tv New Day Sunday CNN July 22, 2018 4:00am-5:00am PDT
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is therethere's a major mil celebrated today. >> the union jack animation, that is so our executive producer who is british! look at prince george. he is 5 today! >> happy birthday. >> he looks a little mischievous. >> just a little bit. the gunman still armed with a handgun took numerous citizens, as well as store employees hostage. >> at all times, our hostage negotiators believed that they
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had established a good rapport with him. >> i'm grateful i was able to find a way out. >> when the wider field of the boat, i could no longer see. i couldn't feel anybody. i couldn't see. i just remember, i got to get out, i got to get out. lord, if i can't make it, no use keeping me here! >> i have president putin, he just said it's not russia. i will say this. i don't see any reason why it would be. >> the great mystery is why the president has not spoken up for our country. >> announcer: this is "new day weekend" with victor blackwell and christi paul. good morning to you. we start this morning with a hostage standoff in los angeles. police say a three-hour standoff ended with one woman dead and a suspect in custody. >> more than 40 people were inside that trader joe's when
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the suspect crashed his car outside and then ran into the store. several of those hostages were able to escape while the suspect was on the phone with police. we want to go to cnn correspondent paul vercammen who is live in los angeles. what are you learning there, paul? >> reporter: you can see behind me in the predawn blackness a very active crime scene. police combing through the suspect's car which crashed into that utility pole. he then ran inside and took around four dozen people hostage. tense moments in los angeles at a trader joe's grocery store in a silver lake neighborhood. the suspect surrendered to authorities after a three-hour standoff that left one woman dead. >> inside the store, a young woman was shot and killed. our officers rescued that woman from inside and tried to render
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aid but, unfortunately, we were unable to revive her. >> reporter: she is identified at 27-year-old melody karoto who worked at the store. police say the incident started as a dispute in south los angeles where the 28-year-old suspect repeatedly shot his grandmother who is in critical condition and injured another woman. he led police through a car chase through hollywood and eventually crashing near the trader joe's, officials saturday. >> it was there was exchange of gunfire. the suspect was wounded in his left arm. and he went inside. >> reporter: some customers immediately ran out of the store as police surrounded the building. over the next three hours, several people walked out with their hands up. some employees climbed out of a storage window on a ladder. >> after getting the attention of a s.w.a.t. officer and was able to indicate that i wanted to go out the ladder. gave me a thumb's up. i was able to get out of there and three coworkers followed me out. >> reporter: police say the suspect was on the phone with lapd hostage negotiators during the standoff.
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he handcuffed himself and then surrendered to authorities. >> he made a series of demand and i won't good into details of what the interchange was. but at all times, our hostage negotiators believed they had established a good rapport with him at all times. >> reporter: on a facebook page that matches the victim melody carota, she seems to be smiling seems to be a die-hard los angeles dodgers baseball fan. she was one rung below the top manager here at trader joe's as describing herself at trader joe's, a mate. >> paul vercammen, thank you for that. the director of national intelligence dan coats apologizing this morning for a public reaction to the news that the president invited russian president vladimir putin in the fall for the second fa face-to-face. remember, coats didn't agree to
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trump meeting privateliy with putin. >> he was caught offguard about the second meeting. this is what happened. >> reporter: vladimir putin is coming to the white house in the fall. >> say that again? ha ha. >> reporter: vladimir putin coming -- >> did i hear you right? >> yeah, yeah. >> okay. >> reporter: yeah. >> that's going to be special. now coats said he does not mean to be disrespectful or criticize the actions of the president. sarah westwood is in new jersey with more details. we know this does not -- the moment we watched did not make president trump happy and now hearing from coats. what else did he say? >> reporter: that's right. national intelligence director dan coats is attempting a bit after cleanup effort this weekend after that reaction to president trump's latest embrace
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of putin and widely interpreted as disagreement with trump and additional evidence of that friction between trump and the intelligence community. coats saying, in a statement, some press coverage has mischaracterized my attentions in responding to breaking news presented to me during a live interview. trump has been quizzing his aides daily on the status of those talks and pressing them to show more signs of progress when it comes to denuclearization. this as american officials are having trouble even making contact with their north korean counterparts. for example, secretary of state mike pompeo traveled all the way to pyongyang earlier this month and was apparently stood up by kim jong-un when the north korean leader reportedly refused to meet with trump's secretary of state. even though president trump has
