tv Don Lemon Tonight CNN June 28, 2021 8:00pm-9:00pm PDT
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rescue teams discovering another body today in the rubble of a collapsed condo building in florida. 11 people now confirmed dead. 150 others remain unaccounted for. the search and rescue operation continuing at this hour. and also tonight, as president biden calls for a federal investigation into the deadly collapse, the town of surfside, florida hiring a structural engineer to begin examining the evidence to get to the bottom of the disaster. and it turns out an engineering firm wrote a report on the building, this was back in 2018, warning of major structural
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damage, including significant cracks and breaks in the concrete, and advising the condo association to make extensive and necessary repairs. let's get to cnn's boris sanchez in surfside florida for us live this evening. boris, good evening to you. it has now been 117 hours since the surfside condo collapse. search and rescue teams have been scrambling to find any survivors. but no one's been pulled out alive since thursday. so how are families dealing with this? >> reporter: don, it's agonizing. they're in a state of excruciating limbo. they're anxiously awaiting any answers to a series of questions. what happened to their loved ones? are there any signs of life, are there any survivors? and then they're thinking about accountability as well. could this have been prevented? what caused this? did someone know something like this would happen?
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will somebody be held responsible? it's very difficult to move forward and begin the process of grieving when you don't know what actually happened to your loved one and when officials here are putting out a message of hope, trying to keep hope alive. part of that is the mayor of miami-dade county, daniella levine cava, continuously repeating this was a search and rescue operation. she made that clear during a press briefing today. listen. >> so we have people waiting and waiting and waiting for news. that is excruciating. we have them coping with the news that they might not have their loved ones come out alive, and still hope against hope that they will. they're learning that some of their loved ones will come out as body parts. i mean, this is the kind of information that is just
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excruciating for everyone. and they know that we're working around the clock on the search and rescue efforts. >> reporter: now, the reason that rescue crews have this hope is because they have experience dealing with situations like this in the past, where they have been able to rescue people, six, seven days after a collapse. so they don't want people to lose hope. but when you look at the odds, and you look at these pictures, the families of 150 people right now witnessing this, facing staggering odds, it's just impossible to put yourself in their shoes and understand the pain they're feeling right now, don. >> that is for certain. boris, i have to ask you, i spoke with the commissioner earlier, the surfside commissioner earlier in the 10:00 hour and asked her about when will this turn into a recovery effort rather than a search and rescue effort.
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she had no idea. do you have any idea, is anyone talking about that? >> reporter: no. i think officials here are being very delicate about making that distinction between a rescue effort and a recovery effort. they don't want to let these folks down. the rescue workers here, we've talked to officials over and over again about the stress that they must be feeling, braving the elements, risking their own lives to try to make a miracle real. they don't want to let these folks down. they're still working around the clock. we've seen heavy machinery being moved in even at this hour. despite that, at some point this obviously will move into a phase of recovery. and obviously the implication there is that, you know, there are no signs of life. there are no other survivors. they want to be very delicate about moving in that direction. and at this point they are pushing the fact that this is still a search and recovery
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effort and that these families should keep hope. >> search and rescue. thank you very much, boris, i appreciate that. engineers are trying to figure out exactly what caused the surfside condo to collapse. it may take months to get the answer. but evidence of structural damage already piling up. here is cnn's drew griffin. >> reporter: as new evidence emerges of past inspections, cracks, and potential danger, this short surveillance camera video itself remains the best clue so far as to how and why the champlain tower south fell in what a forensic engineer calls a clean collapse. >> there was a pancake effect, almost symmetric and vertical. and what that causes is the structure to come straight down instead of collapsing sideways or collapsing in any other trajectory, which would mean that whatever caused it, which is unknown at this point, would have caused this structure to have a clean, vertical collapse
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of those towers. >> reporter: but while engineers continue to speculate from afar, but reality the answer likes, like the victims, trapped under rubble. an alarming 2018 inspection report warned of abundant cracking in concrete columns and several instances of deteriorating rebar, especially on the condo's pool deck and in the parking structure garage underneath the building. according to the report, failed waterproofing was causing major structural damage to the concrete structural slabs below the pool. several engineers cnn spoke with say the 2018 report did not foresee a catastrophic collapse. and minutes from the condominium association board meeting the following month shows a town official told residents it appears the building is in very good shape. champlain towers south was in the process of recertification,
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a miami-dade government structural and electrical assessment of any building 40 years old. according to the condominium association attorney, the building had multiple inspections and was in the process of extensive work which would have cost $15 million. structural engineer jason borden examined champlain tower just last year. >> i saw typical things we see in buildings, cracks in the stucco facade, i saw deterioration in the concrete balconies, cracks in the plaza level. those are all things we're accustomed to seeing. that's why our job exists. >> any cause for alarm in what you saw? >> in what i saw, no. >> reporter: the lack of alarm is sending chills through residents who live here and beyond. voluntary evacuations for the champlain tower's sister building and a rush to answer
