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tv   New Day Saturday  CNN  July 1, 2017 3:00am-4:01am PDT

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to stream to more screens. . . . strategic patience with the north korean regime has failed. frankly, that patience is over. >> the u.s. military remains on alert watching for any hint of a missile launch. >> it's been fascinating and frightening and really sad for our country. >> i think he has been very clear when he gets attacked, he is going to hit back. >> i am very concerned as to what this once again reveals about the president of the united states. >> there was chaos and confusion in new york city after a man
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with an assault rifle walked into one of the city's busiest hospitals and started shooting. >> all of the sudden, the hospital was on lockdown. it was a scary situation. >> may day, may day. >> the plane collided, spun across the freeway and burst into flames. >> the pilot and his passenger are injured but alive. this is "new day weekend" with victor blackwell and christi paul. good morning to you on this believe it or not july 1st. >> half the year is over already. >> i don't get it. >> we are so grateful for your company as always. president trump kicking off the holiday weekend in new jersey this morning. he is going to be back in washington today. he is set to deliver a speech at the kennedy center tonight in honor of veterans. >> the president also preparing for the g-20 summit happening next week. it is there where he will come
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face to face with russian president, vladmir putin, for the first time. will the president bring up russia's interference and will there be any chance to improve relations as both leaders hoped for back in november. >> nair is fallout from the president's disparaging tweets about a tv news host now leading to claims of a tabloid hit story and whether the president issued a threat for favorable media coverage. we have all of that for you. we want to start with cnn's senior white house correspondent, jim askost stcos. >> the era of strategic patience with the north korean regime has failed. many years and it has failed. frankly, that patience is over. >> as the president was leaving the rose garden, nearly all of the questions shouted about him were not about national
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security, they were about the president's tweets and his on going war of words with joe scarborough and mika brzezinski. they allege white house gave them an offer, go softer on your coverage and he will p help with the story in the "national enquirer." >> if you apologize for your coverage, and call the president, he will pick up the phone and spike the story. >> a white house official confirmed he did speak with the son-in-law, jared kushner. kellyanne conway says it is all about counter punching critics in the media that are unpatriotic. >> it doesn't help the american people to have a president covered in this light. it is neither productive nor patriotic. the president is disrupting senate negotiations over health
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care. they are unable to pass what they are working on now, they should repeal and replace at a later date. that mirrors the suggestion from some gop lawmakers. >> what i am recommending is that we give comfort by the american people by repealing the maxim maximum amount of obama care that we can and add a one-year delay so there is an action. the problem is it is not what the president promised. >> we are not going to have a two-day period and a two-year period where there is nothing. it will be repealed and replaced. >> some republicans say splitting up repeal and replace won't work. >> we know how washington works. sometimes on deadlines, we still don't get things done. >> the white house tried to clear saying officials are looking at all options. asked whether the president favors repealing obama care.
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deputy press secretary, sarah huckabee sanders said, the president's thinking has not changed. >> with me now, errol louis and sarah westwood. good morning. errol, i want to start with the president's tweet. this repeal, then replace offer, is that going anywhere? >> oh, no. for the reasons that were just described. it is both politically and sort of mathematically unwise but impossible to do this. you cannot undo the large tangle of subsidies and various interactions that make the affordable care act and all of the sudden just kind of say, well, none of that exists. we are going to roll back the medicaid expansion, 700,000 in this state, 700,000 in that state simply won't be covered and we'll get around to something better a year from now. the polls already suggested, the public, who are the key players in all of this, are not going to
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let the senate or the house get away with that. >> take a look at the latest cnn poll out from a march win. 17% support repealing regardless of a replacement. 59% support repeal only if a replacement is ready. sarah, to you, this wouldn't solve any of the problems the president says he wants to solve, better coverage, cheaper premiums, certainly in the insurance market. is this the president saying please pass something, anything? >> this could be a sign that conservative critics of the current legislation are getting through to the president. this is something that critics like rand paul have been pushing for a long time. problem is it could empower folks that are already opposed to the bill but who might be persuaded to vote yes on it next week. under certain conditions to hold out a little longer in the hope that is the president would back their preferred approach to
