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tv   CNN Newsroom Live  CNN  June 15, 2020 1:00am-2:00am PDT

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angry protests across america following the killing this weekend of yet another black man by police. beijing also back under lockdown. dozens have tested positive for coronavirus with most linked to a local food market. also this hour, the pandemic on the minds of investors. u.s. futures plunge as global stocks look set for another volatile week. we're live from cnn world headquarters in atlanta. welcome to our viewers here in the united states and all around the world. i'm natalie allen and this is "cnn newsroom." thank you for joining us. our top story. powerful public demonstrations from coast to coast pack u.s. streets for a 20th straight day
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as people continue to speak out against police brutality and racial injustice. these protests playing out both day and night have now found new momentum and renewed anger after a black man was shot and killed by an atlanta police officer on friday. rayshard brooks was killed outside a fast food restaurant. police were called after he fell asleep in his car in a drive through. we're getting a look at the moments leading up to that shooting. our boris sanchez has more from the scene. >> reporter: large crowds of people have come and gone from the wendy's in south atlanta where rayshard brooks was shot and killed on friday night. many protesting. many setting up a make shift memori memorial. what is captured on camera paints a complex picture. brooks at different points
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joking with police officers, engaging in polite conversation but in one fell swoop everything changes. we should warn you, some of this video is graphic and difficult to watch. responding to a call from a wendy's in south atlanta friday night. officer devin broznyn approaches rayshard brooks car. >> what's up, my man. hey, my man. may. hey, man, you're parked in a drive through line here. hey. sir. what's up, man? hey, you're parked in the drive through now. hey, sir, you all right? >> reporter: asleep in the drive through lane, police body cam footage shows the 27-year-old does not respond right away.
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>> are you tired? all right, man. i'll move my car. pull up and take a nap. all right. all right. you good? >> yeah. >> all right. >> reporter: brooks eventually wakes up and agrees to move his car before he appears to fall asleep again. >> my man. man, you went back to sleep. you've got to move your car. you went back to sleep. >> reporter: brooks moves to a nearby parking spot where broznyn asks, how much have you had to drink tonight? not much. how much is not much? one drink? what was it? any drugs today? >> i don't do drugs. >> reporter: brooks struggles to find his license and tries to step out of the car. i'm going to get out. >> no, just stay in the car. stay in the car. give me your license. >> reporter: broznyn radios for another officer to do a dui
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test. >> pretty out of it. >> reporter: when officer garrett rolf arrives, brooks denies ever having been asleep. >> the reason we're here, somebody called 911 because you were asleep behind the wheel while you were in the drive through. right? do you recall that? >> i don't. i don't. >> you don't recall that? you don't recall minutes ago where you were passed out in the drive through? >> un-uh. >> reporter: he agrees to a breathalyzer. when rolf tries to handcuff brooks, he resists. they show him readying his taser. brooks grabs it out of his hand. >> stop. stop. >> reporter: breaking free, brooks punches rolf who fires his stun gun as brooks takes off. here's the moment the altercation becomes deadly. we slow this down for you.
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you can see rolf chasing brooks. watch as rolf moves his taser from his right to left and then reaches for his gun. brooks turns and fires the taser and rolf fires three times as he fleas. bystanders almost immediately began cursing and shouting at the officers. >> both of your careers are done because you just shot a man for no reason. >> a few minutes after he shot officers rolf and broznyn provide medical treatment. a short time later brooks is rushed to a nearby hospital where he's later pronounced dead. officer rolf who opened fire has been terminated. officer breznyn has been placed on administrative duty and erica shields, the chief of police in atlanta resigned over the weekend. of course, there is an ongoing
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investigation potentially with charges coming later this week. boris sanchez, cnn, atlanta. a district attorney in fulton county, georgia, say the decision whether to bring charges could come as early as wednesday. here's what he told fredricka whitfield. >> one good thing about video, fredricka, because in the video we actually get a chance to hear the officer's first statement after the shooting took place, and what the officer said is not that his life was saved, but his statement was, he said, i got him. >> reporter: and here's what the brooks family attorney told cnn's ana cabrera about the officer's statement. >> that was a very disturbing to
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myself, my partner chris and tamika, his widow. very disturbing. >> the mayor of atlanta said america will get through this, but more needs to be done. the issues go beyond biases and police training and that there is a bigger conversation the country needs to have. >> i've watched the body cam video. i watched it for 30 minutes. i watched the interaction with mr. brooks and it broke my heart. when he talked about his daughter's birthday party that he was planning for. this is not confrontational. this was a guy that you were rooting for and even knowing the end, watching it you're going, just let him go, let him go. let him call somebody to pick him up.
