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the unfairness is so obvious. so egregious. >> i'm upset because this is a clear abuse. >> we wish him well. he worked very hard. >> the victims here are the women. >> there is no tolerance in this white house, no place in america for domestic abuse. >> you have a second white house official who has resigned over domestic abuse allegations. david sorenson, he is a speechwriter for the administration. >> i think that this will continue to dog the white house. >> in an you been receunprecede moon jae-in shook hands with kim yo-jong, the sister of kim jong-un. >> this is significant. kim jong-un has extended a personal invitation to the south korean president moon jae-in.
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good morning. this morning the white house should be celebrating a new budget deal or the vice president's trip to the olympics, but instead there is a new round of resignations and there could be one more major resignation. >> in skris just one day, a sec white house official accused of domestic abuse is out. and the chief of staff himself is willing apparently now to leave. >> plus any of the bipartisan spirit that was on capitol hill after the passing of the budget deal is old news now as president trump blocked the democrat's memo on the russia investigation last night and now top democrats are accusing him of trying to hide something. >> abby phillip is live at the white house for us this morning. good morning. the president said yesterday that the release would come soon.
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hours later, it was blocked all together. is there any indication that this will ever go public? >> reporter: well, good morning. it is not clear what will happen with this memo now. the president has officially sent it back to congress asking them to redact information that is deemed on to be national security risk. he says he consulted with the fbi and others about some of the tore in the memo and found that there were sensitive pieces in the memo that needed to be taken out. and he is leaving to congress do that. one of the reasons is that the white house was already preparing to be accused of redakr redacting parts for political purposes, but it hasn't stopped democrats from accusing him of using this memo for rank partisan purposes. the democratic leader chuck schumer released a statement saying that the president has used a double standard here when it apply to the democratic memo especially compared to how he dealt with the nunes memo.
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this is the republican version of the document that alleged fbi surveillance abuses. the president had apparently made up his mind having not even seen the memo and he released it despite the fbi concerns that it was inaccurate. so now that it is back in the house, it is unclear whether democrats whether choose to go ahead and redact it or if they will simply let the memo die. >> and talk to us too about this other developing story, a second white house staffer resigning over allegations of domestic abuse. >> reporter: really terrible story unfolding this whole puig. first rob porter the staff secretary who resigned earlier on domestic abuse allegations. and now david sorenson, a speechwriter, who is out at the white house because his ex-wife detailed to the "washington post" that he physically abused her during their relationship. now, sorenson is vehemently denying this and he says in a statement that in fact i was the
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victim of repeated physical violence during our marriage, not her. he says he is considering his legal options, including for defamation. the white house however is trying to get on top of this story after admitting that they handled the porporter allegatio poorly, a deputy press secretary raj shah released a statement last night and he said that before they were even contacted by the media, they learned that there were these allegations. we immediately confronted the staffer, he denied the allegations and he resigned today. this story line is really not going away. and now it has shifted a little bit into questions of whether senior white house aides including john kelly the chief of staff, white house counsel should have done more. but in the case of david sorenson, the white house is trying to put the brakes on it. he is out as of now. and i think will be litigating
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the details of this with his ex-wife out in the public, but not from the white house. >> are all right. abby phillip, thank you so much. joining me now is our cnn national analyst, she was senior adviser at the national security council. samantha, good morning to you. >> good morning. >> so let me just read one sentence which i think sums up the justification from the white house on why this was not released, this is from white house counsel don mcgahn back to chairman of house intel. the department of justice has identified portions of the february 5 memorandum the disclosure of which it believes would create especially significant concerns for the national security and law enforcement interests. what do you make of the denial and the justification for that denial? >> victor, i always support the president listening to the department of justice. particularly when they have significant concerns about what the impact of releasing this information would have on our national security. that is why information is
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classified. but i do think that we're seeing a disturbing pattern of the president listening to his team when it suits his political or personal interests. he went ahead and released the nunes memo despite the grave concerns that the department of justice had about its release. we've also seen this when it comes to russian election meddling. the president has chosen not to listen to his intelligence community, who has agreed that russia interfered in our election, because it in some way makes it looks like he didn't really win the election. and you can't pick and choose when you take your adviser's advice. >> so selective deference. >> for political or personal reasons, yes. >> and let me reads response from the ranking democrat on the house intel committee adam slif. he says after promising to treat the democratic response in precisely the same way, the white house now seeks to have the democratic memo sent back to committee and revised by the same majority that allowed the
