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tv   New Day Saturday  CNN  September 3, 2016 6:00am-7:01am PDT

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hillary clinton's e-mail scandal is back in the headlines as the fbi reveals her dealings with investigators. donald trump taking his outreach message for minorities to a black church in detroit. meanwhile, there's tension between the rnc and his campaign that's bubbling behind the scenes. and tropical storm hermine lashing the carolinas and heading north washing out labor day weekend plans for millions of people. good morning, i'm christi paul. >> i'm victor blackwell.
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it is 9:00 on the east coast. and we have breaking news, a large earthquake rattling at least seven states now we know within the last hour. >> preliminary information showing that this was a 5.6 magnitude earthquake. we want to go straight to cnn meteorologist allison chinchar. information is coming in so fast i feel like it was five minutes ago we had a report of three states. now it's a report of seven that felt this. what are you learning? >> well, see, that's going to be very important. because the reason the states are spreading is because the earthquake was so shallow. when it tends to be shallow, it can spread a deeper distance than a deeper earthquake could. this ties with november 11 for the strongest earth wake this history. but the depth was only 6.6 kilometers. if which for earthquake terms is very shallow. that's why it spread so far for
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people to feel this particular earthquake. it's about an hour and a half north of oklahoma city and an hour west of tulsa for frame of reference, because it happened in a relatively rural area. the good news is it is relatively small in terms of what we consider for fatalities. we're talking a 76% chance or higher for one fatality or less. this does not appear to be strong enough to really have a significant amount of fatalities with it. damagewise it's a different story. we're talking about 67% chance of about $1 million worth of damage out of this. so again, we're not talking huge damage, but there is still likely to be some damage with this particular earthquake as it happened this morning. now, here we're looking at the population that felt this. because we talked about the fact it's been felt in numerous states. about 3.7 million people have felt some form of light shaking and about 200,000 people have felt some moderate shaking with this particular earthquake. so that is very important to know. and again, christi paul, the
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thing to note with this, there will be some aftershocks with this particular earthquake as well. and we could be experiencing a couple that may be above a 4.0 or higher. so definitely something to think about for a lot of the folks in that area. >> all righty. allison chinchar, appreciate it so much. thank you. and today donald trump will be visiting a black church in detroit. a recent poll shows he only has 2% among the african-american voters. >> on the democratic side, hillary clinton is using the term "i do not recall." in fact, we have the term used 39 times in the interview with the fbi in regard to the private use of the e-mail server. donald trump is quick to pounce on this. take a listen. >> when you look at what they've done with respect to the fbi notes where she didn't know what
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the letter "c" was, that's a lie. unless she's not an intelligent person, that's a total lie. >> cnn's ryan nobles is following this story for us. what else was in the recent document released? >> christi, good morning to you. it is pretty clear that clinton's recollection or lack thereof was an important part of the investigation. at one point investigators wrote, clinton did not recall receiving any e-mails she thought should not be on an unclassified system. she relied on state officials to use their judgment when e-mailing her and could not recall anyone raising questions with her regarding the sensitivity of the information she received at her e-mail address. and you know there are examples of sensitive specific materials that ended up on the server that investigators pressed clinton on, in particular, the american drone program. she stated she did not remember the e-mail specifically. clinton stated deliberation over
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a future drone strike did not give her cause for concern concerning classification. clinton understood this type of conversation as part of the routine deliberation process. now remember, though, the drone program is a covert program. so you are only supposed to discuss it if it's on a highly secured system. sources have told cnn that clinton and others are using coded language to discuss cia plans to carry out a drone strike. now while clinton said she did not send classified information through the server, the fbi did find 81 e-mail chains on it that contained classified information. and part of why federal officials did consider criminal charges. but the notes do back up much of what director james comey said in his bombshell press conference back in july where he revealed while clinton was extremely careless, her actions were not enough to rise to a level of a crime. regardless of this information, something republicans have been calling for since comey
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announced he was not recommending charges against clinton and her opponent donald trump is already reacting. he put out a statement friday saying, quote, he doesn't understand how she was able to get away from prosecution. but for its part, the clinton campaign said, quote, we are pleased that the fbi has released the material as requested and said materials make it clear why the justice department decided not to move toward with the case. a lot of people are talking about how this information was released friday afternoon on a holiday weekend. we'll bring in the leader of the republican muslim coalition and a democratic strategist and fund-raising supporter. good to have you with us this morning. i want to say we are following the breaking news of the major earthquake out of oklahoma, so i may have to cut this short. but we'll get the clinton and trump. starting with you, robert, clinton told the fbi she, quote, could not recall any briefing or training by the state department
