tv Wolf CNN March 1, 2018 10:00am-11:00am PST
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hello, i'm wolf blitzer. thank you for watching around the world. we begin with this. >> the wild, wild west wing. >> another day, yoanother scand, another resignation. >> hope hicks abruptly announcing she is resigning him. >> the president berated her for being honest. >> you're seeing jared kushner meeting with executives in the white house and then the companies are giving very sizeable mortgages to his company. >> the existing battle lines have been entrenched by this decision by the chief of staff
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to essentially strip kushner of his security clearance. >> he essentially served as the point man for jared kushner and ivanka trump. >> jeff sessions pushing back after the president called his handling of complaints with the fbi disgraceful. >> i wouldn't stay at all. i wouldn't be anyone's whipping boy. >> trey gowdy is asking for answers after a $31,000 dining room set was purchased for his office. >> president trump has not given the order to disrupt russian cyber threats. >> special counsel robert mueller is looking at the president's business dealings in russia before the campaign. >> paul manafort is pleading not guilty to money laundering and false statements. >> take the guns first. go through due process later. joe, can you do that? >> there is a culture of fear inside the white house. >> all of that was just over the
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past 48 hours. the administration clearly struggling to deal with one crisis after another. among the new developments, the resignation of one of the president's most trusted confidantes, hope hicks. also robert mueller's team is asking questions of comments made by hicks after president trump said he had nothing to do with the russians. kushner's family got $5 million in loans. some in the white house may have's grets fhave regrets over taking the job. here's what jeff sessions said today. >> i almost have no right to be up on this stage. >> you have every right. >> i was in the department and i miss every one of you every day.
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truly, six months, the last thing i wanted to do was walk away from one of the great honors of my life, being the secretary of homeland security, but i did something wrong and god punished me, i guess. >> let's bring in our chief white house correspondent jim acosta. what details have you learned about hope hicks' resignation and how it played out? >> some four-star deadpan there from general kelly there, wolf. that's right, we are hearing from people inside and outside the white house close to this white house that this white house is essentially in a state of turmoil right now, that the president is deeply upset about the events of the last 24 to 48 hours. however, you do talk to people, and i just spoke with a source close to the white house a few moments ago, who said the president is just fine and this is just another day at the office for president trump. keep in mind, wolf, and you and i both know this having covered president trump for some time
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now, that he is accustomed to dealing in an atmosphere of chaos, and in some ways he feels right at home in that kind of environment, so that was what this one source i just spoke to was alluding to a few moments ago. make no doubt about it here, wolf. there is a very big sense inside the white house that the wheels to some extent are coming off. when you see somebody like hope hicks, the communications direct or, a trusted aide and confidafte of the president stepping aside after working for him for so many years, it's hard to draw any conclusion. from what we understand from our sources, this was in the works for some time. there is nothing nefarious about her departure, but wolf, we learned late last night that the mueller investigation at the special counsel's office has been asking people going in speaking with the special counsel's attorneys and investigators that those investigators are asking about a
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comment made by hope hicks just two days after the election to the "new york times" in which she says there were no foreign contacts except for those that came around election night congratulating the president. we now know, of course, that was not the case. there were multiple contacts between trump campaign associates and the russians. but i did talk to a former counsel who has talked with the senate as well as the house and intelligence committees who told me, yes, they are asking that question. it does sound as if hope hicks will have to be dealing with this for some time to come, but at the same time the white house is planning for her departure. they say she'll be here for the next several weeks. of course we heard from the president yesterday in that written statement that he's sort of leaving the door open to working with her in the future. no word yet.
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>> we're also learning, jim, that the president is fuming over his attorney general jeff sessions. tell us why. >> this has been going on for months now, wolf. almost a year ago the president started to really get upset with the attorney general because he felt that jeff sessions was just not enough of a defender, almost -- the president was almost expecting jeff sessions to act as a personal lawyer or white house counsel, perhaps not really understanding that the job of attorney general is to uphold the law and constitution of the united states over at the justice department, and it seems that jeff sessions is determined to do just that. you saw his sthamt seemed to be in direct response of the president tweeting jeff sessions, berating him once again. we saw that late last night of the "washington post" that the
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president is fuming behind the scenes about jeff sessions, referring to him as mr. magoo and so on. it's unclear how long these two can work together, but one thing we have to keep in mind, wolf, is that president trump considers him one of the big name supporters on his staff. he has one very prominently stephen miller who works here at the. it's very clear that jeff sessions has gotten under the president's skin, wolf. >> jeff sergsz. the president has called the attorney general an idiot, beleagured, and disgraceful. sessions still on the job. we'll see how long that lasts.
