tv New Day CNN November 29, 2017 2:59am-4:00am PST
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back, bringing jobs back. what kind of jobs are we talking about? >> factory jobs and those are being automated. our jobs are safe for now. >> well, until tomorrow. >> a few years? >> thanks for joining us. i'm christine romans. >> i'm dave briggs. "new day" starts right now. a missile was launched from north korea. we will take care of it. >> is it could effectively reach the united states. >> if we have to go to war to stop this, we will. >> senate republicans clear a major hurdle toward passing their tax bill. >> it's a challenging exercise. i'm sitting there with a rubik's cube trying to get 50. >> they made a political decision that they were going to do it alone. whether they will or not, we will find out. >> a new report raising questions about president trump's credibility and fixation with conspiracy theories.
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>> just because he's now the president has not changed the fundamental conduct of donald trump. >> this is "new day" with chris cuomo and alisyn camerota. >> we welcome our viewers in the united states and around the world. it is wednesday, november 29th. how did that happen? 6:00 in new york. north korea claims the entire u.s. is now in reach of their missiles after they launched their most powerful test yet. the new one flew higher and longer than previous ones. it can give a heavy nuclear war head. president trump offering a measured response saying, it is a situation we will handle. mr. trump's threats were different than fire and fury and calling him little rock et man. there is morin send ear reporting going on, raising
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serious questions about his credibility or even his grasp on reality. the "new york times" reports president trump is once again reviving baseless conspiracy theories like president obama not being born in the u.s. this comes as the president appears to be spinning a new reality, ignoring facts and his own admission on that "access hollywood" tape. the tax bill clearing a major hurdle after the committee passed the measure, paving the way for a full vote on the senate floor this week. are the concessions that are being made to get the bill through benefiting the rich more than the middle class is? that's the big question we'll take on today. we have it all covered. let's begin with cnn's paula newton live in seoul, south korea with our top story. paula? >> reporter: hey there, chris. it wasn't that long ago we thought about north korea being able to hit guam, hawaii, the
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west coast. they could hit a missile exactly where you're sitting in the u.s. mainland, including the east coast. the it was in the air longer than any other missile had been in there. and the north koreans saying this brings them very close to what they are calling nuclear completion. the south korean military responded immediately with what they call a precision missile strike. what was the purpose of that? it was a simulation. they hit the target the same times three times in the water to say, look, if we have to, we can respond. what is crucial is something alisyn mentioned, this heavy pay load. they underscore that to say we can miniaturize a nuclear war head and we may do that. will ripley has been to pyongyang several times. a north korean source telling him what will come next is an above ground nuclear detonation.
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many people wouldn't bet against that right now. this, as you can imagine, is an incredibly tense time on the ground in south korea. they would prefer to see dialogue. they have a winter games happening in less than three months. they want to move more towards the negotiating table. in terms of the minimum tear options, chris, we can say it altogether like a chorus, there are no good military options. >> paula, appreciate it. if the missile can reach here, i will take one for the team. i will protect you. >> you are superman. it's true. >> the president's response to this test is starkly different than the last few months. why? what's it about? president trump calling the leaders of south korea and japan. joe johns is live at the white house with more. joe? >> reporter: good morning, chris.
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that's right. the president did get on the phone with his counterparts in japan as well as south korea to talk about the threat, the options what to do about this latest provocation. but as you said, in many other ways, the public response to this is what you might call predictably unpredictable in that it was muted, understated, not anything like the rhetoric we've seen from president trump when talking about north korea in the recent past. let's listen to what the president said. >> as you probably have heard and some of you have reported, a missile was launched a while ago from north korea. i will only tell you that we will take care of it. we have general matteson in the room with us. it is is a situation we will handle. >> reporter: now the president did use the situation in a tweet to talk about what he said was
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another reason why congress and the white house must come together to get a funding bill to keep the government from shutting down. this interestingly also comes not long after the president's huge trip to asia, an opportunity he had there and he used it to talk about the fact that the united states had done very well behind the scenes working on the north korean threat. chris and alisyn, back to you. >> thank you, joe. we have national security analyst david zhanger. how does this change the equation? >> only marginally but an important margin. we don't know what kind of pay load was on it, whether it was heavy, whether or not they can make a miniaturized weapon.
