tv New Day Sunday CNN June 17, 2018 3:00am-4:00am PDT
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♪ not even be separating families! they should not be dragging people from their homes! and kidnapping them! >> the president as he has wanted to do is trying to bring everybody together. >> no! no! no we are not going anywhere! >> a growing chorus of frustration and anger and protest. >> home of the free and land of the brave. we should the be using kids as a paternity process. >> i think a black stain on the
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president's first term. >> we need people of good faith and different political floss i philosophies and come together and tell the president to stop this, stop it now. >> separation an anxiety. america take is inward look at immigration and how it inu mainly treats people facing asylum. >> i'm martin savidge. >> i'm christi paul. holding on line one? kim jong-un. president trump teases a possible call with the north korean dictator tied. >> a dilemma facing reporters how to accurately cover the president without giving more oxygen to his false claims. late in the hour, a priceless father's day gift. a 132,000 bill for a smash statue. your "new day" starts right now.
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first up this morning, democrats mobilizing, responding forcefully to president trump blaming him for their own policy change. >> the separation of children's from parents at the border becoming a bargaining chip it seems. becomes such as senator ron widwide wid wid widenwiden says -- they will tour facilities along the u.s./mexico border and stop in texas as protests continue all over the country. >> we are going to let this -- no! no! no, we are not going anywhere! >> here is cnn correspondent ed lavandera with a look what is ahead. >> reporter: while the trump administration remains unapologetic in its support the way it's rolled out the so-called zero tolerance policy for undocumented immigrants crossing into the u.s. southern
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border a growing chorus of frustration and anger and protests that will start to be invisible here on sunday in south texas. there is a congressional delegation that will be touring several immigration facilities throughout the region, throughout the day. most of the members of that delegation very much opposed to this zero tolerance policy. there is a vigil protest also scheduled to occur here on sunday in mcallen and there is another congressman who is leading a march and protest toward the newly open temporary facility for undocumented children facility and that was opened in far west texas so a lot of this is starting to pick up as the stories that have emerged from these -- from the zero tolerance policy and people are watching this play out, really starting to pick up steam. the trump administration unapologetic and they continue to say that this policy is designed to deter undocumented immigrants from continuing to
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pour into the u.s. southern border. however, when you report here on the ground and you talk to immigrants who have just crossed the border, news of this policy isn't necessarily making it to every corner of these countries in central america and mexico as well where most of these undocumented immigrants are coming from. and when you do talk to them, if they do know about the policy, they say it is a risk that they are very much willing to take, that anything is better than the homes -- thometowns they are coming from. that is the latest in south texas as the frustration and ankle on this focus begins to build up. ed lavandera, cnn, in texas. visit follows several days of confusion over which plan the president is going to support. cnn white house reporter sarah
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westwood joins us live from washington with more that. any more clarity this morning? >> reporter: well, there is lots of focus on president trump's push for immigration reform this week, particularly after he stirred up that confusion on friday by saying he would not sign a compromised bill that his own white house actually helped negotiate. now white house officials later tried to clear things up by saying president trump misunderstood the question he was asked but it underscored the chaos that surrounded republican talks on immigration for months now. top trump aide kellyanne conway came out and defended trump saying the president has sent a clear message on immigration and once again blaming democrats for holding up progress on a bill. take a listen. >> the president, as he has wanted to do is try to bringing bring everybody together to come up with a common sense plan but he could not be more clear on his view of immigration is. the democrats refuse to provide the funding necessary so that can you expand the detention centers that you have more ice
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agents, some common sense measures and they have been -- ave been saying -- >> reporter: all this comes against the backdrop of increased excrete knee against the trump administration to step up family separation at the border. democrats are putting more pressure on the administration to end the practice as trump continues to blame democrats for the law requiring family separation even though there actually is no such law. trump will face house republicans head-on tuesday and hoping to smooth over some of the divisions have prevent legislation from moving forward so far. martin and christi? >> sarah west don't swood, thanr that bringing us up-to-dates on the events in d.c. errol louis and siraj hashmi are with us now. errol, first to you. let's listen to senator here.
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he was ruminating over what is happening with the families in the last couple of days. let's listen. >> i just think -- i kept thinking about my grandkids under 6 and what would happen to them. if their parents' lives were at risk to take a journey, in some cases, thousands of miles and to have them subjected to that. it's incomprehensible to me and should be to everyone. >> representative there. errol, do you believe that what we have seen over the last 48 hours is going to help congress in some way formulate something that will stop this?
