tv New Day Sunday CNN August 12, 2018 4:00am-5:00am PDT
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30? >> i'm on my way to mason city and sioux city and then council bluffs and then out and around. >> how many people are going canvassing today? it's a little brisk outside. it will be good for you. walk quick. talk fast. >> it's time that we moved from sound bites to sound solutions. >> we need to continue to press. keep the energy up. there is a huge momentum. >> iowa, you can make the difference. >> tomorrow night, the future of the free world is riding on your shoulders. don't feel any pressure. >> check out the new episode of "the 2000s" tonight at 9:00 p.m. eastern on cnn. the 29-year-old horizon
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airline employee has been identified as richard russell. >> i don't know how he achieved the experience. >> it's going to disappoint them to hear i did this. i would like to apologize to each and every one of them. >> i was just shocked to see someone so nice, so helpful, and caring. >> >> announcer: this is "new day weekend" with victor blackwell and christi paul. good sunday morning. how and why did he do it? cnn speaks exclusively a former coworker. a man crashed an empty passenger plane. white supremacists in charlottesville and counterprotesters heading to the capital. >> the president faces accusations of hypocrisy after his wife's parents use a visa that he has opposed. we speak with the sheriff of the compound in new mexico where people were living in squalor
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conditions there and a remains of a small child. nasa will travel closer to the sun closer than any spacecraft before it. your "new day" start right now. ♪ so glad to have you with us. 7:02. it was hard to listen to the man who was flying that stolen passenger plane near seattle yesterday as he was talking to the tower and apologizing to the people who loved him. >> yes, that was richard russell. now those who loved him say that they are shocked after russell was identified as the airline employee who took off from the seattle airport in that empty plane and then crashed it an hour later. >> this is a complete shock to us. we are devastated by these events and jesus is truly the only one holding this family together right now. as the voice recordings show, his attempt was not to harm
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anyone. he was right in saying that there are so many people who have loved him. >> we are learning more about his training on the ground as well. officials say he was authorized to tow planes to their gates but they do not believe he had a pilot's license. >> it is still early in the criminal investigation. officials are working to recover the plane's data recordings and russell's remains. airport security experts are pointing out there have been several flaws identified in the system by this incident. cnn correspondent dan simon is live with an exclusive interview with one of russell's former coworkers. dan, good morning to you. >> reporter: good morning, victor and christi. we are beginning to get a clearer picture of what richard russell was like as a friend, as a coworker, as an employee. i spoke to jeremy kaelin who worked closely alongside russell for eight solid months. they worked the p.m. shift together. he says this is somebody who had a lot of integrity, somebody who worked really hard, and somebody
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who also had a great sense of humor. he is also not surprised that russell was able to learn some basic aspects of aviation, given certain aspects of his job. take a look. when you learned it was your friend and corporaler coworker, what did you think? >> he was super funny and always go out and help others to his flights that he wasn't assigned to help out with and when he was working with you on your flight, he will world as hard as he could. >> you saw the home video of him doing those maneuvers. >> yes. >> reporter: he seemed like, to a certain degree, he knew what he was doing as a pilot or behind the controls. >> yeah. well, you can learn how to fly with flight simulators if you buy them. you can literally run them on
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your pc, mac, whatever. also part of his description on tow team was to operate some of the systems he was trained to do by horizon air which is part of the tow team. so, essentially, he took that knowledge and built off of it. >> reporter: kaelin who is studying to be a pilot says there is so much information out there, including youtube videos, that might teach you how to start an airplane and to do basic maneuvers so he is not surprised somebody who had access to airplanes like russell was able to do what he did. i can tell you this is all being investigated by the fbi. they will be talking to friends and family and maybe to coworkers like kaelin himself. part of this investigation is also centered about ten minutes away from here by ferry where dozens of investigators have been sifting through the degree field. back to you. >> dan simon, so many questions still. thanks so much. cnn aviation analyst feed
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gould is wi -- peter gould is with us. when we talk about richard russell, i want to ask you about mary schiavo said last hour. something stood out to her in specific in all of this. when richard russell was talking to the tower, he asked if they could help him with the pressurization of the plane because he was feeling light-headed. she said what stood out he was only at about 14,000 feet. because of that, that is too low in elevation that you would normally become light-headed and she suspects that perhaps there might be something physical going on with him. does that stand out to you as well? >> well, i heard that comment. you start to feel the effects of hypoxia above 10,000, 12,000 feet. i wasn't clear when that comment was made. if he had just completed a