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been proclaiming that denuclearization talks with north korea a success, it's clear that behind the scenes, there is a bit of a stand-still and it's just the latest evident that president trump's foreign policy agenda from russia to north korea is facing a lot of obstacles. >> still a long way to go. sarah westwood, thank you so much. for the first time ever, the fbi has just publicly released a redacted version of its previously classified application on trump campaign foreign policy adviser carter page. the fbi surveillance of page has been the subject of heated partisan debate and some congressional leaders have questioned the fbi's tactics krg its investigation of the trump campaign as a whole. republicans claim the surveillance is proof that the fbi and the justice department are bias against trump. the president and have been abusing its powers. the 400-plus page document says
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that trump believes clab regula -- collaborating -- joining us is rachel bade and brian stelter. if na week when the president has waffled it seems over whether russia targeted the election and now we are seeing secret documents showing how the government justified their surveillance of his then campaign carter page this morning the president treated the documents prove nothing is true. rachel, is that valid? >> you know, both sides, we have seen this for the past few months. they hold up anything that comes out and says, look, you know this is a victory for us. we see republicans and trump allies on the hill. they have done this over and over again and exactly what the president is doing this morning. obviously, people who are supportive of the investigation will see this totally dimple, right? there is a portion in these documents, i haven't looked through all of them, but that
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basically shows that this whole surveillance of carter page was not just because of christopher seal's doesyyy -- dossier that keeps coming back from. it said specifically there were a number of reasons why they were looking to follow him and they thought he was being recruited by russia so this justified what they in terms of is your ve sfaling him. both sides will say, look. the fbi is either biased or the fbi has a reason to do this and right now, i don't think it's going to change many minds. >> i think it matters that the president is misstating the facts, though, about fisa warrants and he is complaining it was redacting even though his government is doing the redacting. it's trump pretending he is not part of his government. from the past six days,
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something that ha changed in our country and talking about the president and whether he is compromised by russia. the ideas have moved more into the mainstream now and i think he is scrambling trying to figure out how to respond. if you're hammer all you see are nails, that old saying. he is a hammer and every time he has talks about russia he acts like a nail and take every bit of information and claim it's proof of a witch hunt even though his own government disagrees. >> he does seem to be working, though. if you look at the polls from this. >> to some degree. >> as shocking as they are, you know, republicans, some 80% of them were fine with his press conference in russia. >> i think 20% is interesting. 20% is not with him on this for republicans. isn't that notable too? >> i think republicans have been the hawks on russia and it's shocking to me that 80% of them actually were fine with the president's press conference. >> a lot of people apparently weren't fine with what is dan coats' reaction we just saw
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there when he was at the aspen security summit and heard that president putin is coming here a second time. he is now apologizing this morning, essentially, for his reactions saying some press coverage has mischaracterized my intentions presented to me during a live interview. my awkwardly response was not criticizing the president. what some say was awkward the fact he wasn't told about it before that. so he learned about it on stage which makes me wonder, you know, rachel, how was he supposed to react? >> i think his reaction was really telling, clearly. he doesn't think this is a good idea. hi two thoughts when i saw this statement. the first one being did somebody get to him from the white house and say you need to walk back your comments? and that is important because on thursday in that same interview where he criticized the president's approach on russia, he said if i can't speak the
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trouj, th truth then i'm not staying around and a a lot of question whether he is staying head of intelligence for the trump administration. second thing i pow out it's sort of a nonapology/apology. he said, specifically, i didn't mean to criticize and i meant no disrespect and sort of remind he me when somebody says something very blatant to you and then it hurts your feelings and you say that hurts my feelings. he says, i'm sorry, i didn't mean to hurt your feelings but didn't apologize for his comments where he was bold when he said the president shouldn't sit one-on-one with president putin. >> also this morning, we need to point out article in "the washington post" that talks about how diplomats reporting in north korea, north koreans have cancelled follow-up meetings with the u.s. since president trump met with kim jong-un. they have demanded more money and failing to maintain basic communications. because of that, "the washington post" reporting the lack of
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immediate progress though predicated by analysts has frustrated the president who is fumed at his aides in private as he publicly hails the success of t negotiations. may that affect the progress in north korea? kim jong-un surely has to be watching all of this. >> absolutely. we know the media coverage is well considered by world leaders, even by these dictators, in this case, kim jong-un. thif the limits to the art of the deal. right? the art of the deal is something president trump has been following for decades but it applied a lot more effectively to real estate negotiations than in a negotiation like this with north korea. you know? when you can be out there in public puffing yourself up saying things with going well and claiming your building is taller than it really is might work well in manhattan and here, but it doesn't necessarily work really well when you're negotiating with north korea.
