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tv   New Day Saturday  CNN  August 11, 2018 5:00am-6:00am PDT

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this is cnn breaking news. so glad to have you accompany here, i am christie paul. >> i am victor black. tl white hou the white house is responding to breaking news over night. the president has been briefed and it is monitoring the situation. now, this happened just after 8:00 seattle time. within minutes the military jets were right behind it. it flew for about 40 minutes and crashed. >> authorities say this is not terrorism act. they said he was a 29-year-old male who was suicidal. >> he was what called ground service agent. they can be in charge of directing players on the ground
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but flying the plane is not apart of the job's description. here is a closer look of what happened. >> no one is departing right now. they're working on other issues. >> with those words, all traffic was stop in washington, seattle. after what's being called an unauthorized take off from horizon air owned by the alaska air group. the company's coo says the aircraft was taken by a single horizon employee and no passengers on board. the man was a 29-year-old ground service agent. what happened next is a bizarre display in the sky. the agent was in touch with air traffic controller and performed stunts in the plane. they tried to talk him down to a safe landing. >> congratulations -- let's try
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to land that plane safely and not hurt anybody on the ground. >> i don't know, man sm-- i don want to, i was hoping that was going to be it. >> air national guard jets scrambled. fire pilots flew alongside the aircraft and did whatever it needs to do. in the end, the man flying the stolen plane crashed. >> flaming debris on a near by island. the plane literally at that moment was flying right over our deck and right behind us, we have never seen a plane that low over our deck before. and shortly there after we saw a giant plume of black smoke out in a distance. >> we got more audio where the man talked about what he was trying to do from the cockpit. >> i think i am going to try to
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do a barrel roll. >> he looked up and he saw those fire jets escorting the stolen plane. >> we have two large military bases within about ten miles from where this all happened. it is not uncommon to see fighter craft up in the air but to see him in the manner they were flying and at that location where they were at was a little bit bizarre. i started to tape the aircraft and then out of nowhere, the guy that was flying this just pulled a stick back and put this thing into a complete loop. i thought he's going to stall and hit the water. you know it was just very shocking to see. i kept on taping and i was completely unaware of what it actually happened at the airport. i had no idea that the plane had
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been hijacked or what was going on. the two fighter jets escorted him and they would trail behind him i don't know what they were trying to do at that time. like i said i was unclear of what was going on. he headed down towards where eventually crashed at and pulled the nose backup again and i thought he's going to stall again. he made his way down and i looked again and he was in a nose dive and he went into the ground. i saw a brief flash of flames and big plume of smoke and the sound of explosion. i just had a bad feeling that it was not an exercise or anything. i knew he had crash at that point. >> cnn transportation analyst, and on the phone, renee marsh,
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mary, to you first, the first thing i think on people's mind is how do a ground service agent get behind the plan and is able to take off from an airport. talk to us -- the frightening vulnerabilities of this highlight. >> this person was actually a mechanic, and they are trained and can be permitted and authorize to move the planes to the ground for maintenance. what it was found out that this person was a service worker, ordinarily they do things like hand handle baggage and doing other jobs that don't involve touching the control of the planes. that's a big issue of how the airline security allowed this to happen. >> renee to you on the phone because this was a plane crash, we now know that there will be
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federal authorities headed in and the statement from the white house. the federal authorities are assisting with the ongoing investigation. tell us what the investigation from the federal perspective looks like moving forward. >> i can tell you obviously the ntsb and the faa are going to be backup here. this really is a criminal situation so we do know that local authorities and police are going to take the lead on this. the ntsb and faa will be there to provide any information that they need on the expertise that they can provide as it relates to this aircraft. really, victor, on the face of it when you think of what we are talking about this, someone stole a commercial plane from a major u.s. airport, whether it is ntsb or faa and local police
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they're going to want to figure out is there something that they have not thought before security wise that they need to tighten. how is this able to happen with something they did not think of that they need to put new procedures in place. they won't know that until they have a time line of events. i can tell you at major airports light thilike this, there are cameras everywhere. as we speak right now, they are piece together all of this so they can trace the individual's movement and how he was able to pull it off so they do have a clear understanding of the time line which we don't know right now and they can access and did something slip through the crack or something we did not thought about. >> mary, to you, we have learned
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from mh-370 and the german wings crash that there are something like cameras in cockpit and other types of recorder that can be implemented but the industry rejects those in many circumstances. there is no guarantee of what can be determined as preventive measure after this incident to be implemented even if they know it will stop it again. >> you are right, in congress, the homeland security took this up last year and made recommendations for additional security and background checks and screening of airport workers. there are 900,000 workers at 450 airports. most of them getle less scrutin and screening at the airport. i think congress will look at this once again. the house passed that bill last year and the senate did not.