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and i think that's the challe e challenges that we're all facing as leaders right now. people are looking to us to lead, but when these things continue to happen over and over again, we're asking ourselves the same questions, how do we lead during this time. >> the atlanta mayor added that everyone, not just police officers, have so many biases and it happens every day. joining me now from los angeles is retired los angeles police chief cheryl, sargeant dorsey. >> the district attorney will file this week whether charges are filed in the death of rayshard brooks. what are the questions the da will be looking to answer as this footage is reviewed? >> probable cause is a very low threshold.
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he's telegraphed he was there. this was an unjustified shooting. mr. braks was quiet and polite and what ultimately happened is in hernt in the work to be done. these officers dropped the ball. they spent 20 minutes. you'd have someone asleep behind the wheel of a car. what if he had driven and been involved in a traffic collision and killed someone? those officers would be liable. >> right. they asked him to park the car from the drive through. i want to ask you, when a person you were trying to arrest as they attempted to do takes off running, he did strike the
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officer, he had his taser gun, but how are officers trained vis-a-vis using deadly force when someone is running away from them? >> you can only use that force reasonable to overcome resistance. you can't use deadly force because you can't catch someone physically. we know, we hear, we see the officer fired his taser and this was ineffective. this was a veteran officer that should have known if his was ineffective, the one in the possession of mr. brooks would be ineffective. you can't shoot and kill because you can't catch him. i said from the beginning, this was about punishing mr. brooks because after all he did take his taser. being took my f'ing taser. then he did a victory lap by saying i got him. this was punishment. this was unnecessary.
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>> mr. brooks also offered to walk home. he said his sister lived nearby. could that have been an option or no? >> not an option i would have considered if you believe he's under the influence. you have a duty to make sure he gets somewhere safe. if you don't want to arrest him, take him to the police station and call a family member to come and pick him up, but you can't leave him on the street. you can't allow him to drive away. by their own admission, he's under the influence. if he gets involved in a traffic collision and hurts somewhere or himself, the officers are liable because they knew that and they allowed him to continue on behind the wheel. >> as this country grapples with how to restructure police departments, sergeant dorsey, do you believe from serving in the lapd, officers wouldn't want some of their duties to respond
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to everything and anything reduced. >> listen, there are certain things that officers respond to that some are not equipped and tonight understand it. we respond to domestic disputes, folks are not getting along beings neighbor disputes. we're there to keep the peace, counsel, be a cooler head, give advice. that's inherent to police work. if that's not what you want to do, then you're probably in the wrong profession. you have to do it based on training, a little common sense and good judgment. >> i think it's what's been troubling for so many people but this particular story is it started out just as someone falling asleep in a drive through at a fast food joint, you know? and we saw george floyd die
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because he allegedly passed a $20 counterfeit bill. that hurts. >> listen, what if mr. brooks was having a medical emergency? it's almost as if police officers when they're dealing with black folks don't think maybe we could be suffering from some kind of a medical emergency. this is not the first time a black han has fallen asleep in a drive through. officers didn't take into consideration maybe this wasn't someone who was under the influence of drugs or someone who had been drinking. maybe they were having a medical emergency. we get sick, too. >> we appreciate your insights. thank you. >> thank you. next here, the latest on the coronavirus outbreak as beijing sees a second wave after a cluster of new infections. we'll tell you where that cluster occurred.