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and i think that tension in "the washington post" is describing is something we have to keep watching for. the president saying in public things are going really well but in private fuming because he is not making progress. at the end of the day we might see more than a photo op out of this team to warm up to north korea. >> which brings me to something you wanted to talk about, brian, which was what some people arguably was president trump's worst week this past week. as we look ahead. walk us through what happened. >> i know we have heard that sentence before but it's being said again because of these headlines from monday in helsinki to friday where we learned about those cohen tapes. i think you could make the case this has been a new low, a new worst week for president trump and, thus, i think we have to review his comments and tweets in that context. when he is attacking the looush probe saying it's a scam and trying to reignite the nfl an ds
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th anthem subject. what is important is how we have keeping the focus on helsinki. >> what happens moving forward as we start a new week today? >> republicans are grappling with this on the hill. they feel like the president has totally screwed up when it comes to relationships with russia and the press conference and they want to push back on him but, again, they are looking at these polls and they are looking at the base. the base is with the president and they are afraid to push back on him. right now from the hill, which is where i do a lot of my coverage, i'm just watching this really awkward dance and sort of -- my prediction is that, yes, there is a lot of verbal pushback right now of the president but a lot of times, a weeks later, it fades away and republicans fall right in line with the president again. >> we will see. rachel brian stelter,
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thank you. jake tapper has an exclusive interview with carter page here on cnn at 9:00 a.m. on "state of the union." brian will be up later today as well. new details on a phone call this weekend between the top diplomats from the u.s. and russia, but not one of the details is coming from the white house. next, hear what russia says happened on the call. backlash over the president's putin summit reaches all the way to a popular gop retirement communities and hear how some say it's affecting their support for the president. a mother is now talking about her struggle to keep her family alive on the cap-sized boat in missouri. a live report and a key piece of evidence taken from that vessel.
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and we saw that most clearly in this recent meeting with putin. we don't know what was said in the room where it was just the two of them. >> that was hillary clinton criticizing president trump's summit last week with russian leader vladimir putin where he publicly questioned u.s. intel that called out russia for meddling in the 2016 election. clinton was speaking at ozzie fest. she said that not being sure of where the president stands on putin is deeply disturbing and called on voters to express that displeasure in november. a phone call between the secretary of state mike pompeo and russian counterpart sergei lavrov called the arrest of maria booin unacceptable. >> lavrov called the charges
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fibula r fabricated. all of the details on the call is coming from the russia government. we are not hearing about the details from the white house itself. live with us now from moscow, cnn correspondent matthew chance. russia is even dictating this conversation and we are not not getting any response from the white house. >> reporter: it's an unusual position to be in as moscow based reporter. normally, the information flow comes in the other direction. the white house is usually quite open. the u.s. officials usually quite open on what fs discussed. and the russians usually quite guarded putting out their version of events. we are seeing the complete reverse now and it's confusing. the fact there was a phone call last night local time between the u.s. secretary of state mike
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pompeo and lavrov. they discussed the whole range of bilateral issues. the foreign minister in his statement said they also talked about maria booin who is a 29-year-old activist accused and arrested in the u.s. for being undeclared foreign agent of the russian foreign agency. word she worked inside the national rifle association to influence u.s. policy towards russia in ab illegn illegal way. the russians say this was politically motivated and fabricated. it illustrates something quite interesting. even though the two presidents, president putin of russia and president trump of the u.s., seem to have a burgeoning friendship and seem to want to get on, more than anything else.