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that would affect the range. the fact of the matter is if they can't do it this year they will do it next year or the year after. they don't want to enter into any kind of negotiation or discussion with the united states until it's clear they've got all the capability they need and that it is irreversible. you can make countries give up some weapons. you can't make them give up the knowledge of how to go build them. in this case i doubt we will get them to give up many of the women's. so then you have the question, can they be deterred like we did russia for many years? if not, what else does the president need to do? and why is it that a president who spoke about fire and fury and little rock et man and made all the threats decided at least for now not to take the launches out on the pad -- >> well, because it was a mobile unit. correct me if i'm wrong, we don't know where to take it out.
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>> that's right. the mobile unit meant we didn't have very much time. they are doing this in a smart way of rolling these out at the last moment. there was a huge amount of chatter two or three days before this. they only launched from a few places. they are making it harder and harder for the u.s. to do a preemptive strike. and they are launching them closer to pyongyang. the message is if you do a strike, you're going to kill a lot of people and be the first to do it. >> you have the duration of an hour where the president was informed and the military can act quickly. let's bring in the general here in terms of what can you do about it? you see measured talk from the president of the united states. what are the possibilities and then senator graham who said we're headed towards war and it's north korea's fault. in terms of what the united states can do/should do, the
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military perspective, what can you tell us? >> what this tells us is the options that are available to the president, our president and our allies has now narrowed. in advance of what we have seen today, we have always had the option of trying to impose some form of economic sanctions, albeit we have a very checkered record in terms of success in that regard. we have diplomatic options that are available. we could recognize pyongyang. we could go in on the conflict. bear in mind we're still at war on the peninsula. there was just an armistice. all the options are put on the back burner. by the time, as david indicated, by the time we impose options other than war, other than a military exclusion to try to correct this, the capability the north would have is a missile with a nuke that's weaponized and can reach the united states. whether they can increase the
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number in their arsenal, whether it's just building more, this is critical in terms of our understanding and the north wants to and will negotiate from a position of strength. they're not going to talk about anything else to achieve that position. they can't go to war. they can't fight with this capability. the united states can handle it. sadly, the only way we can handle it right now is if we choose we're not going to live with a north korea with a nuke, is to take it out militarily. we understand the down side of that. >> let's analyze the president's measured tone. there has to be a reason for it since he hasn't exercised that in the past. should we assume that there are back channel diplomatic talks happening? >> well, there have been back channel efforts. and i was with secretary tillerson in china a few months ago where he said for the first time he had two or three channels open. it was the first thing the
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president tweeted out. don't bother. these guys only understand one thing. you're wasting your time. i think during the course of the trip and so forth, he's been persuaded that doing this as a one on one between him and kim is really a dumb way to go about this. and he i thought yesterday had a very measured, almost obama-like will deal with it, we've got this under control. he was going out of his way to play it down. interestingly, it was defense secretary mattis to described this was a significantly greater accomplishment on the part of the north koreans. >> let's demonstrate the difference, the contrast between how the president used to discuss the stakes and now. >> north korea best not make any more threats to the united states. they will be met with fire and
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fury like the world has never seen. >> i will only tell you that we will take care of it. we have general mattis in the room with us. we have had a long discussion on it. it is a situation that we will handle. >> went from like queens, new york, to the queen of england. germ, does that reflect that for all the talk and bravado, military options are limited and very severe and they would have severe implications so the idea going to them is something you really have to be very reserved about. >> yeah, you know, chris, that's right. it is like i'm walk to go -- excuse me, i didn't mean to get in front of your cab. the united states can handle this situation. they can handle it with allies. but the way it can handle is a realization that the international community has to acknowledge and raise a hand and say we're not going to accept a