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why this building just fell. forensic engineering caution that answer could yet be months away. drew griffin, cnn, atlanta. >> drew, thank you so much for that. urgent work is now happening in other buildings in florida to make sure they're not at risk of collapsing. cnn's brian todd had a chance to look at the new inspections under way. >> reporter: municipalities on the florida coast are scrambling tonight to make sure the kind of collapse that happened in surfside doesn't happen to them. cnn got exclusive access to the reinspection and repairs going on at the winston towers complex in sunny isles beach a few miles north of surfside. we saw worried residents complaining about the red tape. >> we didn't get marching orders. >> reporter: there are seven buildings in this complex, each either the same age or older than the condo that collapsed in surfside, each 20 stories tall with 250 units in every building. inspectors show us the damage in
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the parking garage under the pool deck, a setup similar to champlain towers. there are columns and concrete floors cracking, rusted rebar and cables that support the concrete. >> when you look at this now, given what happened in champlain, how big a concern is this? >> it's a big concern. >> why? >> because it could fail and people could die. >> reporter: these inspectors emphasize this is normal wear and tear for buildings like this and it doesn't mean the building is in imminent danger of collapse. still, the work will have to be done to prevent a repeat the surfside collapse. a contractor points to something he's concerned about. >> the chlorine from the pool has deteriorated the reinforcing and the cable in these areas. that's why we have a massive repair underneath this pool. >> reporter: the city's mayor points out it's the owners of each unit that have to pay for
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repairs. >> these buildings are facing up to $25,000 apiece assessment. these people are working class, the people working in the restaurants, all the kids that go to the school, all the kids that would normally use this pool. these people are not in a situation where they are able to afford that kind of money. >> reporter: brian todd, cnn, sunny isles beach, florida. joining me is the former fdny commissioner during the september 11th terror attacks. commissioner, thanks for joining us here. we really appreciate you and the expertise you have in such matters, because you went through a rescue and recovery just like this for 9/11, just on a much bigger scale. the conditioners for these rescuers are incredibly tough. what challenges are they facing as they look for these survivors? >> well, the emotions being one. as time goes by, it becomes really kind of depressing for them to have not found anybody,
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not even to find remains. i'm surprised that they haven't found more fatalities, at least, even if we haven't been fortunate enough to find any survivors. i'm hoping that it's because a lot of those folks we think of are missing just went home, they live in another country and haven't contacted us for one reason or another. i just hope that not all 150 people -- and i doubt very much there's that many people in that collapse. that's my hope. but what the rescuers are running into now is the same thing that we ran into on september 11th. as you say, on a much smaller scale. if they rush, they are in danger of moving heavy pieces of concrete or steel. or too much fire, too much water. there's a potential of drowning somebody who might be caught down there and still alive. there are so many ways they can make it worse, exacerbate the
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situation that that person is in, waiting to be rescued. so they have to go slow, deliberate. there's 250 people working on it right now. you can't have any more than that. they have heavy equipment, trying to slowly move the extra heavy pieces of equipment, of concrete and steel. they're doing everything they possibly can, as methodically and as professionally as possible. >> let's talk about everything they're doing, and perhaps you can add to what you're saying, because we've seen these huge cranes lifting giant slabs off the rubble pile. dogs have been looking for signs of life. professional rescue teams have come in from israel and from mexico. how many different methods do these rescuers have to try to reach people who may be trapped here? because they've got a lot of resources. but still, suggas you said, the haven't found a lot of people, they haven't been able to remove a lot of rubble. how many different resources do
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they have? >> the easiest way to do it would be to bring in all the heavy equipment and push all that concrete and steel out of the way and look for remains of people that have died. but because they are still hoping that there's people alive, they don't want to move all that steel like that, they don't want it to shift, they don't want the wait to slide across on top of someone who might be alive. so they're trying with all the latest technology. they have all kinds of electronic equipment. they have the dogs, as you mentioned. there's sonar, there's so many new things that have come since september 11th that allow them to penetrate the steel without doing any damage. they've gotten equipment from nasa. they've got sonar. there's ways of listening to sound. they have audio equipment, they can hear any kind of movement, not necessarily the sound of a human but the sound that's created by something that might give a hint to -- you know, that someone might still be alive or
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at least it's a void that they should try to go through. underneath that pile where you see a lot of men and women standing around or just moving slowly, are people digging tunnels, crawling into holes that are small and dangerous. if it shifts, the rescuer can be crushed. they shore it up as they go through it. there's professional engineers and structural engineers, professional engineers, doctors on the scene, ems people ready to help anybody that needs it as quickly as possible. the urban search and rescue concept that has been developed since september 11th or probably since oklahoma city, there's probably 28 teams from around the country, i think florida has three of its own, that whole concept has been a phenomenal source of professionalism for all the rescues that are necessary throughout the country and throughout other countries also that we've gone to help.
