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tv   New Day Saturday  CNN  December 8, 2018 3:00am-4:01am PST

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mueller drop coulding -- dropping a major bomb on trump. >> we know who must be next. >> his own justice department, trump's own appointees saying that you, mr. president, are directly implicated in federal felonies. >> in a normal case if he weren't the president, should expect to be indicted. as we know, the department of justice has opined that you cannot indict a sitting president. here's what i want to do and here's how i want to do it. i would have to say, i understand what you want to do, but you can't do it that way. it violates the law.
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good morning, welcome to your "new day." i'm victor blackwell. >> i'm jessica dean in for christi paul. federal prosecutors are zeroing in on what may be a worst-case scenario for the white house. president trump directly implicated in two federal crimes connected to the russia investigation. >> for the first time a team of investigators in new york say that then-candidate trump explicitly directed his personal lawyer, michael cohen, to break federal election law. the memo is seven pages law, but here's a key phrase from the filing, and it's important that we let these words resonate. cohen's commission of two finance crimes on the eve of the 2016 election for the president of the united states struck a blow to one of the core goals of the federal campaign finance laws -- transparency. while many americans who desired a particular outcome to the election knocked on doors, toiled at phone banks, or found any number of legal ways to make
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their voices heard, cohen constitute influence the election from the shadows. he did so by orchestrating secret and illegal payments to silence two women who otherwise would have made public their alleged extramarital affairs with individual one. in the process, cohen deceived the voting public by hiding alleged facts that he believed would have had a substantial effect on the election. >> in a second filing, special prosecutor robert mueller's team says former trump campaign chairman paul manafort lied about five major issues after agreeing to cooperate with prosecutors. and shockingly, they say manafort was in contact with the trump administration as recently as this year. manafort was indicted in 2017. we begin with the latest details on the case against michael cohen. >> cnn's m.j. lee explains what the memos could mean for cohen when he's sentenced next week. >> reporter: a very dramatic day for michael cohen, president trump's former lawyer, as he
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waits his sentencing next week. two separate filings, one from special counsel robert mueller and another filing from the southern district of new york, laying out some of the details of michael cohen's wrongdoings. the filing from special counsel robert mueller laying out how michael cohen has extensively cooperated with the special counsel's office including in seven interviews and how he provided details about his own contacts with russians. here's a key passage from that mueller filing. it says, the defendant has taken significant steps to mitigate his criminal conduct. he chose to accept responsibility for his false statements and admit to his conduct in open court. he also has gone to significant lengths to assist the special counsel's investigation. it also says that the cooperation that michael cohen has shown should be taken into consideration when that joint sentencing happens next week. now the filing from sdny, the southern district of new york,
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was very bad news for michael cohen when taken on its own. it said that michael cohen should get a substantial term of imprisonment and only a modest leniency when it comes to his prison sentence. again, that is expected next week. this filing from sdny laid out how michael cohen evaded taxes, how he lied to banks, and also how he illegally tried to affect the outcome of the 2016 presidential campaign. that, of course, referring to the hush payments that were made to karen mcdougal and stormy daniels, two women who said that they had affairs with donald trump. now a key passage from that sdny filing says that after cheating the irs for years, lying to banks and to congress and seeking to criminally influence the presidential election, cohen's decision to plead guilty rather than seek a pardon for his many bold -- manifold crimes does not make him a hero.
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this will be a blow for michael cohen and lawyers arguing that michael cohen should get no jail time because of the extent of his cooperation with investigators and also because he is committed to helping the government get to the truth. the sdny clearly does not agree with that assessment. m.j. lee, cnn, new york. >> thank you. president trump appears to be brushing off the implications of these memos from looumueller team. >> he's tweeted out the response to the 47 pamges now, what is h saying, what is the white house saying? >> hey there. yeah, the president brushing off these sentencing filings on behalf of michael cohen and paul manafort. the president effectively saying that this is no big deal. he tweeted out, quote, totally clears the president. thank you. of course, that's not like when these documents do.
