so, this is somebody that's been a part of the administration. it's not like this is exactly an unbiased opinion that came out against donald trump. this is someone that has always gone along to get along with the obama administration and obviously now the hillary clinton camp. >> is this a career intelligence professor who has worked under many presidents, republican presidents. do you discount this endorsement. i imagine, you don't, scott. >> well, tell me just say this, if you see the clinton ads, morrell and others which is key,
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there are several others that have come out like partisan peas on morrell's part, there's more to this. you have independents, conservative national party experts that have raised this about judgment. and it does play well into the democratic narrative about whether or not trump is fit to be president and whether he can be baited with a tweet and whether he should have the nuclear codes at his side. i don't think hillary clinton is going to turn anything down here. but it's a powerful statement what i could call international security experts and conservatives as well that have raised these questions. >> scottie, scott, stay with us. you mentioned conservative narrative, we're going hear from hillary clinton and the e-mail and those accounts. we'll talk that in a moment. and also coming up, the games, officially beginning. yes, we're going to take a look at last night's opening sane
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can show you coverage options to fit your budget. oh -- ohhh! she slimed me. [ laughs ] welcome back. hillary clinton's campaign schedule is clear today, but yesterday, she spoke about her e-mails and tried again to clarify earlier statements. scottie nell hughes and a. scott bolden are back with us. scottie, i want to start with what the former secretary said and then we'll talk about it, watch. >> ideally, we're going to be together. >> so, i may have short-circuited, and for that, i, you know, will try to clarify. because i think, you know, chris wallace and i were probably talking past each other. because, of course, he could only talk to what i had told the
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fbi. and i appreciated that. now, i have acknowledged repeatedly that using two e-mail accounts was a mistake. and i take responsibility for that. >> all right. that's former secretary clinton there talking about potentially short-circuiting an anxious during her fox news interview about her statements to the fbi. and in public about her use of a private server. but what she has not acknowledged, scott, is that the statements she made in public do not correspond with what director comey said during his testimony, last month. that she moved more than one device, when she said she used only one. when she did send overseas information that was marked classified at the time that she sent or received it. until she acknowledges those, doesn't that continue to say with us? >> well, listen, to republicans in this presidential race this issue has gone away.
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>> but is this simply about the republicans and acknowledging what is true or not true? >> well i think she's acknowledged what she said to comey is honest. i think she's acknowledged and comey has also that she wouldn't be prosecuted. >> hey, listen, this is the thing, this thing is so confusing quite frankly, i wish my candidate in all seriousness would say i'll apologize if she has already. two, i won't do it again. three i was wrong, four, i told the government and told the truth, and leave it at that. when you get into the narrative and explaining, it becomes a long question and answer period. and i'll be honest with you, it just doesn't serve accuracy purposes. but it also doesn't serve where she is. she's leading in the polls right now. clearly this issue is not affecting her in the poles vis-a-vis the voters, democrats, independents or republicans. i mean, she's getting 42% of the republican vote and 80% of the democratic vote. so, i wouldn't talk about it
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anymore. i'd say those three or four things and leave it there. i promise you, you all will stop talking about it. >> well, i don't know we'll stop talking about it until she acknowledges whether or not she was truthful with the american people. versus simply talking about a conversation with the fbi. >> i think she's acknowledged both. >> she has not acknowledged both. i think it's really clear that the former secretary said in public that she used one device. she then says when director comey comes out and says that's not true, she has not acknowledged that her public statements don't correspond with director comey in her testimony. scottie, you heard scott say it does not serve about creation sake in his conversation to continue this back and forth, you say what? >> well, when you have to apologize for an apology. i think she's probably going to have to end up apologizing for yesterday's apology. you have to wonder when is this -- bernie sanders said once again, i'm tired of hearing
tv-commercial
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about your darn e-mails. i obviously cleaned that up a little. i know the democrats are. but the truth is, if she would just come out and go down the simple steps and she would admit what the rest of the country already aacknowledges. i think the other part to bring up about this, she was asked by a reporter, kind of a selective group of journalists or else she would not have brought this up herself. so reporters are obviously asking that question, it's very important in an election when trust is a major factor when it comes to candidates. in that she remembers possibly last week if she did not have this horrible cloud hanging over her when all she continues to do is add more thunder and lightning to it. >> trump campaign released a video referencing this answer and other elements of this e-mail saga that continues. watch. >> extremely cares. >> e-mail system was breached by hostile actors. >> gross negligence. >> hillary clinton put our national security at risk.
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and she's still lying. >> director comey said that my answers were truthful. >> that's not true. >> even "the washington post" says hillary clinton lied comparing her to pinocchio. >> i may have short-circuited and for that -- >> the new web video from donald trump's campaign. you say in response to that, what, scott? >> well, i certainly say that she has admitted that these -- using these servers were wrong. she's apologized for that. she's acknowledged that. she's been truthful with the fbi. the fbi is not prosecuting her. and when i say that this issue isn't going away, it isn't going away because it's a presidential campaign season. but the fact of the matter is she's got to get more votes than donald trump. if you look at the polls, not just the bump after the democratic convention but also the awful week that donald trump had. these democrats, democratic voters and even independent republicans if you will say i've
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got to vote for her, notwithstanding whatever i think about this e-mail piece. i think that's most port. >> scottie and scott. thank you. so much to talk about. we're together for five hours today. thanks so much. we'll continue the conversation. >> thank you. >> and thank you, victor for highlighting that. we're just getting started for five hours, people. and this morning's 2016 official olympic games are under way. get who got the golden ticket. coy wire is in rio and he's there for the opening ceremonies. >> reporter: good morning to you, guys. opening ceremony last night, i'm still pinching myself that i got to attend. only got three hours of sleep, but i woke up doing the samba. we're going to talk about it and show you some of the highlights coming up. alrighty. first, though there is a boxer in brooklyn, knock, competing in the olympics, brand he gets in the ring he's using new
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technology to help him find his punches and his feet. take a look. >> reporter: when did you decide you wanted to go to the olympics? >> 2012, when i saw marcus browne go to the olympics, gold medal, gold medal. >> reporter: when you're a swimmer you know if you stick it. but boxing is different. dat is virtually nonexistent. in the sport, you guys talk about numbers like hey, i can punch this back, i can punch this much velocity. >> we do try to compare we never really had nothing show us all how fast. >> reporter: he wants to make that kind of data available to boxers. they've created a system that uses sensor boxer's average speed. how many punches and the type of punch they throw most. these are the sensors that are
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going to go on your hands, in your wraps. and it's going to be transmitted to a phone. >> yeah. >> reporter: so you're able to review everything. we had richardson put it to the test. go. wayne state university measured the boxing speed of 11 olympic boxers. the average, 20.4 miles per hour. so your average speed was 16.3. you threw about 25 punches. knowing that you're 16.3 on this past round, in your mind, you'd want to pick it up. why? >> for advancement. things to work on to get the gold medal. >> reporter: so, now, you know what sort of the average is for the other people in the olympics you can compare them? >> can compare them. sure! it's free for everyone. oh! well that's nice! and checking your score won't hurt your credit. oh! (to dog)i'm so proud of you. well thank you. get your free credit scorecard at discover.com. even if you're not a customer.
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you are waking up 25 minutes past the hour to official day one of the 2016 olympics. 12 gold medals up for grabs. events to watch, basketball, cycling, swimming, rowing. and the return of rugby. chris froome is going for gold in cycling, kevin durant and the team in china. and sun yang on freestyle. i'm standing in front of a wall. look at him. look at that background. it's fun, isn't it, coy? >> reporter: hard work here. i wish you guys were with me
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because then it would be an even bigger party. i attended the opening ceremony last night. i some goose bumps. it's inspiring, seeing, feeling what can happen when people from countries around the world come together to embrace, celebrate one another, standing next to a guy from brazil cheering every country that came out, even argentina. they're heated rivals in football and every sport. he said, i can't believe i just cheered for them. guys, what a night. it was a night of celebration and celebrity. dance. and drama. with an estimated 3 billion people watching from around the world, the 2016 rio olympics opening ceremony kicked off in the iconic stadium. show indicationed its athletes and its culture. and it's biggest international celebrity supermodel gisele bundchen dancing to the song
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"the girl from ipanema. "and michael phelps, the most decorated athlete of all time calling the flag for united states. and the internet found a new star, tonga's flag bearer, the chiseled bare-chested tai kwon do chetter glistening in front of an audience. team russia was met with cheers even as a doping scandal hanging over the country with 118 russian athletes banned from the games. one of the most anticipated was a first for the olympics. a team of refugees who got a standing over vasion from the crowd. and who was going to light the cauldron?