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>> so let's talk about this, because you said they're going into holes, they're moving stuff around. but even if they do find someone who is trapped, right, it stale may not be easy, to probably won't be easy getting too them. i mean, there is a lot involved, if they find someone who is trapped, trying to move the debris and rubble around to get to them safely or to get them out safely. >> don, there is nothing easy about this whole operation. as you hear so many of your viewers talking about, they're not getting enough information, they're not getting this, they're not getting that. it's one of those situations where you're not going to -- it's kind of a no-win. until you find somebody and you're able to get them out, that's the only win. everything else is just the inevitable time you take to try to get to that point where you have a resolution. even a resolution, we saw it on
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september 11th, people are grieving, they're sad, they're crying, then they're angry, they'll be angry at the inspectors or the people who didn't do what they should have done in their opinion over the course of time to maintain the building. they'll be angry at the officials for not preventing this from happening. it's just a natural course of events. there's no solution to it. it has to just be played out. it's very sad, and people will criticize those that are making this valvaliant. but a lot of the criticism, most of it in my opinion, will not be valid. >> commissioner vonn essen, thank you very much, we spent so much time with you during 9/11 and here we are again. thank you for joining us. >> you're welcome. to help surfside building collapse victims, please go to cnn.com/impact. so the northwest has never seen temperatures like this.
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115 degrees in portland today. so hot that power cables melted, suspending service for the day. 107 degrees in seattle. i'm going to ask governor jay inslee what the heck is going on. this may look like a regular movie night. but if you're a kid with diabetes, it's more. it's the simple act of enjoying time with friends, knowing you understand your glucose levels. ♪
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so a record breaking heat wave crippling the pacific northwest. portland, oregon hitting a scorching 115 degrees today. seattle, washington, 107 degrees. parts of washington state reportedly even reaching 118 degrees, which the seattle national weather service says would tie the state temperature record from 1961 if that is confirmed. it's usually in the 70s in the area at this time of year. i want to discuss with washington governor jay inslee. governor, wow, wow, wow. good evening to you.
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this is a lot to bear for people who are living in that area. you've been a leader in the push to addressing the dangers of climate change. did you ever expect to see seattle at 107 degrees in june in 2021? >> we knew this was going to happen some year. the science is very clear on this. i and so many others have been trying to arouse our nation to an effort against climate change. and now we're here. the opening act has arrived of a climate catastrophe. and we're getting it in the pacific northwest right now. i-5, some lanes buckled. we had to shut down lanes of our interstate through seattle today. we have thousands of people without power, as you point out. sometimes lines just melted. i think the important lesson for the pacific northwest is we're getting ours tonight but everybody is going to get it. sea level rise in florida is going to flood people and who knows what damage it's going to
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cause. the tundra is melting in alaska. whole villages are melt iing in the tundra. california is an explosive tinder box that's gone off several times in the last several years. everyone will get hit by this claim catastrophe. we're facing it tonight. it hurts. it stinks. i hate to think of people having heat stroke tonight and people drowning who have been trying to escape the heat. that's why i'm very hopeful that congress will final act and pass a reconciliation bill that will tackle climate change. >> i've got to tell you, people in your state, people everywhere but especially in your state, aren't used to this heat. seattle is the least air conditioned metro in the country, only 44% of homes have ac. are you there, did you lose the earpiece? i think his earpiece fell out. governor, if you can hear me, if your earpiece is back in?