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barrel roll or his flip, those two, you know, maneuvers that he had completed, that also could have contributed to his light-headedness. you know, these are very sophisticated and stressful maneuvers and it's very common for inexperienced pilots, and experienced pilots, to feel the effects of them. so i'm not quite sure. >> okay. i wanted to ask you as well about, you know, the tower and what was happening in those moments, because we have learned that they knew that this was an unauthorized departure, there were no routine procedures, the ramp, the ground, the takeoff clearance, none of that had been given. so when you've got a guy in a plane sitting there saying i, "m going," what other choice does the talkower have? the tower will review their procedures, as well as the ground operations, to see
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whether there was something more that could be done and i'm sure they are going to find something. but if somebody is in a plane and the tower picks up that they are moving for a takeoff, you know, you only have a very few number of seconds to try to prevent it, and there are not any reasonable steps you can take, other than trying to immediately clear the runway or clear the taxiway where the individual is going to protect other people. it's a very vexing situation. >> peter goelz, thank you for your thoughts on this today. we appreciate you. >> thank you. a state of emergency in charlottesville, virginia, exactly one year after the deadly and violent protests hit that small town. >> yesterday, hundreds of demonstrators marched through the streets of that city. police came prepared to the worst about you protests were mostly peaceful. there will be same show of force today. white supremacist holding a unite the rally in
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charlottesville but a second rally planned at lafayette square near the white house in pennsylvan pennsylvania and sara sidner is there. >> reporter: the conversations revolve around race and the racial divide here in this country. we have talked to many different people, including a member of the ku klux klan. he was in charlottesville saying that he was representing a militia at the time. he's a man that shot a gun towards a black protester and he has pled no contest in that case. but something remarkable happened between him and a black r&b musician who is standing up for him trying to change hearts and minds. >> i shot a gun! >> reporter: richard preston admitting what he did during the deadly white nationalist unite the rally last year in charlottesville, virginia.
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that is preston yelling the "n" word, aiming and firing in the direction of a black counterprotester wielding a blow torch. preston spoke to cnn for the first time since he pleaded no contest in the case against him. are you sorry for shooting a gun? >> no. i protected people on the steps is all i'm doing. >> reporter: you did say the "n" word before you fired that gun. why? >> if you're standing in a group of a thousand black folks. >> reporter: there wasn't a thousand black folks around you! >> okay. i can't tell you how much. a large group of black people. how do you get one man's attention in a crowd full of black people? >> reporter: you say, you with the torch! >> he didn't care! >> reporter: he said he went to protect a statue as a member of the militia but he also wears another hat, that of an imperial wizard of a ku klux klan chapter and for years he is trying to
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brand the kkk as peaceful do gooders. >> reporter: do you hate black people? >> no. i have friends who are black. >> reporter: you are imperial wizard of a kkk group. >> some klans did but not all klans did. i have never terrorized a black person in my life. >> reporter: why not call it something different? why the ku klux klan? >> i want to see the klan be what it once was. >> reporter: the second rising of the klan when thousands marched through washington in 1925. >> at that time that march was about the fact our country was allowing immigrants to come here, change their names with no documentation, and if your name was schwartzkoffer you come here and call yourself schwartz and nobody cares he says his klan is different. >> not about what color you are.
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it's about a red, white and blue. >> reporter: preston is still awaiting sentencing in charlottesville. while he waits, something remarkable has happened because of this man. r&b musician daryl davis has spent decades engaging with klan members and challenging their beliefs and he and preston have talked for years by phone and suddenly davis was standing up for preston in judge. what did you say to the judge? >> i testified on his part and paid part of his bail money. >> reporter: you paid part of his bail money? >> i did. >> reporter: is he taking for you a fool using you? >> no, not at all. not at all. >> reporter: how do you know? >> because he and i were already friends. i said, i am willing to take mr. preston and he has agreed to good down do this museum with me and take a tour of it and learn something. >> reporter: he is referring to the national museum of african-american history. >> seeing what is he going
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seeing there is going to plant a seed. the seed may not blossom the next day but the truth will come out. the truth can never be squashed. >> reporter: the two man bonding over history and returning to davis' home to find another shared passion. ♪ >> reporter: his track record speaks volumes. davis says 200 of the klansmen has he befriended over the years have left the group. more than 40 of them with a simple gesture, relinquishing their klan robes to him. >> do you think you will give your robe up? >> no. i'll be buried in it. >> reporter: but then this happened. richard preston, who had never been married, had daryl davis at his klan wedding. >> as you stand in the presence of god. >> reporter: this time, it was davis giving something away. the bride. >> me and his friendship is something special. >> she wanted me to be a part of this wedding. that's beautiful. that's a seed planted.