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he won bronze in the event. what a night, let the games begin. as you mentioned christi, 12 gold medals up for grabs. swimming, also president obama, a big basketball fan, happy to know, that we'll get to see a first look at the dream team, u.s. men's basketball going up against china, christi. i'll continue to do this arduous work, dig deep here and from rio. >> all on three hours of sleep. can you imagine if he had just gotten a couple more hours. coy wire, i'm glad you're there. and thank you for being with us. all right. a violation of protocol. chicago police blasting its own officers for this. the individual showing the moments right before an unarmed teen was killed in a hail of bullets. but there's one key piece of video, one element we don't see here. we'll talk about that. plus, distracted driving, it's something maybe we don't
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think about enough but we should think about it, because it's a growing and deadly problem. is enough being done to combat it? >> i think that conservatively, 60%, 70% of people are doing it, with some frequency. what does that mean? that means that it's just russian roulette. welcome. this is the chevy malibu. it was awarded "most dependable midsize car" by j.d. power. it looks great. wow! what is happening? oh my gosh, it's going up! but the malibu's not the only vehicle that was awarded. this is mind blowing. the chevy camaro, equinox, and silverado hd were awarded most dependable as well. this is extremely impressive. there's so many! doing it once, yea, great job, four times, obviously, they're doing something right. absolutely
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welcome back. we're so grateful to have you with us. i'm christi paul. >> i'm victor blackwell. good to have you. donald trump now trying to put out a political firestorm, dousing. backing heavyweight speaker of the house paul ryan and senator john mccain last night 'having to do to earlier in the week. >> in our shared mission to make america great again, i support and endorse our speaker of the house paul ryan. paul ryan. good, he's a good man. he's a good man and he's a good guy. i hold in the highest esteem
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senator john mccain for his service to our country and i fully support and endorse his re-election. >> he also endorsed senator kelly ayotte during that event as well. meanwhile at a gathering of black and hispanic journalists hillary clinton took questions from the core for the first time in eight months and offered this explanation after he refuted her blame on e-mail. >> so i may have short-circuited, for that, i will try to clarify because i think, you know, chris wallace and i were probably talking past each other. because, of course, he could only talk to what i had told the fbi and i appreciate that. now, i have acknowledged repeatedly that using two e-mail accounts was a mistake. and sigh take responsibility for that. >> clinton will take a break from the campaign trail this weekend.
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donald trump is holding a rally in new hampshire. here's the latest polling, it shows him trailing secretary clinton by 15 points in that state. shocking and disturbing that some of the descriptions given by an independent police review panel in chicago, they're blasting new video, showing the moments leading up to the deadly shooting of an unarmed teenager. take a look. goodness, you hear all those gunshots. and you see it here on your screen. high-of speed chase followed by guns blazing. police feverishly trying to chase this teen that she believe stole a car. there's one key piece of video that we aren't seeing here. according a so-called die-in. rosa flores has the newest
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developments for us this morning. >> reporter: newly released dash and body camera videos show the dramatic moments leading up to a deadly police shooting in chicago. the suspect, 18-year-old paul o'neal was fleeing from police in a black jaguar reported stolen. as he drives towards a police car, two officers jump out. firing at the jaguar as it speeds by. one officer even pointing his gun in the direction of his partner as he turns around. seconds later, o'neal slams head on into a police suv. the violent collision covering the suv's dash cam with smoke as o'neal takes off running. body cameras show officers chasing him. moments later, the sun of gunfire. o'neal was shot in the back yard of a home. the county medical examiner says
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o'neal who was unarmed died of a gunshot wound to the back. the officer who fired the fatal shot was wearing a body camera but it was not recording. investigators are trying to figure out why. o'neal's family watched the videos before they were released to the public. >> i'm very hurt. words can't describe how i feel right at this moment. and i saw it when it happened. but i really want everybody to know that paul was loved by my mother, his family, me. >> reporter: the family has filed a wrongful death lawsuit against the department and the officers involved. family members say some of the most disturbing moments are what the officers say after the shooting. while o'neal is still bleeding and handcuffed on the ground. [ bleep ] i'm going to be on a desk [ bleep ].
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>> reporter: the shooting happening in what is being deemed as a new era of transparency and accountability. >> it appears department policies may have been violated. >> reporter: the new chief took swift action taking the police powers away from the three officers who fired their weapons. it also only took eight days for officials to release the video. at move at that times has taken more than a year. rosa flores, cnn, chicago. >> biggest take-away here, the chicago police saying its officers did violate protocol here. senior law enforcement analyst tom fuentes is here. we want to get your reaction. >> good morning, christi. i think in terms of violating department pose, i'm guessing that the policy probably is not to shoot at a moving vehicle or fleeing vehicle mainly because of likelihood of being effective is almost zero. and secondly, you're spraying bullets all over a neighborhood that could be going into other
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people's homes and endangering innocent people in the area. so, i think that may be the policy, and not directly related at the shooting itself, which is still obviously under investigation. >> it turns out, though, that this person, o'neal, did not have a gun on him. is this a violation, or is this in a sense, a crime by the police officer? >> well, i mean, it would be both. if in fact the shooting is not just it would be illegal as well as a -- anything that is illegal would automatically be a violation of department policy. but i think what they're saying now, before they can definitively rule one way or the other, it being a justified shooting. even though it looks very bad. i think that immediately saying it violated department policy i think refers to when they were shoot issing at the car on the street. you have multiple shots being fired. and obviously, they're going all
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over that neighborhood. that's why police departments don't allow shooting the a vehicle, unless it's absolutely the last resort the vehicle is about to run you down. and we've seen that in other shootings where a subject in a vehicle is being shot at. >> there's no doubt in the moment, you're seeing it from different perspectives. the officer who actually shot this teen was rosa pointed out was wearing a body camera but it wasn't rolling at the time. there were mig momessing moment let's say, in terms of the video that was available. what do you make of that aspect? >> we just don't know, was it malfunctioning, was it turned down deliberately. they're still investigating that, that's an important factor. we still don't know what led to that camera not being operable, whether it was deliberate or not. >> family members here are going forward with the wrongful death lawsuit. they say one of the most
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disturbing moments, i think we heard it there happened in that exchange between a couple of officers. let's listen again. >> man, [ bleep ] i'm going to be a desk for 30 [ bleep ] days. >> he shot back, right? >> all right. so he's complaining he's going to be on desk duty for 30 days. the other guy is saying he shot back, right. and then it doesn't seem like there's anything. that was one of the gray moments that comes outside of a situation like this which is understandable. however, by saying i'm going to be on desk duty, in that moment, he's admitting some guilt, is he not? >> no, not necessarily at all. that would be department policy. not just that officer, but any of the officers that shot their weapons goring to be on administrative leave and be on desk duty during the investigation. >> okay. we understand. tom fuentes, thank you so much
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for helping us break down that video that just came out. we appreciate your expertise as always. >> you're welcome. ahead on "new day," the president blasts donald trump as unfit for office. we'll take a look back at the week as the president takes aim at the gop candidates. it just finds more street-legal form. for a limited time get some of the best offers of the year on our complete line of f sport performance vehicles. at the lexus golden opportunity sales event. this is the pursuit of perfection. he wrecked the rec room this summer. his stellar notebooks will last through june. get back to great. this week, these items just one cent each. office depot officemax. gear up for school. gear up for great.
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into a two-week stay at martha's vineyard this morning, before he left, though, he got into a few good verbal punches towards donald trump. >> white house correspondent
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michelle kosinski has the president's comments. >> hi, victor and christi. right, the president is officially on vacation. we may not hear from him for two weeks. he seemed to relish on press conferences which focused on two things to hit donald trump hard. >> reporter: the political storm growing ever fiercer, president obama today gets away from it all. sort of. for what he hopes will be a quiet two weeks on martha's vineyard, but not before leaving behind some surprising zingers of his own, aimed directly at donald trump. >> yes, i think the republican nominee is unfit to serve as president. he keeps on proving it. he's willfully unprepared to do his job. >> reporter: and he kept on going, with the press conference alongside the singaporen prime minister, extending the sentiment to republicans.
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>> if you are repeatedly having to say in very strong terms that what he has said is unacceptable, why are you still endorsing him? what does this say about your party that this is your standard-bearer? there has to come a point at which you say, somebody who makes those kinds of statements doesn't have the judgment, the temperament, the understanding to occupy the most powerful position in the world. >> reporter: this is a long way from earlier when president obama were barely say donald trump's name or make veiled references or speak about the republican candidates. remember them? now, since his endorsement of hillary clinton and the
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convention, president obama seems freer, willing and eager to speak his mind. >> of course, the elections will not be rigged. what does that mean? >> reporter: this was during a press conference at the pentagon after a meeting on isis. >> what is your assessment today, as you stand here, about whether donald trump can be trusted with america's nuclear weapons? >> i've made this point already, multiple times. just listen to what mr. trump has to say and make your own judgment, with respect to how confident you feel about his ability to manage things like our nuclear triad. >> reporter: referring back to his sharpest barbs only days earlier. >> there has to come a point where you say enough. >> at one point, it sounded like the president was saying, well, i've said enough now, i've made my point. so, what can we expect from him from now on on the campaign trail? you know he doesn't like to get into a back and forth with
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donald trump. he doesn't like to respond to every single tweet. but what we are seeing when things are becoming highly controversial like the trump comments on the parents of the fallen soldier, like the white house says he's willing to weigh in, even then some, even though on the political events, although the events we saw this week were not. christi and victor. listen, a lot of us are guilty of this, checking your phone, looking at social media, texting while you're driving. i want to tell you about frightening new things we're learning here, the number of people who have been killed by distracted drivers, it is staggering. we're going to hear from the families left behind. >> parents to go up to the 4-year-old or loved one to say mommy's in heaven is something -- that's been the hardest part.
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most people will admit that texting while driving, yes, it is bad. however, an alarming number of people still do it. >> the impact does affect scientists who is arguing it actually has power over us. it's an addiction that most of us behind the wheel don't even realize. cnn's kelly wallace has the details behind driving while distracted. >> reporter: the unthinkable.