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fixing obama care, a clean repeal and replacement down the line. this is what republicans passed in 2015. president obama vetoed it at the time. there has been talk in conservative circles about why republican lawmakers couldn't just pass the clean repeal bill that garnered so much support a few short years ago. there was no expectation that that would pass. there is a lot more realities at stake. many are popular like pre-existing conditions. >> would this not be the easier of the two votes for republicans, the repeal vote, although the cbo says 18 million would lose coverage in the first year and 32 million additional in ten years but that would leave them to vote for a replacement bill that would be
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antithetical to many of the things that the republican congressmen believe in. >> the mistake we all end up making here is assuming that what repeal is about is simply about trying to lower the cost of medical care or get some sort of a better way for people to choose their health care options. what repeal is about is getting rid of the taxes on the very well think that enabled the whole subsidy structure to stand erect. they want to get rid of that so they will have money to fund the tax cuts which were for many representatives the whole point of the exercise. the replacement is not of very much interest. the repeal is of extreme importance. they feel an urgency that the rate payers and the patience across the country don't feel. that's why you have such negative polling on something that is of such high urgency to
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the senate and house leadership. >> sarah, let me turn to this president's advisory commission on election integrity. the committee sent out this two-page letter to secretaries of state across the country asking for voter's information. there has been a bipartisan rejection. this comes after the president's claim that 30,000 people voted illegally in the 2016 election. we heard from secretary of states, many of whom across the country said they are not going to give it up. mississippi's secretary of state wins an ward for the pithiest response, tas is described. they can go jump in the gulf of mexico. rough start for this commission. >> i think there was already a little skepticism about the commission's motivations and scope. it is not entirely clear what exactly the commission is examining, whether it is voter registration in the 2016 election, whether this is some kind of sweeping look at all
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kind of voter issues. the fact that the commission hasn't been forthcoming about what it is up to and what specifically they do want to look at and what conclusions they are working toward, that has fed into the skepticism among democrats. it is not surprising that you are then seeing states resist this request and it is not clear what kind of authority the commission has to compel compliance. >> errol, does this give the president and, therefore, this commission and out? well, we were going to provide the evidence but the secretaries of state didn't give us the information we needed? >> politically, they could probably end up saying that the next time somebody wants to talk about that. it is a bedrock principle of american voter systems that it is extremely decentralized. you are in the state of georgia,
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which has 159 counties. there are 159 county boards of election that each have their own way of doing elections. while it might seem complex and it might seem difficult to get information when you might want it, that's one of the ways we protect our ballot security. it is hard to hack the united states of america because there are 31 counties and 31 independently elected or appointed boards that make up their own systems. it is just impossible or nearly impossible. that's what's so important about it. everybody should feel, i think, relieved there was such a resounding rejection of this request to begin the steps towards centralizing the system that would do more to undermine our security than anything else. >> some secretaries of state have said to hand it over would be a violation of state law. they can't simply give it to the federal government. we will continue the conversations throughout the morningment thanks
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morning. thanks so much. a small plane crashes on one of the busiest highways in california. >> move back from the plane. just breath. >> frightening moments as that plane crash landed in the middle of rush-hour. traffic. we have details. chaos inside a busy hospital. we have new details this morning about that deadly shoot ng a new york city hospital. it's not just a car, (work sfx) it's your daily retreat. the es and es hybrid. lease the 2017 es 350 for $329 a month for 36 months. experience amazing at your lexus dealer.
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may day, may day. i lost my white engine. >> a california pilot's panic call there after his plane gave out mid-air. you are looking at the aftermath. we are told the pilot attempted to land the cessna 310 at an orange county airport and clearly did not make it and crashed into a ball of flames in the middle of the 405. others stopped to help and put out the flames. the 405 is one of california's busiest highways. the pilot only clipped one car on the way down.