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>> reporter: as you might imagine, this store has evoked anger and hope. some people very upset with daryl davis feeling like he is sympathizing with this man who clearly holds racist ideals but daryl says, look, he has a proven track record. he has done this so many times and he has made a difference. he asks other who criticize him, what have you done? as far as what is going to happen here in d.c., here in lafayette park, we are expecting both sides that they will not come together if police have anything to do with it, they are keeping them separated. one side, of course, unite the white rally and nationalist groups coming out which includes david duke as one of the organizer answer mr. jacob kessler and expect another side to show up in much larger numbers and those who oppose this. we are expecting up to a thousand people what the permit said who are protesting against
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them and all of this is happening right outside the white house. >> sara, thank you. president trump's response in the wake of last year's violent protesters and ahead of this year's planned rallies have been controversial, let's say that. joining me is cnn contributor and "the washington post" reporter wesley lowery. we call the president's tweets but these are official statements from the president of the united states. the only one thus far on charlottesville and here is what he said yesterday. there is the entirety of what we are hearing from the president with regard to charlottesville. how did you receive that? >> it's worth giving the president at least the credit of saying this is the most full-throat condemnation of the white supremacist violation in charlottesville last year and
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this was his statement in the moments and days after heather heyer was murdered amidst that vils maybe the response from him would have been different. we heard from how the president responded to this incident. the attempting to blame the anti-racist protesters and demonstrators on equal footing as the kkk and nazi members are gathered in charlottesville. beyond that, some of the criticisms we have seen of the president amount to a question of, well, you can't, in a tweet, condemn all types of racism, then pursue policies that many people think are racially -- divisive. what we know about this president since he was even a president was that he took advantage of the racial divisions in our politics, that he stoked a white fear and a white grievance among his base, took advantage of dog whistle rhetoric. so, again, it is important for
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the president of the united states to issue statements like this. i do believe that. that said, this particular president, it's hard to believe those words are particularly genuine when, like i said, there is a very good faith argument that many of his policies and actions fly in the face of those words. >> let's talk about the message that came out just a few minutes after that that the president followed up by saying i'm proud to have fought to and secured the lowest african-american and hispanics unemployment rates in history and now pushing for prison reform for people who paid their debt to society a secretary chaned a second chance and i will never stop fighting for all americans. where else in the administration does this commitment come to fruition? do we see it in the department of education, in housing and urban development? is there any evidence that this extends beyond the president's discussion of unemployment numbers and prison reform?
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>> no, not particularly. in fact, what we have seen across most federal agencies is a massive walk-back in terms of both the investigation and prosecution of civil rights cases, whether that be the department of labor or the department of education, much less, the department of justice. we have seen aggressive steps as it relates to things like voting rights, administration that has taken the steps that can to potentially make things more difficult for black and brown voters to have their voices heard. we have seen other things that are maybe not so explicitly in racialized and civil rights terms but things that lead an average viewer or reader to believe that this president perhaps doesn't care. we have seen tens of hundreds of thousands of people in puerto rico received what most people agree was a pretty inadequate response to a terrible, you know, act of god that left their homes decimated and their lives at risk. so what we see is time and time again, policies and behaviors and postures from this presidency and from this white house that most people of color
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believe have been negligent, if not aggressively discriminatory towards them. the president does very often like to cite unemployment numbers with african-americans. and it is true that the president is currently overseeing an economy much better than it has been but what we know is the economy works in cycles. so i think when the president says these things, it provides an out for members of his base, folks who want to say, hey, look. he can't be a racist because black unemployment is doing well. they say he can't be a racist because he is friends with o omarosa. what people know or judge a public figure is not about these types of, you know, token arguments but, rather, it's about how do you though slyour action how you care with black and brown record and i think this president has a track record that speaks for himself. >> he has several more hours as
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the rallies start to see if there is another statement and several more years to see if there is some legislative things. wesley lowrie, thank you. >> thank you. >> ohpresident trump has said my times he wants to end what he calls chain migration. he says too many people are coming here and then bringing family members to join them. what about members of his family? the sheriff who handled the case of a missing boy at a horrific compound answers to critics who say he should have done something sooner.