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flawed nunes document to begin with. from a political perspective here, do you expect that that process will happen that the american people will at anytime see this democratic memo? >> i don't think we know, but when i listen to all of this, what i really think is this couldn't have worked out better for vladimir putin. keep in mind that this house intel committee is supposed to be working on an investigation into russian election interference. and it is just a fact that anytime the house intel committee spends on the nunes memo, on this democratic memo, they are not spending doing their other job again including investigating russian election interference or looking at our cybersecurity. there are so many other issues to work on. and so i do expect that the committee is going to go through this memo, look at the advice from the white house and see what with happen. but that is time that they are not spending on all these other issues. >> yeah, there is certainly work to do beyond bounding between
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the mechl hmos. thanks so much for being with us. so cnn contributor is with us. and we want to bring this back and put it to the porter situation. especially in light of the fact that we now have david sorenson who has also now resigned himself, that happening overnight, first of all, your reaction to it seems like this swinging door policy of people coming and going and they have this domestic violence background. it seems to be that the white house is ignoring it. >> well, you know, i think there are several reactions that i have. one is i'm not surprised and not because it is the white house and this administration, but because we know that domestic violence cuts across all political bounds, all socioeconomic bounds. >> nobody is immune. >> nobody is immune. but it is disturbing that it
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seems that people knew, that mr. kelly knew, and that for a long time. and that there were problems with mr. porter's security clearance. and now there is another person being accused. so it is really disturbing. >> and what do you make of the very swift movement of david sorenson immediately resigning and getting out of the way as opposed to what we know about porter and the fact that the fbi had looked into this and they had mentioned to the white house -- the fbi even talked to their ex-wives and yet he was there for at least a year. >> yeah, i think obviously there is an effort on the part of the white house to try to address this more quickly after initially not moving quickly with regard to porter. i think what is really interesting here, at least from my standpoint, is the fbi's role. obviously in the case of porter, he had access to the most
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classified information possible and was doing so without having the permanent clearance because the fbi was still adjudicating his clearance and it was held up in part because of these issues. so what is really puzzling here is why is the fbi taking so long to address these cases and why isn't the white house moving more quickly to try to deal with these issues as they become more aware of them. >> it is interesting because vice president pence overnight in an interview said that he was appalled and did not know about the allegations. president trump yesterday of course said that -- he spoke out on porter and finally said remember that the man said he was innocent, that he was a good worker. but listen to what president trump said just a few months ago, november 20 17 when he was talking about -- i think he was asked a question about roy moore and that situation.
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listen to what he said about women then. >> mr. president, what is your message to women? this is a pivotal moment in our nation's history. >> women are very special. i think it is a very special time because a lot much things are coming out and i think that is good for our society. and i think that it is very, very good for women. and i'm very happy a lot of these things are coming out. and i'm very happy seeing it exposed. >> he was happy it was being exposed in that particular case. not one word about women yesterday when asked about porter. what do you as an advocate want to hear from the president? >> i want to hear that it will not be tolerated in his administration, that when he hears about domestic violence, domestic abuse, that there will be swift action and that it will not be tolerated in his administration. >> so adam, i wanted to ask you too about vice president biden. i want to listen to what he said after hearing president trump's
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message yesterday about porter. >> i just read that before i walked on stage, a statement from the president saying he wishes him luck. he has so much talent. that is like saying that ax murderer out there, he is a great painter. no, translate this into everyday terms. is there any other crime, and it is a crime, where there would be an explanation that the reason why we shouldn't pay attention to the transgression is because they are good at something? >> senator, two questions. one, do you think that the president is going to change tone here at all, and, two, in light of david sorenson leaving, that immediate resignation and all the resignations and the people that have been leaving in the last few weeks, do you believe that the approval process to fill these positions
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will get more stringent? >> well, i think that part of the reason kelly was brought in as chief staff was to try to bring a greater structure and order to the white house. and clearly what we've seen with these revelations in recent weeks and frankly the chaos hasn't really stopped within the white house. the reason why the fbi does these background checks and the reason why porter's clearance was held up is because they are concerned that if they find something like this in somebody's background, it could be used as leverage against that person by a foreign on intelligence service to try to blackmail them in order to try to get access to information. that is why the fbi gets involved in looking at these sorts of allegations when they do these background checks. how the process goes forward obviously the white house will have to be very sensitive to this and to move more quickly which we're seeing more of now.