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i did want to point occupant sarah sanders, the press -- poo point out, sarah sanders, the press secretary, effectively says on the manafort filing that has nothing to do with the president himself. it does not implicate him. those charges are tied to manafort's financial crimes. the cohen filing, she writes that there's no new information there. she also echoes that claim from the special counsel that michael cohen is no hero. in regard to the president's tweet, though, a prominent d.c. attorney, george conway, also the husband of a very senior adviser to the president, kellyanne conway, rebuffed the president. he writes, quote, quoting the president, quote, except for the little part where the u.s. attorney's office says that you directed and coordinated with cohen to commit two felonies, other than that, totally scot-free. a bit of a snarky response from george conway. we should point out there is pressure mounting on the president, not just on the russia front but the fact that he could be facing a potential partial government shutdown in
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the next few weeks and, of course, a volatile stock market. the result of the president's ongoing trade war with china. jessica and victor? >> all rightme. borises sanchez, thank you very much. joining us to discuss the political and legal consequences, let's bring in errol lewis, cnn political contributor and joey jackson, legal analyst and criminal defense attorney. welcome back. >> good morning. >> i wanted to go into the document. first let's start with the southern district of new york's sentencing memo. joey, cohen accordiated with one -- coordinated with one or more members of the fact about the fact, nature, and timing of the payments, of course this karen mcdougal and stormy daniels, in particular as cohen himself now admitted with respect to both payments he acted in coordination with and at the direction of individual one, individual one being president trump. now the question about the legal
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consequences, the guidelines are that you can't or wouldn't indict a sitting president. but joey, to you, if this were governor trump or senator trump, based on what we know, would donald trump be indicted? >> good morning to you, victor, errol. there's no question about it. what you laid out is called in law a criminal conspiracy. that's an agreement between two or more people to commit a criminal act and, in fact, that's exactly what this is. and so to the extent, however, that there is guidance by the department of justice that says you cannot indict a sitting president, he's not indicted. but essentially what you have described there is criminal conduct on the part of the president who apparently was the ringleader, who directed and otherwise coordinated. so the question then becomes, what now. and i think the what now will very much come to life when you have the changing of the guard as it relates to at least the house of representatives on this is now in democratic control. do these issues rise to the
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level of impeachment? i think certainly when you have the southern district of new york, certainly, you know, a very respected office in terms of the united states attorney's office throughout the country, stating that they have the goods on the president, i think that there needs to be more there. so the fact is the question, does it rise beyond a reasonable doubt, a criminal standard, that's another matter. it's left to the jury, of course, the senate. as you know, the house of representatives by majority would impeach, then it would go to the senate for a trial. you need 67 for removal, so it's less likely. boy, oh boy, you have the description of a criminal event there. and i think it gives a lot of meat for the congress in terms of the democrats taking control to move forward. >> errol, that's going to happen in january when democrats get control of the house. but republicans hold it now. nobody's expecting there will be any impeachment. that there will be any probably official censure each of the
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president. where -- censure even of the president. where is bripaul ryan, where ar republican members of the house and senate after the justice department --not the special prosecutor -- but the southern district of new york says the president of the united states directed his attorney to commit two felonies on his behalf to help his campaign. >> yeah, it's real serious stuff. paul ryan made his decision. he chose not to run for re-election. he's on his way to the private sector where he'll probably get rich. for a lot of the other republicans, you raise a good question, what are they going to do. they're going to have a difficult time i think ignoring this. the stage that we get to, whether or not there's full impeachment hearings by the house of representatives, whether or not the question ever arrives on the doorstep of the senate as to whether or not to remove a sitting president, these questions are in some ways subsidiary to the immediate political question of what will happen as the public absorbs this information and starts to decide that, you know, maybe