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>> the same unite the right group that marched in charlottesville last year. >> cnn white house reporter sarah westwood is live for us. has the president said anything about what is expected to happen today? >> reporter: so far we haven't heard so much from the president on this topic beyond a tweet he put out yesterday condemning raci racism. the president is here in new jersey to wrap up the full day of his working vacation as the white nationalists gather outside of the white house in washington. he has no public events on his schedule today so we may not hear anything from him other than what he puts on his twitter feed. even though president trump tweeted yesterday marking the one-year anniversary of charlottesville, so far he hasn't said anything about the events set to take place today. one thing he has spoken about is attorney general jeff sessions. sessions refusal to investigate the origins of the russia investigation. trump accused sessions of being a missing in action when it comes to an investigation of how the obama doj opened the russia
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probe even though sessions has recused himself from anything related to russia. now as he has been here in new jersey, trump a has tweete 14 times about the russia investigation so clearly it's something on his mind. he has escalated his calls for the justice department to hand over documents from that ongoing investigation. of course, this is all taking place against the backdrop of the trial of his former campaign manager paul manafort, something that, obviously, continues to frustrate the president. >> sarah westwood, thank you so much. brian stelter is cnn senior media correspondent and host of "reliable sources" is with me now. i know we will talk about omarosa but i want to talk quickly about the fact that the event happening today and trying to cover what is happening in a balanced way. you wrote in a piece, i thought it was really well said.
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how should newsrooms approach these stories? al tompkins of the pointer institute said his main notion, quote, is that no problem, including race i-and hate gets smaller by ignoring it. it's a profound thought. it still doesn't help us know how to balance, yes? >> i think a real challenge for these organizations. it's actually, in some ways, similar to the challenge of covering terror groups. you think about how do you cover isis? do you shine a light on the horror or do you try to deny a group oxygen? there is a similarity in some ways between that problem, that challenge and the problem of an extremist here at home or in the united states who has hateful thoughts and part of a hate group by giving them attention, you're, in some ways, helping recruit or at least that is the risk. so like i said in that piece for cnn.com, unchallenging unedited interview, a live interview is probably not the right answer. i love what sara sidner did in
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her piece a few minutes showing a story with a people with noxious thoughts and a person coming into their life and trying to make a change. tompkins said for the coverage of wrongdoing and racist and white supremacist, let's make sure we shine the light on the people who are trying to make a change in these counterprotesters today. as sara said, we will see a much bigger presence of counterprotesters than we will the white supremacists in washington later today. >> i have to ask you about the back and forth between omarhoos and president trump is getting heated. >> a book coming out on tuesday and hear a lot about this book in the next few days. the title is "unhinged." they is breaking with president trump in a very public way. really betraying him. i think it mountains for a couple of reasons. one, this is the first real white house tell-all.
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every white house has these. former staffer who breaks from the pack and comes out and says what she says is the truth about what really happened. number two, she is a reality tv star. we know her as the villain, as the liar, the back-stabber from "the apprentice." "but trump decided to higher and bring her in. she made $170,000 a year and pretty good government salary. she was there in and in meetings and she saw action at the white house. some of her stories do seem to check out but our colleagues at cnn read the book and found some basic errors and a lot of unverifiable information as well so it's battle of credibility. who has less credibility? omarosa or former white house colleagues? in the book she describes trump as racist and lewd and mentally waning. it's a real incredible betrayal of who was her former boss, someone she worked for for a long time and she now says she
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has a lot of regrets and people will be able to decide for themselves if they believe her account of what happened. >> brian stelter, thank you so much. >> thanks. >> you can catch more of brian on "reliable sources" at 11:00 a.m. on cnn. at 9:00 a.m., rudy giuliani is on "state of the union" with jake tapper. president trump wants to end a reunification. he calls it chain migration and people sponsor their family members coming into the country for potential u.s. citizenship. why doesn't he believe that pertains to his family? utoglass, we really pride ourselves on making it easy for you to get your windshield fixed. >> teacher: let's turn in your science papers. >> tech vo: this teacher always puts her students first. >> student: i did mine on volcanoes. >> teacher: you did?! oh, i can't wait to read it. >> tech vo: so when she had auto glass damage... she chose safelite. with safelite, she could see exactly when we'd be there. >> teacher: you must be pascal. >> tech: yes ma'am. >> tech vo: saving her time...