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also, many european unions partially reopening, we have details where e.u. travel is resuming and where people still have to wait. ancestors served n world war two. many of their stories remain untold. find and honor the veterans in your family. their stories live on at ancestry. mucinex cold & flu all-in-one. fights... oh no. no-no-no. did you really need the caps lock? mucinex cold and flu all-in-one.
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at least 11 neighborhoods in beijing are under lockdown after the chinese capital reported 79 coronavirus cases since thursday. most linked to a new closed food market. let's go live to beijing and our senior producer steven jheng standing by. i saw one headline about this resurgence. they say beijing has gone into war load over this. >> reporter: that's the word officials have been using, war time emergencies. the city had not seen new cases for 56 days until last thursday. since then these newly emerged cases are almost all of them linked to this wholesale food market which housed thousands of
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vendors. they saw thousands of people on a daily basis. they're dogmas testing for anyone who has visited the market since may 30th and their close contacts. as of saturday they had tested 76,000 people. they have not only shut it down but sealed it off. they're placing a growing number of city neighborhoods with newly reported cases under have i strict lockdown. they are also, of course, bringing back very rigorous health checks and screening measures because things have been easing up as we had not seen cases until last week. school students have returned to school but they are being told they have the option of studying from home again and this is how seriously concerned they are and a lot of lingering uncertainty.
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natalie? >> this market is closed. we know that the coronavirus originated in wuhan at a wild animal market there. what do we know about this market and suspicions that might be surrounding it, steven? >> reporter: that's right. this market, no suggestion that there's trading going on there. it serves vegetables to meat and see foot. when they closed it down, there was a lot of concern from local residents about food buying. there was panic but then the government came out saying they would deploy services from elsewhere. there are other concerns about the fact that authorities said they found traces of the virus in multiple environmental
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samples because chopping this. they're not sure how this surface got contaminated, they're vowing to strengthen inspections. >> you'll be following it for us. steven zheng in the united states. the united states seeing another surge of coronavirus cases. cases are spiking 8%. florida reported more than 2500 new positive cases on sat according to johns hopkins universit university. there is a very weel possibility that reopening would be rolled back if people violate safety
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guidelines. on twitter the u.s. surgeon general said wearing masks will reduce the virus. although president trump has refused to wear a mask -- actually, he has, period, his top economic advisor told cnn's jake tapper that supporters attending a trump rally this week should probably wear them. >> people must observe the safety guidelines, must. the social distancing must be observed. face coverings in key places must be observed. >> i'm glad to see you calling for people to wear masks and i assume that also means in tulsa people should be wearing masks at the trump rally in tulsa this saturday? >> well, okay, probably so. >> probably so. how can u.s. states prevent a
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resurgence of the virus. i asked dr. rog kelce, an emergency care physician, and here's his response. >> the lesson to be learned is that every uptick is important and has to be scrutinized very importantly by doctors, epidemiologists. new york was primed to be more apt to protect themselves moving forward and maybe that's part of the momentum of their success because they saw so much death and destruction so much in terms of hospitalizations, ventilations. a state like florida didn't see that so they may be more lax in how they process that exposure. >> what do you make of the stats we're seeing.
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some say it's because there's more testing. is there validity in that? >> absolutely. this is what we asked for early on. if you remember the chimes it was more testing. everybody needs to be tested. whoever needs a test from the executive branch should get a test. we're not quite there but i won't to get there. hospitalizations, the length of stay for patients in the hospital and of those people who stay in the hospital, how many of them died. those are the most important for me as a doctor. >> do you believe the increases are a reflection in some respect of what happened three weeks ago? what are you seeing in your particular practice? >> it's a wonderful question. when we spoke about easter a few
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got together. >> we are seeing a little bit of an uptick and in the rural counties we're starting to see a steady decline, which is wonderful. of those people who are coming in with covid-19, they seem less sick and we can send more people home because we're just better at treating this now. we're not doing things that we thought were helpful but were harm 49er. we're getting smarter and smarter all the time. >> dr. kelce said people should continue social distancing and wearing masks as each person's actions could transfer to their loved ones. the european borders were closed weeks ago amid the pandemic, but this monday cross border travel resumed in some nations, france, germany and greece. spain will wait another week.
