tv Don Lemon Tonight CNN April 27, 2022 7:00pm-8:00pm PDT
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the news continues right now. i want to hand it over to don. >> how do you describe the actions of the man who captured those images in bucha? he risked his life just by taking the photos. >> it's really extraordinary. this is a -- just one block in bucha. some 300 people were killed but 7 people were shot to death on that street over the course of several days. had soldiers scene him video taping on his cell phone camera,
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he would have been killed. there's no question about it. they were brutal to other residents on that street. he knew the risk he was taking. he felt it was important one day those photos could be important and he wanted to document what was happening. >> we'll have your full report from bucha a little later on in the show. the inhumanity. i know you've been in many war zones but to watch what is happening there to the people, each one is unique but it's indescribable what they are enduring and what our folks on the ground, including you are witnessing. >> yeah. the behavior of russian forces in a number of places has been really across the board pretty awful that not only obviously there's the shelling of several yans but individual acts of terror especially in bucha. documented incidents of individual shooting. civilians and bringing potatoes
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home to his family to get something to eat. shot to death for no reason at all other than to terrorize the population. they killed him because they could. >> look at the sun coming up behind you. it's really odd to see that. thank you. we'll see you tomorrow. get some rest. appreciate it. this is don lemon tonight. the evidence of what happened in bucha is shocking. we have more breaking news to tell you about. the u.s. has credible information that a russian military unit executed ukrainians who were attempting to surrender. more on that in a moment. russian flexing its muscle inside and outside ukraine tonight while the rest toughens up its rhetoric and actions and
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says it won't be blackmailed. vladmir putin forces making gains in the east and south after the humiliation on the outo outskirts of kyiv. this is what is left of a hospital hit by russian military strike. rubble nearly burying patients beds. cnn has geo located and verified the authenticity of this video. that as putin is muscle flexing extending beyond ukraine's borders cutting off gas supplies to poland and bulgaria after both countries refused to pay in rubles. they called it blackmail. as the west says the end game is to weaken russia, vladimir puti vows a lightning fast response to any outside interference in ukraine. >> if someone intends to intervene in what is happening from the outside and creates
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unacceptable strategic threats for us then they should know our response to oncoming strikes will be swift, lightning fast. >> outside interference, you mean like attacking an independent sovereign nation, bombing neighborhoods into rubble. that kind of foreign interference. as putin's forces battle the east and the south, ukraine is fighting back. overnight blasts reported in three russian regions including and e an ammunition depot. ukraine not acknowledging its forces rr responsible. adviser to president zelenskyy saying quote, karma is a cruel thing. a huge win for the biden administration. american trevor reed, a former marine, detained in russia since 2019 freed in a prisoner swap.
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the swap taking place on the tarmac in turkey. the state department says it won't impact the war in ukraine. there's new calls for russia to free two more detained americans. ukraine is acknowledging some eastern towns have been lost. you have been reporting from the front lines. what wilare you seeing? >> reporter: as you can hear, the sirens continuing here at dawn. they're pursuing it by advancing north of the river here. north of the river. they have captured the town and they are closing in.
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this is what that city looked like today. on the front line are russia. it's an artillery front line. >> let's get into the basement. local police are delivering aid to civilians unable to leave. there's no time to wait out the bombardment. there's no likely end to the shelling either. supplies need delivering and fast. up spstairs a bedridden woman. they only use the basement when it's bad. mostly old people. one gentleman is dying of
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cancer. saying she's living in a double hell. there's been five, six, eight impacts very close. almost every tree, every corner of this local neighborhood has got the signs of recent impact. russians are just a kilometer, maybe three away . he says we're in dapgernger now. they're shelling us. we try to hide there in the bomb shelter. two months of war have driven
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these people under ground. there's no end in sight. he tries to keep it inside but it creeps out. there's one more delivery that the police have got to make but every time we try to get out the front door of this building, there's another impact. they're saying the hospital is under heavy shelling. we were planning to go there. we can't get through nor can we get out of this bunker. the hospital was hit. images of the damage done that morning posted online by the local administration. officials said one civilian was killed. others injured and several floors were badly damaged. the humanitarian effort goes on. this woman asks only for the basics of existence. water and candles for light.
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you do this every day? most people left here now have nowhere else to go. they have lived here all their lives and don't want to abandon their homes. do you think the russians will take some of it? never he says. we will stand our ground to the last man. no one will leave here. anyone still here will be trapped in russian hands. it's probably worth remembering we're living in 2022 not 1942. the tactics of the russians are the sort of tactics they
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employed at some of the more violent aspects of the second world war targeting civilian areas. >> thank you very much. i want to bring in the former u.s. ambassador to ukraine. putin, today, warning any country interfering would be met with a lightning fast response. how should the united states and nato hear that? is that another escalation? >> it's another bluff. putin had some success from deterring us from doing things but threatening possibility of nuclear war. this is way to get us to step down on the increased armed shipment we are making. for the first time, we have seen the biden administration sort of laugh the threats off which is a very healthy response. >> do you think that the threat is in response to the change in rhetoric from the u.s. officials saying they want to seae a weakened russia. i think pay much more attention
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to our actions. the white house is sending long range artillery multiple rocket launchers to ukraine. we are working with our allies and partners so they send more. they understand this to make it much harder to make advances in their offensive and east of ukraine. >> i'm not sure you saw it so we will play it again but anderson spoke with the u.n. secretary general. listen to this. >> when they decide to end it and when there is after the cease-fire the possibility of a serious political agreement. we can have all meetings but that is not what will end the war. >> if that is the case, it sounds like this war may go on for quite some time, a long time. >> it may well. i think ukrainian determination
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to prevent russian domination has only grown. i think putin still doesn't understand he's not going to win. i think this is going on for months and maybe more than months. >> ambassador, the european union is accusing russia of trying to blackmail them after russia halted the gas supplies. this comes after president zelenskyy accused russia of using the nuclear threat to blackmail the world. is that really the tactic russia is using? blackmail. >> russia is trying to demonstrate it can impose economic costs on europe. it's an effort r to try and coerce them but it will fail. it's rather stupid. poland is already making e ing to be free of russian gas and oil. this will just spur poland to do
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that. for him to go after bulgaria which has been kind of soft is quite odd. it's been those politically vulnerable. it hurts his position. it's a big mistake. >> the british foreign secretary urging allies to supply ukraine with war planes, other heavy weapons as well. is this a necessary step when we keep hearing that the security of europe and really the whole world is at stake? >> i think it's the right course. given this massive russian offensive in east and open terrain, ukraine needs the war planes which we have been reluctant to help them receive. i think that will change. this is coming. it hasn't come yet. >> from the very beginning exactly what you're saying now.