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that bill did not contain mental health screen. >> mary schiavo and rene marsh, thank you both. >> the white house have been briefed. sarah westwood is live in new jersey right now, she's near the president's golf club where he is today whach, what are thyou ? >> reporter: the white house is finally responding to this incident. the president has been informed and he's monitoring what authorities are doing to figure out how this was allowed to happ happen. the president has been briefed on the incident involving a stolen plane in seattle and is monitoring the situation as information become available. federal authorities are assisting of the ongoing investigation which is led by local authorities. we commend the response efforts
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for their swift action and protection of public safety. this happened very late at local times, we asked the white house when the president was told about this incident, early in the morning or late last night. we'll see the president later this afternoon when he appears for a photo opportunity, perhaps we can hear more from the president on what the administration is doing to keep tabs on this situation in seattle. christie. all right, sarah westwood, thank you so much. >> still to come, it is one year since white nationalists and protesters faced off the streets of charlottesville, virginia. they plan to do it again this time in washington, d.c., just across from the white house. some say the nation has not learned anything about grace and hatred on this anniversary. plus, a new movie about how a black police officer in colorado springs was able to infiltrate the kkk back in the '70s.
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director spike lee takes this story from the past offers a perfect message for today. the first major test of the mueller investigation, the trial of former president trump campaign, paul manafort, we'll get an update on this week's testimonies and the hundreds of thousands manafort spent on sports. owners always seem so happy? because they've chosen the industry leader. subaru forester holds its value better than any other vehicle in its class according to alg. better than cr-v. better than rav4. better than rogue. an adventure that starts with a subaru forester will always leave you smiling. get 0% percent apr financing on the 2018 subaru forester.
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that's the mother of heather heyer. there is a lot of protests today and in virginia and downtown charlottesville. two virginia state troopers who were in a helicopter watching the protest, they were killed at the crash. >> less than an hour the university of virginia are hosting a memorial. clergy members are leading a service for the remembrance and our kaley hartung is with us right now. i understand you are seeing some activities right now. >> reporter: that's right, this is the first visual presence
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that we have seen in downtown charlottesville. it is a secure perimeter of two entry points for anyone who would like to enter the area and no vehicles allowed inside. it is among the lessons learned from last year's incident. i want to bring in two guests here. last year's event changed so many people's lives. i would like your reaction to seeing such a presence of law enforcement here in the city this weekend. it is not what the people of charlottesville asked for, the police did nothing last year to protect citizens and activists and it is a massive over correction from last year and they do not keep us safe, we have seen them protect white supremacists continually and we are the ones that keep us safe,
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not them. >> reporter: the new police chief we should add no violence should be tolerated and this presence does not make you feel safer? >> the only violence permitted is the violence that came from police forces when enacted on protesters. that makes us feel unsafe and anxious. >> reporter: a year ago you two experienced the weekend and its totality, white supremacists were marched in with tiki torches and you were on fourth street later that afternoon. can you tell me what you experienced and the emotion you felt and the everything you witnessed and heard and what you were apart of on fourth street. >> on the 11th we watched how uva laid out the welcome matt for hundreds of nazis to march
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on the ground. we were surrounded by them by tiki torches and they were chanting slurs and racial slurs and that event embolden them to have more violence on saturday. >> reporter: what did you see on saturday? >> on saturday i was right next to sophie, we were complete completely -- ohthat was friday. on saturday, it was chaos, police in out skirts watching and men in full cam mo with assault rifles on their chest. it was like i was on a different planet. i have never seen anything like it. >> after this assembly was declared unlawful, if we can get this picture behind us, can we rotate. when the assembly declared unlawful, protesters vevacuated
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this area and a man drove the vehicle down on fourth street and caroline and sophie were there, what was the results that you found ourself in. the counter protesters were celebrating, we defended charlottesville and drove the wheat supremacists out of our town it looks like and we turned occupy up on fourth street and i was hit by the car that the nazi drove and next thing i remember is coming to the sidewalk and had no idea what had just happened. >> reporter: tell me of the injuries you suffered and how you are doing now? >> i broke both legs and i had two surgeries on my left leg and multiple contusions on my body and i lost half of my blood internally and obviously this past year has opinion extremely challenging to not only recover