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the other infrastructure in the united states, the they are enforcing u.s. law. >> mau chance, appreciate the update. republicans and president trump's top intelligence officers are talking about his summit with putin. senator marco rubio is going to be with jake tapper to discuss on "state of the union" at 9:00 a.m. eastern on cnn. iran president rouhani is not holding back this morning with a warning to president trump as he spoke to diplomats in tehran. this is the quote. there has been tensions with iran for sometime. u.s. and iranian tensions are not new but heightened recently
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since president trump pulled the u.s. out of the iran nuclear deal. it has some people unnerved inside the largest retirement community in the u.s. cnn sits down with some of these folks and they give us very candidly their take on what they think trump's relationship is with putin. plus, we are hearing from a mother who lost nine family members when that duck boat capsized in missouri. coming up, who she credits for saving her life. when we switched our auto and home insurance. with liberty, we could afford a real babysitter instead of your brother. hey! oh, that's my robe. is it? when you switch to liberty mutual, you could save $782 on auto and home insurance. and still get great coverage for you and your family. call for a free quote today. you could save $782. liberty mutual insurance. liberty. liberty. liberty. liberty. ♪
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29 minutes past the hour on this sunday morning. i'm christi paul. >> i'm victor blackwell. the ntsb has recovered a camera on that sinking duck boat in branson, missouri. >> it is an important piece of evidence that will help investigators determine what went wrong. caylee hartong joins us live. let's start with the mother. a wife who lost her husband and her children and several other family members. >> reporter: tia coleman says her home has always been filled with little feet and laughter but won't be the case when she leaves this hospital and returns home to indianapolis. 11 members of the coleman family traveled here to branson,
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missouri, for a family vacation. this being a popular tourist destination in the ozarks but only tia and her nephew will return. nine members of her family, including her husband and her three children, perished in this duck boat accident. her emotion was raw as she shared her struggle with us yesterday. >> a riverboat and they were jumping in and saving people and throwing rafts out to everybody but i couldn't reach it and get there in time. somehow i managed to get to the boat. beautiful people, angels, i don't know who they were. they pulled me out! when they pulled me out from the boat, i didn't see any of my family. but i believe i survived by god and by a good samaritan. going home, i know is already
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going to be completely -- completely difficult. i don't know how i'm going to do it. since i've had a home, it's always been filled. it's always been filled with little feet and laughter. and my husband, i don't know how i'm going to do it! >> reporter: three generations of the coleman family impacted. tia says passengers on the duck boat were warned there was a storm coming before that boat went into the water but she said it wasn't even cloudy at that time. we have learned the duck boat altered its route because of that storm. the ntsb telling us that ride the ducks brand is used as a subscription based weather system and the question is how did they use that and how was the communication shared the crew members responsible for
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putting that boat on the water? the ntsb has praised the cooperation of the owners of the boat company rippley entertainment but missouri's attorney general is pleading for that same cooperation in the state's criminal investigation. >> still a lot of questions to be answered. you just got to feel for that mother who lost three children and her husband. caylee hartung, thank you so much. breaking news we want to tell you about in the conflict with syria. israeli has evacuated members of the white helmet rescue group and their families. they have gotten them to jordan or are getting them to jordan right now. the white helmets are the folks you see there running and digging through the rubble to save civilians who are caught in the syrian war. a group of 800 civilian groups and been vatican now.
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israeli completed it with the u.s. and other countries. the white helmets there doing important work. a new york pizza dlaveliver man arrested by i.c.e. why they say his arrest shouldn't have happened in the first place. will trump's latest russia setback cost him key votes? uhp. i didn't believe it. again. ♪ ooh, baby, do you know what that's worth? ♪ i want to believe it. [ claps hands ] ♪ ooh i'm not hearing the confidence. okay, hold the name your price tool. power of options based on your budget! and! ♪ we'll make heaven a place on earth ♪ yeah! oh, my angels! ♪ ooh, heaven is a place on earth ♪ [ sobs quietly ]