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nuclearized, weaponized north korea. the fact of the matter is north korea has essentially reached that state. you can't put that genie back in the bottle. oh, by the way, even if we were able to alter that, nuclearization and there is a market in terms of how that knowledge is transferred and moves around the world. if north korea were to lose it and agree to it, which they frankly are not going to do, they can always reopen and get that genie back out of the bottle again. the options right now are militarily. and those, as we have discussed, will include south korea having to acknowledge that they're going to end up losing a lot of citizens because they become a target immediately. >> wow. all right. obviously we will be following this throughout the program. thank you for all the analysis. back here at home, president trump reviving the conspiracy theory that he had already
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personally debunked raising new questions about his own ability to tell the truth and realize the truth. we take a closer look at what's going on next. the game changes.n you're introduced to something so luxurious, anything else is a disappointment. there is a high definition, touch-screen display that's bigger than my tv at home. the zero-gravity seat position. and something called virtual windows. oh and here is the best bit- it has a top speed of 1,100 km an hour. and it comes with pajamas. introducing the fully-enclosed first class suite from emirates. inspired by mercedes-benz. and her new mobile wedding business.tte at first, getting paid was tough... until she got quickbooks. now she sends invoices, sees when they've been viewed and-ta-dah-paid twice as fast for free.
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visit quickbooks-dot-com. they appear out of nowhere. my secret visitors. appearing next to me in plain sight. hallucinations and delusions. these are the unknown parts of living with parkinson's disease. what stories they tell. but for my ears only. what plots they unfold. but only in my mind. over 50% of people with parkinson's will experience hallucinations or delusions during the course of their disease. and these can worsen over time, making things even more challenging. but there are advances that have led to treatment options that can help. if someone you love has parkinson's and is experiencing hallucinations or delusions, talk to your parkinson's specialist. because there's more to parkinson's. my visitors should be the ones i want to see.
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learn more at moretoparkinsons.com but having his parents over was enlightening. ♪ you don't like my lasagna? no, it's good. -hmm. -oh. huh. [ both laugh ] here, blow. blow on it. you see it, right? is there a draft in here? i'm telling you, it's so easy to get home insurance on progressive.com. progressive can't save you from becoming your parents. but we can save you money when you bundle home and auto. progressive can't save you from becoming your parents. if yor crohn's symptoms are holding you back, and your current treatment hasn't worked well enough, it may be time for a change. ask your doctor about entyvio, the only biologic developed and approved just for uc and crohn's. entyvio works at the site of inflammation in the gi tract and is clinically proven to help many patients achieve
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he is peddling conspiracy theories this time behind closed doors once again casting down on the authenticity of president obama's birth certificate. we're joined by ron brownstein is and chris cillizza. here is an excerpt from the "new york times" piece n. recent months, advisers say, mr. trump has used closed-door conversations to question the authenticity of president barack obama's birth certificate. one senator who listened as the president revived his doubts about mr. obama's birth certificate chuckled on tuesday as he recalled the conversation. the president, he said, has had a hard time letting go of his claim that mr. obama was not born in the united states. brownste brownstein? >> good morning. look, state the obvious. it's a deeply disturbing report. it is an extension of i think what we have seen in public, where we have seen the president
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willing to say things that are flatly untrue on a regular basis, starting with the crowd at the inauguration. as troubling as the report about the president i think is the report about the reaction, the chuckle is very revealing there. because republicans essentially are trying as hard as they can to look the other way to ignore all the questions that the president hass engendered. we're now to two-thirds -- it was only 60%. we're now two-thirds of americans do not believe he has the temperament and judgment to seven effectively as president. as we saw in virginia, voters had been willing to take that out on other republicans. they have strengthened themselves by trying to avoid all of these issues and keep their head down to advance the agenda. if they do not provide a reasonable check on the
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president that many americans have doubts about, that will bite them in 2018. >> chris, what the president has said about these conspiracy theories, let's revisit that. the birther he brought to light, made it in the foreground to how he has worked his way, it appears, back in a circle to this. so listen to this. >> so he could have been born in kenya and gone over to the united states and everybody wants to be a u.s. citizen. >> do you accept that what he produce d is valid? do you believe he was born in america? >> i think he might have been. >> do you know who first questioned his birth certificate? hillary clinton. you do know that, don't you? >> president barack obama was born in the united states, period. >> i think i did a great job and great service not only for the country but even for the president in getting him to produce his birth certificate. >> okay.