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there's something here. maybe it wasn't -- wasn't all a witch hunt. maybe there's a level of sort of low moral conduc surrounding this administration that is simply unacceptable. and when that kind of feeling spreads through the country and gets taken out on the president's party, the republican party, i think that's when you'll see the senators and the members of congress start to stir, start to make clear that they don't want to lose another 300 legislative seats the way they did in this late midterm. that they don't want to start losing control of state houses. they'll want to continue losing control of state houses, and that something has to be done. >> errol, let me stay with you on this. in the white house, sarah sanders says that of the filings, tells nothing of value that wasn't already known about cohen specifically. but on the moscow project, which was about building the trump tower there in russia, the mueller memo says this, the government writes, "the fact that cohen continued to work on the project and discussed it with individual one well into
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the campaign was material to the ongoing congressional and special counsel's office investigations, particularly because it occurred at the same time of sustained efforts by the russian government to interfear with the u.s. presidential electi election," putting together for the first time the moscow project, building the trump tower, and russian interference in the 2016 election. significance? >> absolutely. it is significant. there's actually additional information that is new. sarah sanders is quite wrong. we've learned a couple of new and important things from this latest filing. one is that there were russians who were reaching out through michael cohen to the campaign to try and create what was called political synergy with russia as early as the fall of 2015. >> yeah. >> so that's a -- one key fact. then just as you point out, look, the prosecutors have known this all along. many members of the public has v
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known this all along. at the same time there was an effort to build a trump tower in moscow, there was interference going on in the u.s. election. that's the core of the problem that mueller was tasked with getting to the root of. we know there's an important connection there. it's troubling. >> let's talk about the political synergy, joey. it's important that we read from the documents, go into these filings. this also from the mueller memo, "in or around november 15th, cohen received a contact information for and spoke with a russian national who claimed to be a trusted person in the federal federation who could -- russian federation who could offer the campaign a political synergy and synergy on a government level. the defendant recalled that this important proposed a meeting between individual one and the president of russia. the person told cohen that such a meeting could have a, quote, phenomenal impact, quote, not only in political but in business dimensions, as well," referring to the moscow project,
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"because there's no bigger c-- bigger issue than consent of sh russia." what's the implication considering there was no followup because the document says that he already had another in somewhere else? >> i think it's very legally significant as it is significant you getting into the core of the document itself. we cannot be a country for sale. why is this significant at all? because we have to base policies not upon business deals and business decisions and wealth and money building, we have to base policies upon what's best for the country and the american people. and so in the event that you establish a tie which might suggest, hey, you know what, i'm looking to build something in your country, perhaps there could be a quid pro quo as a result of that, you do this for me, you know, we'll have this platform and will lessen our stance on ukraine in terms of what we do, in terms of sanctions, in terms of concessions, and so all of this is important. and remember, victor, last point, you can't look at this only in isolation.
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you have to look at it in terms of everything else that's occurring. why is everybody in the administration that's so closely tied to the president lying about russia? why is cohen saying that, you know what, in january we were done -- no, it was really june. and so you know, then you put it together with paul manafort, you put it together with wikileaks, you put it together with the hacking, with russia, if you're listening, you know, by the president himself, it might be a good time to release information. and it just starts to smell really bad. and it has very big legal significance. >> of course as you suggested there, there were more than just the cohen filings. there were the manafort case filings, we're going to talk about those, errol lewis, joey jackson, thank you very much, stay with us. meantime, james comey, the former fbi director whose firing by president trump ultimately led to the appointment of the special counsel, robert mueller, was on capitol hill friday. comey squared off with the republican-led house judiciary committee, and while a transcript of the closed door
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hearing has yet to be released, at least one lawmaker called that session tense. here's how comey summed up the six-hour interview. >> after a full day of questioning, two things are clear to me. one, we could have done dothis open setting. you'll see that we're talking about hillary clinton's emails for heaven's sake. i'm not sure we have to do this at all. i'm trying to respect the institution, and to answer questions in a respectful way. you'll see i did that in the transcript. you'll see that if you get a transcript of might have return visit which i think will be week after next. and then this will be over. >> and as you heard there, comey is expected to return to congress december 17th. special counsel robert mueller says former trump campaign chairman paul manafort lied to investigators. but the white house says that has nothing to do with the president. is that true? plus, undisciplined and not a big fan of reading.