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okay. so we lost him. again, this heat wave, very serious. look at the temperatures, 300 plus records will be set in the coming days because of the heat. you've got roads buckling and electric lines melting, in a place that's usually 70 degrees right now, and now it's in the 100s, in the 90s. look at this, seattle streetcar. this is from twitter. this is an electric line melting. so there we go. more to come on this right after this break. if your wal. they'd say... help us. today let's paint. let's paint our houses. and our fancy doghouses. it's a fancy dog home. right now, get incredible savings on behr marquee® paints. starting at $39.98*.
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inslee of washington back. governor, thank you. i knew you had dropped your earpiece, because i saw it come out, and i said "can you hear me." we were talking about the record temperatures in your state and the lack of air conditioning there. only 44% of homes in seattle have ac. what are residents doing to keep safe? >> we're trying to help each other, of course. neighbors are helping neighbors. we have opened up quite a number of cooling centers. we've expanded our capacity. we had covid restrictions on capacity on some of these centers. we've set those aside, so we can get more people into cooling centers. people are trying to get in the water physically, and unfortunately we've had several drownings in part as a result. so we're doing what we can do. i think the fact is, though, is, look, this problem of climate change can't be solved by air conditioners. it would be like trying to win
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world war ii with air raid bunkers. we have to attack the source of this problem because this climate is changing so fast in my state, it's hurting the fundamental aspects of our culture and our economy. i talked to a couple of our farmers, they're terror-stricken, they're going to lose their crop this year because of this heat. our shellfish industry, we have not been able to grow baby oysters in puget sound without treating the water, because of ocean acidification. you can't run from climate change. you have to challenge it and defeat it, which means building a clean energy economy. i'm proud of my state, we've now adopted the most ambitious, the most aggressive, the most robust climate change, clean engineering, job creating programs for the united states. we need congress to adopt the same measures we have in our state. >> will this be part of infrastructure?
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are you dealing with rolling blackouts and all that stuff? because that happens. >> we are. >> i'm wondering if we should start tackling, if people should start tackling this maybe with some infrastructure, whatever they're trying to do with infrastructure. >> yes. yes, we need to make our grid more robust. we need to make sure renewable energy can be tied into it. but since you mentioned infrastructure, there is a danger right now in our nation's capital. if we only do roads and bridges and we don't do clean cars and clean electrical grid and energy efficiency in our buildings, it would have been an enormous opportunity, really our last opportunity squandered, to save ourselves. so this is very imperative that congress and the president buckle down and make sure that if this bipartisan infrastructure deal goes through, a reconciliation bill also goes through, that will be a real climate bill. i've heard some senators say, no
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climate, no deal. i think that's an appropriate approach. we have to have, in this infrastructure package or reconciliation package or both, a meaningful, strong climate proposal to get on top of this problem. it is absolutely imperative. and we all ought to be talking to our members of congress about this subject. >> listen, i know it sounds trite, but stay cool, and we appreciate you joining us. no, i'm serious. i grew up in louisiana. it's hot as hell in august, and it's humid. i can't imagine when it's dry, you guys aren't used to that. we're used to that, we were built for that. >> this is not a june deal in the evergreen state. this is a whole different deal. >> a whole nother show. >> we have to get on top of it. >> thank you, governor. former attorney general bill barr says he suspected that former president trump's claims of widespread election fraud were, in his words, "all bs." he used the actual word.
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the former ag says he's not aware of any discrepancies in the 2020 election. so i want you to listen what he told abc news chief washington correspondent jonathan karl. >> i had no motivate to suppress it but my suspicion all the way along was that there was nothing there. it was [ bleep ]. you could tell me all you want to that it could have been hacked or whatever. but it's a counting machine and we saved everything that was counted. so you just reconcile it. there's a pile right there. how many ballots? a thousand. now let's see who they're for. there's been no discrepancy reported anywhere that's looked at that. and i'm still not aware of any discrepancy. >> i mean, and that's it, thank you guys for joining us, good night. john avlon and elie honig, elie
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honig wrote "hatchet man: how bill barr broke the prosecutors' code and broke the justice department." elie, he said it. but you're not buying what barr is selling. why? >> here's a question i would have liked to ask bill barr if i had a chance to sit down with him, which by the way, don, he declined to sit with me several times for my book. okay, mr. former attorney general, you knew this was all bs like you said, why did you embrace it for months leading up to the election, when the public was impressionable, why did you fan the flames, why did you go on n pchlpr and tell falsehoods air? why did you come on cnn and lie to wolf blitzer about the big lie? this is spin control by bill barr but it's not even effective because it's so easy to refute the nonsense he's trying to put out now.