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so he had worked his way around to saying he was born here, period. he nephew said he was wrong, that donald trump himself was wrong. but now since is the inauguration, behind the scenes he's reneging on that. >> he made that statement the middle of september last year. if he has a legitimate chance to be president of the united states, shouldn't we raise this question and get an answer to it. he then gave that response. that response was 100% political. i remember watching it. it was very clear to me donald trump was reading the words someone told him to read, which he doesn't do all that often, candidly. but he doesn't like being wrong. he is convinced he is not wrong. this is someone who for his entire adult life has been telling himself the story of
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himself, right? donald trump tells the story of donald trump. every day to anyone who will listen. and that story is that he's winning all the time, everyone else is weak, he was always proven right, that the phones in the trump tower were wire tapped, muslims celebrated on 9-11, the assassination of jfk. that's the point here. this is not inconsistent with who he is. in fact, it is entirely consistent with who he is. we shouldn't be surprised. as surprising as it is that he holds these views, we shouldn't be surprised. because everything we know about him would suggest he is trying to relit gatt not just t litigl hollywood" tape but the presidency. >> it's not just a sense of self. but a larger political project
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delegitimizing sources of information that he thinks can hurt him. there have been polls showing what percentage of trump voters in alabama believe the allegations against roy moore being very low. there is no foundation that is fixed enough that he doesn't want to destabilize it. in terms of something like the "access hollywood" video, and basically you can see over and over how on matters of public policy, not just things relating to his history, he is arguing for a set of facts that have no connection, no support in reality. and i think every time he pulls down a pillar of something that people think they believe, he makes it easier to do it again the next time. >> you said that the chuckle drew your eye. >> yeah. >> the fact that they're in private drew my eye. here's why. it is one thing when he projects a message onto the base or to the american people. you get that. it waoeupdz up checking a lot of
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the box of politics. in private, it is a much more acute sense of where his head is. he is now on the phone with china, russia, south korea, japan, trying to create an alliance to stop a mad man who is launching as many missiles as he can. i wonder, chris, if this doesn't color his perception of authority with people. as you know, he's talking crazy about things that many might dismiss as small. who cares about the "access hollywood", who cares about the birther thing. it's absurd. but if you're on the phone and you have to negotiate these sensitive and profound issues, how can it not affect your take on his judgment? >> absolutely. and his unpredictability. and if what he says he means. i think he says these in private is he believes them. >> that's my point.
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if it's not done just to embarrass an alisyn or chris or galvanize his base, it's much more worrisome, isn't it? >> absolutely. i thought two things. the "new york times" report last night that he is telling a united states senator this about the birther thing and "access hollywood" tape he also told -- we don't know if it's the same or different u.s. senator. can you imagine how a united states senator is receiving that information? the chuckle i would hope is a nervous laugh and i can't believe this is happening. >> or choking on his conscience. he believes them in the sense that he is willing to spread them around in private conversations with senior other elected officials. that to me speaks to it's not a political play. i think we have a tendency to see everything as political. oh, it's just some genius
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strategy that we can't see. it's just him saying stuff. i really believe that. >> i don't agree with that. i think it is an effort to undermine the base of concept of truth. but beyond that, i think you see this week how difficult it is for republican senators who have raised concerns or about president trump's temperament to find some way to deal with it. because all the ones who have done so, corker, flake, sass, mccain, they may be poised on what has been the lifeline for the first year of his presidency. they have not been willing to bite the bullet and impose any consequences on the president to enforce the judgments that they are -- jeff flake is in a lot of speeches. but he gives his votes to the president when he needs them. what does that mean? how do these concerns manifest in any tangible way. >> ron brownstein, chris cillizza, thank you. we are talking about the gop
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won over. >> there are a lot of different cat gather categories. >> we don't know how john mccain is feeling today. >> unspecified. >> this is where the rubber will hit the road. it will be later. they will be able to get it through to the senate. the first year of the ronald reagan presidency, they cut taxes. the bush presidency, they cut taxes. that's the first thing they do. they want to find a way. whether they will be happy they do that, it could raise taxes on suburban voters in the place where they are most in trouble already. i do think they want to get the big curveball. they will need to impose some kind of trigger to get it through to the senate that says we will raise taxes if it doesn't produce as much revenue as we expect. >> it goes back to the old way.