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parents lay their teenage daughter to rest after a crash in which her friends were drinking and driving while texting behind the wheel. but thankfully, this isn't real life. it's a program called choices. every choice comes with a price. created by the acadia parrish sheriff's office in louisiana. nearly 200 high school students participate in a mock crash, and act out the consequences afterward. the video is shown in high schools in the community. >> we're going to read you your rights. once they read the rights, you're going to be okay, what's going on. >> reporter: it sounds so simple, don't use your phone while driving. seeing the consequences help drive the point home. in long island, new york, another approach to get the message out. students take a ride on the distracted driving simulator, and see how quickly things can go wrong. good it may seem that, oh, i'm
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sending a text to my friends, no big deal. next thing you know, you're swerving. for matt buvvy who lost his wife to a distracted driver. and laura lauer who killed a grandfather while glancing at a text. >> it can wait. realizing it's our lives are on the hand. >> andrea is already a fixer and doer. it's a lot to did this, to get the word out that distracted driving, it's a major offense, it's something that can changed lives and it changed theirs. >> and a hughes thanks for matt and laura for sharing their stories. coming up at 8:00, we'll talk about how people like to play
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social is media, paying bills and even pokemon while driving. it increases your chances of crashing by six times. >> kelly, thank you so much. by the way, her driving while distracted is this afternoon at 2:30 eastern here on cnn. >> we have so much nmore to tal about. >> next hour of "new day" starts right now. whole communities areg on mars and solar satellites provide earth with unlimited clean power. in less than a century, boeing took the world from seaplanes to space planes, across the universe and beyond. and if you thought that was amazing, you just wait. ♪
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did you know people can save over $500 when they switch to progressive? i got your nose! i got your nose right here. i know that's your thumb, grandpa. talent! learn about it! we are so glad to have your company as always. i'm christi paul. >> i'm victor blackwell. i support and endorse our speaker of the house paul ryan.
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>> oh, i may have short-circuited, and for that, i will, you know, try to clarify. >> newly released dash and body camera videos show the dramatic moments leading up to a deadly police shooting in chicago. the officer who fired the fatal shot was wearing a body camera but is not recording. investigators are trying to figure out why. good morning from copacabana beach. got to go to the opening ceremony last night. still pinched myself that i was there, i only got three hours of sleep but i woke up doing the samba. we're going to talk about it and show you some of the highlights, coming up. good morning to you. thanks for joining us on "new day." i'm victor blackwell. >> and i'm christi paul. we are so grateful for your company as always. we're talking again politics. >> yeah, starting again, donald trump, walking back his comments
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on paul ryan. actually, a 180 here endorsing the house speaker. >> and also endorsing senators john mccain and kelly ayotte. this comes after a week of trump going off message and criticizing gop leaders, and criticizing a gold star family. i want to go to scott. >> yeah, christi, donald trump was looking to smooth things over with his own party. last night trump and something that we rarely see read closely from some notes. he endorsed paul ryan, a guy who is in a tough battle with the district and also endorsing john mccain and kelly ayotte from new hampshire. earlier this week, trump had declined to endorse any of those three big name republicans. and he ruffled plenty of party feathers in the process. but trump has had a pretty rough
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week. he's sinking in the polls. he's struggling to move past controversy. and clearly, he wanted to end this week on a note of party unity, listen. >> in our shared mission, to make america great again, i support and endorse our speaker of the house paul ryan. and while i'm at it, i hold in the highest esteem senator john mccain. for his service to our country, in uniform and in public office. and i fully support and endorse his re-election. i also fully support and endorse senator kelly ayotte of new hampshire. >> and a paul ryan aide told cnn
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that the speaker appreciates the gesture from donald trump but that he is focused on winning the endorsement of voters in his district. now, after that endorsement, donald trump turned and focused on hillary clinton, someone that paul ryan said in the get-go that should have been trump's target all along. the campaign put out a new web video, putting the spotlight on clinton's md leisleading statem about the e-mail serve. tonight, trump and ayotte are losing in the polls there. she has not gone as so far as to say she endorses donald trump, christi. >> thank you. >> joining me former white house commit cal director, jeff, good morning to you. >> dr. morning, dr. victor, how are you doing? >> i'm doing well. i want to get to the substance
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of this, every time i watch that, why did donald trump have to read those simple endorsements. it's not as if the sentences were complex and difficult to remember? >> well, i think he did want to be on message there. let me just start by saying there's a new reuters poll out yesterday that has him down only by three points. so, i think he's definitely on the rebound. secretary clinton is on the defensive about her misstatements, misleading things about her e-mails, et cetera. you know, donald trump yet cited ronald reagan 80/20 rule. having worked for ronald reagan, i remember it well, somebody who agrees with you 80% of the time and days agrees with you 20% is your 80% friend. and i think that was his description of paul ryan and john mccain and kelly ayotte. i think he's right. >> not your 20% enemy. i think many of us remember that. christi is going to talk about
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the e-mails in a minute but what took donald trump from i'm not quite there yet on speaker ryan to endorsing him and calling him a good man. is it simply that he turned the page or is this more substantive? >> well, i think he's suggesting the fact that he is the leader of the republican party. and everybody has to adjust when you get to this role. i remember then governor george w. bush finally getting together with john mccain in i guess this was after a pretty beautiful primary. ronald reagan certainly made an overture by putting george h.w. bush on his ticket. this is the way it works. >> let's jump to something that ohio governor john kasich told cnn about potentially vote for donald trump. watch this. >> i wish that i could be fully
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enthusiastic. i can't be. so i don't know mats goiwhat's happen. >> what can donald trump do to get to you vote for him? >> well, there's so much water over the dam now it's become increasingly difficult. i want euna feig. i want -- i think i've been pretty clear about it. there was a speech i made called two paths. you can either operate on the dark side of the street or operate in the light. i believe america needs people to operate in the light. plain and simple. >> he said he needs -- that america needs someone who is going to operate in the light there. what's your reaction from what you're hearing from governor kasich? >> you know, on monday this last week, with was with donald trump in a rally about five miles from here in central pennsylvania. i had plenty of time to talk to folks who were there. the rally was totally filled inside this massive gymnasium
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and auditorium and there were thousands of people who couldn't get in. they are so enthusiastic about donald trump the changes at hand. i honestly think that governor kasich is out of touch here. there's a lot of passion. a lot of enthusiasm from these folks. and i'm sure that it applies in ohio as well. i would just, for the sake of party unity now, it's time, it's time. >> we should also say there's a significant number of self-identified republicans who are still not behind donald trump and believe in the latest polls that the party is not united and potentially will not be united moving forward at least in the next 94 days by election day. i want to listen to also something donald trump said, this is in burlington, if my memory serves me well at the gop convention about unity. watch. >> ideally, i think we'll be together, i think i will win if we're fought together.
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there are some people i honestly don't want their endorsement. there should be and has to be unity. now, with that being said, would i win can i win without it? i think so, to be honest, i think so. >> still believe, do they still believe they can win without a unified gop? >> well, one of the interesting factors, i think, of this election, victor is presence of people coming into the system who have never paid much attention to it before or were sort of put off by all of politics, these people are pouring in the door, if you will, of the republican party, in support of donald trump. so, yes, i think he can do -- i think he can win, absolutely. i think he can win. and there's always going to be people, victor. i mean, i remember after the hotly contested primary in 1980, congressman john anderson who is a member of the republican house leadership and was a candidate
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picked up his marble and ran as a candidate. he got 6% of the vote and ronald reagan won in a landslide. >> we're taking a break. to disc. ah, no she's not. since when? since now. she's into tai chi. she found disc sports too stressful. hold on. let me ask you this... what's she gonna like six months from now? who do we have on aerial karate? steve. steve. steve. and alexis. uh, no. just steve. just steve. just steve. live business, powered by sap. when you run live, you run simple. he wrecked the rec room this summer. his stellar notebooks will last through june. get back to great. this week, these items just one cent each. office depot officemax. gear up for school. gear up for great. at clorox 2 we've turned removing stains into a science. now pre-treat with clorox 2! watch stains disappear right before your eyes.
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and the majority were rated as cleared or minimal at 12 weeks. be the you who talks to your dermatologist about stelara®. welcome back, we're talking endorsements this morning. and donald trump has not endorsed speaker paul ryan in his primary race there in wisconsin. but sarah palin, big trump follower is not following his lead. she tweeted this, proud to be standing with paul mahlon since may 9th. please vote for this man on tuesday. let bring back trump supporter, jeffrey, your reaction of what you're seeing from governor palin, or ex-governor palin. i'm wondering what is the potency of a palin endorsement these days? >> she's got a lot of clout with folks. i have a great deal of affection
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for her, i think she's terrific. yeah she certainly does. >> what division or what separation from donald trump? >> these things happen. somebody's going to win, and then we'll go on from there. >> well, i'd imagine if these things happen and somebody is going to win, donald trump could have stayed where he was and not endorsed ryan and ayotte and mccain? >> he's in a different spot. he is the party's presidential nominee. and i can give you an example, victor, from ronald reagan. ronald reagan was no fan of the late arlen specter running as a liberal republican. he won in the landslide, six years later after irritating ronald reagan mightily over those six years, ronald reagan swallowed hard. endorsed him in pennsylvania, doing fund-raiser for him. exerting his influence getting a
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constituent out of a difficult situation. this is donald trump's moment. >> you say this is donald trump's moment. how long is this iteration of trump and the campaign going to last? i imagine, i know, sitting in this chair, we've asked at least a dozen times, christi? i don't know, is this the shift? is this preparing for the general. are we all being fooled, is this going to change where we see him in new hampshire this weekend? >> well, donald trump is going to continue to be donald trump. there's no question about that. yeah, we're now in the general election. it may be august. and the olympics may be attracting a little bit of attention here. but the game is on here. donald trump understands full well what the stakes are. i can tell you, i spoke with him on monday. in person. he's very up beat. >> the game was on last week when he was going after khizr khan last week, also.