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>> and one of the things that i think people have a hard time reconciling is they see one person publicly and they don't see them privately when these stories come out. jennifer willoughby's story is about what she went through with rob porter were heartbreaking and people were saying this is not the man i know. but we know the dr. jek keckyll mr. hyde does exist. yes, we need proof, but we have to recognize that there is not proof either about sfwlp domestic violen. >> domestic violence goes on behind doored. most are not out battering their neighbors or co-workers. it is insidious inside the home. so there are many pillars of the community who are batters and you would never know. just as mr. porter apparently a
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great worker, but -- >> even his wife said he is great at his job. >> right. and so there is that you never know. you never know. you know, you could be sitting next to somebody on the train who is a batterer. >> but do you think that we're giving more credence to what women say, are we entering a new era here? >> i believe we are. and i certainly hope we are and i hope it continues. we need to tell women that we believe them, that we believe them on every level that when they are telling stories of abuse, that we are there and we're going to listen and we believe them. >> because we have to remember it is not easy to talk about that. not an easy thing to admit. thank you so much. >> thank you. rachel brand third ranking official at the justice department is leaving to take a job at walmart. walmart says that she will be their executive vice president for global governance. as an associate attorney general, she was third from the
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so the winter olympic games are on in south korea. in the men's speed skating final, south korea one their first gold. >> and there is of course a lot more happening today. it is early. biathlon, ski jumping. we'll keep you updated on the medal count. >> and history is being made not just on the ice but off. north korean leader kim jong-un has invited the south korean president to visit pyeongchang. he extended the invitation through his sister kim yo-jong. >> and she is obviously there for the games and had lunch with the south korean president earlier. let's go to will ripley. and you broke this story about this historic invitation.
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tell us more and starting with if it is accepted. >> reporter: so we got the indication when north korea was hosting the military parade originally planned to be quite large but was scaled down that kim jong-un was changing his tone, he didn't use the word nuclear. he referred to his country as a military power. and sources told me that they believed he was sending his sister here on a diplomatic mission to try to warm up south koreans and drive a wedge between south korea and the united states. you had vice president pence arrive on the ground, he met with defectors, he blaeshe blas jong-un, he wrought with him on the to th otto warmbier. and then man jay in-was shaking
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hands with kim yo-jong. and then of course at the opening ceremonies, they all sat together. president moon shook hands once again with the high ranking north korean delegation and then it was today when they had a lunch together with the north koreans that the offer was made by kim jong-un's sister for president moon of south korea to travel to north korea to visit the country. and this is something that he has said he has wanted to do. he thinks engaging with north koreans is the right idea even if the trump administration says that south korea should disengage, that they shouldn't fall for this so-called charm offensive because from the united states view point, north korea is still developing nuclear weapons, still potentially going to test weapons to launch missiles. and they think that north korea needs to be isolated, needs to be cut off and they want president moon to do that but the decision's made is pretty of the exact opposite. he will further engage with the north. he is willing to visit north
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korea. we don't know when that will happen. but we don't know what the north koreans want out of this, do they want better economic conditions, lifting of sanctions, further delay of joint military exercises? all of this development puts the united states in a tough spot because it makes it hard for the trump administration to say that they have a strong alliance with south korea to crack down and be tough on the north when in fact south korea is engaging and possibly going to be visiting with kim jong-un. >> in-the first te think the fi that will be if the military exercises are resumed between the u.s. and south koreans, something that the north koreans have hated for many years. will ripley, thanks so much. and still ahead, the future of democracy in the trump era, there is a new book that says he is leading the country down a dangerous path. we'll talk to the author. and plus an autopsy reveals new details about the gunman who opened fire on the las vegas strip and what was in his system at the time of that attack.