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the resignation of hope hicks will and adds to the chaos of the west wing. director anthony scaramucci was on the job for ten days and he says morale was bad and getting worse. >> what do you think? what do you think is going on? >> morale, people afraid to talk to each other -- >> coming from the president snt. >> noment i think it was a chief of staff. if the current situation and the current culture r. there is literally more change and a lot more departers. more than a couple.
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carrie correspodero, hirschfelds and gloria borger. >> it's the way trump governs, it's the way he likes to run his white house. but today when we saw a president effectively go rogue on his own kind of economic advisers. to change the subject i would argue and say, okay, we're going to impose a 25% tariff on steel and a 10% tariff on aluminum. while these internal arguments are going on inside his white house, he sets up this meeting. and he went rogue on republicans
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yesterday. duri during. he's lost hope hicks who, as one source said to me, is his emotional support. this source also predicted the hope hicks resigning. >> there was also the reporter who harassed the white house secretary who was accused of marital abuse. we saw those pictures and she was having an affair with him at the time. >> that just points out the level of chaos she's been dealing with for many, many months, dating back to the inauguration in the campaign. with the focus of rob porter and the mueller investigation going on in the background, and she's clearly focused. she had to deal with that. she had to get a lawyer just
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like many west wing airdes have had to do. and that testimony she gave on the hill when she said at times she's told white lies for the president doesn't precipitate him, but she did help create a super pressurized department. the circle of people around him who know him well and he feels comfortable are really shrinking. now his son-in-law jared kushner is under all this scrutiny. the story we ran today about his business dealings, and now he's been stripped of his clearance. will he stay, will he be able to stay? he's fume iing is shrinking. that's want a good thing if
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you're in the oval office. >> while he was serving in the white house, among those brought in from various meetings, executives from two major lending operations, big capital companies, wound up lending $500 million or so to kushner family business properties, and the suggestion is that's inappropriate. >> well, it's inappropriate and the difficulty is this white house has, unfortunately, just set administrations of both political parties. so ethics rules apply to white house individuals, senior executive brancho fishlz, and there is both the actual potential conflict. whether or not there actually was any knowledge of his part or his family businesses, those who are supposed to be running the business now, about these loans. then there's the appearance of conflict from senior leaders in government are things civil
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leaders should be concerned about. however, it looks like they tend to disregard ethics, security rules and these established norms. >> his son is suggesting his days railroad. >> i think that jared kushner, no matter how much his people push back on this, would have a difficult time doing the job he's been assigned to do, i.e., peace in the middle east and mexico without having this kind of clearance. i think that the stories show that there is a different set of rules for some people. and i think, you know, that contributes to the chaos and the resentment inside the white house about jared kushner and perhaps even about ivanka. and i think that's why you see a president that's so sort of
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besieged here. he's got a son-in-law who is being questioned, he's getting it from all ends and wants to project to the american public that he is in charge and he can do what he wants to do. >> in a way, all of this is in the same sort of category as the chicken coming home to roost. let's not forget, more than a year ago we were all writing stories about nepotism and is it even appropriate for jared kushner and ivanka trump to be working at the white house at all? now we see an instance where this has really become a major conflict inside the white house and outside, and also the rob porter situation. they now lack a staff secretary. that's where you get things like the president going rogue and saying he's going to do something on tariffs when the paperwork isn't ready and all the lawyers are saying, hold on a second, this isn't the way to go. >> even though somebody said we'll make the announcement next
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week, but here's what we're going to do next week, and i'm sure some of his aides were pretty stunned by that. >> it's so ad hoc. you can't run a presidency and a white house in an ad hoc way. >> it's also spilling into the justice department as the president fumes over his attorney general who he has reportedly named mr. magoo. plus, an arms race? putin unveils russia's new line of nuclear weapons that he calls invincible. surviving the slave trade. exclusive report. you'll want to see this. that's coming up. my bargain detergent couldn't keep up. it was mostly water. so, i switched to tide pods.