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let's get details on that from atika shubert. hello, atika. >> reporter: hello. yes. it's an absolutely brilliant, sunny day here. these are the beaches that spain is getting ready to welcome tourists. not quite yet. it's a little slower here in spain so they're taking more precaution shuns but the holiday they're welcoming in thousands of tourists. those arriving won't be tested, won't be gaur guaranteed. they will have to give their address and otherwise if all
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goes well. it will open up than some of the other countries. they're taking more precautions. france, for example, has gone ahead and opened its borders. we've seen traffic between france and germany already this morning. french president has said they've proven they're resilient and it's now time to reopen. what we're seeing in europe is slowly reopening. if all goes well, it will go from opening within the e.u. to the rest of the world as well, natalie. >> yeah. when some places started to open, you can go into the winter, you can't sunbathing.
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>> you know, each locality sets their own glooibs. we've seen across the board some general principles which is that -- the beach is meant to be disinstekted. i've seeing some coming through. in addition to that. each up bra la and -- they provided an app for a space 9 square meters by 9 square meters. your family will be safe and you're not micking with other people. they say that will try and contain the coronavirus spread. it's one of the ways that many of the beaches here are trying to be the safest holiday destination in europe, which is what spain hopes to be. >> hope so. the beach looks huge behind you. it looks like there's ample space for people to spread out.
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thanks so much, a teeing ka shubert. protesters turn out begin across the united states, including here in atlanta where a deadly police shooting is sparking new outrage. more about it next. i got an oriole here.
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welcome back to our viewers here in the united states and around the world. i'm natalie allen. you're watching "cnn newsroom" live from atlanta. more protests are expected in
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the hours ahead after cities across the u.s. marked a 20th straight day of demonstrations on sunday. protesters from coast to coast are speaking out against racial injustice three weeks after the death of george floyd in minneapolis. now there's renewed anger after a black man was shot and killed on friday. rayshard brooks was killed outside a fast food restaurant. police were called after he fell asleep in his car in the drive through. in the wake of deadly police shootings, congress is working to tackle police reform legislation. republican senator tim scoot, the only black republican in the u.s. senate, is proposing a national database to track incidents of police misuse of force but he says he's not ready to link recent police shootings of black men to systemic racism. here he is. >> i will say most of us don't really understand the definition
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of systemic racism. it changes based on the conversations. what i would suggest is that you look at the racial outcomes. is there a nexus? i think the answer is yes. can we reduce that so we're no longer battling the systematic or systemic racism? i think the answer is yes. there's no question that the outcomes seem to have a racial component. >> when the senator was asked about congress establishing a national standard for the use of force by police, this is what he said, said. >> i think it's really difficult to establish a codified in law standard for use of force. there are millions of scenarios that play out. that's one of the reasons why what we have tried to achieve through the legislation is finding the best practices around use of force around the country and then provide that
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clarity and guidance for those departments who need a better perspective on use of force. we're getting at it but i'm not sure we're going to codify in law a use of force standard. in a recent tweet president donald trump blasted democrats over the reepcent protests. he's calling on the mayors to take back their city. the ugly anarchists must be stopped immediately, end quote. cnn's doug simon went and here are some of the people they met. >> reporter: this is what it looks like when you enter chad. there is street graffiti. asking questions or making sure you're not somebody that's going to stir up trouble. >> making sure there's no
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violence here. that's why we're here. >> reporter: then you walk 2 or 300 feet and you're in the heart of the zone. this is the main focal point of the occupation zone. people have put up messages. how would you describe chas and the occupation? >> it's a lot of people out here, unity, trying to get this equality thing going. very peaceful. >> reporter: one of the remarkable things about the occupation is the infrastructure. they are incredibly well stocked for the long haul. those are all individual donor cards. most of this stuff, one bag of groceries at the time. >> we have so much stuff. we can't get enough people to take it right now. >> reporter: a lot of people on this field relaxing, having a picnic. there's a meditation society behind me.