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and creates an spf 30 barrier, to protect against flare-ups caused by the sun. herpecin l. so glad to have with us. so president trump denies the release of a democratic memo on the russia probe saying that it was just too much sensitive information. this of course even though the republicans were able to have their memo released just last week. and that was against theish wis of the fbi. >> and also more departures, third in line at the justice department gone, a second white house official in three days accused of domestic abuse is also gone. deputy chief of staff is out of that position. and chief of staff john kelly says he would be willing to leave as well if the president wants him to. >> so donald trump's presidency, it has some critics raising the question is our democracy in
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danger, specifically harvard professors who studied the democracy for decades. >> they argue president trump shows and yuthoritarian tendenc. co-author of how democracies die is joining us, along with jack kingston. good morning to both of you. >> good morning. >> so there are four criteria. and you believe that president trump meets those. is the -- i'll ask the headline question here. is the president there your perspective a threat to our democracy? >> we wrote this book how democracies die inspired in part by the campaign and the checklist during the campaign season, he went after the media,
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he condoned violence at election rallies, he said he wouldn't necessarily accept the results of the election. so this was all talk and many people have said take it easy, this is only on talk. but we having looked around the world, this set off alarm bells for us because we've seen when democracies die often political leaders come to power displaying these same tendencies. certainly once in office this is a different question, but this should make citizens and potential allies of the president nervous. >> so jack, when you listen to the president, because let's face it, words matter at the end of the day, he is the president, even his tweets are considered to be official statements from the president, do you see him edging toward demeaning democracy in some way or disintegrating it? >> no, i don't. i have to say to the profession are on, my dad actually went to -- got a fhd frph.d. from co
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so maybe i can talk about ivy league politics. but isolated liberalism. if you want to look at violence, why aren't we looking at antifa, the vie lechbtolence of the rese who are denying the election results? how come the conversations of eastern liberalism always conveniently leaves that out. and then finds things about donald trump. he is moving on. he has got a great cabinet. he has a great agenda. an and -- >> wait a minute. i was going to let you run there, but to characterize the president as moving on when he -- i have to check this. he tweets about hillary clinton at least every month of his presidency. and he is almost 13 months in. moving on is not objective lir the way to describe president trump's -- >> she won't go away and neither will joe biden. joe biden is out there now. hillary clinton shows up at the grammys reading a book. i mean come on, she's not
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exactly taking -- [ everybody talking at once ] >> -- nothing to do with politics. >> one of the things that the president recently did accusing his democratic members of congress of treason for not standing at the state of the union and you really think -- it is dangerous words. [ everybody talking at once ] >> one at a time. one at a time. we'll let you respond. >> professor, maxine waters and all the other democrats have never used violent terms and bernie sanders was so inspired guy shoots members of congress. >> you can't blame that on bernie sanders. [ everybody talking at once ] >> but all the liberals are always saying, oh, that is because of the trump rhetoric that has happened. the only rhetoric -- excuse me, not the only one, but the most striking example of rhetoric that a caused violence was this bernie sanders nut. and i would not blame that on bernie sanders. i think that some of this is just -- >> objectively again, jack, that
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is just inaccurate. there is a difference between -- and we'll get back to how democracies die. but when you poiktd out thyou p person who supported bernie sanders shot a member of congress, bernie sanders never said go out and shoot a member of congress. president trump as a candidate did say i'd like to punch them in the face and if you hit one of these guys who wants to throw a tomato, i'll pay your legal fees. so there is a difference there. but let's get back to the list of -- >> can i -- >> go ahead, daniel. wait, one at a time. >> excuse me. so the point that we make in our book is that when powerful politicians use this kind of rhetoric, it is dangerous on its own, but it also provokes a counter reaction. we look around the world when authoritarian leaders use this receipt 20r rick, democratic opposition radicalizes and you get a spiraling politics exactly the kind of thing mr. king son
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is worried about. this kind of polarized rhetoric that 3mr. king son is using is predictable response. and the president has a moral responsibility to not engage in that kind of rhetoric. >> did you cite example when president obama said they're going to get their knives and we'll get our guns, or was that because it was barack obama and we can't use that? did you use that, was that in your book? >> in our book we go -- >> did you use that quote? >> we go through violations of -- >> did you use that quote? >> should i answer? >> it's a yes or no. did you use that quote or not? >> and i'm telling you what we say. we report the instances of violations of democratic norms including use of executive orders under president obama. we're social scientists. >> but not that quote. >> we try to be neutral in the