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that's how rex tillerson is describing his former boss. we're going to tell you what the president said in response. ♪ [upbeat music] you wouldn't feel good not knowing the price here. don't let it happen when you buy your diabetes test strips. with the accu-chek® guide simplepay program, you pay the same low price. all without having to go through insurance. plus, they come in a spill-resistant vial along with a free meter. skip the guessing game and focus on your health.
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in a new court filing, special counsel robert mueller says former trump campaign chairman paul manafort lied about several key points after agreeing to cooperate with prosecutors. >> this could mean mueller's team has more evidence about contacts between people close to the president and russians, but during the tweaks campaign. here's senior white house correspondent pamela brown. >> reporter: mueller's team outlined in a heavily deducted filing how they believe and why they believe paul manafort lied in, quote, multiple ways and on multiple occasions. manafort, they say, lied to the special counsel's office regarding his contact with the trump administration this year. even after his indictment last october. he said he didn't talk to anyone in the administration or convey messages to themment mueller says that's -- to them. mueller says that's not true.
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his team said manafort told a person to talk to a trump administration official just this past may and had contact with administration officials including a senior administration official in february and may of this year. so this new and damaging information for the white house comes at a time when every move by mueller appears to bring his investigation leaper into the white house and trump's inner circle, and it shows it has expanded well beyond what may or may not have happened in the 2016 campaign. the revelations and mueller's filing raises questions about why paul manafort may have been lying about these contacts and who the contacts were made with. sarah sanders, press secretary, leased a statement in response -- released a statement in response saying it has nothing to do with the president and that the media is making up a story. pamela brown, cnn, washington. and joining us now is talk more about what this means for the russia investigation, errol lewis, cnn political contributor, political anchor for spectrum news, and cnn legal
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analyst and defense attorney joey jackson. good morning to you both. >> good morning. >> after reading this, we know manafort had contact with the trump administration as recently as 2018 which begs the question who was he talking to, what were they talking about, and we could guess all day. why does it matter that he had continued contact with the white house even after being indicted and not telling the truth about it. errol? >> well it matters a great deal because, look, he's in federal custody. he's on trial for his life or facing some real serious legal jeopardy. and to be in touch with the white house, to be sharing information with them as the -- the federal justice department now alleges, suggests that he's really kind of never ended the criminal conduct for which he's now being charged. i mean, that he's -- he never stopped scheming. there are tantalizing blacked
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out passages in the sentencing document that was filed yesterday where it -- it appears that he just never even slowed down a little bit. he's changed his story multiple times. he said he was going to cooperate. he decided not to cooperate. he said he had nothing to do with at least the white house, wanted us to believe he had nothing to do with them, and you have the contact. i guess one last tantalizing part of all of this is that it happened shortly after, two days i believe, after president trump posthumously pardoned dak johnson, the boxer. it raised a lot of public discussion about whether or not manafort was angling for some kind of a presidential pardon. the fact that he then reached out to the white house suggests that that might have been been his goal. >> that's an interesting point. and joey, legally when we start talking about pardons, what does that look like, how would you work and do you think that's what manafort's end goal is here? >> jessica, good morning to you.