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>> the driver of that car fortunately suffered just minor injuries. the pilot and passenger on the plane survived the crash. they were taken to a local hospital. police say a disgruntled doctor was who went on a shooting spree at a new york city hospital. he killed a doctor, wounded six others before he killed himself. >> as you can imagine, this had workers at the hospital ducking behind desks and behind doors. according to authorities, the former doctor had a troubled past. let's go to cnn correspondent, paul low sandoval na has the latest from new york. >> victor, christie, this morning, five doctors, many of them young medical students in the early part of their career, people hoping to save lives are currently fighting for their lives here at bronx lebanon medical center in new york. these are individual that is according to police were shot by a man who used to practice medicine here in 2014 for a
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relatively short stint before re-signing in 2015 under unknown circumstances. what i can tell you, this was a very chaotic scene yesterday afternoon as the sound of gunfire erupted upstairs in this medical facility. this man is being described as a disgruntled employee. there was a sixth individual that was injure. the only patient shot according to officials, they tell me that patient expected to pull through. that chaotic scene also is something that many did not expect to happen. this is a hospital, a place of peace, a place where people turn to for shelter or treatment, turned into, as one doctor described it for me, a virtual war zone. investigators still trying to determine a motive, trying to determine what could have led to this shooting, why a person who was a doctor came here to a place that he practiced medicine and opened fire on some of his
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colleagues. >> thanks so much. let's take you to illinois where authorities fear a missing chinese grad student is dead. they arrested a man that they say kidnapped her. they say she disappeared june 9th. they caught her getting into a car that was driven by the suspect who has been charged in her disappearance. investigators also say the suspect visited websites about kidnappings and allegedly confessed to the crime. despite what officials believe, her family remains hopeful she will be found alive. >> translator: to the person that did this, we want to tell this person, please be kind to her and let her come back. grandma and mother are waiting for you at home. you have to be persistent in fighting, because we are all waiting for you. >> we also know her
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disappearance triggered widespread concern in china. the suspect is expected in court on monday. a man underway in a deadly roadway incident. please take a good look at the suspect. this incident happened wednesday afternoon outside of philadelphia. surveillance video shows the moment the suspect in that red truck shot the young woman in the head. her car veered off the road and crashed into the tree. the victim, 18-year-old bianca roberson, her family says she was headed to jacksonville university in two weeks to start her freshman year. police are offering a $5,000 reward for any information. we have more on the president's voter fraud commission asking states for information on their voters. several states are pushing back, saying they have no intention of complying. ♪
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welcome back. i'm christi paul. >> i'm victor blackwell. next week, president trump will meet face to face with president vladmir putin. they will meet on the sidelines of the g-20 summit. so far new york's details of the format of the meeting or what they will talk about. the president seems to be changing his tone on the gop health care bill. he called to repeal obama care first and then replace. the white house insists the president has not changed his thinking at all. they struggle to muster enough votes for the current repeal and replace. more are slamming the president for his twitter rage. they say it is dissfratracting their agenda.
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paul bernstein said president trump's presidency is sailing uncharted waters. >> i think something much greater is happening. we are in the midst of a malignant presidency. that is known to the military leaders of the country. it is known to the republican leadership in congress who recognize it. and it is known to the intelligence community. >> errol louis with us as well. sarah westwood with us. thanks for sticking around. we wanted to ask you, do you believe that president trump is going to bring up the meddling allegations. you wonder if there is going to be a consequence for the president if he doesn't take a harder line. >> the fresh hold question for
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me would be, are we going to know all of what happens in whatever meeting occurs? even a sideline meeting, there can be a transcript. i would advise the white house that would be the best way to quell any fears that there is something untoward going on. something as close to full transparency be achieved so we know exactly what is said. there will be some real outcries if we don't hear our president say, you cannot p be involved in our elections. donald trump has said, it is fake news and nothing to see here. that would be odd for him to take a different approach. i'm not expecting to hear anything. the key is transparency.