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related to the retention of federal records or handling classified information. she couldn't recall any training? does that seem like it could be a problem for her? > >> tewell, look, first and foremost there were 39 times in a three-and-a-half hour deposition in front of the fbi where she said she didn't recall. there were hundreds of thousands of questions she was being asked. and so not remembering 39 situations going back to 2009 is not as extreme as the republicans want to make it out to be. but the point here is simply that as jeffrey tuban pointed out, the e-mails and your previous reporter pointed out, these discuss director comey's reason for not taking action. >> but she couldn't recall briefing or training by the state related to the retention of the federal records or handling of classified information. the argument from republicans, and i know you'll shoot this down, is that she is not --
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donald trump's campaign says she's not qualified or prepared to handle this. she can't even remember the training. >> let's remember, victor, there's a record number of republicans who serve in the foreign policies administration, foreign policy agenda, if the reagan and bush administration, that endorsed hillary clinton. 21 four-star generals have retired to back hillary clinton. that demonstrates her stature and ability to keep america safe. so i think it is very important not to look at these issues in an isolated situation. of course, donald trump is going to exploit it. >> i hear you. let me go to a sound bite for people like robert who say, listen, there's nothing here, there have been no charges, these questions have been asked and answered. you say what? >> well, i think hillary clinton was extremely reckless in using classified information such freely on her e-mail servers. the reason she wasn't prosecuted is because she's supported by
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the obama administration. that has nothing to do with what she did. if anyone else did that, she would be penalized for it. it goes to show her credibility for handling classified information in the future if she was to be given, i mean, is she going to have private e-mail servers once she gets into the white house? and we talk about drone programs on her servers and just making our national security procedures a joke. i think it's really sad to see that such a senior official is -- was not trained. i mean, i'm very surprised. the first day in office -- >> we have to jump in here -- i'm sorry, saba. we have to get in here. we have more breaking news on the earthquake. robert, saba, thank you. now we'll go to break -- are we going now or after break? a quick break and then more breaking news out of oklahoma.
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earthquake in california or in nevada. which is why we're seeing felt reports coming in from as far away as sioux falls, south dakota, and austin, texas. >> okay. so we did talk to a gentleman who was in dallas who lives on the 26th floor. he said he felt his bed moving back and forth. he continued to move next to him and the glass shaking downtown in a high-rise. what kind of damage or effects will we be learning in the next few hours with the earthquake? >> damage and effects with this magnitude earthquake, we can compare this to in 2011 there was a 5.6 earthquake in proud, oklahoma. and there was 14 homes destroyed in the local city, in the local town of prague. as for widespread damage, we don't expect to see much damage out of places at a larger distance from the epicenter. but there are reports of damage to buildings in pawnee,
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oklahoma, which is 8 miles away from the epicenter of this quake. >> would you suspect there will be some aftershocks? >> yes. with any event of this magnitude, aftershocks are expected over the next couple of days to a week. >> oh, wow. okay, robert sanders, we appreciate it so much. thank you. again, 5.6 earthquake. magnitude earthquake there in oklahoma with a very shallow depth, four miles deep, which is shallow. the epicenter an hour west of tulsa. we'll keep you posted as we continue to hear more. meanwhile, we want to talk about tropical storm hermine. because it's lashing the carolinas now. it is heading north at a sprint i heard one meteorologist say this morning. threatening to wash out labor day plans obviously for so many people. sharisse is live on the coast of north carolina. you've been there a couple hours
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and it looks to me that things are calming down where you are based on what we have seen with you this morning. what are you feeling? >> reporter: yeah, absolutely. things are calming down a little bit here. but i want to turn you over here, take a look at the ocean behind us. we have some massive storm surge. still we were talking to a president who lived here since the late '70s. this is usually where the beach extends to. so we have dangerous conditions here. this is wiping out some labor day plans, but you still have visitors, tourists and beach goers determined to get on the beach here. officials are saying please to stay out of the water because you have dangerous surf conditions and rip tides. tropical storm hermine really passed through here in the middle of the night at the hardest level and it left more than 44,000 people without power according to officials now. so for those people watching it in atlantic city and virginia beach, this might be a little bit of a taste of what is coming your way.