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book. >> but that quote was not -- >> why we can't have aen open discussion without engaging in this receiphetoric. >> but that quote quags conveniently left out of your discussion. i mean, i have to tell you, as a conservative frankly, it bothered me that the president would use rhetoric like that. but it didn't bother you know because he is somebody who you happen to agree with most of the time. >> i think what it shows is that every president -- somebody has a problem with whatever any president says depending on what side of the aisle they are sitting on. but when we look at president trump in this particular case, we wanted to get a question to you about what has happened overnight, in speechwriter that has left the presidency, the administration now, because he has been accused of domestic abuse and in his defense we have to say he said he was actually the victim of domestic abuse, it
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was not him against his ex-wife. but he immediately resigned. that is very different than what we have seen from the president when it came to rob porter, a man who the fbi had said, look, there could be some problems here, both of his ex-wives say that he was a domestic abusabus. they had a criminal complaint from the second ex-wife. and yet this man was given security clear answer, not full clearance, but some security clearance. and he was right next to the president that whole year. that they knew about it. what do you say about when you just said we started and he said he has a great administration, that administration is losing people left and right it seems just in the last week. how can the president remedy this in your opinion? that they should do is audit ng- everybody's background from the very beginning. and why that wasn't done is beyond me. and i think frankly it is
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inexcusab inexcusable. i would say this is somebody hired by reince priebus, kelly somewhat inherited him, apparently a great demeanor in the white house which is typical of wife abusers, where they are charm, smart, they know how to cover it up. and perhaps even said listen, this was 15 years ago, i've rehabbed, i'm a different guy now. we don't really know when kelly knew or what he knew. there was an unidentified senior washington person who said, well, kelly and mcgahn knew. we really don't know what they knew. but i'm not giving them a pass. it is their business to know the background of everybody particularly who are handling classified information. so i think there was obviously a mistake. >> don mcgahn knew early in 2017. they came-hfr t -- the fbi came
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to the white house. general kelly nooknew several ts and did not make the decision to fire him. that is not just a "washington post" reporting. that is cnn's reporting that general kelly knew months ago and other outlets have as well. jack kingston, the book is how democracies die. thank you both for being with us. all right. toronto police are digging for answers after the remains of six men police say targeted from the gay community were found in a gruesome kricrime scene. what police know about the suspected serial killer is coming up. the market, but through good times and bad at t. rowe price we've helped our investors stay confident for over 80 years. call us or your advisor. t. rowe price. invest with confidence.
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shooting in modern history had anti-anxiety drugs in his system. >> stephen paddock's autopsy also shows he died of a self inflicted gunshot wound to the head. 58 people were killed, roughly 500 people injured. and police found paddock dead inside his hotel room at the mandalay bay resort. authorities have not released a motive, but paddock was known as a gambler who havevisited casin frequently. as the snow melts in toronto, police have discovered the remains of six men buried in various yards, but all linked to a suspected serial killer. police believe bruce mcarthur a land skscaper buried remains in multiple yards. here is polo sandoval.
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>> reporter: they are digging for answers. investigators say bruce mcarthur used large machiplantars to stos victims, all men, among them andrew missing since june. investigators confirm he was among six sets of remains found in plantars this week, the rest are still unidentified. though police won't elabelabora they say there was sufficient evidence to charge mcarthur with the murders of five men. >> there is an extensive investigation going on. going through computer, cellphones, online applications. >> reporter: there could be more victims yet to be discovered. additional potential crime scenes have been identified. and the soil at the primary location is slowly thawing. allowing forensic teams a chance to dig as one retired toronto homicide detective puts it, the work is just getting started for investigators. >> once they got evidence that
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clearly he was responsible for at least a number of the murders, that sort tarted the beginning of vets and nowinvest now a case that involves 30 potential crime scenes involving cases that could go back decades. >> reporter: it is an unprecedented case that has left the community shaken to its core. >> the community has been harmed significantly and it happens to be the gay community in particular. we all need to throw our support behind that entire community, behind the entire city who this has impacted. >> and we'll keep you posted on that. meanwhile want to tell you about a tennessee sheriff who was caught on tape ordering deputies to, quote, take out a suspect they were chasing over a suspended license. when deputies tried to ram his truck off the road, the sheriff ordered for the suspect to be taken out by any means necessary. he was shot in the head, killed by a deputy and when the sheriff
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arrived, his conversation was picked up by a body camera. listen to this. >> i told him take him out. i don't give a [ bleep ]. >> not long after that, shots fired. >> i said don't ram him, shoot him. [ bleep ] tear my cars up, but i got two cars tore up again. >> the suspect was not armed at the time of his death. his wife is suing the sheriff's department now after the release of that audiotape. this year's deadly flu season is raging across the u.s. and the cdc says there is no end in sites. what you need to know about vaccine shortages is next. first patty hearst, tomorrow the new original series reveals her transformation from heiress to terrorist and back again.