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mr. magoo, an elderly bumbler who is always getting in trouble, and apparently the nickname the president has for his attorney general, the attorney general of the united states, jeff sessions. we're also learning now that the president is furious with the attorney general after he pushed back on a tweet by the president. plus the relationship has now piqued the interests of the special prosecutor, robert mueller. carrie, this must be so extraordinary for career justice department officials to see the attorney general slammed publicly by the president. >> it's really bizarre. i look at this as someone who spent 13 years in the justice department as a career government lawyer. it just goes against everything the department stands for. independent law enforcement,
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integrity, just a way of doing public service that the president just doesn't seem to understand. and the difficulty is that the people in the justice department will continue to do their job, they'll work on their cases, they'll do their work, but on the political levels, it is just so beyond -- inappropriate doesn't cover what it is that the president is doing. and this goes back -- you know, he's been in office for a year, so one could say early in his administration, he doesn't understand independent law enforcement, he doesn't understand the boundaries that are supposed to exist between a president trying to pressure independent law enforcement leadership, but now a year in, that excuse just really doesn't hold anymore. and so now when he verbally attacks whether it's senior fbi officials or whether his own attorney general that he selected and nominated for this position, it just really demonstrates that he is actually, in my opinion, trying to influence the justice
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department's operation. >> if he wants to get rid of the attorney general, he's the president. he can fire him and he can make that happen. he doesn't want to do that. he wants to, in effect, ridicule him so much that he resigns. >> that could be one of the things he's trying to do. we do know that despite the "you're fired" slogan of his reality show, the president doesn't actually like to fire people. he does tend to do this with people. we saw him do this with reince priebus when he was chief of staff where he sort of openly challenges and undercuts them that they want to resign. there is a sense he tried to do that with general kelly a few weeks ago, although i think that's over now. he might be doogs whing what ca said which is keeping him there and pressuring him to do otherwise. i think what we saw in this statement yesterday, the reason sessions put it out, is he is actually pushing back on that notion, you can insult me all
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you want. as long as i'm here, i'm going to do the job the way i think it needs to be done. >> isn't it rare that the president gets insulted when somebody pushes back at him and says, i'm one who pushes back, i don't let anything go unanswered. for the first time jeff sessions showed he was pushing back on the president and the president goes ballistic about it. this has been going on since last july. there are people advising the president legally who are telling him, you cannot fire anybody right now. you are in the middle of an investigation. you can't fire jeff sessions right now. this would look really bad for you. i think he's doing as you're saying. he's just publicly trolling jeff sessions. >> who is he really going to replace him with at this point? what are the chances he could get a new attorney general at this snoint there apoint?
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there isn't, so he's gambling here. a career diplomat announced she will be resigning. i will be departing beginning of may to seek other opportunities. it's coming at a time pretty significant. president trump and president nieto supposedly planning a trip here shortly, but they supposedly decided this isn't a good time adding that the president paid for the wall. >> he canceled the trip. i don't know the specifics of this, but reportedly the u.n. ambassador believes she isn't doing any good, that her effectiveness is over. if the president is going to handle these relations, i haven't done any reporting on it -- >> 31 years a career diplomat
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and making this announcement just now. >> and roberta jacobson, as well as jared kushner, they thought they were making some progress toward a visit where they could make some announcements about common border moves, something on trade, something on drug addiction, and they knew they had to have this phone call done before they could schedule a trip. i think they thought this would be a rubber stamp on that opportunity. instead the president's insistence on his own aagenda, which is a political agenda, are resigning. >> people have resigned for a variety of reasons. stick around. he says he's the biggest fan to the second amendment of the constitution. but now it looks like people are
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nobody knew what to think. that was the general reaction after an extraordinary meeting on guns between president trump and lawmakers from both sides of the aisle yesterday. and it had to do with comments like this one. >> some of you people are petrified of the nra. you can't be petrified. in your bill, what are you doing about the 18 to 21? >> we didn't change that. >> are you going to leave that? >> we didn't address it, mr. president. >> you know why, because you're afraid of the nra. >> the president certainly didn't stop there. not only did he call out members of his own party on live television, he also appeared to side with democrats at times during that meeting. now listen to this. >> diane, if you could add what you have also, and i think you can, into the bill.
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joe, can you do that? can you add some of the things? >> you help. >> i'll help. >> joining us now, democratic congressman steve cohen of tennessee. congressman, thank you for joining us. >> you're welcome, wolf. nice to be on cnn. >> i don't know if you had a chance to watch that one-hour live television presentation, but do you think the president sounded more like a democrat in that meeting? >> he sounded like a democrat and he sounded more like the campaign when he said nice things about planned parent hood and nice things about the dreamers. but when it comes to the law, he's a republican. >> he was ready to challenge the nra is some of the issues. i assume you welcome it? >> i do welcome it and i hope it bears fruition and i hope he finishes through on it. but he doesn't get to the finish line. he's liable to stumble.