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guys? >> sherisse pham, thank you so much. what is stopping police and the community from fixing this problem of homicides? we'll discuss that next. and later historical ties to slavery. now planning to give admissions priority to the decentuscendant nearly 300 slaves. is it enough? we'll talk about that. ♪ the sun'll come out tomorrow... ♪ for people with heart failure, tomorrow is not a given. but entresto is a medicine that helps make more tomorrows possible. ♪ tomorrow, tomorrow... ♪ i love ya, tomorrow
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police are now revising last year's total homicides to 481 up from the originally reported 473. that means that eight more people we are killed last year than thought. still, even with the revised number, the number of people killed this year is on track to surpass last year. so far, so far this year, 474 people have been killed and it's only september. police say they are having a hard time fighting the violence and bringing justice because witnesses will not talk. so in a phone interview with "the "chicago tribune"" eddie johnson talked about the frustration trying to keep guns and criminals off the street. and this is what he said. these men and women are working their tails off out here. and i'll tell you this, it's
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frustrating for them to arrest a guy on friday for an illegal gun and then next thursday they see this guy right back out on the street with another illegal gun. joining me now is father michael flager, he has outspoken about street violence for 35 years. first i want to get your reaction. thank you for being with us, by the way. >> yes, sir. >> i want to get your reaction to what you think and feel when i give you those numbers that already chicago is at 474 for 2016. >> well, it's outrageous and unacceptable. we understand that communities are afraid to go back to school because they are afraid of being shot. i had a child in my school asking me to pray for her that she would not get shot going to school this year. there's a fear and hopelessness and despair in the community. and people don't see a light at the end of the tunnel. we have been told this week that we had the most deadliest month last august than in 20 years. we have more murders here than new york city and los angeles
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together. and we're lacking a strategy or a plan to say how we can turn this around. and so people are kind of overwhelmed by it. >> so father pfleger, i know it is too much to ask you to give me the solution, but is there a single element or single variable you see that could push the ball in one way or the other? >> i really don't think there's one element. i think it's so comprehensive and i think that is what we have to have the counselor to do. you look at the nine or ten most communities with the most violence taking place, you see the same threat, you see double-digit unemployment. you see poor funded and underfunded schools. we see most coming back from prison with nothing but $20. you see abandoned buildings, and communities that are meant to look like third world countries. you see a proliferation of guns, no options or opportunities, no economic development. so poverty raining. and you see this in a community
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day in and day out. and unless we have the courage to do all of that and change the playing field, we are not going to see an end to this. some people want the national guard to come in. the national guard comes in and does nothing but suppression. we need federal funding because there's a state of emergency in chicago just like foods and fires and earthquakes. we have a flood and fire and earthquake of violence and blood on our streets. >> i believe you heard what i just read there from the interview with the superintendent eddie johnson speaking with the "chicago tribune" with witnesses who will not talk. you said there's a lack of trust between police and the young people. what are the steps? go ahead, if you're interrupting to clear something up. >> no, i'm sorry. just saying i agree. i mean, obviously cooperation and communication between law enforcement and the community is absolutely necessary to solve crimes. but you don't speak or share information, number one, if you don't have the trust built up that i can trust that person to
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talk to. but number two, if there's not a respect for each other. we just had two of the biggest incidents in chicago in the last week where people went to report information at a police station. one, at a house, and the police talked to them with disrespect, cursed them out, told the one person to get out of the police station. if there's not a respect and trust element, understand that people are not going to talk. and so until that builds that relationship back up, i've never in my life in chicago, and i'm raised in chicago, seen that a vision between law enforcement and police and the community worse than it is right now. >> we know that chicago mayor rahm emanuel said he'll give a major address to talk about the violence there in the city. we'll stand by for that. father michael pfleger, thank you for speaking with us and more importantly for the work that you do. christi? donald trump trying to woe the african-american community with a stop that is stirring up
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some controversy before it even starts this morning. cnn's jeremy diamond is following that story in detroit. good morning, jeremy. >> reporter: good morning. after three weeks of making his pitch to black voters before largely white audiences, donald trump is coming here in detroit. the heart of the african-american community. we'll have more on that after the break.