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we'll see. >> there is a gold star mother just last night by the name of karen bond who spoke up for him. so, i think we've turned the corner there as well. >> let's talk about this video that's coming out. donald trump did a 180 on that video. he said he saw of the plane, the $400 million going to iran. he tweeted the plane i saw was the hostage plane in geneva, switzerland, not the plane carrying $400 million in cash going to iran. now, reportedly there is video showing money on the day, that several american prisoners were released. we've got this video up now. now, reportedly, this wasn't known to have existed when trump made the claim. but from your perspective, does this change any element here for mr. trump in the campaign? >> well, the essence, and frankly, when i saw that video,
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i thought the same thing he did. and i now understand that there's one of the hostages who said they were not allowed to board their plane and leave until another plane mysteriously landed. presumably, that's the one with the cash on it. the point is whatever video is in sight doesn't change the fact, is that the u.s. government, under the obama administration paid $400 million in cash ransom for these hostages. and i can tell you, again, i was in the white house during the ire ran contra affair. there was a major investigation of president commission, a special prosecutor, there was a lot that resulted from that. so is this a very, very big deal. >> president of course says the u.s. does not pay ransom, did not pay ransom. >> the iranians have said otherwise. >> iranians have said many things otherwise. but said they sent cash because there is no banking with iran.
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jeffrey lord, thank you so much. >> thank you, sir. >> christi. hillary clinton trying to explain why she fumbled an answer about the investigation into her private e-mail server. we've got karen johnson talking about that and more on the dems side coming up. also, more than 11,000 athletes from 200 countries, yes, folks, the games are on. guess who is there. coy wire, live from rio. hey, coy. >> hi, christi. good morning, got to go to the opening ceremony last night. not going to lie. got a little teary eyed. about 3 billion people tuned in to watch this. we're going to talk about who stole the show and sent the internet ablaze when they walked out shortlesirtless, see you so. ♪ hey, is this our turn? honey...our turn?
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21 minutes past the hour and you are officially waking up to day one of the olympics, opening ceremonies kicking off the 2016 games. featured more than 5,000 costumes, spectacular fireworks, and guess who was there -- one mr. coy wire. gets to see it in person. coy, how are you doing? looks like a tough job? >> reporter: hey, someone has to do it, christi. i'll tell you, being there was surreal, because you grow up dreaming of being that cool some day. you watch the opening ceremony, and i was there feeling that energy and that passion. the brazilian people, seeing the colors. it was outstanding. but let's talk about some of the highlights of the night, a was personally looked forward to the
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u.s. olympic team coming out. and they sure did come out in full force, more athletes than any other nation in the games, led by michael phelps as the flak be flag bearer. the most decorated olympics. and the athletes, a lot of people making fun of the outfits online. how about when brazilian supermodel gisele bundchen walks out, the wife of tom brady, to the song "the girl from ipanema." as the star of the night had to be the guy from tonga, the tae kwon do opponent wearing that tae kwon do and nothing else. glistening oil. that got the party started for sure. guys i got an exclusive interview, u.s. track star justin gatlin, arguably the most
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popular in the summer games, the shortest, ten seconds going toe to toe by usain bolt. i caught up to talk to him. check it out. i got to ask you about usain, he said you're going to feel his wrath, what are your thoughts on this? >> i'm just going to come out here and do what i do. which is, you know, run, enjoy myself. make my way to the finals get on top of that podium and just represent usa. that's ma i'm here for. >> reporter: this may be the last time you after do face usain bolt. does that cross your mind at all, i may get one more shot at taking this guy? >> i haven't thought about it. i'm just going to get out and do what i'm going to do. it's olympics, it's special, i know everybody is bringing heir a-game. >> reporter: where are you this time around? >> this is the olympics i'm bringing the fun and carefree justin gatlin from 2004 and the
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honored to be here justin gatlin from 2012, putting the mix together, i'm going to celebrate and have a great time. >> reporter: some of the athletes have great ability, but sustainability. what has kept you going? >> just the fans. people who haven't seen me before, just giving me well-wishers on social media top give me the drive to keep going forward. >> reporter: ooh, christi i cannot wait to see that one. don't blink or you'll miss it. 12 gold medals up for grabs today. that hardway is going to start to be handed out. i'm excited about the swimming to take place tonight. i'm excited about the paddle boarding and some of the cool things that i'm going to go and do and make you jealous of my assignment. it's a beautiful morning here on copacabana, the rio games are underway. >> i'm grateful that you are
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able to there be, coy. i'm gafl frateful for you, than. >> thank you. let's turn to the city of phoenix on edge as police are searching for a serial sniper. officers say the gunman has killed seven people and now has struck again. plus, chances are you got one of those new chip credit cards in your wallet right now. you know, the ones where you never know whether to insert or swipe. coming up, we'll hear hackers who say those cards are not as safe as you can think. and what they can do with them. speaking of money, mortgage rates fell this week. here's your look. sfx: rocket blasting off (dong) (ding) (ding) (ding)
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(ding) (ding) (ding) sfx: (countdown) 3, 2, 1 (ding) (ding) (ding) rocket i'm hillary clinton, and i approve this message. michael hayden: if he governs consistent with some of the things he said as a candidate, i would be very frightened. gillian turner: he's been talking about the option of using a nuclear weapon against our western european allies.
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max boot: this is not somebody who should be handed the nuclear codes. charles krauthammer: you have to ask yourself, do i want a person of that temperament controlling the nuclear codes? and as of now, i'd have to say no. [bill o'reilly sighs] and as of now, i'd have to say no. you want to make your enamel sure to protect it, you want to have it for life. consumption of very acidic foods can wear away your enamel. your tooth is gonna look yellower, um more dull. nobody wants to have yellow looking teeth.
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7:30 in the morning. i'm christi paul. >> you made it. i'm victor blackwell. good to be with you. donald trump trying to put the political fuse back behind him, speaker of the house, paul ryan, john mccain as well, after hesitating to do so earlier this week. >> in our shared nation, to make america great again, i support and endorse our speaker of the house paul ryan. paul ryan. good. good man. he's a good man and he's a good
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guy. i hold in the highest esteem senator john mccain. for his service to our country, and i fully support and endorse his re-election. >> meanwhile at a gathering of black and hispanic journalists hillary clinton took questions from reporters after the first time in more than eight months and offered this explanation after she repeated a debunked blame on her use of a private e-mail. take a listen. >> so, i may have short-circuited, and for that i will, you know, try to clarify. because i think you know, chris wallace and i were probably talking past each other. because, of course, he could only talk to what i had told the fbi and i appreciated that. now, i have acknowledged repeatedly, that using two e-mail accounts was a mistake. and i take responsibility for that.
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>> clinton will take a break from the campaign trail this weekend. donald trump meanwhile holding a rally in new hampshire with the latest poll him showing trailing his opponent with 15 points. we'll have more that in just a bit. a serial sniper terrorizing the phoenix area has struck again. police say the latest was not injured but the shooter has killed six in march. witnesses describe the gunman as a fair-skinned white man in his 20s. so far, the shooter's identity an motive is a mystery. no one knows who the next target might be, of course, cnn brian todd has the latest. >> reporter: he seems to choose his victims randomly, approaching them quickly at night and blasting them with a semi-automatic handgun. now police sell cnn the shooter has struck again. >> a 24-year-old man and a
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4-year-old boy were in a car. it was during that time that we believe the serial street shooter shot at the car. fortunately neither the man or child were struck. >> reporter: that was on july 11th. it's taken investigators weeks to establish this was indeed the same man who killed seven people in nine attacks since march. children have been targeted twice including 12-year-old malia ellis shot is and killed as she listened to music inside of a car. authorities have raised the reward put out on this suspect, likely a hispanic man in his 20s tall and shin. profilers say he's a narcissistic psychopath. >> what we have here is a man who cares nothing but himself. he gets a thrill out of anything drawing teen ining attention to. >> reporter: no apparent connection to any of his victims but he does have an m.o., police say some of the shootings were in east central phoenix
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including the last one. most occurred in merriville. >> what does the pattern tell you? >> it's clear he's comfortable in parts of the city east and west, maybe because he can park far and safeway. maybe he's lived in the neighborhood or worked in the neighborhood. >> reporter: cnn was told that investigators believe he works in a cars sales lot. he has access to two described as a lincoln and a dark 5 series bmw late sedan. he approaches his victims in a car. gets away in a car. he may have an accomplice. how could this killer slip up? >> i think the biggest mistake this killer is starting to make. he thinks he's invisible. there's a composite out there. they've talked about my vehicles, nobody has turned me in. >> reporter: there could be critical new information.
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15 this police tell me unlike his last attacks, they don't believe the shooter got out of his car. our analyst tom fuentes says that means that explosive residue from his gun could be found in the seats of the car. seats or interior lining. it could be an important clue for police if they can find that vehicle. brian todd, cnn, washington. coming up, those new chip credit cards they're supposed to protect us from fraud, yes? well, some hackers say, this new technology that makes it vulnerable to a whole new problem. we'll talk about that. why do people put milk on cereal? why does your tummy go "grumbily, grumbily, grumbily"? no more questions for you! ooph, that milk in your cereal was messing with you, wasn't it? try lactaid, it's real milk, without that annoying lactose. good, right? mmm, yeah.