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>> right. or some version. maybe not all the way back. it's hard to see a real trigger surviving a conference of any kind with the house. so i think what mitch mcconnell may be betting on is do whatever you have to do to get through the senate and count on the senators to buckle if you move what they said they won. >> why drawing out such a long horizon? why not abbreviated the period of the cut. >> they want to go the other way. they want to make it permanent. under reconciliation rules they can't. >> but they could make it shorter. >> but that goes -- their argument is you need permanence. >> the reason they're getting beat up is the longer you go out in the time morais zone, the more they are saving in tax cuts ends up being the worse. chris cillizza, a big issue on the table that deserves some chewing on this morning is ron
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johnson and what he wants. you're not treating the little guy like the big guy. that's the mainstream criticism of this bill. however, is that what he's talking about when he said treat passthroughs, limited liabilities and partnerships of that kind the way you treat the big company and that's helping the little guy. do you buy that? >> it's easy as a piece of rhetoric. if you say, wait, we need to treat them like these giant corporations, everyone says, yeah, we do. have a policy perspective, it's a little less obvious how it would directly benefit the little guy candidly. i think ron johnson will get something of what he wants to passthroughs. i don't know if he will get everything. the fact that he voted for this in committee shows what we suspected, he is probably going to be a yes. i think ron brownstein on makes the right point, which is these gu guys, they want to be yeses on
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this. you saw susan collins say it looks like it's phofgt in tmovi right direction. it surprises me that president trump went and took questions for an hour yesterday and suddenly all their doubts about the tax bill were resolved. i think they feel as though they have no chance to get this. they will get a little bit here, a little bit here. mccain i think obviously no one kno knows. flake and corker as well as the fact that they are retiring. murkowski is going to be for this. most of the people you show on the list will be for it. i think it will be close. i think they will get it through. i think ron is right. see what happens when it comes back from conference. remember, the senate republican group is much more centtri st and pragmatic.
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just passing it through the senate does not guarantee anything. and i think the one thing that is dragging this is not even policy. it is what they view as necessi necessity. now, necessity being they have to have something to go to voters with next year. >> yo can look at the tax cut and say it disproportionately cut. this bill is different in that it raises taxes on half of the country and still increases by 2027 -- and still increases the deficit by $1 trillion. that is the size of the break it is giving to business and people at the top. so it is much more of a gamble than earlier tax bills in that there are actually losers. a lot of losers are concentrated in upper middleclass households, suburban areas outside the major metros where they are hit by the
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limits on the mortgage deduction. as we saw in northern virginia, those are places that are moving away from the republican party. a lot of democrats were fearful that republicans could buyback the loyalty of college educated whites who don't like trump on personal grounds who are cutting their taxes. instead, they are raising taxes on many of those voters and compounding the risks they are facing going into 2018 on this gamble that giving a huge tax cut to corporations will produce faster growth and thus wages. >> just one thing to add to ron, the gamble piece. in the senate bill, the repeal of the individual mandate is in there. you talk about taking 13 million people who currently have health insurance and getting rid of that, basically fundamentally the size of the bill you have to swallow on the deficit. that's not something that is going to go over easily. now, that targets a different