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tell your doctor before all planned medical or dental procedures. before starting xarelto tell your doctor about any conditions, such as kidney, liver or bleeding problems. to help protect yourself from a stroke, ask your doctor about xarelto. there's more to know. xarelto. take a look at your screen here. this is a beautiful building. we are told it is a 100-year-old building in pawnee, oklahoma. and the bricks you see there are what fell off during a large earth wake thquake that rattled states. this is from a 5.6 magnitude earthquake that shook in oklahoma. we are going to speak to the
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mayor of pawnee, mayor, how is everybody there, first and foremost? >> well, we're really fortunate, everybody seems to be doing well. i've been in our dispatch office, our 911 dispatch office, no reported injuries. i think it shook everybody up. it was just about time that a lot of us were waking up. and those who were not already awake certainly were awakened by the earthquake. >> help us understand what it felt like. i understand this happened about 7:00 a.m. your time? >> yes. yes, well, it was -- it was a sustained quaking. it lasted a long time. it was something that, you know, you had your presence of mind to be able to check on children and do different things like that. it was not like -- we have been having a lot of earthquakes here over the last couple of years. most of those have been just single tremors. you feel it and it's gone.
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this continued. and it was very, very alarming for those of us who weren't used to this sort of thing. >> we had a gentleman from dallas on a little while ago who said he lives on the 26th floor of a building there in downtown dallas, and that he felt his bed moving back and forth and could see a tower next to him and the glass shaking. did you have any reports of any similar experiences where you are? >> oh, absolutely. yeah, there was a lot of that kind of thing. i know in my own house we had things that were on shelves and on counters that fell onto the ground. it was -- i've heard reports that there are other places and other stores in town with things that have fallen off the shelves. so yeah, there was a lot of things that were not, light things that weren't tied down that kind of were moved around by the quake. i haven't -- >> go ahead, i'm sorry.
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>> well, it's -- we haven't seen any obvious structural damage to buildings downtown except for one building. there's a historic bank building that's on the corner in our downtown square. and it's a historic building and some of the limestone has fallen and is on the sidewalk. that's the worst of the apparent damage to downtown. we're waiting on a building inspector to come to inspect the buildings before we let anybody near the area. we have it roped off. as you can imagine, an early 1900s storefront area, that is what it is like. and there is some different businesses in that area. and before we let anybody in there, we have to make sure it is safe. >> so smart. real quickly, have you felt any aftershocks? >> we have not. >> okay. well, brad sewell, the mayor in
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pawnee, thank you for taking the time to talk to us and we are grateful everybody is okay. no injuries being reported. thank you again, sir. victor? all right, happening now, in his continues effort to reach out the black voters, donald trump is meeting with the council of baptist pastors in detroit. he will later attend a worship service at an african-american church there. now the campaign says he will address the congregation but the church has not confirmed that detail. trump will also sit down for a taped interview with the pastor there, bishop wayne t. jackson, for the impact television network. joining me from detroit, cnn politics reporter jeremy diamond. jeremy, i've read reports of protests this morning ahead of trump's arrival. have we heard or seen any of those protestors? and have we heard from the group of pastors yet? >> reporter: well, we do have some protestors who started gathering already outside of the church.
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they are about to do a press conference to address it. we have several high-ranking african-american officials here including the head of the city council and the head of the sheriff around detroit. but donald trump is finally taking his message of outreach to african-american voters into the heart of the black community. you know, for the last three weeks he included his outreach to african-american voters in his stump speech and centered speeches around that. but he's done so before preco predominantly white audiences, especially from those who say donald trump's outreach is more to white voters who want to know he's not a racist and running a campaign based on racial divisiveness. with donald trump expected to perhaps address this congregation today, we'll have to wait and see what he says and the language he uses because that is also a point of contention here. donald trump has said repeatedly that african-americans have no job, that they have no good
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schools. obviously, using some hyperbole there to make his case. but some african-american leaders have not said that is the reality of the african-american lives. most are not living in dire poverty, which is the situation donald trump seems to describe. so today he's going into the african-american community here in detroit and will speak with people and learn a little bit. and we'll have to see what he comes out saying today. victor? >> jeremy diamond for us right there in front of great faith ministries in detroit. jeremy, thank you so much. one of the pastors who helped to facile it the republican nominee's visit to the church in detroit is mark burns. he gave an impassioned speech, a pretty controversial benediction at the rnc earlier this year. but he's probably best known for this tweet, it's showing a cartoon depicting hillary clinton in black face here. he has since apologized for this and taken it down. well, there are a number of questions now about claim that is he made about his experience,