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so, you probably have one of those credit carts or debit cards with the chip in it, right? >> yes. >> all right. now, it's supposed to be safer, do a better job of protecting against fraud. >> well, it turns out these cards are vulnerable as well. and lori siegel introduces us two to hackers who are talking and say, listen, you people need to be concerned. >> reporter: hey, christi, hey, victor. well, we're here in las vegas for black hack. where it's the latest for hackers where the brightest in hacking show off their skills. what if you're one of those people with a chip in your credit card and think you're safe, you might want to pay attention. chip cards, they take forever. on the bright side, they're also more secure. they're supposed to stop criminals from stealing our information. but the very thing that makes them take longer may also make them vulnerable. on an old-fashioned credit card the data of that sensitive
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register is static. it never changes. on a chip card the data is randomized meaning it's only good for one minute. normally, the information would be useless, but if the hackers can steal it and use it, they're in business. new research shows that may also be possible if hackers can crack open a store register and add something called a skimmer. maybe they own the store themselves, whatever the case, then their minute begins. here's how it works. during that minute, the hacked register is stealing all of your card's information. and wirelessly transmitting to another device the hackers have set up elsewhere. like a smartphone ready to make a mobile purchase. or in this case, a hacked atm that's confusing the data for your physical banking card. and -- first of all, wow.
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>> what did we just see, can you explain just went down? >> the data on the card is getting transmitted to a device inside this false front here, and then back, then in turn, it's starting to punch in all of the data. punching in the opinion. asking for $200 and hitting withdrawal. >> there's little we'll say robot hands that are actually putting the pin numbers in there. >> you had to take over two devices to make this happen, right? how likely is this to be widespread? >> what we're trying to do is envision the kinds of attacks that are going to be likely to happen once the u.s. moves over more completely to the tip and pin standard. it's not like the criminals are going to put up their hands and say, oh, you took it away now i'm out of the credit card fraud business. so, i would expect to see some variation of this. maybe in two years, hence. you know, we're not going to see this today. >> you have the skill that enables you to hack an atm and
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make money just kind of flow out. yet, you want to use this skill for good. a lot of people would want to take the money and run. so what is it about you that makes you want to choose this power for good? >> i like being able to go out in society not being scared that a knock on the door is maybe the police or general. >> i love the internet. and i'm a technophile. i want that stuff to work. the only way that is going to work is keeping up to pace with the bad guys. >> i've been coming to black hack for years. it's ground zero for hacks. a lot of research that you see here inevitably happening in the real word. they're the ones that find the flaws before the bad guys do. hillary clinton with a room full of reporters. she tries to explain what some are calling a bungled answer on
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[ hip♪ olympics 2016, let ] me get you on my level. ♪ ♪ so you never miss a moment, ♪ ♪ miss a minute, miss a medal. ♪ why settle when you can have it all? ♪ ♪ soccer to wrestling. track and field to basketball. ♪ ♪ fencing to cycling. diving to balance beam. ♪
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♪ all you have to say is, ♪ "show me," and boom it's on the screen. ♪ ♪ from the bottom of the mat, ♪ ♪ to the couch where you at? ♪ ♪ "show me the latest medal count?" ♪ ♪ xfinity's where it's at. ♪ welcome to it all. comcast nbcuniversal is proud to bring you coverage of the rio olympic games. hillary clinton has not had a news conference in months. but she was in a roomful of journalists on friday, she tried to explain what many have called this bungled answer into the investigation into her e-mail and also took some shots at donald trump. cnn international correspondent suzanne malveaux is tracking the story. >> america is better than donald
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trump. >> reporter: hillary clinton laying into donald trump at a conference for black and hispanic journalists in washington. >> we need to stand up as a country and say that donald trump doesn't represent who we are. and what we believe. >> reporter: clinton was asked about her claim in a pair of recent interviews that fbi director james comey said her public answers about her e-mails were truthful. here's what she told fox news sunday. >> after a long investigation, fbi director james comey said none of those things that you told the american public were true. >> chris, that's not what i heard director comey say. and i thank you for giving me the opportunity to, in my view, clarify. director comey said that my answers were truthful and what i've said is consistent with what i've told the american people. >> reporter: that statement which she repeated in another interview wednesday ruled false by fact checkers. clinton trying to clarify those comments, referring specifically to what comey said about her fbi testimony. >> i was pointing out in both of
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those instances that the director comey had said that my answers in my fbi interview were truthful. that's really the bottom line here. i may have short-circuited it, and for that, i will try to clarify, because i think, you know, chris wallace and i were probably talking past each other. because, of course, he could only talk to what i had told the fbi, and i appreciated that. >> reporter: clinton also addressed questions about her struggles with voters who do not see her as honest and trustworthy. >> how would you lead a nation where a majority of americans mistrust? >> every time i have done a job, people have counted on me and trusted me. i take it seriously. you know, it doesn't make me feel good when people say those things. and i recognize that i have work to do. >> reporter: as the democratic nominee picked up another high-profile endorsement in a "the new york times" op-ed former cia director mike morell
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said he would vote for clinton in november. i warned of the impact on the world stage saying, quote, mr. trump has no experience on national security. even more important, the character traits he has exhibited during the primary season suggests he would be a poor, even dangerous, commander in chief. morell also slammed trump's praise of russian president vladimir putin in the intelligence we would say that mr. putin had recruited mr. trump. nationally, it continues to widen perhaps by president obama's pot job rating and jobs report. >> more good news for hillary clinton. a new poll shows she's four points ahead of trump. this is typically a red state. this is significant, this movement, this developments. the last time it went for a
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democrat along with cnn political commentator and donald trump supporter, scottie nell hughes. theron, i want to jump off with this short-circuited statement. it confused a lot of people. there were some wondering, is this -- was this supposed to be a joke, because she has been said to be somewhat robotic during her speeches. >> the good news for us is that hillary clinton is usually pretty good on her feet and is going to be really good in debates. i think that this sort of comment was sort of just overreaction to the american people. the bottom line is what she just said. the testimony that she gave to the fbi were truthful statements. now, what we're really talking about, krischristi, is 3 out of 30,000 e-mails that the fbi director said had some type of marking on it. let's be honest, we as american people, we'll truly never know what was in those e-mails is, because it's so classified and it was such a robust discussion between the fbi and --
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>> but don't you think the american people will look at it and think, i want to know what's in it, because there's such a trustworthiness issue when it comes to hillary clinton. >> hillary clinton has said that it was a mistake to have two e-mail servers. the polls show that a majority of democrats and especially the american people are not as concerned about the issues they once was. it's definitely distracting for her campaign. but she's going to have 90 plus days to really show the american people that she's trustworthy and dependable and that she's fit to be president. >> to turn this around. >> yeah. >> scottie, i want to come to you with something that bernie sanders wrote, an op-ed in the "l.a. times." he wrote, donald trump would be a disaster and an embarrassment for our country if he were elected president. his campaign isn't based on anything of substance, it is based on bigotry. this is a man who secured more than 1,800 pledged delegates. he had 46% of the total primary vote. how strong is his voice against donald trump? >> well, i think the question is, does it still have a voice? has hillary clinton done enough to go after those bernie sanders supporters? mr. trump is looking hopefully
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to be able to recruit some of those bernie sanders folks over. however, if he doesn't, it's not the end of the world. that's not the end for the republican party. however, hillary clinton must continue to recruit, and a lot of those bernie sanders supporters are still very upset. and as she continues to strengthen her ties with wall street by hosting high-dollar fund-raisers, by more and more accepting out, she accepted almost ten times more from hedge funds on wall street for her campaign than necessarily mr. trump, that message right there does not send a bond the two of them together. >> theron, i see you shaking your head. and i want to get to one other thing if you want to comment on that, too. there's an article in politico this morning that says that democrats are really worried about this october surprise, supposedly, more hacking, more that could come out against the clintons. help us understand the potency of that concern. >> when you're in the campaign, it's always sort of a big fear that something's going to happen in october. the reason october is so pivotal, it doesn't give you a lot of time to respond. >> it doesn't give you a lot of
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time to fix. for both camps, too. >> that's what i was going to say. this whole issue with hacking and the e-mails is not just a democratic issue or a republican issue, it's a national security issue. while hillary clinton should be worried, i think donald trump should be worried as well. what if they uncover donald trump's tax returns in october. >> you led me into my next thing. let's listen here to something we heard last night. take a listen. >> why don't you hack into donald trump's tax returns? >> well, we're working on it. >> okay, they're working on it. so, scottie, is the trump's campaign preparing for an elicit release of his tax returns, or is the trump campaign going to surprise everybody and release %-p- from what i just heard there, julian assange saying, it wouldn't necessarily be hacking into donald trump, it would be
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hacking into the irs. that right there does cause concern. but who's saying that he is the one responsible for these hacks. he's just the one that's releasing them through wikileaks. i think there was a lot of concern there. but i think you're right, this october surprise. and this isn't the first time that a candidate, going back to ronald reagan and carter, carter was up by eight points two weeks shy of the november election, and obviously things flipped. so october is actually a very, very important month, i agree, on the debates with it but it depends on these e-mails. we've already heard that hillary clinton e-mails specifically will be released. the question is right now, you have three staffers from the dnc resign this week, three more senior staffers. what exactly is going to be in these next round of e-mails that are from hillary clinton. >> all right, tharon, go ahead. i want you want to respond to that. >> i think the donald trump really missed here, he could have come out and been very presidential and statesman like. scottie, we talked about this.
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your candidate, every time he has an opportunity to really connect with independents, he blows it. at a time where i think his pathway to victory is harder, listen, he just endorsed paul ryan and endorsed john mccain. these are two great americans. but these are two people that represent the establishment of the republican party. he also maybe made a lot of his supporters upset with that move. and you and i both know he's doing exceptionally terrible with independents right now. and hillary clinton is doing very well. i think it's a hard rode for donald trump. >> i'm sorry, we' we've run out time. thank you both. >> ahead next hour, florida, they are continuing there to fight against zika, spraying underway right now. we'll take you through some of the steps they're using to try to prevent a larger spread of this virus. . ...another anti-wrinkle cream in no hurry to make anything happen. neutrogena® rapid wrinkle repair works... ...in one week. with the... fastest retinol formula. ...to visibly reduce wrinkles. neutrogena®.