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>> well, it all depends on whether or not republican house members are going to take similar passion into their meeting with the president. now whether they are going to applaud take pictures with them and vow and out some kind of defense to these policies. . people are thinking ahead to the mid terms and i'm sure every member of the house who is up for re-election is thinking about that, they will see the issue something come back to haunt them. we haven't seen a polling number yet from the last few days how this is going to play with voters in the fall but it's safe to say politicians are aware there is a reason the last administrations have considered this kind of activity, this kind of policy and then stepped away from it. it's going to be politically very, very hard in a lot of these swing states to carry voters forward with the notion that this is going to be a policy, this is going to be
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something that republican members with defend and it's going to be a tough season for them if they can't change really quickly and convey that to the president possibly as soon as tuesday. >> when they meet on tuesday, yes. let's listen to your point to johnson how they struggle with immigration and especially when it comes to separating children from their parents. >> when i was in office, we removed or patriot ioted millions of people to secure our borders. we considered all sorts of things to lower the levels of legal migration on our southern border. one thing we would not do is separate children from their parents at the border. something that i could not bring myself to do.
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>> siraj, do you believe republicans will stand up against this? >> they will have and a discharge petition in the house over the last few weeks and they are trying to get over the vote line with the democrats and pretty much the bill was president trump was railing against on friday. but, of course, what we have to look at what they bring about on tuesday, they are looking at the house speaker bill and another bill. these are things that according to trump's base is probably the closest thing they will get to end this since it will put a pathway to citizenship for 1.8 million undocumented immigrants, especially the children the children who came in illegally. >> do either one of those bills solve this problem and stop the separation of children from their families? >> i can't say confidently that they will, because, right now, the current policy set by the trump administration and initially by the obama administration with respect to these detaining centers, i can't
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speak to whether the obama administration was separating families. we know that the trump administration is separating families. bad policy to put children in detention centers then and it's bad policy now. and i don't think any particular house legislation, at the moment, will fully dress this unless they really speak to addressing ending the laws because -- not amnesty laws. asylum claims. because right now a lot of these detention centers and i.c.e. agents are looking to detain the families and separate them from their children before they get a chance to claim asylum. >> errol, if you look at a crystal ball, this is a problem that is going to snowball nool something huge for the government gause if you're looking, since april and may, in a six-week period, 2,000 children being separated, these are children that have to be housed and have to be taken care
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of if something happens to one of these children, if one is lost or hurt or one is aabusbus. does the government in their car are the ones responsible for this so that is not sustainable. how do they move forward with this practice? >> you raise a very good point, christi. the lawsuit you can start drafting them now, the class t action lawsuits. we are in the season. we are in the high season. to the extent we have got something like 46 separations every single day, including today, father's day, and this goes on for weeks and weeks and weeks, you're talking about thousands and thousands of kids. you're talking about an enormous amount of harm that is being done. the cameras are not going to go away. the democratic opponents are not going away. we are seeing reports of people sitting outside centers. they are not even being turned away or necessarily taken into
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custody. they are simply sitting there because the capacity has already been overwhelmed. it's going to be a gigantic mess. it's going to get a lot worse before it gets better. >> sira jmptj, your final thoug >> we have to work with our counterparts in mexico because the mexican government doesn't want to take the immigrants back who come through the southern border. if we are going to stop about stopping the immigration problem, president trump needs to move fast and if he is going to get a border wall built he has to do that, that has to be his first priority and if he is going to get mexico to pay for it he needs to actually put some feet under their -- basically put the fire under their feet and get them to pay for it. >> errol louis and siraj hashmi, great to have you here with your perspectives. >> thank you. in addition, another immigration story is getting national attention.
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62-year-old jose luis garcia of california moved from mexico to the u.s. nearly 50 years ago and arrested by immigration officials last week outside of his home for a misdemeanor conviction from 18 years ago. >> he is now being held in a detention center and awaiting possible deportation. cnn spoke with garcia's dau about what happened that day. >> it was just a typical sunday morning and drinking his coffee, watering the lawn, and he started screaming out my name and i ran out, and there was eight officers or agents arresting him. i asked for a warrant and they didn't show me a warrant. they said they were going to take him. it was due to a domestic dispute that he had in 2001. and had he a misdemeanor and they didn't tell me where he was going to be taken or anything. they just took him. he's a green card holder.