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his past and his bio on his church website, that he was in the army reserves n a fraternity, graduated from college. so when i sat down with limb to speak on camera on the record to ask about those claims, things got a bit uncomfortable. did you attend north korean university? >> i did attend north korean university? >> did you gradual wate? >> no, i did not. >> your bio says you earned a ba bachelor of science degree. did you make that claim? >> i asked you a moment ago opening up this, i said we were off the record. >> i didn't agree with that. >> but i did. >> we're still rolling and i asked you questions about the website. coming up, we'll show you how pastor burns drove off from his
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church leaving us in the building. and you'll hear a new statement about how he now admits he overstated his bio. donald trump is weak and lacks stamina to be president? the clinton campaign says donald trump is promoting racism and wrecking america's image abroad. no matter how much they clash on the campaign trail, behind the scenes guess what? they are both working on their transition into the white house and are sharing some of the same physical spaces in a d.c. office building. how is that going? and could the arangement leave both campaigns eligible to be hacked? we have ceo with the republican partnership service working with the trump campaign on this transition. and steven, i would like to start with you. we are told that this is the first time that two campaigns have had to share building space as they plan their transition. how is this different from the usual protocol and why? >> well, christi, i'm sure it's
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leaving a few awkward moments between the two campaigns when senior members of the campaign meet each other in the corridors while candidates thrash it out on the campaign trail. but this is actually an interesting development. in the past transitions have been fairly chaotic affairs. that is not the case anymore. we hear a lot of bipartisanship in government and how government doesn't work. this is one instance where government is working. it helped by organizations like max's. it think it goes back to the george administration after september 11th decided in a time of national peril we couldn't have these chaotic transfers of power anymore. he worked very closely with the obama administration. you talked to members of the incoming obama administration, senior officials in 2009, that were grateful and surprised about the extent of help they got. so i think this is a new trend in our politics. it's a way of one administration handing over to the other and it's a huge task after all,
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standing up a massive federal government is not something that can be done in a few days. what we are seeing between the two campaigns is evidence of that. >> max, so we understand this, as i said, you'reworking with the trump campaign on the transition, have you been working in the building? what has the experience been for you? >> so i think you heard it exactly right. the experience has been terrific. we are not talking about two candidates that are racing each other, they are racing the clocks of that whoever wins is actually ready to run our government. it's the most complicated, most difficult takeover and most important takeover of any organization, not just on the planet but in history. so it is encouraging that both teams are actively engaged in being ready or getting ready so whoever wins, we have a government that is up and running on day one and can deal both with potential crises as well as ultimately have to fulfill the promises they are making on the campaign trails. >> max, there's a report out there in politico reporting that the hallway bathrooms have locks
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on them now. some meetings are being held offsight. because again, this is something that has nod happened in the past. what other adjustments or modifications have all of you made? >> so i work as a nonpartisan organization supporting effective government and supporting the transition efforts of both teams. i do think that what is unusual here is that you don't actually have competition between each other. on the campaign trail, obviously, there's a lot of, you know, combat, et cetera. but for transition planning, they are really sprinting a marathon to get ready. they have 4,000 political appointees that the next president is going to have to make. it's a $4 trillion organization. hundreds of different operating units. so i don't think it's a challenge to have both of them in the same space. they are not competing against each other, they are competing against the clock to get ready so whoever wins, we have a president up and running on day one. >> steven, this is delicate work
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we understand happening behind closed doors. they are getting people ready for administration roles, solidifying plans as to how to run the government. i would think this is either one of the safest places in the nation's capital or one of the most vulnerable to hackers. which is it? and what information might be most vulnerable? >> sure. we have seen in this campaign there's been hacking of the dnc's server. in the 2008 campaign, both mccain and obama campaigns were hacked. and one of these officials were looking over potential resumés, they are looking over potential background information of people that could be put up to senate confirmed for cabinet jobs. so this is sensitive information. both campaigns have been warned by authorities for the possibility of hacking. but i think it's almost a reality of our lives now in washington. almost every government department, journalists have been hacked. sometimes from entities in
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russia or china. so it is something all campaigns will have to be careful of. and as i said, it's very, very sensitive information. you're having private information, financial information about officials, foreign governments that would love to get ahold of the information, not just for espionage, but to have an idea who is running u.s. and foreign economic policy in the years to come. so it is clearly something the two transition efforts will be careful about. >> stephen collinson and max, thank you for being here. >> thank you. heads-up if you bought samsung's note 7. rachel is following this story for us. >> cell phones melting, catching on fire. samsung, the world's biggest selling smartphone maker recalling 2.5 million phones. more on that after the break.