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>> got shorty. inside the chase for el chapo. >> yes, "got shorty: inside the chase for el chapo" airs tomorrow night, 8:00 eastern, only here on cnn. and boy do we have a full plate of news for you this morning. >> next hour of "new day" starts right now. >> i support and endorse our speaker of the house, paul ryan. >> oh, i may have short circuited, and for that, i, you know, will try to clarify. >> newly released dash and body camera video show the dramatic moments leading up to deadly police shooting in chicago. the officer who fired the fatal shot was wearing a body camera, but it was not recording. investigators are trying to figure out why.
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good morning from copacabana beach. got to go to the opening ceremony last night, still pinching myself that i was there. only got three hours of sleep, but i woke up still doing the samba. we're going to talk about it and show you some of the highlights, coming up. we want to wish you a good saturday morning. and thank you so much for keeping us company here. >> good to be with you. i woke up doing the samba, too. >> you did? >> not just coy. i woke up doing it too. >> you'll be doing it by the end of the show. let's turn to politics now. donald trump changing his tune, now endorsing house speaker paul ryan. while he was at it, he endorsed senators john mccain and kelly ayotte, as well. >> this comes after a week of trump going off-message. he wouldn't endorse ryan and mccain initially, feuding with the family of u.s. soldier khan who died in iraq. talk to us more about what donald trump said overnight.
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>> reporter: hey, christi, donald trump has had a pretty tough week. he's struggling in the polls and to move past controversy, and as you mentioned, he's been fighting with his own party lately. so clearly he wanted to end the week on a note of party unity. just a few days ago, trump declined to endorse speaker paul ryan, senator john mccain from arizona, or senator kelly ayotte from new hampshire, and that ruffled plenty of party feathers. so last night you'll notice donald trump appeared on stage in green bay without any big-name wisconsin republicans with him, like, say, governor scott walker. so to try to smooth things over, trump gave a tightly scripted endorsement of ryan, mccain, and ayotte. listen. >> in our shared mission to make america great again, i support and endorse our speaker of the house, paul ryan.
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and while i'm at it, i hold in the highest esteem, senator john mccain. for his service to our country, in uniform, and in public office. and i fully support and endorse his re-election. i also fully support and endorse senator kelly ayotte of new hampshire. >> now, donald trump has -- or those three big-name republicans, i should say, have all publicly disagreed with donald trump, most recently over his feud with that gold star family, who spoke at the democratic convention. but despite differences, ryan and mccain had both given trump their endorsements. now, ayotte has says she supports the party's nominee, but hasn't gone so far to say she endorsed donald trump. but he will be in new hampshire, her home state, for a rally
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later tonight. both he and ayotte are losing in the polls in their respective races. a lot of people are wondering, kr christi, whether torrent donald trump can stick to the script, stay on message. >> we appreciate it. >> let's bring in maria cardona, and boris epstein, a republican strategist and trump surrogate. good morning to both of you. >> good morning, victor. >> boris, let me start with you. what changed between donald trump expressing his reluctance to endorse ryan and mccain and his coming out last night? nothing, from what i see changed, except from the outcry from the party. >> well, victor, it's all about party unity. donald trump knows what's best, not just for politicians, but for the party and for the country as a whole. that's -- >> he didn't know that last week? >> victor, let me finish now. >> okay. >> that's what's best for the country as a whole. he take a look at the situation and decided it is important to endorse paul ryan, senator mccain, and senator ayotte and
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that's what he did. and again, he knows what's best for the country and that's when the decision was made. >> okay, you've now finished. he didn't know that last week? >> he was evaluating the options. this is within the republican party. this is gop versus gop. the people in those primaries had already endorsed donald trump. they were also very supportive of donald trump and he was evaluating what to do and that is the decision that was made. this is not what we should be talking about right now, victor. we should talking about hillary clinton quote/unquote short circuiting and lying to the american people about her wloel career, and now again lying, lying about lying about her e-mails. >> we'll certainly talk about the "short circuit" comment in a moment. >> i can't wait. >> but this would not be a conversation if he had not held out his endorsement a couple days ago. maria, now that he has tried to unite the party, it seems like there are more leaders of the gop coming into the trump camp. are you concerned as a democrat about what you saw last night? >> let me just say this, as
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democrats, we should wake up every single day concerned and pretending that hillary clinton is ten points behind with her back against the wall. because that is how we will win. we cannot take anything for granted the way donald trump's 16 competitors during the republican primary did. we are certainly not going to make that mistake. having said that, of course bor boris wants to talk about hillary because he knows his candidate is on a downward spiral. he's had a horrible two weeks. the trump train is flying off the wheels. every single day, two or three things come out of his mouth that continue to concern the republican party. so of course he had to come out after the intervention that the gop had -- >> there was no intervention. >> -- to talk about quote/unquote party unity. and if you look at how he made that announcement, he clearly went there quicking and screaming, trying to read from the notes, very stilted. but, like boris said, this is what they want to portray,
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because not only does every single day bring something new in terms of a trump debacle, it also brings new republicans coming out and denouncing trump. >> may i respond? >> let me finish. about how dangerous he is to national security and you have more and more of these high-level republicans coming out and endorsing hillary clinton. >> no, you don't. -- works with a clinton-related firm. >> we've got two blocks together. go ahead, boras. >> if you're referring to mike moell morrell, he was appointed by obama. >> you brought up morrell -- hold on. let me read what morrell said -- >> hillary clinton was only up by three points -- >> boris, hold on, let me read what morrell said. >> sure. i just described it. >> but let people at home understand what he said. this is what he said, former cia director michael morial endorsed hillary clinton. first, mrs. clinton is highly qualified to be commander in
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chief. i trust she will deliver on the most important duty as a president, keeping our current second. second, donald trump is not only unqualified for the job, but he may well pose a threat to our national security. this is someone who has served under as many democratic presidents as he has republican presidents. and you say, boras, this means nothing. >> it's completely discredited. one, he works for a firm related to the clintons. that's one. two, he was appointed by obama to be head of the cia, acting head of the cia. this is somebody who is completely biased against donald trump. hillary clinton, quote/unquote, short circuited on national security throughout her whole career. she short circuited when she lied to the american people about her e-mails. she's short circuiting when letting the american people know what's in the 30,000 e-mails that haven't been released. we all know it's not about yoda. she's already tried to prove to the american people that she can be trusted on national security. she's proven that she cannot. she's put american lives in danger -- let me finish! she's proven to the american
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people that she puts americans in danger, just like he did in benghazi and like she did with her e-mails. she cannot be trusted, she's a liar, and that's why she will not win on november 8th. donald trump wins. >> maria, go ahead and we'll take a quick break. >> this is why republicans want to talk about the hillary clinton e-mails -- >> of course, she's awful. >> hold on, let her finish. >> even though she has been exonerated, they have nothing else to talk about. they can't compete with her on the battlefield of ideas, especially when it comes to foreign policy -- >> i would love to talk to you about that -- >> hold on. >> let me finish, boris! when it comes to national security, foreign policy, and so importantly the temperament to be president of the united states and commander in chief. we have seen that the american people do not want somebody like donald trump who can be baited with a tweet, with his hands who are so twitter-happy, on the nuclear codes. >> well, that's a clinton talking point. i would love to talk to you about trade -- >> not just -- >> hold on, hold on. we're going to take a quick
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break. >> just one more point. >> okay, let maria finish her point. >> this is why you have so many republicans, not just mike morrell, you have more than 100 national security, high-level republican officials who have come out to endorse hillary clinton. it speaks volumes. >> we'll take a quick break and turn to that short circuit comment that hillary clinton made yesterday. we'll have that right after the break. stay with us. >> yes, boris and maria are coming back in just a minute. also ahead, the games are beginning now. we'll give you a look at the opening ceremony and a look ahead at what to watch today.