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i'm beating this. my main focus was to find a team of doctors. it's not just picking a surgeon, it's picking the care team and feeling secure in where you are. visit cancercenter.com/breast a hotel can make or break a trip. and at expedia, we don't think you should be rushed into booking one. that's why we created expedia's add-on advantage. now after booking your flight, you unlock discounts on select hotels right until the day you leave. ♪ add-on advantage. discounted hotel rates when you add on to your trip. only when you book with expedia. 38 minutes after the hour this morning. you might remember the new york pizza delivery monday who is facing deportation after arrested by i.c.e. at a brooklyn
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army base. he is asking this week to stay in the united states and he will face a federal judge on tuesday. he wants to be released and given time to fix his immigration status. he is a married father of two. he is married to a u.s. citizen and an undocumented immigrant from ecuador. he was arrested at the army base while delivering a pizza to that base but this time a problem with his i.d. even though he had delivered pizza there before. mr. copeland, thank you for joining us. good morning. >> good morning. >> reporter: let's start here. on tuesday, you're expecting what? >> well, we are expecting to present our arguments about why mr. va sen he should be allowed to progress with his status. >> one of the high profile of the case is new york governor
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andrew cuomo. he released an open letter saying the following. do you believe that the detention of your client is illegal? >> yes, we do believe it's illegal. there is a number of reasons why it's illegal. it doesn't serve any public safety benefits. he doesn't present any sort of danger or flight risk, so we believe there is no support to keep him detained as this process runs its course. >> for people who are not familiar with this case, he went to this army base where he had been before to drop off -- deliver a pizza an an i.d. problem sew went through, what, an automatic background check? >> so he delivered food to this base, i think, on three prior occasions, and he had shown an i.d. he showed an i.d. again on this
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occasion. there is conflicting reports about exactly what happened. he doesn't indicate that he permitted the base to do a background check but the base claims that he did. >> let's listen to president trump. this is then president-elect trump talking about as it relates to people who are undocumented in the country and the priority in which he ranks them in deportations. let's watch. >> what about the pledge to deport millions and millions of undocumented immigrants? >> what we are going to do is get the people that have criminal records, gang members and drug dealers, a lot of these people and probably could be 3 million and we are getting them out of our country or incarcerate. we are getting them out of your country that are here illegally. after the border is secured and everything is normalized we will
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make a determination on the people, they are terrific people but make a determination. before we make that determination, it's very important we want to secure our border. >> president talking there about prioritizing criminal, people who are criminals who are in the country illegally. how does that reconcile with your client's case? >> well, it doesn't reconcile with our client's case and it doesn't reconcile with the administration's approach to enforcing, you know, immigration priorities in terms of detention and deportation, you know, from the very onset of this administration, and their revision of the enforcement priority. so it doesn't square with our client's case. he has no criminal history. it's tearing apart a family with, you know, two u.s. citizen children. >> he was in the process, i understand from earlier reporting, of getting a green card? >> that is correct. there is a process that the
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government has held out to people exactly in mr. vivacensio situations where a wife who is a u.s. citizen for them to normalize their immigration status. he was pursuing the lawful process in terms of, you know, becoming a lawful permanent resident. >> he has been in custody since june 1st. what is your degree of confidence he will be, as you're requesting, be released so he can continue this process? >> well, we are very hopeful. the judge has been presented with our arguments, which we think are meritorious and hope the judge will agree and release my client immediately. >> thank you. >> thank you. s press's administration may be looking forward to this week as opposed to looking back since we started monday on a pretty tough note for the president and it just kept building from there. with that said, a lot of people were watching, including a lot
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of voters, in one particular of the largest republican retirement communities in the u.s. they have been watching. they have a lot to say and you're going to hear from them next. >> he is an embarrassment to me. and as a republican, i still feel that, you know, i just wish he would just learn to say things properly. >> i have faith in him. mitzi: psoriatic arthritis tries to get in my way? watch me. ( ♪ ) mike: i've tried lots of things for my joint pain. now? watch me. ( ♪ ) joni: think i'd give up showing these guys how it's done? please. real people with active psoriatic arthritis are changing the way they fight it. they're moving forward with cosentyx. it's a different kind of targeted biologic. it's proven to help people find less joint pain and clearer skin. don't use if you are allergic to cosentyx. before starting cosentyx you should be checked for tuberculosis.
