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tv   CNN Special Program  CNN  June 16, 2018 11:30am-12:00pm PDT

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like this wisconsin man, a father of four, american-born children, who is in federal custody and is set to be deported. franco ferreira was brought to the u.s. from argentina when he was just 13 years old on a visa which later expired. that was back in 2001. as we say, he became a father, a family man, but then over the years he has had several traffic tickets including driving under the influence, a broken taillight, and driving without a valid license. his family and activists are fighting to save him from deportation. his ex-wife spoke at a rally to support him. >> this is not okay, taking a father away from their children. my kids are young and they don't understand right now. and trying to explain to them, they just cry. >> so that was alisha ferreira
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who now joins me live with their three kids. good to see all of you. so this is a very difficult circumstances. just met with franco who is still in custody. how is he, what is the status of the deportation? >> well,ing when inwhen we vis, he was very happy to see his kids. tears of joy, a lot of tears. he is -- you know, he is scared. he just wants to be with his kids and it is very emotional, you negotiatiknow, mentally har. just to be taken away from your kids all of a sudden. and so he is doing his best to stay strong. >> so explain if you could how it got to this point.
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while we mentioned that he came as a kid and he had the visa, it expired, but then how was he apprehended, detained, what were the circumstances that have him now in custody facing deportation? >> yeah, so he came when he was 13 in 2001 and his visa had expired when he was 13, he was in middle school. and not able to really follow up with the papers himself. and so that kind of, you know, went to the side just so he could finish his education, finish high school. when we were together, we were married and we applied for his papers, his legal residency. and it fell through. so he got some really bad legal advice saying he didn't qualify for daca. so his advice not to apply for
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that due to the dui he obtained in 2013. so he, you know, obtained a different lawyer to try to figure out what he could do and he has worked tirelessly trying to hire different lawyers and figure out what other ways that he can get legal status, a legal work permit and driver's license to be here and support his kids. he has his whole life has been trying to do that, to be here legally. so we are just praying and hoping that the daca in july will follow through with that and be able to set him free and be with his kids again. >> and what were the circumstances that put him in
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custody right now? was he surprised by being told that he is about to be deported? how did that happen? >> so he was driving, he was taking actually my kids dropping them off to my house because it was my place at the time. he did have a broken taillight and he got pulled over. he got a ticket for that which he paid. and it kind of from there everything kind of went south and the immigration i.c.e. was looking for him, came to his work and was trying to find him. >> and he's been told he will be deported. what is the time line now as a result of, you know, being in custody? what is your understanding? >> we're not sure.
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>> do you feel like you have any options that will assist his situation? >> i feel like i hope for my children and for any other families in the situation is that ricardo wong is the person that can help my family. christina newman. they can help my family. they can help our family stay together. my kids need their father. they are devastated. when we went to go see him, they are just devastated, they are torn, they don't understand. they just want their dad. they want for spend their father's day with their dad and they don't understand why, they really don't. >> very tough situation. >> it is heartbreaking. we're praying and hoping that
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daca can be -- we can move forward with that in july. >> i know that you and your family are holding out hope, alisha. thank you so much to your, your childr children. thanks for your time. and we'll be right back. [stomach gurgles] ♪when you have nausea, heartburn, indigestion, upset stomach, diarrhea... girl, pepto ultra coating will treat your stomach right. nausea, heartburn, indigestion, upset stomach, diarrhea.♪ try new pepto with ultra coating. (vo)about what i eat.n selective this new beneful select 10, has 10 amazing ingredients! (avo) with real beef, plus accents of sunflower oil and apples, suddenly your dog's a health nut.
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i want to go back to that breaking news we have been following out of russia. a car jumps a curb plowing into pedestrians. this video may be disturbing to some viewers. matthew chance is at the scene and joins me now to tell us more about this image you see right there that cab careening right off the street into the curb and hitting all of those pedestrians. what more do we know? >> reporter: well, i mean watching that absolutely horrific video, it is amazing, isn't it, that no one was killed. at least that is our understanding at the moment in it erm tsz of tterms of the cas. we know at least two or three people according to eyewitnesses appeared to be injured quite seriously as a result of that. the mexican embassy here in
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moscow city that at least two of their citizens were injured. we understand from state media here as well that there were other nationality, russians of course, some other national i dids may have been involved also. but just take a look at that image of that yellow moscow taxicab coming up to that traffic on this road right here, then mounting the curb just about here and plowing through all of those people. you can even see the scuff marks on the wall, the big black scuff, some yellow paint as well that came off the taxi as it rammed against the wall and went on and hit a road sign. if you keep on watching the video, and i've watched it a few times now, you can see the driver then tries to get out of the car, gets out and he runs as fast as he can in that direction before he is apprehended by some fans and he is held down and the police come and arrest him. you can see it is extremely busy
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along this pavement, it is one of the main thoroughfares. and it is where all the fans aie world cup. >> and also extraordinary, before the driver run, you see the other two people, two pedestrians perhaps who try to open up the car door, quite aggressively and then he takes a run for it. so how are police trying to explain or help surmise his intention here, what the appearances are of this driver wanting to get away like this. does it make investigators begin to think that plowing in to the crowd like that was intentional? >> reporter: it has to be something that they are looking at. when something like that happens and you inadvertently lose control of the car if that can happen, you shouldn't just get up and try to run away.