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doesn't really look like the picture of anarchy. >> what are your immediate impresses? >> it seems like it's a great way to demonstrate what's happening. this is a very revolutionary time in our history and i think my kids need to see it and it seems peaceful and under control. >> good vibe. good vibe. we have a million people. not a million but everybody got a different opinion. we going to hear some screaming and yelling but it's only opinions. >> this is a native american group doing a drum ceremony. is everything polyannish here? washington is an open carry state. >> a couple bullets in this. this is not pro police. i'm an american citizen and my war is not with the police, it's with the system and the
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accountability and the lack of accountability. no, this is just for protection. >> what do you think of chas? >> this is the most beautiful thing. it's so hopeful. i've seen a lot of festivals around the world. what i see is something very similar, love, giving, self-organized policing and, yeah, just a lot of good vibes, rainbows, you know? it's really helpful for me. >> all right. from the far west to the united states we want to take you now to brittain which has seen a weekend of ugly scenes as far as right groups targeted -- targeting black lives matter demonstrations. amid the chaos one powerful image has resonated around the world, and for that we are joined now from london. it was quite the moment.
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tell us more about it, selma. >> reporter: that's right, natalie. i want to start by explaining where i am. i'm near waterloo station. this area is where these clashes broke out, where this viral image was taken. as right wing demonstrators were clashing. black lives matter had canceled because they didn't want to be drawn into any violence. pat trish hutchinson said he wanted to act as a peacekeeper. take a listen to what he told me. is this you in the photograph? >> yes, that is me. >> reporter: can you describe to me what's happening in this picture? >> my friend and i surrounded this man. he was on the stairs lying in a feet tall position. anything is about to happen to him.
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i saw him underneath me to pick him up. >> reporter: you could have looked at this man and thought, he is my enemy. why did you choose to help him? >> there was a particular thought i had that, you know, you have to show some sort of love for your fellow man, okay? regardless. because i was saying that if the other three officers that were present when george floyd was unfortunately mur 2kerd, if just one of them stepped in, and you put him on your shoulder. you carried him over to the police. then what happens? >> i'm carrying him, my friends surrounding me and the man on my shoulder. he was sort of receiving blows. carried him over to the police and i said, here you are. one of the police officers said,
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thank you. you did a good thing there. >> reporter: what do you want people to take away? >> hopefully they'll see breaking down the race barriers and seeing we're all one people, we're all one race. >> reporter: and this is what's so extraordinary about the black lives matter movement, natalie. there isn't one singular moniker. it's all how you interpret this. for patrick, that meant helping an injured man, he still doesn't know, might have held privileges against him. he hopes that image, if it's seen, will change people's minds and make them see everyone as equal. >> was an extraordinary act of kindness. thank you for sharing that with us. you're watching "cnn newsroom." still to come here, press, freedom in the philippines is put to the test. the verdict in the case against former cnn journalist. we'll have a live report for you. ♪
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we have some news coming in to cnn. a russian court has sentenced american paul whee land to 16 years in prison. the former u.s. marine who was also a citizen of the u.k., canada and ireland was detained at amos could you hotel in 2018 for alleged involvement in an intelligence operation. wheelan denies the spying charges and calls the trial a sham. he's calling on president trump and leaders from his other countries to, as he says, end this. a court in the philippines has found award winning journalist maria ressa guilty of cyber liable. she was a former cnn journalist and founder of news website rappler has denied it.