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the past week has not been a smooth one for president trump. backlash over a summit with russian president vladimir putin is coming not only from democrats but also from republicans. cnn senate correspondent gary tuchman visited perhaps the largest retirement community in the country where republican voters were eager to speak out. >> reporter: the village is
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florida is a popular place for republicans to retire. making it easy to find people who voted for donald trump for president. but for some trump voters, things went south this week. especially following president trump's presentation as he stood next to russian president vladimir putin. >> he is an embarrassment to me. and as a republican, i still feel that, you know, i just wish he would just learn to say things properly and maybe he wouldn't get himself into so much trouble. >> reporter: on this day, hundreds of republicans in the villages showed up at a forum attended by florida candidates for governor which was a good place to ask trump said there's blame for the united states as well as russia, the blame on this country, does this trouble you? >> it's donald trump. you know, you sort of expect that. >> but does that trouble you? do you think the united states should be blamed -- >> no, i don't think the united states should be blamed. >> reporter: should donald trump
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not have said that about his country? >> he says a lot of stuff he should not say. >> there are trump voters like dick hoffman. >> i love the fact he just plays the press like a strat var yus. >> are you a little uncomfortable with how comfortable he was with vladimir putin? >> didn't bother me a bit. >> reporter: didn't think it was defer ent shal -- >> to the meeting before that. >> no one does, except for donald trump and vladimir putin xbr okay, i have faith in him. >> reporter: what donald trump said was regarding russian meddling. i will tell you president putin was extremely strong and powerful in his denial today. what does that mean to you, strong and powerful? what did he say that was so powerful that convinced donald trump? >> powerful in the way he said it. >> reporter: does it sound creepy to talk about the russian leader, strong and powerful. >> the way you're questioning with that, you're questioning me in a very strong and powerful
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way. i don't see that as a big deal. >> reporter: many of the republicans here having alive for 13 presidents and seen a lot. and some while continuing to support the president and their party, are a bit wistfull. >> you were born when fdr was pld. you've seen fdr and eisenhower and kennedy and johnson and nixon up until donald trump today. would you be more comfortable with ronald reagan or dwight eisenhower for president today? >> if ronald reagan would have run again, yeah. >> reporter: few points from republicans in america's larngest retirement community. the villages, florida. >> tonight the cnn original series, the 2000s explores president bush's desire. here's a clip for you. >> human nature being what it is, there are excesses and abuses. >> to free you, in order to do
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that we'll torture you. what democracy here is talking about -- >> we handed islamists a recruiting video. you couldn't have had a better way of encourage gs young iraqiiiraqis to join the jihad against the united states. >> the cnn original series, the 2000s airs tonight at 9:00 p.m. eastern here on cnn. >> this is not happened in a long time. it's sunday at a major and tiger woods has a legitimate shot at winning. alex thomas is in scotland. al alex? welcome to a gloriously sunny and windy day on scotland's east coast. tiger says he's here to win it, not just make up the numbers but being young to chase a very young american superstar who's close shave came off the course. i'll explain more in a moment.
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maybe britain's open championship but the american flag is all over the lead are board. >> live from the golf course in scotland for this final round. hey, alex. >> hey, victor, there are 20 players within four shots of the overnight lead. a three-way tie between a trio of americans. that's never happened before in 158 years of open championship golf history but two names stand out. tiger woods and jordan spieth. we never thought we would see tiger in this position again challenging for a major title a deck add after the last time he had one at the u.s. open. i can tell you the rules coming off the course yesterday were like something from a soccer crowd. absolutely incredible stuff. the fans we spoke to loved it and one of the players he's chasing down is young jordan spieth who set the records tiger woods did in his young days and
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spieth is looking impressive. he always is when he's at the front of the field. so flawless in the third round, only close shave came away from the course at the local hair dresser. take a listen. >> went a little high and tight. it was not a little bit -- was a little bit -- it was intended to be what i normally get. instead he went a little shorter. very british hair cut, little shaved on the sides, longer on top but it is what it is -- summertime it works out. >> may not be happy with his hair style but he's certainly happy with the way he's playing golf and very hard to beat later on as conditions get windier here and after five weeks covering the world cup in russia, i might try to find that myself. >> not a bad cut. >> you look great, alex, all is well. have fun today. thank you. >> so listen, if you've got a
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spare half million dollars, because who doesn't, why not, of course. >> saving up for this. don't know what to do with it, a british shop is selling a rocket fueled jet suit for $433,000 and that guy, the creator testing it on the streets of london. can you imagine if you were just walking down the streets of london and saw that? >> that would be so good for traffic. that's all i can think about. you know what, forget this car, i'm putting on my jet suit. >> well, that's true. >> that is true. but i would think it's a movie if i saw it -- >> that's true. >> and if you see yourself as iron man, wait a moment. this version has a top speed of this -- 32 miles an hour. and you can only fly for about nine minutes. it's a start though. it's a start. >> i just don't know if you want to hurt your tush if that fire starts shooting out of those that's where it's headed. >> yes. >> see the jet pack and how it's maneuvered on you. >> got to protect the tush.
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>> that's right. >> we hope you make good memories. >> inside politics with john king starts right now. >> the president and the playmate. >> were you in love with him. >> yeah. >> do you think he was in love with you? >> he was, yeah. >> talking about buying her silence and first helsinki and now the white house. the president offers vladimir putin another summit gift. >> what is putin blackmailing president trump with? putin appears to be president trump's puppeteer xbl no place like -- kansas? a road test for the democratic resistance. >> this is the defining moment, not just for the state of
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