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and so it doesn't do much for the case that this was an accident. in terms of what the moscow police are saying, remember all eyes in the world are watching the security situation here, watching how the moscow authorities handle this massive influx of people. and what they are saying at the moment is that they have opened a criminal investigation in terms of a traffic violation that they are treating it at the moment as a traffic violation, but you know, again, these images look much more serious than that, don't they. >> yeah. and i'm just reading that the moscow mayor, you know, using the terminology it is under control, the situation is under control. but no other detail in terms of the direction of that investigation that you speak of. matthew chance when you learn more, bring to us. appreciate it. we'll be right back.
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following their historic summit, president trump and kim jung-un are planning to speak by phone tomorrow after the president revealed he gave the north korean leader a direct phone number. the news comes as the president defends a bizarre remark he made while praising the dictator and the way north koreans treat their leader. >> hey, he is the head of a country and i mean he is the strong head, don't let anyone think anything different. he speaks and his people sit up at tankattention. i want my people to do the same. >> president trump tried to backtrack later claiming he was being sarcastic, but you'd be excused not knowing that because it comes after a weeknorth kore. take a listen. >> he is very talented. he has a great personality. he is a funny guy. he is a very smart guy. a great negotiator. he loves his people, his country. his country does love him, they
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have a great fervor. i think that he really wants to do a great job for north korea and he wants to do what is right. he was really very gracious. i think he trusts me and i trust him. >> i'm joined now by a former senior adviser at the u.s. state department. and also elyise labott. good to see you both. the president said he was being sarcastic about that sit up at attention remark, knowing everyone knows there are north koreans who have been starved, put into camps, and others murdered. did he forget about those things? >> this is a president who speaks cavalierly and, you know, he is a man that uses rhetoric, uses hyperbole and does not speak carefully. and just, you know, again, uses rhetoric and speaks cavalierly about leaders and speaks off the
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cuff and offing speaks emotionally and does not -- uses words often without thinking. and i don't think that we should take his words very carefully. >> so does that mean when he says problem solved with north korea so to speak, you're not buying that? >> again, i think we have to take actions more seriously than his rhetoric. especially when it comes to north korea. >> well, this is the president in his own words. >> you remember the sitdown with barack obama, i think he will admit this, be he said the biggest problem that the united states has and by far the most dangerous problem that he said to me that we've ever had because of nuclear is north korea. now, that was shortly before i entered office. i have solved that problem. >> so how does the u.s. diplomatic community take a
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that? he got a warning from his predecessor, but then he says, you know, he doesn't really -- he doesn't really i guess appreciate that kind of information because he can read somebody. >> i mean, look, i agree that i think you know the president uses rhetoric and i don't think that we have to take what he says literally. clearly he is trying to butter up kinl just m jung-un just as trying to butter up his base to let people know that he is working on the north korea problem. i don't think anybody in the diplomatic community or the international community or in the united states thinks that the north korea sprproblem is really solved. i think we should take that to mean that the president is working at it and we don't know what will come of it. there is a lot of skepticism of the process, but clearly the rhetoric has kind of been toned down, the fire and fury of six months ago is now talk of --
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there was this summit and now the president and kim jung-un are going to talk tomorrow, south koreans just announced that. i thought it was a little weird that the south koreans announced it, but president trump said he was going to be calling north korea tomorrow. and it looks like he will have a conversation with kim jung-un, that they have a direct channel now. and in-that is a good thing. i think, you know, my colleague is right that we need to just kind of disregard the rhetoric. this is someone who, you know, speaks with a lot of flourish, but i think we should look at the actions and see how these negotiations proceed. i think nobody has rose colored glasses, but if they were able to get some progress, it would be a good thing. >> and what are you hoping would be discussed or what kind of parameters in this conversation tomorrow between these two men? >> well, i would certainly hope that president trump would emphasize that if kim jung-un does not proceed with the process of denuclearization,
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that president trump would certainly not, you know, continue with this favorable kind of commentary and that in fact that he would return to the fire and fury rhetoric and that in fact he is not going to lift the sanctions and that he is not -- that in fact he is going to proceed with some pretty serious actions that he was promising earlier. >> and so what about this approach that the president says, you know, getting to know, showing respect for someone you are trying to negotiate means that it will likely lead to something fruitful? >> well, i mean, that is how the president, you know, tries to have these personal relationships. one of the criticisms of president obama is that he didn't have any relationships with the world leaders. clearly president trump is trying to develop whether it is with a dictator like kim jung-un or with someone who is more of an ally like japanese prime
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minister abe trying to form that bond. i think we need to look at the results. i don't think that -- clearly the rhetoric, praising kim jung-un, is very tone deaf. but he is, you know, obviously this is the president likes to hear this kind of rhetoric from other leaders about him. he loves to be buttered up. and he thinks that he can butter up other leaders. but i think again we need to look at what is going to produce, i think the president thinks by buttering up kim jung-un he will get him to denuclearize. that is not going to be what turns kim jung-un around. it will be whether he sees it is in his country's interests to abandon nuclear weapons. and that is what the negotiations over the next several months hopefully will produce. >> all right. we'll leave it there for now. thank you so much, ladies. and thanks so much for being with me today. the next hour of the newsroom with annaa cabrera starts right after this.
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