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>> if the president called russia on it, took a harder line, would it in any way dilute this notion russia was working on his behalf? was there some sort of collusion. >> he would suffer consequences at home even if he just briefly mentioned it. he would spare himself a lot of grieve. you are right, there are these allegations, so far unsubstantiated his campaign cluded with russia. there is an obligation for him to put a little bit of that to rest by bringing up the subject of election meddling with putin. i think there are other very important issues that he will have to discuss with putin during this meeting. it will be interesting to see how long he will have. syria will be the most pressing
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conflict he will have. the conflict has been escalating with regards to russia. if he doesn't bring up election meddling he will invite a whole lot of unnecessary criticism by putting in a mention at the meeting. >> let's talk about the white house refusing to answer questions regarding the president's attacks on a female news anchor. i want to listen to kellyanne conway. >> do you endorse what the president sent out in those tweets? >> i endorse the president's right to fight back. >> what i was asking you about was whether you endorse the president's comments and attacks? apparently, you do. >> i never said that, george. what i said was i endorse his ability to fight back. >> bottom line, you do not endorse the president's tweets? >> i endorse his ability to connect on social media. >> now, i want to listen to scott lucas, a professor of
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international politics in birmingham, england. >> i want to be very clear. this is a where on the media. this is an attempt not only to say the media is wrong or that they have their information incorrect. it is an attempt to suppress what you and other journalists are trying to do not only by trump but high-level advisers like kellyanne conway. >> errol, where does the white house go with this? >> i think what the professor said is a fair statement. they have tried to demonize the press beyond anything i have ever seen. you don't impeach somebody for that or invoke the 25th amendment. there aren't a lot of things you can do other than to do your job, inform the public and let
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the public sort out what they want to do with a president who insists on this kind of behavior. there are individuals like kellyanne conway, a perfectly nice lady. i have known her for a long time, who have to make their own professional decisions. >> we saw something this week that we have not seen, i don't know, ever, people publicly questioning the president's sanity. there is this group that is trying to get behind the president to remove him to see if he is unfit to lead. is there a possibility that could come to fruition? >> i don't think questioning the mental effectiveness is going to be an effective strategy from the democrats. we have seen this move play out. he will tweet something controversial. it will get washington up in arms for a couple of days and
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everything will die back down. i don't expect we would see any kind of different results. >> errol louis, sarah westwood, always appreciate you being here. >> thank you z. >> one state's response, go jump in the gulf of mexico. o severe rheumatoid arthritis like me, and you're talking to your rheumatologist about a medication... ...this is humira. this is humira helping to relieve my pain... ...and protect my joints from further damage. humira has been clinically studied for over 18 years. humira works by targeting and helping to... ...block a specific source... ...of inflammation that contributes to ra symptoms. it's proven to help relieve pain and... ...stop further joint damage in many adults. humira can lower your ability to fight infections, including tuberculosis. serious, sometimes fatal infections and cancers, including lymphoma, have happened, as have blood, liver, and nervous system problems, serious allergic reactions,
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according to a memo obtained by cnn, the pentagon is delaying a decision on allowing tra transgender people to enlift st the deadline. last week, army, navy, air force and marine corps leaders requested the delay. last year, they ended the ban on transgender recruits openly serving but said it would happen in stages. the trump administration asked secretaries of state for information on their voters. the commission is needed in order to combat what they say is widespread voter fraud. no documentation, no documented evidence of such fraud and both republicans and democrats are saying they will not comply with the administration's request. here is part of a statement. to the commission he says, they can go jump in the gulf of mexico. mississippi is a great state to
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launch from. >> so many cities are corrupt and voter fraud is very, very common. >> in a quest to root out allegedly rampant voter fraud, the president's commission wants an ocean of sensitive information about every voter, including the person's full name, address, date of birth, political affiliation, voting, military, and criminal record, part of his or her social security number and more. states, particularly some democratic blue ones are pushing back hard. california is flat-out refusing to hand over the info. >> the president's allegations of massive voter fraud are simply not true. >> so is new york. >> we will not comply and virginia too. there is no evidence of significant voter fraud. some states that went republican red for trump are also balking, including utah, alabama, iowa
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and wisconsin. they will hand over only someday ta. othe others are dismissing the idea of voter fraud run amok. >> people that have died ten years are voting. illegal immigrants are voting. >> as a candidate, donald trump insisted fraud was a real problem. even after he won the electoral college, he lashed out at news more people voted for hillary clinton. tweeting, i won the popular vote if you deduct the millions of people that voted illegally. to help steer his commission, he chose kansas secretary of state chris kobach, who calls the state's complaints complete nonsense. >> we are looking at all forms of election irregularities, voter fraud, voter intimidation, suppression. the. >> kobach has zellously fought
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this at home. he is a champion for voter i.d. laws and he was fined by a federal judge in kansas just last week for his conduct in a lawsuit involving voting rights. connecticut's take, i have been go secretary kobach's history, we find it very difficult to find confidence m the woin the this commission. there is no credible evidence there has ever been a widespread voter problem. that is adding clearly to the hesitancy of many of these states. tom foreman, cnn, washington. >> what do republican voters think of the gop health care bills? >> the polling is bad. as we found out, sitting down with republican voters, they are putting congress on notice. as republicans, raise your hand if you want to see
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democrats and republicans work together and come up with something different than the senate and the house have put forth? >> that's an easy one there. this is the president that wrote "the art of the deal." get in and make a deal.