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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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moms know their kids need love, encouragement and milk. with 8 grams of protein, and 8 other nutrients. 9 out of 10 u.s. olympians grew up drinking milk. moms know kids grow strong when they milk life. yesterday he spoke about her e-mails with a room full of supporters -- not supporters, i'm sorry, journalists, let me correct that, and tried again to clarify her statements, made during the recent fox news interview during which she said that director james comey,
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director of the fbi, testified that her statements to the fbi and to the american public were truthful. >> i have said, during the interview, and in many other occasions over the past months, that what i told the fbi, which he said was truthful, is consistent with what i have said publicly. so i may have short circuited, and for that, i, you know, will try to clarify. because i think, you know, chris wallace and i were probably talking past each other. because, of course, he could only talk to what i had told the fbi and i appreciated that. >> all right, let's bring back maria cardona, cnn political commentator, democratic strategist, and boris epshteyn. secretary clinton said during that interview that director comey said that what she said in public was truthful. in fact, she told the american public that she used one device. however, he said that she used
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more than one device. she said she never sent or received any information that was marked classified at the time that she sent or received it. the director said that there were three at least e-mails that were marked with a "c," indicating that they were classified at the time she sent or received it. why can't she or why isn't she acknowledging that there is a discrepancy between what director comey said during that testimony last month, and what she told the american public? she still is not doing that. >> well, i think what she's trying to do is clarify two very important things. number one, is that comey did say that there's absolutely no evidence that she was untruthful to the fbi, number one. number two, on those classified e-mails, the three classified e-mails that he says were in the more than 30,000 e-mails that she turned over, three of them had partial markings on them. when you see what he said in the actual congressional testimony, he actually admits that those partial markings were ones that even an expert on classification would be easy to overlook. and so it would be reasonable to
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think that even secretary clinton would not have known that those were classified. but that is getting into the weeds. and so i agree that this is not an answer that is helpful for her, because people who did not see that testimony are not going to see those words. but that is what she was trying to classify -- or that's what she was trying to clarify. but, again, this is done. it's over. this is something that, you know, the american people have moved on. this has been baked into the cake of the people who support her don't care. the people who don't support her are not going to support her either way. we have seen this in the polls. she is ahead by ten points nationally. she is ahead in all of the battleground states. so of course this is something that the republicans will continue to come back on, because they have nothing else. >> boris, done, over, maria says. what do you say? >> absolutely not. first of all, in the reuters poll, clinton and trump are tied within the margin of error, three points. that's one. two, of course this is not done and over with. hillary clinton was secretary of state. as secretary of state, she broke
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laws, rules, and regulations. she put americans at risk. and now she's lying about what director comey said. of course he said she was untruthful. it was right there in the testimony. you can play it back, victor. she specifically told congress that she lied. and he told congress that she lied under oath when she was in front of congress. this is somebody -- >> he did not say that, boris. come on, that's even beneath you. >> let me finish. she's lying about lying. of course folks like maria want to tongue twist and confuse the american people into believing hillary clinton. that will not happen this time. >> there's no tongue twisting. >> hillary clinton, who's been lying her whole career, the american people will see right through it. but if you want to talk about trade, let's talk about nafta. talk about the 700,000 jobs that it's cost america. talk about the tpp, which hillary clinton is lying about supporting. we know she supports it. let's talk about all those issues. >> before we get to the trade topic, i want to go to specifically what you said, that director comey said that she lied under oath. he did, in fact, say, during the testimony in july, that there was no evidence that the secretary did not tell the truth
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to the fbi. >> thank you. >> let's set that as fact. >> victor, you mischaracterize what i'm saying. i'm talking about her testimony in front of congress. when asked by representative chaffetz, director comey said, i do not know whether she did or did not lie to congress. >> that's not saying that she lied, is it, now, boris? >> that's not the same thing as saying that she lied under oath. >> well, she only used one device. and you just said -- >> now you're the one who's tongue twisting. >> hold on, both of you. let me play this video that just came out overnight from the trump campaign, and maria, i want your response. >> extremely careless. >> e-mail system was breached by hostile actors. >> gross negligence. >> hillary clinton put her national security at risk. and she's still lying. >> director comey said that my answers were truthful. >> that's not true. >> even "the washington post" said that hillary clinton lied, comparing her to pinocchio. >> i may have short circuited, and for that i, uh -- >> careless, reckless, crooked.
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>> so your reaction or your summation here is that it's done and over, because the people who support her will support her anyway. the people who won't, won't support her regardless of this. but does this not play into a larger narrative that creates trouble with independents, for those two-thirds of metropolis, according to the latest polls from cnn, who still find her untrustworthy and dishonest? >> so, here's the issue with that. donald trump is not trustworthy either. so what is actually happening, victor, and why i say that this is baked into the clinton cake because this is a narrative that republicans have been pushing about hillary clinton for more than 30 years. >> because it's true. >> this is something that the american people have heard about her, the people who support her understand that her life's work, more than 30 years in public service, has been about fighting for families and for children, versus donald trump, who cannot be trusted with the nuclear codes. he asked one of his advisers three times, why can't we use nuclear weapons?
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my goodness, this should scare the bejesus out of all of us. and that's why you're seeing her above in the polls -- >> we've got -- >> -- the american people know -- >> we've got 20 seconds for you, boris. 20 seconds. >> the american people know that hillary clinton has lied throughout her career. look at all the scandals, from arkansas to the white house. >> that's what republicans want to see! >> she is a complete -- hillary clinton is a failure. she's nothing -- >> so why is she ahead? >> and that's why we'll be ahead within a week. >> thank you both, maria, boris, we had 11 minutes together and still not enough. >> thank you, victor. >> thank you. >> ain't that the truth? thank you. so the summer 2016 olympic games. they are starting! today, we are here. and with none other than coy wire. he's in rio and he was there for the opening ceremony. >> reporter: it was a wonderful opening ceremony. still have goose bumps. there were so many special moments that showed the power of sport. we're going to tell a couple of the stories from the games that left a big impression, coming up. see me.
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so you are waking up to the first official day of the 2016 olympics. 12 gold medals up for grabs. so who should you keep an eye on? chris froome is going for gold in cycling. we've got kevin durant, the american team taking on china in basketball. and you've got american swimmer, chase kalisz who came back from a coma to compete in the pool. but guess who got the golden ticket to go there. one mr. coy wire. he is -- let me put it this way,
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look at the background of where i am. now look at the background of where he is. who got the better deal? i'm just saying. how is it, coy? >> reporter: christi, beautiful sugarloaf mountain behind me. the iconic scene here, copacabana beach, one of the most recognizable beaches on the planet. it is not a tough gig. i've got to tell you. but what an olympic opening ceremony. to me, it talked about the power of sport. despite controversy, disciplines, hate -- excuse me, differences, hate, when people choose to come together and choose to celebrate one another, it can be powerful. yeah, the team from iran come out and their flag bearer was a woman. this is a country where women are barred from attending male-dominated sports in that country. and there she was on a team dominated by men, representing her nation. that's the power and spirit of the olympics. the power of sport. so what else stood out in that
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opening ceremony? of course, team usa led by michael phelps, the most decorated olympian of all time. he has 22 medals already, still counting. this is his fifth and final olympic games. more athletes in this games, the usa had in these games than any other nation. now, a big secret of the night going into this, who was going to light the olympic caldron? a lot of people thought it was going to be soccer legend pele. it was not it was vanderlei de lima. he was oning in the 2004 olympics, he was in the lead, a fan sprints out of nowhere and tackles him, he ends up getti t bronze. can you imagine? here he was last night at the opening ceremony, finally getting some olympic glory, joining legends like muhammad ali, wayne gretzky, the american on ice u.s. olympic team, getting that moment on a world stage. you want someone to cheer for, talk about getting knocked down and coming back stronger, u.s. swimmer chase kalisz, 8 years
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old, diagnosed with a rare auto immune disorder, goes to the hospital and slips into a coma. and here he is a u.s. medal contender. here he is reflecting on all those years in the hospital. >> i remember laying in the hospital bed and had a ventilator and a feeding tube and all i could do was blink. and if any other part of my body got moved, it was an excruciating amount of pain. >> letting your struggles strengthen you, that fighting spirit. got to love it, got to love chase. good luck to him tonight. what else? who else? the men's basketball team getting kicked off. the dream team facing china. we'll see that. we'll see women's soccer versus france in their final-stage match in the group stage against france. that should be a good one. and we'll have swimming, they'll be holding the 400 individual medley for women as well.
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check out maya darado, in her first and last olympics. she has a job lined up in atlanta. one last go in the pool. she'll be someone to check out and root for in these opening days of the games. >> i love your takeaway, coy, about kalisz, let your struggles be your strength. let your mess become your message. coy wire, we appreciate it. thank you. a violation of protocol. chicago police now blasting its own officers for this. [ sirens ] [ gunfire ] >> the video shows the moments right before an armed teen was killed in a hail of bullets, but there is one moment here that we don't see on the video. we'll talk about that. plus, florida's fight against zika. how they are trying to prevent a wider spread of the virus. she spent summer binge-watching. soon, she'll be binge-studying.
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. welcome to saturdaychristi . >> i'm victor blackwell. donald trump putting an end to a four-day standoff. now backing senator paul ryan and john mccain in their re-election bids, after earlier saying that he was a bit reluctant to endorse them. >> in our shared mission to make america great again, i support and endorse our speaker of the house, paul ryan.
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paul ryan, good. a good man. he's a good man and he's a good guy. i hold in the highest esteem senator john mccain, for his service to our country and i fully support and endorse his re-election. >> meanwhile, hillary clinton is trying to explain her answer during this interview you're seeing here, to a question about the fbi's investigation into her private e-mail server, after fact checkers deemed it false. >> so, i may have short circuited and for that, i, you know, will try to clarify, because i think, you know, chris wallace and i were probably talking past each other. because, of course, he could only talk to what i had told the fbi with and i appreciated that. now, i have acknowledged,
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repeatedly that using two e-mail accounts was a mistake. and i take responsibility for that. >> those comments were made at a gathering of black and hispanic journalists. shocking and disturbing. those are the words used by an independent police review panel in chicago who are blasting new video that shows the moment leading up to the deadly shooting of an unarmed teenager. look at this. [ sirens ] [ gunfire ] >> goodness! as you hear all of that gunfire, a high-speed chase there, followed by those guns. police feverishly trying to take down a teen that they believe stole a car. there's one moment in all of this that is missing. a key piece of video, that apparently was not actually recorded, according to police there. it details -- and that detail is fueling outrage across the
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country. protesters organized a so-called die-in and they're accusing the department of a cover-up. miguel marquez is covering this. what are you learning now? >> the police in chicago are on high alert as well as police across the country because of this shooting. i want to play for you a bit more of that video that you just played. that was the initial shooting, about 15 rounds fired at that jaguar, that they believe was a stolen car. and there was one shot later, i'll play that for you now. >> [ bleep ]! your hands behind your back! [ bleep ] shoot at us! >> all right.