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i'm in accord with errol. we're speculating as to what the conversations might be. after you're indicted, right, you're facing serious issues in trial, i'm not sure you're reaching out to the white house just to have coffee and to see what the next season in sports is going to look like. if i had to speculate, that's what it would have been about. it perplexes me to begin with -- manafort goes to trial, gets convicted of multiple counts, right, not related to russia at all bull relating to his business dealings. you face a separate trial because he faces two separate sentencings. one in february, one in march as to separate conduct. the reality is why do you go to trial initially and then, oh, i'm going to cooperate the second time around and the government should believe what you say? so it's problematic. as to the issue of pardons, this is a president who pardons who he feels like pardoning. and certainly you would think
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that manafort might at least initially in terms of the strategy he employs either say, look, i'm with team government and i'm going against trump, or i'm with trump, as he made clear during his trial, and i'm not going to cooperate. instead, he does cooperate, and he lied in his cooperation. they have evidence to suggest that it was all made up. and so this leads him into deeper legal troubles. he faces certainly a couple of decades in prison. and i'm just not sure what the legal rationale with his legal team was as to doing what they did. >> yeah. and joey, i want to stay with you for a minute. the white house came back out and said that, quote, absolutely nothing -- this has nothing to do with the president and less about collusion in terms of the manafort filing. do you believe that to be true legally? >> i'm not sure what they're looking at. remember, there's a political spin here. many people are not deeply involved, that is voters, in terms of what the documents say, what they mean, so the president tweets out "totally clears the
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president, nothing do with me." i guess for people who want to believe that or his supporters politically he has to say that. to your point, let's talk about the law. the real sit that you have -- reality is that you have your form campaign chairman lying about dealings with the russians, in touch with them, and we remind viewers himself is under indictment. he's in russia, though, so we can't touch him jurisdictionally. why is your campaign chairman having all of these dealings and lying about the dealings, and he worked for you? the fact that it clears you, has nothing to do with you seems much of an overstatement. not only an overstatement but a misleading statement at that. >> uh-huh. we have seen so many things come through this white house. so many allegations, so many scandals, if you will. does this stick what happened yesterday? where does this fall on the
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spectrum political? >> yeah. the only thing you can compare it to and i know the trump people don't like this, but compare it to 1973, 1974 and the watergate situation where you learned good -- an astounding number of subsidiary crimes that had nothing to do with the issues that drove nixon out of the white house, but there was this overall sleaze. you've got spiro agnew, the vice president, taking cash bribes in an envelope inside of the white house. you have mitchell, the attorney general, with a safe in his office stocked with cash that was used to pay for dirty tricks and all kind of illegal conduct. all of that stuff was going on at the same time as the central question of what does the president know, did he order this, had was he involved in a cover-up. so you know, you can -- you can stick to the main threat, and i think the public is trying in its own way to do that, but then when you see all of this other stuff going on, i think that really sort of indicates that we've got a serious political problem, and even if there are
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no legal consequences, there will be political consequences for this kind of conduct. >> errol lewis, joey jackson, thank you very much for being with us. >> thank you. nine months after being fired by the president, former secretary of state rex tillerson gets candid about his former boss. >> he acts on his instincts, in some respects that looks like impulsiveness. but it's not as intent -- not his intent to act on impulse. i think he really is trying to act on his instincts. it was challenging for me coming from the disciplined, highly processed oriented exxonmobil corporation to work for a man who is pretty undisciplined, doesn't like to read, doesn't read briefing reports, doesn't like to get into the details of a lot of things but rather just kind of says, look, this is what i believe. >> that did not go over well with president trump.
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the president trump who one pulitzer prized him, quote, as one of the greatest businessman in the world, smofm doing a great job. his predecessor rex tillerson, was dumb as a rock. i couldn't get rid of him fast enough. he was lazy as hell. it's a great new ball game. great spirit at state. still to come this morning, the man who deliberately drove his car into a crowd of counterprotesters in charlottesville last year was found guilty of first-degree murder. we've got more details about that verdict. that's ahead. and in paris right now, almost 300 people already arrested. demonstrators clashing again with police this time, again, in a cloud of teargas. here we go.