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from physical injuries and mental trauma that we experienced over the weekend and continuing to demand justice from the institution that failed us that weekend, uva. >> reporter: what are those demands? >> so the students are demanding that uva issue lifetime no trespass orders on all identified nazis on august 11th that university pay all medical bills, mrs. survivors who still have medical bills they have not. they're not welcome back on the grounds. they have not done that. >> reporter: i want to thank you both for your time this morning and tonight there is an event, the rotunda on the university of virginia campus, you are
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returning a year ago to defend the grounds and support those in the community who need it. that'll beginning at 7:00 tonight. they tell me victor, and christie about a thousand people have rsvp. . >> kaylee hartung, thank you so much. >> a black officer had an idea back in the '70s. we wanted to win the trust of the kkk leaders. how did he do it and why? a new movie by spike lee. paul manafort's long time aid takes the stand. what he said about the man on trial.
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an employee at seattle airport stole a passenger plane and he crashed over night. this is still early in the investigation but this is what we know from authorities. he's a 29-year-old ground service agent who stole the plane around 8:00 p.m. pacific time. he flew the plane about 40 minutes before crashing into the small island. the sheriff department says the man was suicidal. audio between the man and traffic controller, they tried to help him safely plan for
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nearly an hour before he crashed. >> oh man, these guys are roughing me up. i think i may mess it up there. i i would not want to do that. oh, they got heads o ut here. >> no, they don't have any of that stuff. we are trying to find a place for you to land safely. >> let's bring in our aviation analyst and former manager director of ntsb. >> to you, the man sounded excited in discussing of the antiaircraft. when you hear that ground service agent that took off in his plane, is this a single breach do you think or did this man have to jump through a series of loopholes to pull this off? >> he cleared his background
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check. this is a one off event, the person is going through some sort of mental health crisis that he got access to the plane is unfortunate but these aircrafts are serviced over night and they are maintained during the evening hours so they can fly during the day. this is just a tragic one off event. >> we know the ntsb and the faa and fbi have been notified and will be working on this, what is the first thing they'll look at. >> this is an fbi led investigation. the ntsb defers to fbi and any criminal type of investigation. i think the first thing you would do as anyone would do is review your procedures and go through ground procedures to see if security is in place and if there were any gaps in it. you would also frankly review
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your employee assistant program to make sure that employees who are having difficulties have access to this. you know alaska is one of the airlines that consistently ranks high in custom satisfaction and high in employees satisfaction and they're known as a really cutting edge carrier. this really is a one off event but i think everyone is going to take a hard look at it. >> i also want to share, our producer told us during the break that you and i wonder, we should disclose this have done some consulting work for alaska airlines just so everyone's card is on the table here. >> i have. >> i admire the airline greatly. everyone will take a look at procedures and at whether every step was followed and whether there were any gaps.
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those will be closed. i can't think of an event like this happening before in my lifetime. >> you know i wonder and i got mary schiavo perspective on this, i want yours as well. there has been some - to what degree do you think we'll see intensify or increase mental health screenings or check for employees o f these airlines. we know that'll come at great expense. >> there is expense on doing that. and certainly the german wing tragedy some years ago have revamped their mental health screening and mental health
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environment for pilots. it is a challenge, i think if this incident is reviewed, there will be new procedures in place. >> you mention alaska airlines, we understand that this person was employed by horizon air, just to be clear. thank you so much peter goelz and appreciate your perspective as always. >> thank you. the trial of paul manafort will enter its third week on monday. prosecutors are expected to wrap up the case soon. on friday, they focused on the chairman's lavish spending on hundreds of thousands of spending. allegedly paid for an unregistered foreign account. the jury was expected to hear that part of the case right before he started on friday but instead there was this five
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hours delay that pushed everything back. cnn correspondent athena jones tells us what to look forward as this case moves forward. ro >> reporter: this after a week of damaging revelations. many of them coming from rick gates. the government's star weakness from the trial. manafort ple gates is cooperating with the government as he's trying to convict his former boss on 18 counts. this is the first of two trials his former campaign chairman faces in virginia and washington, d.c. the virginia case presenting the first big test for special counsel robert mueller. he is investigating the russian meddling of the 2016.