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rappler has produced extensive coverage on president dutertdut. this could have grave repercussions for maria ressa but for free speech journalism and journalists in the philippines. >> reporter: yeah, absolutely. maria is a very well known name not just in the philippines, but around the world. she was time's person of the year in 2018. she's award winning. she has someone like duvall clooney part of her international legal team representing her. she has been convicted of cyber liable. she's facing up to six years behind bars. human rights groups are calling these trup ped up charges,
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trumped up claims. you talk about the smaller independent media organizations and this verdict is without doubt an ominous warning. you challenge us, you scrutinize us and you will be next. that was something that maria ressa spoke to. they were at the courthouse to document this moment in history. i mean, she said she was absolutely devastated. even though she was preparing for the worst case scenario, but she told her colleagues not to give up. take a listen. >> reporter: i appeal to you, the journalists in this room, the filipinos who are listening, to protect your rights. we are meant to be a cautionary tale. we are meant to make you afraid. right? so i appeal again. don't be afraid.
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because if you don't use your rights, you will lose them. >> reporter: maria founded rappler back in 2011, 2012. she has made it her crusade to hold the government to count. when president rodrigo duterte came into account, they scrutinized the killings which penalized thousands of filipinos. this is coverage the president did not like an many say this is why he and his government and the courts have gone after maria ressa. but i mentioned amal clooney, natalie. she said shortly after that verdict verdict, i want to read you some of it. today a court in the philippines became complicit in a sinister act to silence a journalist. this is an affront to the rule of law, a staff warning to the
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president. she is going to appeal this verdict but as we know, this is one of the most dangerous places to work as a journalist. now you have a government that is going after particular individuals and organizations if they're not happy with the coverage. >> she is a bold journalist, the type that we need. we'll all be thinking about her as she appeals. anna coren in hong kong. thanks so much. next here, the pandemic on the minds of the investors. u.s. futures plunge as global stocks look set for another volatile week. we'll have another live update about it.
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rely on the experts at 1800petmeds for the same medications as the vet, but up to 30 percent less with fast free shipping. visit petmeds.com today. u.s. stock futures falling sharply as investors grapple with concerns over the coronavirus pandemic. you can see the dow, nasdaq, s&p all arrows pointing down. let's talk about it with cnn's jeff defterios. what's going on on wall street
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and for that matter in global markets? >> reporter: it seems like a sobering wake-up call for investors with the snap back cases, both in the number one and number two economies. the u.s. and in china. we saw the cases spike up in beijing and the u.s. now has a death toll of about 115,000 with cases well above 2 million. let's take a look at the closing numbers from asia, and you kind of get the idea of what i'm talking about here, natalie. shanghai the best performer. that deep fall of better than 4% on the day. we had industrial production and retail sales are improving but below expectations. if you take a look at the european markets, we're looking at losses from 1 to 1.5% at this stage. this is a critical window as you
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know, natalie, because france, italy, spain, greece are trying to reopen to tourism and this is a very delicate window. we don't know if the snap back is going to reoccur at the same time. there's realization in the united states that we've had the 44 million claims on the jobless benefits. if you calculate it, that's one in four of the american work force. what's coming in the second half. right. as far as helping out americans again, initially the white house was against further stimulus for the economy. now it's changed its tune. why is that? >> reporter: and changed its tune in a very, very big way, profound way. they were suggesting they'd like to see a second wave here coming in in terms of stimulus. better than $2 trillion who's a
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trade advisor at the white house. bringing them back on sheer. give people a payroll tax cut here. what are we suggesting here? $3 trillion in the first three waves, $2 trillion in the fourth wave. very dear price tag even for republicans on capitol hill. >> we'll be watching that one. john defterios. good to see you, john. thanks. >> thank you. and that wraps this hour of "cnn newsroom." thanks so much for watching. i'm natalie allen. "early start" with christine romans and laura jarrett coming up right after this. i got an oriole here.
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i want to do the same thing as if it was my husband who killed somebody else. >> as the nation continues to protest the killing of unarmed black men, police shoot and kill a black man in atlanta. how a police ebb counter that could have de-escalated turned so deadly so quickly. and as the economy reopens, coronavirus cases spike. several states dealing with record spikes of coronavirus cases and hospitalizations. those concerns sending asian stocks and u.s. futures down sharply overnight. it w

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