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this week, cnn sat down with a group of voters and we wanted to understand their views on the president and how he is doing on issues that mattered most to them. >> they addressed health care, an issue they all care deeply about. not a single one of them like the republican plans that are on the table right now. listen to this. >> raise your hand if you voted for president trump. do any of you want the house or the senate health care bills to pass and become the law of the land? >> not in the current form. >> i am not really happy with the health care bill they have
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so far. i am not happy with the current health care bill. i would like to see more free market so people can choose. >> i think he still has a lot to prove and i am probably one of those republicans that he still has a lot to prove to. you have a represeublican house senate and white house. there is no excuse for the republicans not to put points on the boar. the offense trying to drive down the field, keeps having penalties. you have to put points on the board and there is no excuse for it. >> terry, josh, you give the president a b plus. bill says he has control. the republican party has control of the white house and congress. he says they need to put points on the board. they need to get legislation done. >> we do. we hold the majority in the white house and our congress. this is a great time for our president to be an effective leader and deliver on some of his campaign promises. i'm looking forward to what's to come out of the health care
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bill. i do think personally that he should consider reforming it instead of repealing it. i think there are layers there that ought to be changed but there are layers that can remain. >> the president's promise was repeal and replace obama care on day one. you don't want to see him do that? it sounds like you want to see him work, republicans work with democrats to alter obama care, is that right? >> i would love to see our elected officials work together, work across the line for the benefit of the people. we put them into office and they should do what we want. >> you pay their salaries too. >> they have had plenty of years to have this health care ready to go on day one. they should have done that. they didn't. it is what you would always say, your typical politicians not doing what you would want them to do. i don't think they are repealing
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obama care. it is a reform but it is really not a repeal if you look through. >> as a republican, does the house or senate republican health care proposals help enough americans? are you pleased with either of them? >> no. i would like a full repeal. i would like free market. i would like free market. >> health care is not a republican or a democratic issue. it is a human issue. we all need health care. we need if to sustain ourselves, our family, our children and it is an issue that shouldn't be a partisan issue. >> is the president right or wrong to make that a center point of his campaign, a full repeal and replace of obamacare? >> whether it is right or wrong, i think it is the necessary thing to do. we all know that obamacare or
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the affordable care act is a disaster at this point in time. premiums have increased. in some states, you all have one, maybe, sometimes two, health insurance companies participating. it is on the road to disaster. it is imploding. >> was he wrong to promise a full repeal and replace? should he have said, we are going to fix this. >> the way the affordable care act was set up, it was doomed to fail. he wasn't wrong in saying it does need to be replaced. it does need to get it replaced. >> if they don't get it done, the president has said he is going to move on. perhaps we can have democrats and republicans working together. even democrats. >> on health care? >> you want the republican versions in the house and senate to fail? >> i don't agree with them as they are right now. i don't think it does enough. >> they need to be negotiated. they put something together quickly to get it on the table? >> they need to sit down with
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democrats and republicans. it doesn't matter whether they repeal and replace or fix. it doesn't matter what you replace, the affordable health care act with. you are going to have to have some of the provisions of obamacare to make it work. get it done. i retired at age 62. i tried to get health insurance after i retired because i had to wait until 65 to get medicare. to get the same benefits that i was getting while i was working and way 40 doolz a month for, it was going to cost me $802 a month. i went for a year and a half as a diabetic with no health care. i just didn't go to the doctor. >> as republicans, raise your hand if you want to see democrats and republicans work together on this thing and come up with something different than the senate and house have put
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forth. >> this is the president that wrote "the art of the deal" get in and make a deal. just like you did when you built buildings all over the world. get in and do something. >> you think president trump should be injecting himself more into? >> he owns this issue he had made it a focal point. he is using the bully pulpit to push for it. >> can he get it done if the senate and the house can't get it done? what does that say? >> i think it's a big defeat. >> i don't think it's a defeat for the president. i think that is a defeat for congress. >> it's been four years, since 19 firefighters were killed in an arizona wild fire. now, we're advice etting the powerful memorial dedicated to them and their families are talking to us as well. stay close.