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president trump was criticized this week for promising to end what he calls chain migration. he has made his views very clear on this point. >> we have to end chain migration. we have to end chain migration. we want to select people based on their ability to contribute to our country, not choose people randomly. we have no idea who they are. or based on extended family connections. >> but this week, here is a tax on family sponsoring each other was splashed with a little hypocrisy from his own in-laws.
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their response, his wife. melania trump, the first lady and her lawyer thinks the president is wrong on the topic. join me is a criminal defense attorney and former prosecutor. welcome back. >> thank you for having me. >> let's start with clarity. the system, the visa that the president has lambasted for more than a year now, is that the exact same process in which the knavs came into the country? >> it's believe to have been the same process. look. the problem with trump is that he's had a history of being a hypocrite and a pattern of being a hypocrite before taking office and since then, his whole entire presidency is knee-deep in hypocrisy from foreign policy to executive orders to even patriotism. you have ma lau -- the same sys
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he is trying to get rid of and allows u.s. citizens and while melania who has a questionable immigration history herself, while she sponsored her parents for a green card, the president is trying to reduce legal immigration at all costs and making it harder for documented immigrants to obtain citizenship or even permanent residency. in fact, what he is trying to do is also limit sponsorships down to spouses and child -- or minor children, which would, obviously, excluded his own in-laws at the time if that were to be the case. use the same process he has been talking about for a year and a half now to get rid of and, of course this is a system where the trumps work from this place of do as i say and not what i do. >> listen to the first lady's immigration attorney here and we will talk about his criticisms
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and who might have had to have authorized this on the other side. watch. >> this is a tradition that happens in all rank and all files of life, whether you're president of the united states and this is the first naturalized first lady that we have, or people who eventually navigate through the waters into america. >> does a criticism like this, if he works for the first lady, does that happen without her authorization, without her giving him the go ahead? >> you know, that's a good question. i don't know. i can't say. >> but you're a defense attorney. if you were speaking out on a policy that benefits your client's family but potentially the husband is against whatever that policy is, do you go out and speak without clearing it first? >> we have seen melania trump do that quite a bit and not the first time she has taken a different position from her husband but this is not about following the rule of law,
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right? this is about controlling who comes in. donald trump only cares about family-based migration when it comes to brown and black people coming in. this is coming from a president who is labeled haiti and african nations and -- questioning whether we should take in people from norway as he describes mexico city as criminals and rapists. the hypocrisy of trump's in-laws become citizens using a system he is trying to keep other people from using isn't shocking and isn't surprising. in fact, it makes a lot of sense. this is about controlling who comes into this country. he only cares when it comes to brown and black people coming into this country because there is a fear that immigrants are changing the face of this country, that -- from what is traditionally been a white and christian majority. you saw that fear in laura ingraham's racist rant where she
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talks about basically wanting to preserve white culture. you're going to see that fear later on today when you see a bunch of neonazis and supremacists convene in front of the white house and that is where we are at today. >> i use the word hypocrisy at the top and so did you. there is a basic rule if it's better than it looks, people will tell you. . hopefully, the white house or the first lady's office will clarify, if this is not just bold-faced hypocrisy that the president says other families should not be able to bring their relatives in the country using family reunification but his wife can. >> victor, i wouldn't hold my breath on that. we won't hear a thing. >> deep breaths. thank you. >> thanks. critics say new mexico police could have acted sooner to rescue a boy who was missing. the sheriff says otherwise. you're going to see more of what he had to say in a moment. whenshe was pregnant,ter failed, in-laws were coming, a little bit of water, it really- it rocked our world. i had no idea
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febreze air effects doesn't just mask, it cleans away odors. because the things you love can stink. eleven children were found at a new mexico compound with no running water, barely any food. landlords said they told authorities months ago something was not right. >> in an exclusive interview with cnn, the sheriff says they have it all wrong. cnn's scott mclean has more for us here. >> reporter: the children who lived on this squalored compound in nonnew mexico were home dunn schooled but authorities say they were taught to become public school shooters. taos county sheriff jerry hogrefe says it comes from 14 and 15-year-old kids who lived on the compound where the body of a small child was also found buried under human waste inside of a 40-yard tunnel. >> there was some crying and emotion. >> reporter: tears are not enough for jason and tonya