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group of people than the suburbanites ron is talking about. we forget that is in this bill. maybe it gets stripped out. maybe it doesn't. you lose rand paul, the calculus changes. this is a big risk they're taking. it is deeply unpopular right now. >> all right. chris cillizza, ron brownstein, thank you. later in the program we will talk about the political theater we saw. >> and very relevant. as i like to tease on the show, do you hear that? that's the big voice of the democrats trying to win back this working class they lost to the republican party. this is all about the republicans and their infighting. where are the democrats making their case? here comes the hate on twitter. still, it's something you have to think about. ahead on "new day", we will talk with senator john cornyn, the majority whip. is this bill a winner for his party and why? his argument ahead? a suspected serial killer is
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in custody in tampa. do police finally have the man who terrorized the naked for 51 days? we have a live report next. we can do this? we can do this. at fidelity, our online planning tools are clear and straightforward so you can plan for retirement while saving for the things you want to do today. nana, let's do this! aye aye, captain! ♪ and as you go through life -whoo! -♪ tryin' to reach your goal theratears® uniquefer from the electrolyte formula, corrects the salt imbalance that causes dry eye. so your eyes will thank you. more than eye drops, dry eye therapy. theratears®. was supposed to be a wake reup call for our government?sh people all across the country lost their savings, their pensions and their jobs. i'm tom steyer and it turned out that the system
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that had benefited people like me who are well off, was, in fact, stacked against everyone else. it's why i left my investment firm and resolved to use my savings for the public good. but here we are nine years later and this president and the republican congress are making a bad situation even worse. they won't tell you that their so called "tax reform" plan is really for the wealthy and big corporations, while hurting the middle class. it blows up the deficit and that means fewer investments in education, health care and job creation. it's up to all of us to stand up to this president. not just for impeachable offenses, but also to demand a country where everyone has a real chance to succeed. join us. your voice matters.
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we have breaking news for you. a gunman with a hostage opened fire last night from the eighth floor of a luxury high-rise condo in reno. he was killed by officers who burst into his room. no one else was hurt. the high-rise is in the middle of the most popular casinos in reno. in a bizarre twist, investigators say the vegas killer had a unit at that reno complex last year, but they have not yet discovered any connection between the two. more breaking news. tampa police arrested a 24-year-old man in connection with a string of murders over the last two months.
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cnn's diane gallagher joins us now live with breaking details. they believe they have their killer. >> reporter: that's right, chris. 51 days of terror in this community. police canvassing the neighborhoods 24 hours a day. it all came down to one tip from someone in the community to put an end to it. >> we're bringing someone to justice who doesn't deserve the right to walk amongst us. >> reporter: 24-year-old howell emanuel donaldson now detained for murder. he handed a gun to a manager who then alerted an officer in the restaurant. >> we received some information about mr. dom son having a firearm at the mcdonald's. we said all along no tip is too small. somebody stepped forward and gave us what we needed. >> reporter: he is accused of fatally shooting four people in the seminole heights area of tampa in the last two months.
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>> we're not sure why he was in this neighborhood. we're not aware of what his ties are. we don't know what his motive is. >> reporter: october 9th, the first victim. benjamin mitchell, 22, shot and killed in front of his home. authorities releasing this surveillance footage of a person running near the scene of a crime, images of a man they call their suspect. october 13th, the body of monica hoffa less than a mile away. anthony naibola gunned down after taking the wrong bus home. he had autism and just graduated from high school. two weeks ago, 60-year-old ronald felton was murdered while walk to go a local church to help feed the homeless. a terrified and grieving community breathing a sigh of relief now that the killer is behind bars. >> the process will occur when this individual rots in hell. >> reporter: the big question that everybody has right now, alisyn, is why did he do it?