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before leaving, questions of his lobbying work and the payments he received totaled more than $60 million. the government alleges manafort hid millions and lied about his income and spending big on items like expensive suits and yankees tickets and ostrich jacket. >> he testified he and manafort had 15 foreign accounts that they did not report to the government even though they knew it was illegal. manafort instructed him not to submit the required forms. gates testified that manafort recommended a banker who loan him money for position of the trump administration and he admitted he cheated on his wife. revelations manafort defense
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team hopes to under mimine gate ability. the president has played down his relationship with manafort in recent months. >> manafort works for me for a short time. >> he's watching the trial closer and taking to twitter to express sympathy to manafort. he's calling on jeff sessions to end the mueller probe immediately or calling the white house describing it as not an order but an opinion. athena jones, new york. >> where was all of this coming from and what did he learned and what is he saying it now? he's with us next.
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that's taking options trading from wall st. to main st. hey guys, wanna play some pool? eh, i'm not really a pool guy. what's the hesitation? it's just complicated. step-by-step options trading support from td ameritrade some of the activities that's going on there as they mark one year since the dead lel ly violent of the rally. dozens of security. the university of virginia hosts a renewal with breakfast and service. this evening there will be a student rally on uva campus. >> the kkk is planning an attack.
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>> how do you suppose to make this investigation? >> the white officer to play me when they meet face to face. >> you are from the white race? >> oh hell yeah. >> can do that? >> with the right man we can do anything. >> a clip there of the new film of spike lee. the movie is sads in the early 1970s and based on a true story of an african-american police officer in colorado springs who infiltrated the kkk along with his partner. i want to spruce you to sia wilson, he went under cover as a white supremacist to better understand their hatred. >> theo, it is great to have you. we talked to you last year at this time. i want to ask you last year first of all, what surprised you most of the people that you are in communication with?
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>> what surprised me most is how hatred backfired on haters immediately. the thing that struck me that none of them are happy and the emotional entanglement in white identity causes great suffering for these people in of itself and it comes out as rage and anger and hatred. none of these guys were fulfilled in legislativing thee living their best lives. >> did anybody want to? what kind of conversations were they having? >> based on blame. they are centered around the fact that america is sadly a historical society. what i find is there is a gigantic vacuum, when it comes to the history of color, they
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don't know about it and therefore you lose context in the present moment. history context relies on now. when loose that, you have the vulnerability especially of the age of internet and people falling for new ideas and getting rebranded as something brand new and they don't realize that they are baited on the wrong side of history yet again. >> one year ago we talked about this and we are a year later, do you get a sense that anything have changed? >> what i do get a sense of, this is interesting of the charlottesville rally. the far right imploded on itself. i remember the atmosphere in the country being something they may have a valid political voice. when charlottesville happen, oh, these are the same old crazy people that white supremacy always produce. i think it pitsuts a dent in th momentum and credibility. when heather heyer was killed,
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it shows this violence and ideology was still the same thing. it shows up again and we have the right to be on edge of these rallies. >> there is a student activist at charlottesville high school who said this. i believe it was in "the washington post." there there has not been the work to go back and reckon with white supremacy. before we can move on and heal as a community, we have to reckon with that. >> what conversations need to be had? >> i think the conversation especially needs to be had and why america is the difference between guilt and accountability. there is something in your huge past that is something to be ashamed of like the genocide of native americans and the enslavement of black folks and what happened with the chinese and the white folks.