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>> why didn't he do it when he had a bigger megaphone, and now it's over. john, barr first finally admitted there was no widespread election fraud right before he resigned. after that, jon karl yelled at barr, saying "you must hate trump," referring to himself in the third person. trump didn't understand what an actual attorney general was and barr certainly obliged. >> of course. he saw the attorney general as his own personal lawyer, the justice department as his own team of hatchet men, as elie says, the military as "my generals." what you see, and how history will record this, we had a mad king for a time who tried to overthrow an election in the united states of america and there was a cult of personality being enabled by people like his chief of staff who tried to aid
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that effort. whether it's a rehab tour or not, we need the full truth to come out. we need to confront people with that truth consistently because there can be no compromise with lies, and that's what they've been peddling for so long. even if it's a rehab tour conversion, i'll take it, if only to confront folks with the truth rather than the lies that they told when in office at trump as behest. >> what are you talking about? people lied in the trump administration? shocking. john, there's new reporting from "the wall street journal," reporter michael bender's new book obtained by axios. his reporting says trump wanted to invoke the insurrection act to put general mark milley in charge of a military campaign inside the country to suppress last summer's racial justice protests. trump yelled at milley that he was, quote, f-ing in charge and milley fired back that he was
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not. trump has denied to axios, duh, that it happened. what does this new reporting >> also trump and his aides deny that they were discussing it. it's one more sign how serious what was going on behind the scenes was, all throughout the election year. the president of the united states calling for invoking the insurrection act to crack down on protesters and has to be lectured by the chairman of the joint chiefs of staff? we had a president that wanted to deploy the u.s. military illegally to, quote, crack the skulls of peaceful protesters in the streets of america. >> listen, elie, the former president, barack obama, was, you know -- is talking about future elections and attempts to overturn them. he is sounding the alarm, saying, you know, what's going to happen. what do you think could happen in 2024, 2022, and beyond, and
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beyond, if, you know, these laws that are in 22 states -- excuse me, these 22 sets of laws that have been enacted in states where legislatures can overturn the election, or give it to whatever candidate they think is right that they want to win, what happens? >> it's really important that former president obama is drawing attention to this issue. it's really dire when it comes to our fundamental rights to vote. there's only two ways to combat, fight back against these restrictive state laws. one is congress. they're not going to have their act together, democrats don't have the numbers and don't have the will power. i think it's foolhardy to county own that. the other key will be through the courts, through litigation. this past week we saw the justice department announce it would be filing suit against the georgia legislation. that's really important. i think it signals that doj has changed course and they'll be challenging some of these other
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states. but also understand, that's an uphill climb. doj has to show there was purposeful discrimination behind these lawsuits. they do a good job in the complaint. but again, you don't have anybody out there saying let's pass these laws so we can discriminate. you have to look at the stats and read between the lines. but it's really important that doj is taking up this fight. >> every election can't be like this one. oh, my gosh, this is going to be nuts. i don't know have i have the stomach for it. thank you, gentlemen, i appreciate it. a 2018 report said there was, quote, major structural damage. three years later, the building is a pile of rubble. we'll look at what could have caused it, that's next. plus the nfl comes out during pride month, the nfl comes out during pride month. i'll explain. you have to see their new ad. - had enough? - no... arthritis. here. new aspercreme arthritis. full prescription-strength? reduces inflammation? thank the gods. don't thank them too soon.