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he is a legal resident, permanent resident. he has been here for 50 years. he's paid his taxes. he's a homeowner. he's been here. he has nine grandchildren, two great grandchildren. he takes care of my daughter and they should not be separating families. they should not be dragging people from their homes and kidnapping them in this country. this is my father's country. he has been here almost his whole life. we were all born here. we all live here. he's been a model citizen. he has three jobs. like he has paid his taxes. he came here for the american dream and now it's a nightmare. >> the future is uncertain right now. natalie says she has been able to see her father and visited him saturday at the detention facility where he is being held. immigration is not just an issue for the united states.
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breaking news. in spain right now, hundreds of rescued migrants are arriving at the port and last of three ships expected to arrive this hour. >> hundreds of migrants were saved from drowning in the mediterranean a week ago. of those a hundred minors and 7 pregnant women. all of the migrants have been entered temporary pass to spain. after meeting with kim jong-un, president trump wants to speak with the north korean dictator again on father's day. our ivan watson joins us live in atlanta after the break. also ahead this hour, a kid caught on camera given a statue, a hug, and his parents $132,000 bill as a result of that. oh, happy father's day! also a soccer great comes up short in a massive world cup
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upset. >> we are talking will messi stymied by the little guy! we will show you how 30,000 icelanders made the trip. martin savidge, i have convinced him to do the thunder clap later in the show! all of the highlights are coming up. i would not want to pay that insurance bill. [ ding ] -oh, i have progressive, so i just bundled everything with my home insurance. saved me a ton of money. -love you, gary! -you don't have to buzz in. it's not a question, gary. on march 1, 1810 -- [ ding ] -frédéric chopin. -collapsing in 226 -- [ ding ] -the colossus of rhodes. -[ sighs ] louise dustmann -- [ ding ] -brahms' "lullaby," or "wiegenlied." -when will it end? [ ding ] -not today, ron.
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more horsepower than the lexus rx350. and a quiet interior from which to admire them. for a limited time, get 0% apr on the lincoln mkx plus get $1,000 bonus cash. among the lesser publicized results of last week's summit with kim jong-un and exchange of direct phone numbers between the north korean dictator and president trp, the president says he is planning to give kim a call sometime today with a special number that they exchanged. >> i am looking forward to that. we are also waiting for official word from the u.s. and south korea on the fate of joint military exercises. what north korea and president trump called the war games. cnn senior international correspondent ivan watson joins us in the studio today. a rare visit and wonderful to see you. >> so nice to have you in person. >> it was a real shock to a lot of people how the president said that he was suspending these
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military training exercises, war games he called them. what was the reaction in south korea? >> oh, the south korean defense minute city quickly put a statement out saying we have to know what president trump meant when he said that. >> they had no clue this was something? >> it didn't sound like that. that was strike because the south korean have been working very closely with the u.s. government and with the japanese, for example. it did look like it caught them offguard and highlights how deep the cooperation is between south korea and the u.s. the u.s. has 30,000 forces on the ground there and they work so closely together and this is cooperation that goes back to the 1950s, the korean war. >> in light of what you just said that they didn't seem to know that that was coming and in light of what we know today the president is going to have a conversation. >> we think. >> on the phone, we think, with kim jong-un. how is south korea feeling about the way this is panning out thus
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far? do they trust president trump? >> south korean president wants this. he wanted to bring kim jong-un and president trump together. the question of suspending military exercises is a little bit of a different thing because you recall the u.s. said going into the summit we are going to make any concessions and we are not going to postpone any drills or anything like that. now there is this proposal and we are trying to wait and see. i think the south koreans are trying to figure out are these drills going to be suspended? if it is, it is quite a big deal. they were postponed for the winter olympics of this year. these drills are so huge and such a big deal they happen every year and there is almost this ritual with north korea. the u.s. and south korea do their big drills hundreds of thousands of south korean troops, you know, planes, navy ships and the north koreans hate it and they say they make all kinds of threats and it's this annual thing, usually around spring and kind of late winter.