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what is the motive? at this point police haven't given any indication of that. to give an indication how big a deal this is, the governor of florida is making his way to visit with the police to congratulate them on catching this murderer. to sports now. for the first time in 13 years, eli manning will not be the starting quarterback for the new york giants. andy scholes has more in the bleacher report. what's up with this, andy? >> bleacher report brought to you by the new 2018 ford f-150. second only to brett favre's legendary streak. but he is being benched after 2-9 start by the giants. he was emotional when speaking about the news yesterday. >> i don't like it. but in football, you handle it
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and do my job. >> it's hard. hard day to handle this. but hang in there and figure it out. >> former jets quarterback geno smith will start for the giants on sunday. eli start today every game for the team since november 21st, 2004. the cleveland browns have had 24 different you starting quarterbacks. facebook just launched. george w. bush had been re-elected president back in 2004. this likely is the end of the line for eli as a member of the new york giants. and a lot of fans, and actually just people in the sports world, not very happy with the way they handled it. >> if you're pinning your hopes
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on geno smith. >> not a good idea. >> welcome to loser town. royal wedding planners, start your engines. new details revealed about prince harry and meghan markle's big day. when is it going to happen, where is it going to happen, what will alisyn wear? >> way to sell it! >> our expert next. that says your truck can only haul gravel. introducing the new 2018 ford f-150. with best-in-class towing... best-in-class payload... and best-in-class torque... the f-150 lineup has the capability to get big things to big places- bigtime. so bring out your atvs, your campers, your palominos. hey. you're not always working. but your truck is. this is the new 2018 ford f-150. it doesn't just raise the bar, pal. it is the bar.
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sally, great to see you again. >> good morning. >> we have new details we need to share with everyone. you're in london. very helpful as details break. they will get married at st. george's castle, windsor castle which seats 800 people. >> right. >> so a smaller affair than we had for prince william and kate. >> a little bit. >> what else do we need to know. >> it has a lot of memory. prince harry was christened there. queen elizabeth the queen mother buried there. it dates from the 15th century. it is filled with history. the prince of wales was married
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there as were several of queen victoria's children. and windsor as a place, windsor castle, has always been central to the queen's family. they have easter there. and then when william and harry were at school in eaton college, which is very close by, they would often come up to windsor castle and have tea with the queen and prince philip. then when he was serving in the blues and royals regimen of the household cavalry he was based in windsor. not as windsor castle but in the town. it is quite a lovely place. >> so lots of connections. >> lots of connections, yeah.
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lots and lots. so it's kind of home for him even though he never grew up there as his father and his siblings did. but it's a very comfortable place for him. >> okay. another development. i was relieved that the royal family will be paying for this. >> yes. >> it is a huge relief to meghan markle's family that they don't have to foot the bill. that must be customary for royal weddings. >> i believe it is. prince edward was married there, for example, in 1999, to sophie reese jones. i have no idea how the costs were allocated. they did have their wedding blessed there. it is a happy place.
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>> meghan markle is of course an american. >> yes. >> it's been she will become a british citizen. >> yes. >> she will take on uk citizenship. does she have to give up her u.s. citizenship? >> she does not have to give up her u.s. citizenship. my daughter went through the same thing when she married an englishman. it is a long process, probably three years. but once you attain british citizenship, you are fully entitled to keep your american citizenship. some people opt to drop it. but quite a few people remain dual citizens. it's quite commonplace. >> okay. so may is when we think this will be happening. the new baby will be born in april. >> yes. >> and can also be part of that celebration. sally, thank you very much for the update on this exciting event. >> you're more than welcome. >> chris. >> i have an idea. >> what? >> i hope they pack that church
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with veterans and the people they reach out to. that would send some message other than the typical pomp and circumstance. >> that's interesting that you say that say they are trying to figure out what the public access will be and what the amount open to the public will be. >> as honored guests. >> i'm sure they are listen to go all of your wedding tips. >> the president is watching. i'm sure they are as well. is north korea's latest missile test proof that all of us in the united states could be within striking range? is that just scary talk or is that the reality? answer ahead. you can't predict the market. but through good times and bad... ...at t. rowe price... ...we've helped our investors stay confident for over 75 years. call us or your advisor.
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