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>> i want to play another moment from that meeting yesterday, a moment that got a lot of attention. listen to this one. >> take the firearms first and then go to court, because that's another system. because a lot of times by the time you go to court, it takes so long to go to court to get the due process procedures that you could do exactly what you're saying, but take the guns first, go through due process second. >> he was talking about the mentally ill, and he thinks in some cases it's better for police to simply seize the weapons before allowing due process, legal rights, if you will. what do you think the reaction would have been, for example, if president obama had suggested the same thing? >> well, he'd have been against it entirely and said it was wrong and you deserve due process. we were trying to pass no fly no buy, and we're still trying to do it. the republicans said it gave the people on the suspected terrorist list, it denied them
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due process. so they're providing due process for suspected terrorists and the president wants due process for weapons, and that's not going to go over well at all. i don't think he knows what due process is. i think he thinks maybe it's a beverage, like mountain dew. >> do you think there is a chance that you and your colleagues in the house and the senate will pass some significant gun control legislation any time soon? >> certainly i would hope so, and i was pleased that democrats went there and they did what they needed to do to put the ideas forward on common sense united states universal background checks and changing the age and other proposals, but when it gets down to it, i doubt republicans will put it on the open floor for amendments, because things might pass that they don't want to have happen, and when it gets time for paul ryan and the rules committee, the nra will rule, and i don't think we'll have much to vote on. but i certainly hope we will. trump sounded good yesterday.
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but getting paul ryan and the republicans to have a vote will be much, much more difficult. >> let me ask you about the president's son-in-law and senior adviser jared kushner. as you know, the "new york times" is now reporting that his family's real estate business secured more than $500 million in loans after kushner held meetings at the white house with some of those lenders who participated. what's your reaction to that? >> what a coincidence. it's just amazing, you know, that these things could happen, that people could meet with kushner who is an owner of those companies, benefit the profits from it and then they make these tremendous loans outside the ordinary. it's a conflict of interest. the white house should be beyond rapproch like senior's wife and they're not. they invite criticism, and it started with president trump not divesting himself of profits from the trump corporation. the reason we filed our peace
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resolution because of violations of trump on the emollients clause, domestic and foreign. you're supposed to go to congress before earning money. trump did neither. he set the low bar for members of his family and administration to follow, and kushner followed directly in conflicts of interest. there is an influence, and you can buy influence in this white house, that notice has been put out. manafort took the job running the campaign and said he didn't want any money. he needed influence and the money he could get through the oligarchs' and that was something he got paid for. same with the salary. the salary is chicken feed. there was a movie made about it,
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"the grifter." melanie griffith was in it. sad story. we have grifters today. >> jared kushner doesn't take a salary in his job as the president's senior adviser. just a little nugget there. senator, thank you for joining us. a retired ambassador calls out the state department recalling that sexual harrassment has been running rampant there for years. plus president putin develops a nuclear missile that he claims is capable of hitting anyplace on the planet.
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he said the missiles can reach anywhere in the world, are able to defend other systems and leaves north korea's missile useless. let's go to matthew chance who is joining us live from moscow. matthew, what is putin's goal in making this assertion? >> reporter: it's interesting because the video you just played like it was from the 1990s and the rhetoric sounded like he was from the 1980s. it's being interpreted like that, of course. but you have to remember this is a political season in russia, that vladimir putin in 17 days from now is going to the electorate, and he wants to show himself as a strong candidate like president trump does in the united states. i think this was primarily directed at a domestic audience
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to say, look, we are mighty again once again on the nuclear stage and on the international stage. but of course, there were other messaging in this as well. he was criticizing the united states. it was also intended to be a sort of warning to the united states not to further encroach on russia's interests on the international arena. i think that was probably heard loud and clear in the united states as well. and those missiles that he was talking about, extraordinary stuff. high personic missiles which travel 20 times the speed of sound, an underwater drone that was capable of carrying a nuclear device. another cruise type missile that he said had no range limitations that could quite literally go on forever until it hit its target. it's science fiction stuff that vladimir putin was talking about. literal analysts thought it might or might not be drid frea
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deployment right now, but either way, the message was loud and clear, wolf. >> thank you, matthew chance, in moscow. we have brand new reporting on cnn. the reporting includes a now retired u.s. ambassador who is calling out what she describes as persistent sexual harrassment over at the state department. let's go to our global affairs correspondent elise latvin. tell us about the person making these accusations and what exactly they entail. >> we're talking about recently retired ambassador leslie bassett who writes a very damning article for the foreign department's service journal. that's the union of state department employees. in their journal a very damning story about a culture of what she says is permissiveness and persistent sexual harrassment over her decades-long career at the state department. just one anecdote that she
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writes and talks to cnn about, talking about early in her career where she busts a male superior. he, quote, showed up uninvited at my home on his birthday, unexpectedly stuck his tongue in my mouth and assumed we would have sex as his present. when i declined, i was excluded from meetings and professional opportunities as he very publicly shunned me at both official and private events. i told no one. and wolf, ambassador bassett goes on to talk about several instances in her career, where she faced advances by her superior. she was rebuffed and felt like that hurt her career. inspired by the me too movement, she looked at what she calls a persistent culture at the state department of sexual harrassment. more than 225 cases reported last year here at the state department, and it's something that secretary of state rex
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tiller ttill till tillerson has taken personal interest. he wants to be informed about it and wants to increase training here at the state department. he says he has zero tolerance, wolf. >> thank you for that reporting. a very disturbing story. up next, syria and slave trade. one man's journey to freedom and why the fight for survival is far from over. models can be simulated...