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and they would love nothing more than for them to be scrapped and cancelled. you know, i've got a military source in the u.s. military who has worked in north korea and say the south koreans like to train with their u.s. allies. >> remaining current and communicating and being able to actively called upon jointly, right? >> yeah. well, yeah, and to be able to respond and another thing. the military say we need to keep practicing. we have to be sharp and that is the whole point of being in a military for whatever contingency. lately the south korean government and the president's office is saying, well, good to introduction flexibility to this new diplomatic relationship that seems to be growing with north korea. >> before we run out of time and getting back to the telephone call and we don't know if it's going to happen today or not but it seems extraordinary these two have a phone relationship. >> have each other on speed
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dial. >> do they trust president trump? >> one warning on that. last month that the north korean government and the south korean president set up a hotline. that was a big deal. but then remember at the end of last month, the north koreans stopped talking to the u.s. and stopped talking to the south koreans. they were showing their displeasure. even if they have these channels open, if they get angry about something, they will just go cold and they stood up a u.s. delegation in singapore that was supposed to be organizing the summit that led to president trump cancelling it briefly. so it's good to have these channels of dialogue but you're still dealing with north korea. >> right. you're still dealing with the motion. >> yes. >> ivan, great to see you. >> good to have you here. >> thank you. >> thank you. happy father's day. that's right. straight ahead, the president, reporters call him out. he sticks to his claims. then what? brian stelter joins us next with
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just like that. like everything... the answer is simple. i'll do what i've always done... dream more, dream faster, and above all... now, i'll dream gig. now more businesses, in more places, can afford to dream gig. comcast, building america's largest gig-speed network. itthat's why i lovel the daily fiber wfiber choice,ood alone. with the fiber found in many fruits and vegetables. fiber choice. the number one ge recommended chewable prebiotic fiber. so democrats are firing back at president trump blaming them for his own administration's policy change. >> the separation of children from their parents at the border is become ago real bargaining chip for an immigration deal. as protests across the country in a few hours, more than half a
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dozen democratic lawmakers will also be out there touring facilities along the u.s./mexico border. >> sources tell cnn president trump is head to go capitol hill tuesday to talk immigration with house republicans. >> the president claims that every opportunity, democrats are to blame for a law requiring children to be taken from their parents as families try to enter the united states illegally and that is not true. >> the trump's administration to prosecute each and every undocumented migrant and very far from the only example the president denying or flat out opposing the truth. host of "reliable sources, brian stelter is with us now. i saw a number 3,000 lives have been tabulated by the "the washington post." >>? "the washington post" is keeping track of everything trump says. 3,000 misclaims and some of them flat-out lies from the president but a lot of in the gray area.
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is a fig, exaggeration and flat-out lies and journalists are trying to tell the difference without reading his mind. a problem for decades. politicians mislead the public and a problem for president trump. his rhetoric is more extreme and he denies reality mere often. look what happened on friday when he was outside the white house talking to reporters and journalists straight up said you're lying, mr. president. >> i hate the children being taken away. the democrats have to change their law. that is their law. quiet! that is the democrats law. we can change it tonight. we can change it right now. i will leave here -- no. no. you need their votes. you need their vote. the democrats, all they have to do -- >> you control both chambers of
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congress. the republicans do. >> no, excuse me. >> interesting to see how vigorously the reporters were pushing back on the president's claims and we don't see that very often because the president is not accessible to those groups of reporters. a rare occasion we see the back and forth. i think it highlights a growing problem that newsrooms are grappling with and members of the public are also wondering about. i think some of our viewers would say, stop quoting the president if he is not telling the truth! others would say he is a leader of the free world. of course, you have to quote him and broadcast him live and show what he says. the answer could be somewhere in between, somewhere around the way we report what any politician says when they are not telling the truth. i was talking to george could haveman the other day. you explain the truth and explain the lie and go back to the truth on border separation, for example. it's a trump policy change that has caused an increase in these detentions. then you say, the president says the democrats fault. that's not true.
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then you go back to the truth about the border. maybe a truth sandwich is the way to think about it. one of many possible sort of answers for these challenges that the newsrooms are facing. i think the way you had it in the banner a minute ago saying he falsely claims the democrats are to blame and another way to address this head-on while not just repeating the lie. >> brian stelter, thank you so much. we appreciate it. brian is not going anywhere. >> what did he say? a truth sandwich? >> he did! >> very interesting. very interesting. remember, you can catch brian stelter on "reliable sources" at 11:00 a.m. eastern here on cnn. >> cnn political commentator david jacobson and john thomas is with us here. let's talk about what he just said here, gentlemen. dave, how do you deal with a president who does not tell things factually to people who need to know how to vote? >> i think brian is on to something. i think a truth sandwich,
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perhaps, could be a good approach. i don't think you can't report on the lies but i think you start with the truth. the fact of the matter is the president with these lies is essentially trying to brainwash the american people. he is sowing the seeds of dispute and misinformation. you think to the children who look to the president of the united states. someone who is supposed to be a role model and truth teller. the fact the president does the precise opposite. if something really damaging happens, perhaps he had a conversation with north korea, with kim jong-un, at the end of the day after you lie, 3,000 times to the american people, how are we supposed to know if he is telling the truth? >> people who support him and people who believe him. >> that is the challenge there. they think that the president is telling the truth and incumbent upon the reporters and news media like "the washington post" to suppose the egregious 3,000 plus lies. >> john, you're sitting there silently. what is your take on all of this?