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>> reporter: before the o.j. simpson trial captivated a nation, there was patty hearst. her kidnapping in 1974 considered the crime of the sent se churry. born into he will wth and power, she grew up in a quiet suburb of san francisco. for college, they headed to berkeley where she walked the streets that were her name. she lived off campus with her boyfriend, a former teacher at her high school. it was the couple's engagement announcement in her family's newspaper, the san francisco examiner, which first drew the attention of a small radical terrorist group that called itself the liberation army, sla. >> they pushed me back. shouting get your face on the floor. >> reporter: hearst was kidnapped from her apartment on february 4, 1974.
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>> pa there itricia was symboli. >> reporter: she was blind folded, beaten and raped. >> what does that do to a 19-year-old's mind? >> it was gone. >> reporter: she reappeared in april of 1974 on surveillance footage holding a rifle. she and the sla robbing a bank in san francisco. >> she was still a kid. she was a survivor. >> reporter: the heiress turninged terrorist was now seen as a fugitive. she emerged as tonya. 19 months after being kidnapped, she was arrested along with the few remaining members of the sla. six others had died months earlier in a blazing shoot-out with the los angeles police broadcast live on tv, very new for television. hearst was sentenced to seven years in prison for her role in robbing the bank. the public remains divided as to whether she was a victim of
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brainwashing or a willing participant. >> she was on the run for a year and a half. with many opportunities to leave and escape. and she didn't. >> reporter: yet she would serve just under two years in prison before president carter commuted her sentence in 1979. is there any doubt that none of this would have happened if she hadn't been kidnapped. after she was released, she maisched the man task aed with protecting her during her tria . president clinton issued her a full pardon in 2001. samsung galaxy phones get a samsung galaxy s8 free. yahoooo! ahoooo! plus, unlimited family plans come with netflix included. spectacular! so, you can watch all your netflix favorites on your new samsung phones. whoa! join the un-carrier and get a samsung galaxy s8 free. all on america's best unlimited network.
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the cdc says instead of peaking, in year's deadly flu season is only getting worse. >> can you believe it. the flu is blamed for 63 children's deaths thus far. one doctor says it is spreading like wildfire with more than 151,000 cases in 48 states and puerto rico. this year's flu numbers are on track to break hospitalization records for people who are aged 55 to 64 and the cdc says there is still a shortage of antiviral vaccines and there are likely many more weeks of misery ahead. just so you know. and did you know doctors have drawn a link between heart attacks and the flu? in today's heartbeat, elizabeth cohen talks about how the flu vaccine could have benefits
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beyond preventing the flu. rurt t >> reporter: the flvaccine coul lower the chant of a heart attack. >> when somebody comes into the hospital with a heart attack, it is not uncommon that this individual has had some type of a viral illness or process in the recent past. >> reporter: in one study of people 35 and older, heart attack risks jumped six times within a week of coming down with the flu. in patients with cardiovascular disease, the vaccine may be as effective against heart attacks in the short term as quitting smoking or taking medications for high blood pressure. >> every one of our patients with heart disease, part of our process is to discuss a flu vaccine. not just to prevent the flu, but as a means of preventing a heart problem. >> reporter: and another benefit? if you don't get the flu, you won't give it to anyone else. elizabeth cohen, cnn reporting. that is it for us. we'll see you back here at 10:00
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for "cnn newsroom." >> smerconish is with you after a quick break. hello, i'm an idaho potato farmer. you've probably seen me running all over the country in search of our big idaho potato truck. but not any more. i am done with that. ooh, ooh hot - just gonna stay home on the farm, eat a beautiful idaho potato, and watch tv with my dog... tv anncr: the big idaho potato truck pulled into town today and it's really a sight to see. oh man...let's go.... (distant) you comin', boy? sfx: (dog) gulp! woof. td ameritrade select securitiestrade 24 hours a day, 5 days a week. so i can trade all night long? ♪ all night long... let's reopen the market. ♪ trade 24/5, only with td ameritrade.
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i'm michael smerconish in philadelphia. we welcome our viewers around the world. #where is the memo after the president promised we'd see the democrat's response to the nunes memo, it is still under wraps. how come? an a second white house aide stepping down after beingaccusa of spousal abuse. plus the winter
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