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hey, do you have the new samsung galaxy note 7? it was revealed just a month ago, but already millions of reports are that the batteries can catch fire while charging and can explode. this comes just a week before its rival apple unveils its new phone. rachel crane is joining us with more. so an exploding phone, right? anything you have to hold up to your face or anything that you leave on your night stand when you go to bed. this is serious. and it's going to cost them a lot. >> yeah, it certainly is going to cost them a lot. samsung not revealing exactly
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how much it will cost the company. but they are issuing this recall. samsung put out a statement yesterday saying we acknowledge the inconvenience this may cause in the market, but this is to ensure samsung delivers the highest quality products to its customers. we are working hard to replace these phones as conveniently and efficiently as possible. they now say next week in the u.s. viewers can go into samsung to exchange the galaxy note 7 for another phone and get a $25 credit. we hope the users backed up their information to the cloud. as you see, the phones are just exploding and catching on fire. there have been 35 cases out of the 2.5 million models they have sold that have had the battery
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malfunction. now, the recalls are only happening in ten countries. the u.s. being one of them. in china the phones are not being recalled because there was a different battery maker. victor? >> we'll afternoon that. rachel crain, thank you so much. a university with past ties to slavery plans to give prior admission to 300 descendants of slaves. at ce it protects my personal belongings should they get damaged, stolen or destroyed. [doorbell] uh, excuse me. delivery. hey. lo mein, szechwan chicken, chopsticks, soy sauce and you got some fortune cookies. have a good one. ah, these small new york apartments... protect your belongings. let geico help you with renters insurance.
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georgetown university plans to atone for past sins. in what arguably could be called a type of reparations for the university's dark history. the school now plans to give priority admissions to the descendants of nearly 300 slaves. georgetown exists in part today because the jesuit priest who ran it in 1838 sold 272 slaves to keep the doors open. now nearly two centuries later the school has come up with a list of recommendations to try to atone. joining me now is georgetown university professor dr. marsha chatlin. she was part of the working group that came up with this town to georgetown. good morning to you. >> good morning. >> so let's start here, because there are many institutions i think most people know across the country that have -- profited and benefitted from slavery and the sale of those
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slaves and the work of the slaves, georgetown made this move, why and why now? >> it's important to note although for many of us this is common knowledge, i think there's a sector of this population that wants to believe that slavery never happened. i think the reason why we're entering this conversation now is that we understand that we are really specially prepared to enter a national dialogue about slavery. i think this is part of a larger national landscape of questions about race and equity and justice. i think this is one of the many things we do as a university. >> okay, i want you to listen to one of the descendants of those slaves and then we'll talk about that on the other side. watch. >> i don't know that we can say, oh, this is enough. it's just a great beginning. what they're doing as a university as a prominent university that was saved by the horrific idea of human as
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chattel. and they're stepping up and admitting that that was wrong and that they are researching it to see how it all played out. >> so you hear that there, and the question then is what in addition to this priority status is part of this plan? >> in addition to the legacy status, we have recommended intensive study about the history, making the history more accessible to a larger public. understanding our role as a university in repairing some of the pervasive legacies of racism, including continued segregation, educational inequality, gentrification and health disparities. this is absolutely a beginning and an invitation for the public to come closer, not only to georgetown's history but to the nation's desire and need to reconcile its dark and shameful past. >> a journalist with the the atlantic wrote a fabulous book between the world and me. he tweeted about this news.
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folks may not like the word reparations, but it's what georgetown did. scope is debatable. it's reparations. i use the word at the top of this in the intro, would you call what georgetown is doing reparations? >> i think it's a reparations framework. i think that reparations is an issue that has been discussed for over a century. and so i think what georgetown is doing is trying to imagine a restoration process and a reconciliation process and i think reparations is appropriate. but i want us to understand that reparations is a mechanism in which we can address a number of issues. >> okay. all right. doctor, thank you so much for being with us this morning. we'll continue this conversation as this plan continues to grow. thanks so much. >> thank you. all right. as tropical storm builds strength off the east coast could become a hurricane again. a powerful earthquake strikes right in the center of the
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country, people in at least seven states have been feeling it this morning. we'll have details coming up.
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they were extremely careless in their handling of very sensitive highly classified information. >> the documents providing insight into why the fbi did not
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recommend charging clinton even after investigators found classified information on her private server. >> i would certainly not do that again, it was the wrong choice. >> i think we're the only hope. hillary clinton has no clue. and doesn't care. >> donald trump in detroit this morning at an african-american church trying to make inroads with minorities voters. >> this is an opportunity for donald trump to use the african-american community. >> nothing means more to me than working to make our party the home of the african-american vote. what the hell do you have to lose? >> we are wishing you a good saturday morning and so grateful for your company as always. >> i'm victor blackwell, good to be with you. we're going to get straight to the breaking news we've been following a large earthquake rattling at

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