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>> that is your take on it, dave. i understand. but the fact is president trump, i think, his challenge sometimes he is not as articulate on the issues as he should be. for instance in that case. >> he is president of the united states. >> what he should have said in that case we are putting forth an immigration package to solve all of this and what he should have said is we are talking about these children being separated and it's tragic, what he should have said it's really tragic and why we have to get an immigration deal passed like kate steinly who was shot to death by an illegally immigrant five times and never see her mother again or josh wilson who was burned to denial by a legal immigrant. >> you're explaining number one and 2,999 others. how do you justify all of those? >> here is the deal. politicians, this is nothing new. okay. so day this is a problem with donald trump is nothing new. >> this is far bolder than that. >> look. every -- not every. almost all democrats are basically saying all illegal immigrants are just good people searching for a better life. many of them are.
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>> the vast majority. >> many of them are not. tell that to kate steinly and josh wilkinson. both sides do it and it's your responsibility of the media to fact checkoth sides and the president's job to tell his side of the story. >> let's switch it to how this is having an impact on the very emotional and true story going on now. separation of families at the border. and legislation that may or may not come this week. is this destroying an opportunity, the president either in his confusion, because it does sound like he was confused, and maybe his misrepresentation, is he losing an opportunity here? are we losing an opportunity? >> i think the political whiplash is causing confusion, right? on friday, he went on -- president trump went on fox and friends said he wouldn't support either immigration bill and then his staff walked that back and they are not on the same page or left hand is not talking with the right hand which is often the case with the bhis. he digging his heels on the border wall and democrats will not support such a bill.
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republicans only 51 votes in the senate and a number of moderates who perhaps don't support the president's current legislation lose two votes in the senate and i don't tell i don't know that they have unified support. >> i think it's an opportunity for the president to get meaningful border security and border immigration progress made here. >> but is he using children and using the separation as a means of doing it? >> it's not just about the children. there are many other components of why we need to fix immigration system and it's disgusting. the democrats are stonewalling and using the children and saying -- >> we are not going to be -- >> no. >> this is -- >> no, we are not going to vote for this immigration practice because it has wall funding. why don't you compromise? >> 25 billion dollars for wall funding at this time? >> let me -- >> let me ask you a question about the influence on president trump. the steven miller. in "the new york times" is quoted.
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that is coming from stephen miller said to have so much flungs on the president he is the one crafting this. what is it about stephen miller that has so much sway for this president? because if this continues, if this continues that, you know, the children are separated from their families, that is going to come up in the midterm. >> sure. >> i don't know that it's going to work for republicans. >> no. something has to get done. so now we are playing a game of chickens for if the democrats will come along with him. >> if he is such a hardliner on this how -- >> let's not forget how president trump got here to be president trump. it was when he came down the escalators. he talked about immigration. he talked about building that wall. and he largely got through both a primary and a general election because of folks like stephen miller being hard-liners on immigration. this is not something you can
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walk back. he promised to build that wall and secure our borders. that was his fundamental campaign promise and fix the economy. >> he also said mexico is paying for the wall. i'm not convinced that president trump campaigned on separating immigrants from their children that he would have necessarily won his very narrow president electoral presidential win. we are separating children. even the president's base and evangelicals are coming out against this. >> separating children may not have been an issue, say, in 2016 but it could be this fall. >> 90% of the kids that come aacross are unaccompanied by anybody get detained and 10% get separated we are not sure if the adults with them are their parents, right? so this is a complicated issue. >> that's sowing a seed there of question. >> we are not 100% sure. so i really -- >> even if there are some children or one or two get
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separated it's not fair. >> you're right. needs to be solved and the republicans are putting forth a solution. we welcome your vote. >> we see on tuesday what happens with when the president meetth the republicans to see if any republican stands up about this. thank you so much. >> thanks, guy. >> so good to have you here. >> thanks for having us. >> thank you. listen. do not miss the president's attorney rudy giuliani today on "state of the union" with jake tapper on cnn at 9:00 a.m. eastern. you're also going to hear from democratic congressman meeks and o'rourke. a little boy's curiosity inside a community center may have cost his family $132,000! it is a moment straight out of a movie. a world cup match very few saw coming. coy wire, did you? >> huge upset. no, i was hoping for it, though.