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that's actually the wrong video. that is actually after the initial shooting. there were 15 rounds fired. and then 18-year-old paul o'neal hit a police car. that officer, who he hit, fired a single shot into the back of mr. o'neal. this is the arrest a few minutes later. in this video, which runs about ten minutes in total, you can hear police officers saying, he fired, too. he shot at me. police have now said mr. o'neal had no gun on him. his lawyer says that the police in chicago acted as judge, jury, and executioner. the police in chicago tried to hold a press conference to discuss this, and here's how that went. apparently we don't have that tape. but the police superintendent in chicago walked out on to the stage to try to address the
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media. protesters actually took to the stage, forcing him to back down. chicago police have now issued a nationwide alert, based on this video, saying that the footage will show an unarmed african-american male, who's been engaged with police, with only his vehicle and was shot in the back at some point during the encounter. the subject wounds were fatal. chicago pd anticipates civil unrest. eddie johnson, the police superintendent of chicago, says that the officer who fired that shot did not follow the directives of the department. this incident happened on july 28th. the video was released yesterday. very, very quick by chicago standards. you'll remember 2014 video of laquan mcdonald. that video took over a year to come out, and when it did, it angered people beyond the pale. and i think chicago police are bracing for a similar reaction,
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here, christi. >> miguel marquez, thank you so much. appreciate it. let's take you to florida and this fight against the zika virus. authorities there are hitting this from the air, from the ground. correspondent dan simon is following the latest there for us. dan? >> reporter: hey, victor. we are in the heart of the zika danger zone. we'll tell you what florida is doing to combat the virus and how other states can learn from what they're doing. that is coming up after the break. also, the devastating impact that the zika virus can have. dr. sanjay gupta reports on the disease detectives, and how they're hoping to help babies affected by zika.
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florida is waging war against mosquitos to prevent the spread of the zika virus. of course, it's a war of a different kind. officials now spraying a 10-square-mile area north of miami after reporting the first locally transmitted cases of the virus there. correspondent dan simon joins us now, live from miami with the latest. so, dan, give us an idea and an update here on florida's fight here against zika. pretty aggressive here. and the implications for georgia, for mississippi, for the surrounding states. >> yeah, hey, victor. we are in a miami section called wynwood. this is sort of ground zero for the virus in miami. this is sort of a collection of galleries and restaurants, bars, and you've got some houses and some apartments sprinkled in there, too. there have been 16 local transmissions of the virus, with nearly all of them coming from
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this one neighborhood. when it comes to other states, they can probably learn something in terms of what florida is doing to combat the virus. take a look. as florida health crews work to rid the state of zika-infected mosquitos, other parts of the nation are nervously bracing for the virus to spread. it's the height of mosquito season, and cities like new orleans with hot, muggy conditions with particularly vulnerable. >> our mentality should not be a party of if we will face a locally transmitted case, but rather, when. because it is likely that we're going to have one. >> with similar climates, louisiana, alabama, mississippi, georgia, and texas have all crafted plans to combat zika. but the threat goes even farther. this map from the national center for atmospheric research shows all the states at risk, with yellow being low risk, orange moderate, and red being a high risk. still, health officials say they don't expect widespread outbreaks. >> but we cannot be complacent,
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because we do expect to see more zika cases. >> with florida, the only states so far to have local transmission of the virus, it may offer something of a template to the rest of the country on stopping its spread. it's begun using airplanes to spray insecticide, the chemicals spread across a ten-mile area. the early results seem promising, with a high kill rate in the traps used to gauge effectiveness. it's been mopping up water to deprive mosquitos from laying their eggs, while health officials have fanned the community, administering more than 2,400 tests to residents to see how widespread the virus may be. florida has also waged a fierce public relations campaign. police officers handing out zika information pamphlets to tourists and encouraging the use of bug repellant. bug spray has become so pr prevalent that stores have actually run out of it. also in short supply, money, which scientists hoped would
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fund research into a zika vaccine. congress and the white house has been engaged in a fierce partisan battle over a $1.5 billion zika funding bill. >> congress and the president have not been able to come together and pass a bill to provide more funding. we're continuing to help with mosquito control, help reimburse at the state level. but can i tell you, at the state level, we're going to spend the money we need to do the right things. >> reporter: now, in terms of those aerial sprays, they'll take place over the next four weeks. they're epa approved and safe for both pets and humans. it is a bit early where i am in this tourist district, but i have to tell you that the foot traffic has been steady. of course, officials are concerned about the economic impact, but we've been here over the past few days and there seem to be quite a few people still coming here. victor? >> all right. dan simon, thanks so much. now, brazil is ground zero in the zika epidemic. and teams of doctors have been tracking its origins and trying to understand the devastating impact that it can have. they hope what they're learning
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now about this virus and the birth defects that it can cause are going to help babies around the world. cnn chief medical correspondent, dr. sanjay gupta, has more on the zika disease detectives. >> reporter: christi, victor, you know, when zika came to brazil, it came to this part of the world, first of all, they had no idea what it was, initially. they had no idea what kind of disease it would cause. and they had no idea that it would ultimately be associated with these birth defects. we now know all of this information thanks to the disease detectives that have been working on this for a year now on the ground. when trying to solve a medical mystery, it helps to start at the beginning. that is why ana lara, this adorable little girl with the eye glasses and the too-small head may be so important. at 10 months old, she is the first. the first known child to be born with microcephaly here in salvador, brazil, near the epicenter of the zika epidemic.
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>> one of the things -- >> reporter: every day, her head circumference is measured. it's a frightening new ritual for thousands of parents all over brazil. their hope, that their child's head will suddenly start to grow. but why ana lara? why brazil? and why has the northeastern coast of this country been hit so terribly hard? >> it's the perfect setup for an epidemic to occur. for the past two years, this doctor has walked the favelas, the slums of el salvador, searching for crews. >> so this has been the epicenter. why is it so bad in brazil? >> i think the social economic conditions are worse in this part of the country. they're more closely compact, demographically. so they have less access to care and sanitary conditions are worse in this part of the country. >> reporter: and the nutrition is poor as well. which he believes could be a factor in microcephaly.
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for the mosquito that can breathe in even a bottle cap's worth of water, a favela is a zika paradise. the disease spreads quickly here, with terrible consequences. and as bad as the conditions are around here, take a look down there. when it rains, all the water goes down into the valley. and of course, that means more mosquitos. any of you guys have zika? everyone knows about zika here. no surprise that as hard as we looked, we saw lots and lots of kids, but not a single pregnant woman. this boy tells me that his aunt is pregnant, but she stays inside all day, using repellant. do you pray? this woman was lucky. her baby is fine. >> so she prayed to god so the mosquitos wouldn't bite her and not affect the children. >> reporter: many of the unlucky children never make it to the clinics, set up to help those with microcephaly. their parents ashamed to be out in public with them. never receiving the type of
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therapy these children are getting to stimulate their growth. so the reflexes. this is julia. notice her eyes. in addition to the problems with her gaze, she also has significant sensitivity to the light and clearly diminished vision. >> look at that smile! >> a clue as to where the infection is most likely to strike. >> you see the brain, severely distorted. >> reporter: peering deep inside her brain, dr. jamari looks for clues, as well. the hope, what they learn here will help similar babies being born throughout the americas. >> i think with stimulation, that these chirp are getting, from the group, we see actually better outcomes than we expect from looking at the scans. >> reporter: that's a good grip! well, christi and victor, there have been some other lessons learned here, as well. we know that if a woman's younger during her pregnancy,
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she's likely to have more of an impact from the virus. if the virus actually attacks earlier in the pregnancy, it's likely to have more of an impact. and nutrition. poor nutrition seems to lead to a greater impact. again, these are lessons that have been learned here in brazil that can be applied in perhaps many countries around the world. christi, victor, back to you. >> sanjay, thanks so much. up next, distracted driving. this is a deadly and growing problem that we don't talk about often enough. and we have to ask, is enough being done to combat the problem?
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so let's talk about how we use our cell phones. there's a psychiatrist who's arguing that they have power over us. our phones. that it's an addiction most of us are not aware of that we have at or behind the wheel. cnn digital correspondent kelly wallace has been looking into this. hey, kelly. >> hey, christi. it all comes down how our brains instinctively respond to those pings on our phone. it's almost like when someone taps you on the shoulder at a cocktail party, you can't help but turn around. it's almost the same when we hear those alerts on our phone, and that's exactly what happened to an iowa woman who glanced at a text and is now living with what she calls the biggest regret of her life.
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>> it's not like i got in my car and thought, i'm going to drive distracted and hit somebody today. that's not what i was out to do. >> reporter: looking at that text would cause her to crash into a tractor here, in rural iowa, taking the life of a 75-year-old man. >> the reason why she answered that ping is because she felt a compulsion in order to answer it. >> reporter: dr. david greenfield is the founder for the center for internet addiction. he says most of us would probably have done the same thing and looked at that text. >> reporter: conservatively, 60 to 70% of people are probably doing it with some frequency. what does that mean? that means that it's just russian roulette. that some of those people will have accidents. some of those people are going to be killed. and some of those people are going to kill or hurt somebody else. so, is that a huge problem? i think it is. do i think it's a public health
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issue? yes, i do. >> reporter: our smartphones are affecting our brains without us even knowing it. when we hear the ping of an incoming text, social media update, or e-mail, our brains get a hit of dopamine, a chemical that leads to an increase in arousal, energizing the reward circuitry in our brains. >> the dopamine reward centers are the same centers that have to do with pleasure from eating. pleasure from sex and procreation. pleasure from drugs and alcohol. this reward circuitry is old as time. and if we didn't have it, we probably wouldn't exist as a species. >> a hit of dopamine in our brain also does something else, christi. it shuts down access to the part of the brain that controls reasoning and judgment. in that moment, we're not operating with as much judgment, and then we make some dangerous decisions. >> all right. kelly wallace, looking forward to it. thank you so much. "driving while distracted" airs this afternoon at 2:30 eastern only on cnn. more news after this break. stay with us. my mom loves giving me advice. she even gives me advice...
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