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small business, internet providers promise you a lot. let's see who delivers more. comcast business offers fast gig-speeds across our network. at&t doesn't. we offer more complete reliability with up to 8 hours of 4g wireless network backup. at&t, no way. we offer 35 voice features and solutions that grow with your business. at&t, not so much. get internet on our gig-speed network and add voice and tv for $34.90 more per month. call 1-800-501-6000. men and women bought and sold, it may be hard to believe, but modern day slavery exists.
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last year our team uncovered a slave market in libya. now they have traveled to nigeria, for many it is the first stop on a hellish trafficking trip to europe. she introduces us to a man saved from the slave trade only to return to a life where every day is a struggle. >> reporter: this is the trafficking capital of the country. it is one of the most trafficked from departure points in the whole continent, it is where tens of thousands of young people men and women head off for their dream of europe. it is also where tens of thousands of them are returned to with that dream shattered. and today we're hoping to meet one of those returnees. the last time we saw vehicle
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toerks he was lying on the floor of a libyan detention center. just rescued from slavery. begging to be sent back home. now he is back in nigeria, but has he found his happy ending? how do you feel coming back here? victory is responsible for his mother and three younger siblings. his mother says she is too embarrassed to show her face on camera, too embarrassed to admit her family was desperate enough that her son risked everything to try and make his way to europe.
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but that didn't mean he is giving up. after we did interview with you in libya, a lot of people said they thought you were a hero. having survived what you survived abo. do you feel like you're a hero? how many more like victory will attempt the journey to europe? thousands. maybe tens of thousands. many returning to a poverty they say is even more dehumanizing
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than the mohorrors they face in will i be can i can't. victory is convinced that his will be a happy ending. that like he did in libya, he will again finds strength to survive. >> that is a heartwrenching report. what is being done to stop human trafficking in nigeria? >> in nigeria what the government is trying to do is essentially create livelihoods. and that is extraordinarily difficult because while there is exploitation, the system has to have something to feed off. so when these brokers send out representatives, essentially almost like touting for trade, into these communities and they say we can get you to europe, we can get you a better life, the nigerian government are attempting to give them a return to turn afternoon and say no, i have a good enough life here. but you saw what victory has
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returned home to. right now that is not people's reality on the ground. and it is a heartbreaking situation. >> and there are many just like him, right? >> yes. the nigerian authorities are actually reached out to us since that report went out to say that they are trying hard to work with victory, to give him a livelihood, to train him. but everyone wants more. every kid wants more. they want to be able to dream, they want to think that they can have a big future and that is not what is available to him. and i think it is really important to remind our viewers that right now it is not just people like victory who are suffering. inside libya right now what we showed you back in november, that is still happening. the slave trade, the exploitation, that is all still happening. >> thanks so much for your outstanding reporting and congratulations on winning the prestigious royal television society award for scoop of the year for your incredible reporting on slave trafficking in libya, another outstanding
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award. thank you so much. more news coming up here on cnn as chaos ensues at the whoiite house. we're on standby for a press briefing. you walked together. you built your home again. my dna showed that i'm native american, and connected me to cousins who taught me about our tribe. my name is joseph reece, and this is my ancestrydna story. now with 10 million new family connections made every day. order your kit at ancestrydna.com
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