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and i deserve to be the ring bearer. oh, sorry. (vo) switch now. buy the latest iphone and get iphone 8 on us. only on verizon. it was a rumbling, roaring upset in the soccer world and fitting for the nation of iceland. >> the little country that could. stifling one of sports best, lionel messi. coy wire, you didn't see it coming? >> it is dreamy for iceland. alternate and iceland dwarf the capital in alternate is 45 times larger than the population of iceland. so think about that. 30,000 people from iceland made
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the trip and they brought it. that is 10% of the population. listen. with their famous thunder clap echoing across moscow, little did the vikings of iceland know their hero this is guy, hannes halldorsson who used to direct films before making it pro. nobody could have script it any better. facing messi on a penalties kill and incredible commanding and demanding outstretching save! yi iceland's first cup rises to the occasion and stunning argentinean fans. hall dorsson dreamed of this and it paid off. people from iceland are in a frenzy. listen to this! [ screaming ]
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>> they have their umbrellas and they are loving life. some right out of a movie. just ask the goalkeeper and formerilmmaker himself. >> to play for iceland at the first game of the world cup to face the best player in the world at a penalty, it's a big moment and it's a dream come true to say. it helped us get a big point that i hope is going to prove important for us. >> one of the greatest of all time lionel mess implts took 11 shots and missed all of them. iceland shocking the world and game end in a tie 1-1. we will have fun watching them throughout the world cup. iceland, keep bringing it. >> yeah. that is fun to watch. who do they play neck? >> nigeria. the youngest team in the tournament so should be a fun one. >> coy, thanks. >> whoa whoa whoa whoa. happy first father's day! >> yes, thank you so much! >> we have to show, speaking of
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little ones. here we go! >> that is my girl. little baby wren. i wore pink for her today. it is my first father's day christi mentioned and i'm glad i brought a handkerchief here! i can't wait to get home! >> it's a life changer. >> i'm going to church and enjoy the day with her. >> the best production you'll ever be a part of. >> you will have a lot to tell them from this guy. he has very successful awesome kids. >> thanks. >> you're welcome. thank you. >> happy fernandez to you too. i wouldn't forget you. >> i know. next, a kid in kansas is going to need a big father's day present himself to make up for a mistake that could cost his dad a lot of money! migraine with botox®.
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happy father's day. >> the entire incident was caught on surveillance video and now his parents, they may have toay for those damages. here is kshb tom dempsey with the details. >> reporter: sarah goodman remembers the wedding reception at tomahawk ridge community center starting off with plenty of celebration. >> i think there was a few different parties going on, bridal showers and birthday parties. >> reporter: a joyous occasion that in a moment turned into something much different. >> i hear yelling. where is your mother? >> reporter: surveillance video capturing sarah's 5-year-old son hugging a sculpture on display before it topples over on top of him. he struggles for a suddenly, it falls to the ground and rushing to help sarah's soon
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learned the sculpture's price tag. >> maybe this is $800 or something. no, it's $123,000. i'm sorry. we are finished here. >> damage an insurance company said the familyould be on the hook to pay for. >> my children are all well supervised but all people get distracted. >> reporter: the two parents now questioning the safety of the display. >> it's in the main walkway. not a separate room. not plexiglas. not protected, not held down. >> reporter: the city calling the incident an unfortunate situation but saying the artwork should not have been touched. >> there is a societal responsibility that you may not interact with it. you know? if it's not desired for interaction. >> reporter: an spreveexpensive tag leaving the family wondering ahead. >> the snurninsurance company, whether they are taking it to lawyers, we don't know. >> cnn has reached out to the city of overland park, kansas,
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for a statement and have not received a response just yet. again, happy valentine's day! happy valentine's day. look at me. happy father's day to you. >> tnk you. >> martin is one of the best fathers. kids, daughter, his son is such a great guy. his daughter has won just emmys. >> she followed me into this business which i've always been surprised but very proud of her. >> you taught her well. her first job and won all of these emmys. i have to say happy father's day to my dad. there are his two kids on nhis knee and the third one was not born yet. that is knee on his knee. >> happy father's day to everybody. you are important as a father. have you no idea. hi.i just wanted to tell you that chevy won a j.d.power
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dependability award for its midsize car-the chevy malibu. i forgot. chevy also won a j.d. power dependability award for its light-duty truck the chevy silverado. oh, and since the chevy equinox and traverse also won chevy is the only brand to earn the j.d. power dependability award across cars, trucks and suvs-three years in a row. phew. third time's the charm...
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