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ingenious space- neat nest™ by fasaving design. all designed to stack and protect the lids, and the pan surface. farberware neat nest™. stacked & intact™ welcome back. i'm victor blackwell. >> i'm jessica dean in for christi paul. >> james fields, you may not recognize the name, but you'll recognize the crime. he intentionally drove his car into a crowd of people. they were protesting a white nationalist rally in charlottesville last year. he was convicted of first-degree murder. he faces up to life in prison for the death of heather higher. >> he was also -- heather heyer. >> he was also found guilty of
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charges and faces over 30 federal hate crime charges. >> reporter: the self-professed neo-nazi who barrelled his car into a crowd was convicted friday of first-degree murder and all other charges brought against him. >> i think every last one of those -- thank every last one of those jurors. they made the -- they made the choice to express to the world like we don't stand for this type of hate at all. >> reporter: a jury took just over seven hours of deliberation to find james alex fieldser j guilty of heather heyer's murder. eight counts of malicious wounding and one count of failing to stop at an accident involving a death. he faces a possible life sentence. through a week of testimony, prosecutors focused on his intent. the commonwealth argued that he was unprovoked and acted with the intent to harm counterprotesters when he watched the crowd, backed up hisses dodge challenger -- his dodge challenger, and raced down the street going 28 miles per
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hour before crashing into the scene. the defense didn't deny he drove the car but said he was panicked and acted in self-defense. a jailhouse phone call to his mother was played in court. in it fields said he was defending himself in aim violent mob of terrorists -- himself from a violent mob of terrorists. but big burkes was one of 35 injured in the attack -- >> the most chilling people to me were the jailhouse phone calls to his mom. you could just see the way he was talking to his mother and the way he called heather's mom susan, an anti-white communist. and called us all terrorists and said we were the enemy and it was no big deal that, you know, heather had died because she's the enemy. you know, that just tells me everything i need to know about what kind of person he is. >> reporter: on august 12th, 2017, burke and heather heyer were among those demonstrating against the unite the right rally. [ chants ] as so-called alt-right activists
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chanted slogans, some carrying guns, and flags with swastikas and confederate emblems marched on this college town. fields drove more than 500 miles from ohio to participate. his attack turned an already bloody and violent and hate-filled day deadly. there was web site spread anger and -- there was widespread anger and outrage. >> a message to all the white supremacists and nazis, our message is plain and simple -- go home. you are not wanted in this great commonwealth. shame on you. >> reporter: then -- >> i think there's blame on both sides. >> reporter: president trump's refusal to condemn the racist attack in its immediate aftermath further enflamed the national conversation. >> just because he was found guilty, this is not over. this is just the start to let people know don't think that you can come here and do this type of stuff and get away with it because we're not having it. >> reporter: kaylee hartung,
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cnn. all right. another round of violent protests across france. live pictures for you now. you can see the arc de triomphe i believe right there. thousands of demonstrators -- that's the report from police there in paris. police now using teargas. you can see the cloud in the center of the screen there, trying to control these crowds to avoid what we've seen now for three consecutive weekends. we're live in paris next. i've always been amazed by what's next.
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violent protests across france. according to a spokeswoman for paris police, 342 people have been taken in for questioning. several major parents landmarks are close -- paris landmarks are closed. police have removed bicycle stations and city benches to prevent them from being used as weapons. another 80,000 officers have been deployed across the country. on friday officials seized at least three homemade bombs in southern france. >> it yellow vests protest began as an opposition to rising gas prices and tax increases. last weekend more than 600 people were arrested. officials say there are nearly half that number with almost 300 injured, at least four people have died. also, hundreds of arrests this weekend, as well. cnn's international correspondent melissa bell joining us with the latest. melissa, good morning to you. what are you seeing there? >> reporter: well, i'm here on the champs-elysees. we can see there are thousands
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of people here officialing to official police figures from paris police -- the smell of teargas hanging heavy in the air. you see what's happening on the street. all of the side roads have been closed off to try and contain the yellow vest protest. what we saw last week was violence on the periphery of the champs-elysees which had been closed off. we've seen the day had begun peacefully, people handing flowers to the riot police that gathered early on to try to contain the crowds on the champs-elysees. we've seen teargas being used and rubber bullets already at the protesters. [ inaudible ] the big question is about numbers countrywide. >> melissa bell there, unfortunately, having a little bit of a hard time hearing her. clearly things happening there