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tonight, as president joe biden calls for a federal investigation into the collapse of the condo tower, the town of sur surfside, florida is hiring a structural engineer to begin to look for answers. a report from 2018 warned of major structural damage including significant cracks and breaks in the building's concrete. more from cnn's tom foreman. tom? >> reporter: hey, don. all eyes are focused on this 2018 inspection and report about
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this property which found major structural damage and abundant cracking and spalling of the concrete. this is a term some people refer to as concrete cancer. it happens a lot in human environments and salty environments. and there's a lot of concern about it. beyond that, there was concern about water seals on the building. the failed waterproofing is causing major structural damage to the concrete structural slab below these areas. failure to replace the waterproofing in the near future will cause the extent of the concrete deterioration to expand exponentially, again, reference to that concrete cancer people talk about there. how much would it cost to have done the repairs? $9 million in 2018. yet that same year there was a meeting with people tied to the condo and a city official in which the city official said it appears the building is in very good shape. a lot of questions about why that was said, what the reaction was to it, especially in light
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of this report being out there. and these were not the only concerns, by the way. there have also been concerns about nearby construction, some people in the building say they felt shaking in the building which alarmed them. we've heard reports of creatks n the building. does any of that definitely have to do with the collapse? absolutely not, but these are things that have to be looked at closely by investigators. >> tom, thank you. i want to bring in a professor of structural engineering at drexel university, thank you so much for joining us, professor. you took a look at the reports that raised major concerns about the major structural damage to the concrete slab below the pool deck and cracking and crumbling of the columns and beams of the parking garage. professor, does that offer clues as to why this building came
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down? >> the clue it offers is that the engineer should have been given access to check the interior of the building, the slab, which he never had access, for some reason. it showed that deterioration was going on. but he did not check the main towers and check the slab/column connections. this building is a flat slab construction. so punch and shear, where the column punches through the slab, that's a common failure for these types of structures. if he had been given access to check those column connections to the slab, we would have known whether those were badly deteriorated and whether punch and shear was going to be an
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imminent failure mechanism for this structure. because the tower that came down, came down on itself. it's almost like a controlled demolition. and, you know, there are several ways that can happen. the column can fail. punch and shear could have happened. the foundation could have given way. we also need to check the original design. was this structure well-designed? folks might say that the building has been standing for 40 years. so was the i-35 bridge. it stood for 50 years, and coll collapsed. those are the things that i would check. this engineer's report was craig out for more investigation into the building in 2018. >> professor, you know, you're right about the bridge. and you're right, as we looked at that video, we saw the video of this structure, this condo
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collapsing, pancake, almost, as you side, like a controlled demolition. u as you see the images before and after, what stands out to you? >> what stands out to me, like i said, i think so those three possible failure scenarios that could have caused the center portion to collapse. the thing that stood out to me was the east segment. the east segment of the structure, you know, was looking for bracing, was looking for some lateral bracing. it had none. because there was only one wall in the north/south direction in that segment, in that northeast segment of the structure. had there been more walls in the east/west direction and in the north/south direction in that segment, we might have been able to at least rescue some people and have that standing for a while.
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that is the thing that stands out to me. the walls in this structure, what we call the shear walls that are there to resist lateral loads, especially in the east/west direction, i feel there should have been more of those. >> thank you, professor, appreciate you joining us. >> you're welcome. so the nfl topping off pride month by coming out. that's next. you're strong. you power through chronic migraine - 15 or more headache days a month,
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as we close out pride month, and one week after carl nassib of the las vegas raiders came out as the nfl's first active player to announce he is gay. now, the league released a new video supporting lgbtq americans. i want you that take a look at this. ♪ well, i mean, you know, we have always known football is gay. have you seen the uniforms? and all the padding and -- anyways, it finishes with a message of support from the trevor project. an organization that works to prevent suicide in lgbtq youth. that is the important part of all of this. so, everyone, happy pride.
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[footsteps] so, are you gonna buy the car? please! if i could just go home, and discuss things with my wife- i've been here all weekend. you can leave anytime you want. no! ahhh! never go to a dealership again. well, that was painless. go to vroom.com, buy a car and we'll deliver it straight to you.
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[ "me and you" by barry louis polisar ] go to vroom.com, buy a car ♪ me and you just singing on the train ♪ ♪ me and you listening to the rain ♪ ♪ me and you we are the same ♪ ♪ me and you have all the fame we need ♪ ♪ indeed, you and me are we ♪ ♪ me and you singing in the park ♪ ♪ me and you, we're waiting for the dark ♪
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good evening from surfside, florida. i'm john berman, in for anderson, tonight. families and friends are holding onto hope that their loved ones may, still, be found alive. even as authorities in this beach-side community announced a short time ago that an 11th body was pulled from the wreckage of the champlain towers south condo, today. that leaves 150 unaccounted for, almost-six days since the tragedy that has touched at least nine countries, and multiple faiths. and put safety on th
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