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what needs to happen is okay, i may not have been the one perpetuated these crimes individually but i inherit the wealth of that. how do we reckon with the past so we don't make these mistakes. let's make brand new mistakes in the future but the sic cyclical what's alarming to me. >> that's what's interesting here another article, another moment of this takes on institutional racism, listen, it exists. the city and the university have not come to term with their history of being built, enriched and sustained by enslaved people and remaining for much of the
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20th century. can you move forward without the acknowledgment? >> you can't move forward without the acknowledgment. we have to keep in mind this has been an openly society. like enslavement and of black folks was legal to 1619 to 1971. okay, so basically if you are generation x, you were born at a time when this was legal. it is not enough time to reverse the damage that was done when this society was openly -- >> there are people that said i didn't live in that time and i don't acknowledge that now so why can we get over it? to that you will say what? >> you can break somebody's legs and you can say i am sorry for it but the time it takes to heal
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that leg is the time that takes to heal. if you don't acknowledge that leg is broken and don't give the proper nutrient, it will never heal. this society has a habit of denial and defensiveness. you don't get to escape from that just because you don't want to see the damage that's been done to the people of color. >> theo. i thank you so much. sorry we run out of time. i want to say i appreciate you being here and sharing. >> that's all right. >> thank you for being here. >> thank you, take good care. we are in charlottesville this morning as the city marks a year since the violent white nationalists rally. dozens of officers are there on the streets. they come as washington prepares for another rally by the same group tomorrow. we'll get the president's perspective and those supporters
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and we'll be joined by coach chairman of new york state, joseph parelli, we'll be right back. f everything a to z. having insurance is something everyone needs, but having usaa- now that's a privilege. the new united explorer card hooks me up. getting more for getting away. traveling lighter. getting settled. rewarded! learn more at theexplorercard.com
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we are seeing something very different, police are moving in and taking up positions and p p preparations for today's event. one of the students we spoke to says this is a massive. >> joseph, good morning to you. >> good morning victor. let's start here of what we are hearing from the president. the president fam famously said
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after last year. the president chose to tweet the protest during the national anthem and have said nothing about these protests coming. why ridicule one protest and not talk about the other? >> it is 8:30 in the morning. i think you will hear something from the white house today. sarah san s sarah sanders denounced white nationalists and the kkk. i won't be surprise later if we hear something. >> let's talk about the impact of the president and his rhetoric during the campaign and his administration have been for these nationalists. listen to the exchange between sara sidner and man named daniel
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burnside. >> rural america spoke up when they elected trump. >> the vast majority of americans are in their 60s and 70s. we'll be in the ground the next 20 years. we have a possibility becoming a minority in our country. >> reporter: it sounds to me that you are afraid of being me. being me is great. >> this is my country. >> reporter: this is also my country. >> you guys did not win the cultural war. >> he went onto talk about the fear of white people becoming a minority of the country. this man with the white power feels embolden by this president. what responsibility does the president have to -- >> the person that you just put on your television show is probably an a-hole but it does
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not have to do to the fact that rural america did speak up and working class did speak up sort of the power they saw and the power that they saw in hillary clinton. i am not sure if we can still be blaming for donald trump for every racist problem in the country. >> i don't think anyone is doing that. >> i think what this man said is people spoke up and elected him. that was their way of speaking up. >> yeah, a lot of people felt that they were not being heard. >> he in turn after charlottesville said there were fine people on the other side that says jews will not replace this. that was a mistake and the president denounced that. on august 17th, he made similar announcement to other people and he went to his hometown rally with maga hats and people
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raising the flag and he said the same thing. >> you said apologies but we don't hear apologies from the president very often. let me go to another element. i want you to listen to what the president said about chain migration. >> under the current broken system, a single immigrant can bring in unlimited numbers of disresista d distant relatives. under our plan, we focus on immediate families by eliminating sponsorships to spouses and minor children. >> melania trump sponsored her parents to come in what is the president calls their chain migration. why is it good for his family and no good for other families. there was a proposal essential democrats and congress rejected. melania trump's parents would
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not qualify for any other type of immigration program or they would not have qualified under the gop immigration with the program that they would are passed. >> joseph borelli, he wanted to limit spouses and children but except when it comes to his wife's parents. >> we'll see you right back here at 10:00 a.m. eastern for cnn news.
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should the media stop broadcasting president trump at every rally and responding to his every tweet because it is just feeding the beast. no, keep it coming. says thomas freedman, he thinks exposing trump's personality will discourage moderate republicans. how does that work in 2016? laura ingram under fire for saying america's going downhill because of

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