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in paris that we'll keep an eye on all morning. >> we'll try to fix that audio issue and get back to melissa if we can. game day on the gridiron in a storied match-up. on the line, bragging rights for a full year. it's army-navy weekend. coy wire live from philadelphia. >> reporter: top of the morning to you. we're talking about the future defenders of our nation being put to the test of strength, will, and precision against one another. coming up, we'll talk about why army-navy game is perhaps the greatest sporting spectacle in the world. ♪harry's meeting clients...♪ ♪...from far away. but they only see his wrinkles.♪ ♪he's gotta play it cool to seal the deal.♪ ♪better find a way to smooth things over.♪
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when mit rocked our world.ailed we called usaa. and they greeted me as they always do. sergeant baker, how are you? they took care of everything a to z. having insurance is something everyone needs, but having usaa- now that's a privilege. the annual army-navy game is not just bragging rights for the team on the field, of course. >> no, it is the biggest sports day of the year for both
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schools, their alumni, students. coy wire is live from philadelphia leading up to america's game. coy? >> reporter: yes. good morning. it's -- the game is so big that today president trump will be the 10th sitting u.s. president to attend. already there are secret service members out here. ur usually we're the only ones here this early. this is dripping with tradition, it the most respected rival reel in all of sports. there's a roaring flyover before the game. one person has been coming with his father who also served for our country. there's the national anthem where players and fans are brought to tears. yesterday i met at the "rocky" steps at the philadelphia museum of art, another cool tradition, the running of the game ball. thursday the team started at west point, new york, taking turns moving the ball essentially nonstop about 150 miles through the night, through the elements.
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they finished here at the field. they were met by military members, first responders, and fans along the way. they told me they were blown away by the support of the communities they ran through who were giving them snacks and water. they said no fumbles on the day. that's a good thing. after the game, one of the most heartfelt moments in sports. the singing of the alma matters by each team. army and navy standing arm to arm singing alma matters for each other, offering moments. reflections about what it means to truly be an american. there are always tears. the goal for that -- the winner gets to sing second. so listen to what the team had to say about that. >> the last two years we've had our fans arm in arm with us, they've been on the field. singing second is an incredible feeling. >> we have two schools that are, you know, trying to beat each other for three hours, and then the respect factor after that you go and listen to the other school sing their alma mater. >> you always got to let the
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losers go first and get their song in. >> i want to sing second forever. i don't ever want to sing first in this game. >> reporter: now one of the greatest sporting rivalries in the world. today at 3:00 p.m. the 34th president eisenhower said it best, he said army and navy are best friends 364.5 days out of the year. this one saturday afternoon we are the worst of enemies. later in the morning, stay tuned. we're going to show you the uniforms that these teams are breaking out. and my aficionado back there, my style guru, victor, i got it here -- who you think has the better uniforms this year. i think they're both pretty sweet. >> i'll weigh in. thank you, coy. >> thanks. happening now, spacex's "dragon" cap actual is docking -- capsule is docking with the international space station, delivering supplies and science gear but also christmas dinner. my mom's pain from moderate
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spacex's "dragon" is close to docking with the international space station. >> a satellite communication issue caused a delay in the docking schedule this morning. the cargo ship is loaded with supplies for the crew, including 250 science and research projects. there's the work. but the shipment also includes a little fun. a traditional christmas dinner of smoked turkey breast, cranberry sauce, candied yams, and fruitcake. >> mm. >> yes. all freed dried probably. the iss crew has a space walk planned for tuesday, and "dra n "dragon" will return to either next month. >> live pictures. we see to have a camera everywhere -- that's nasa's
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camera. can't take credit for it. cranberry probably in the can. i know it's probably freeze-dried. can't do it if it's not in a can. meanwhile, take a look at this. it th-- the rocket is carrying china's moon rover. tell observent whenner plants can -- observe whether plants can grow in low gravity and if there's water. it will eventually 3d sendishow humans can go to the moon. mueller dropping a major bomb on trump. >> we know a lot more about where mueller is heading and who must be next. >> his own justice department, trump's own appointees saying that you, mr. president, are directly implicated in federal felonies. >> in a normal case, if he weren't the president, he should expect to be indicted. as we know, the department of justice has apined that you cannot -- opined that

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