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badger who think law enforcement has bungled this case. >> they were dragging their feet and taking too long. a child's life at stadium. >> reporter: they owned the compound the property sats on and said they alerted the sheriff's office as early as april when they spotted the missing child and his fugitive father there. >> it never came to me. i'll tell you right now, i never had credible information would get me on that compound until thursday when i wrote the first search warrant. i will stand by that. >> reporter: deputies finally raided the compound on august 3rd and they found 11 malnourished children and five adults who have pleaded not guilty to child abuse charges, charges that came only after weeks of fbi surveillance and even an in-person visit. >> there was a sheriff's deputy what ontario out to that compound sometime in june, correct, to serve court papers? >> yes. >> reporter: at that time, seeing the conditions, should that deputy not have come back and said this is no place fit
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for a chiled child? >> the deputy didn't see a child. >> reporter: the fbi was investigating since may. . the sheriff did not give them permission to search the property. >> we would not valid right to be there and the fruits of the tree would have come into play and we would have lost anything we possibly would have been able to criminally charge. >> reporter: you might have able to save a child if he were still alive." thanks for remind he me of that. it's not like it's hard to live every day wishing i could have got there quickly. you have to get this lawfully! >> reporter: a moment later, the sheriff walked out of the interview. >> i think we are done. >> reporter: that is hardly the final question as to why his office didn't act sooner. the university of maryland benches its head football amid allegations of bullying. coy, this is a stunning --
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>> it is. imagine having a son or daughter being forced to practice until they pass out or even worse, in one case, dying. we will tell you about a bombshell report and the disturbing details in what is being described as a toxic culture at the university of maryland. that is coming up on "new day." when i received the diagnoses,
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maryland's head football coach on administrative leave this morning while the death of a player from heat stroke is under investigation. >> coy wire is here with details. from what we're hearing, this is just terrible. >> scary, disturbing allegations. here's the deal, maryland has their first home game in 20 days from now. they just watched one of their teammates die after a workout. now the head coach being placed on leave while his program is being investigated for alleged abusive treatment of players. this all stems from a bombshell report from espn describing a toxic culture intimidation,
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humiliation, all within the team. it's said players were subject to verbal and fz cal abuse. one player was forced to eat until he vomited. another player allegedly mocked after he passed out during conditioning. 19-year-old jordan mcnair died of heat stroke after an outdoor workout on campus in june. body temperature was reported to reach 106 degrees. athletic director released a statement saying the safety and well being of our student athletes is our highest priorities. these alleged behaviors are not consistent with the values i expect all staff to adhere to and must do better. larry hogan supporting the decision to place durkin on leave, we must have complete confidence that our student athletes are treated with dignity and respect and they are supervised and coached responsibly. if the investigation confirms these reports, then strong and permanent corrective actions should be taken immediately. the offensive coordinator will
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take over as interim head coach. kickoff is september 1st versus texas. it is a home game. prayers go out to the family of the young man whose life was lost and think about parents with players still on the team while all of this is going on. we'll keep our eye on it for you. >> you would think this would not be an issue with how many times we had to report this, i fact it's still happening. coy, thank you. >> you're welcome. >> nasa launches an unmanned spacecraft to our closest star. n making it easy for you to get your windshield fixed. >> teacher: let's turn in your science papers. >> tech vo: this teacher always puts her students first. >> student: i did mine on volcanoes. >> teacher: you did?! oh, i can't wait to read it. >> tech vo: so when she had auto glass damage... she chose safelite. with safelite, she could see exactly when we'd be there. >> teacher: you must be pascal. >> tech: yes ma'am. >> tech vo: saving her time... [honk, honk] >> kids: bye! >> tech vo: ...so she can save the science project. >> kids: whoa! >> kids vo: ♪ safelite repair, safelite replace ♪
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exercise should not be about getting injured, if we find a client has a injury, why refer to them to an of course paying pagsal or physical therapy. >> i noticed the aches and pains going away. i have lost this weight. i feel healthier and feel like my muscles are stronger and support me better. i want to be out there with the kids, having the fun versus sitting in the chair and
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watching everybody else have those moments. >> we rock! >> nasa is going where no spacecraft has gone before in the first unmanned trip to the sun. >> the parker sole low probe has thick solar shields to protect from melting. first data back to earth expected in early december. thank you so much for being with us. make good memories today. inside politics with john king starts now. >> one year later, charlottesville remembers. and the president lashes out again at black athletes. >> this guy has got in the white house, not even a dog whistle. it's a bull horn. >> a big week in the manafort trial and big message from team trump to the special counsel. >> you're trying to trap him into perjury because you don't have a case. >> as we sort the latest
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