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it has been four years since 19 arizona wildfires died in one of the deadliest wildfires in
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history. they why overwhelmed by flames. on friday, a bell rang for each one of the 19 granite mountain hot shots. martin savidge spoke to some of their families at a site dedicated to them for going beyond the call of duty. >> these are the last images of the granite mountain hot shots, preparing to fight the fire that will kill them. a wind shift later sends flames racing toward the team trapping them in a box canyon. all 19 men died. in the aftermath, friends, family and officials worked to preserve the now hallowed ground and the memories of those lost. >> we had to get it right. >> the result is a memorial like no other that will test your heart as well as break it. >> this is a good example of the whole way. >> a rugged 7 mile trail climbing more than 1,000 feet up the side of a mountain. >> reporter: is it hard to come
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here? >> yes and no. no, because i know andrew is in heaven. >> 29-year-old andrew ashcraft was one of the hot shots killed. his mom remembers him returning from other fires covered in soot, a smile on his face, smelling of smoke as he hug her. >> after we lost him, there were times i would say to my husband, could you just put a fire in the fire pit, i just need to smell andrew for a minute. >> reporter: on the trail, there are carefully placed plaques every 600 feet. which means every so often you meet a new member of the crew. this is andrew, debra's son. the las part of the trail is the hardest of all, the 600 foot
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dissiden descent. the men were as close to each other in death as they were in life. among them, karen and jim norris' 28-year-old son. >> scott was fun-loving and adventurous. he really enjoyed making people laugh. this is a very emotional and very sacred place to me. >> reporter: firefighters can often be found here like this montana crew hiking up during our interview. >> i have to hug you. >> reporter: four years after the death of 19 granite mountain hot shots, their memorial is a trail for remembering and a path toward healing. martin savidge, cnn, yarnell, arizona. >> certainly, thinking about all of them. let's talk about the weather here. it is a holiday weekend. so we don't know what's going to happen. allison chinchar does. >> hey, allison. >> it has been very rainy the
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last month, specially in florida. this was actually great news, guys. take a look. if you remember, this is what may looked like. pretty much two-thirds of the state had some form of drought. the central region had exceptional drought at some point. that all changed in the month of june. we have zero percent in the drought. that is how wet june was. to emphasize how much rain the region got, take a look at this map. you notice the widespread area of red which indicates 6-10 inches for the month of june. look at the purple, 10-20 inches. you even have some pockets of white that picked up in excess of 20 inches of rain. app pa la cchicola picked up mo than a foot. for the holiday weekend, guys,
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we are still expecting some showers and thunderstorms into the forecast. this means if you have some barbecue plans, you may have to check the radar to make sure you won't have to encounter some lightning along with it. >> i would eat barbecue in the rain. lightning, not so much. in the rain, i will. allison chinchar, thanks so much. our strategic patience with the north korean regime has failed. that patience is over. >> reporter: we remain on alert watching for any hint of a missile launch. >> it's been fascinating and frightening and really sad for our country. >> he has been very clear when he gets attacked, he is going to hit back. >> i am very concerned as to what this once again reveals about the president of the united states. >> there was chaos and confusion in new york city after a man with an assault rifle walked into one of the city's busiest hospitals and started

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