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ukraine is acknowledging the gains made by russia. they also repelling russians in the donbas. how critical is this phase of the war right now? >> well, if putin makes a major gain, he will tout this as a victory and gives a reason to go on. if ukrainians manage to prevent from making major gains, he will beat out his hands and this will hasten the end of the war as the russians recognize they cannot win. if they can take major city or two, it's a small sdicity but t will be a victory for putin. i'm not certain if he can. if we can get the weapons that are promised, they get into the battle the chance of this happening go down. >> always a pleasure. thank you so much. >> thank you, my pleasure.
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he was detained in russia for 985 days. what did it take to free trevor reed in the middle of vladmir putin's war? we'll talk to a man who went to moscow in the hours before the war broke out working to get reed released. that's the former ambassador. he's here. that's next. it's lawn season. and i need a lawn...ququick. the fast way to bring it up to speed... scotts turf builder rapid grass. ♪ rapid grass is a revolutionary x of seed and fertilizer that will change the way you grow grass. it grows two times faster th seed alone for full, green grass in just weeks. after growing grass this fast, everything else just seems... slow. it's lawn season. let's get to the yard.
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tonight, american citizen and former marine, trevor reed is on his way home after close to 1,000 days in russian detention. he was released as part of a prisoner swap. russian state tv releasing this video that they say shows reed being escorted to plane at an airport outside of moscow. concerns over his health. his parents speaking out tonight. >> he still looked terrible but he sounded better. he sounded more like himself. he was cracking jokes and talking for a few minutes.
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he have more like trevor. we had been speaking with every one, asking them to please bring trevor home before the war in ukraine breaks out. please, please, please. that didn't happen. we were told the communications were cut for a bit. we were a bit down. then they said in next week, we're speaking again. >> joining me now is the former u.n. ambassador. trevor reed's family thanked him for traveling to moscow in an effort to win reed's release. we're so happy to have you here. thank you for joining us, sir. appreciate it. >> thank you very much. senior administration official says reed's release took months and months of work. you went to moscow just before the war in ukraine to help secure his release. more about what went onto get trevor reed freed. >> well, what was descisive was
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the parents. the reed's talking to the president. they had a meeting in the oval office and they convinced the president, who was very em patpa thet -- empathetic that his health was deteriorating. some exchange. another marine who is detained there that we need to get out along with the britney greiner, the basketball player. the u.s. is generally against prisoner swaps. you don't get the exchanges for free. t i think we got the better deal. an american marine coming home.
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wrongfully detained. the russian, a drug dealer, served 13 years. a drug pilot. this is day do celebrate amidst all this terrible news that's happening in ukraine. we got two more to go. he's been in detention for 40 months. do you say that, this could help. do you think this could help pave the way for other relees. how long could all of those take? >> well, look, this took, as you said, three years. these are very complicated, don. what happens is countries like
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iran, like north korea, venezuela that are hostile, take americans hostages and use them as bargaining chips. we have to develop a hostage policy where we try to prevent all of this. put sanctions out there. i think the president deserves credit for the step he took because this was a humanitarian release. at the same time we're battling the russians over ukraine, over nuclear weapons yet this exchange happened. maybe the russians are sending a signal that we need to start talking more. i'm not sure. i don't think so. i'm so laep with the release that it happened for trevor reed and the family.
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000 he's coming home. we should be a little positive. >> there are back channels going on with moscow. how important is having that line of contact when intentions are the highest they have been in decades. >> it's good. i coordinate with them. i work with them. i think the embassy in moscow did a good job.
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i'm sure their discussions going on. there are also private discussions that others can have. i was just there riepgt before t -- right before the war. i got out the day before the war started. this has been in the making for a while. it's been years. two, three years that we try to get this american out along with paul. we cannot forget paul whalen. she a marine unjustly detained. and britney greiner. we have to work to do that.
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>> it's been several months for britney. it's been 40 months for paul and almost 1,000 days for trevor reed. it's been a while. we appreciate you joining us. thank you for doing what you do. >> thank you. an armeninan really helped me and flew me there. fred smith. i want to thank him. >> also, you're energy secretary under clinton. a many of many -- >> couldn't keep a job. i was doing all kinds of things. >> thank you. we appreciate it. be well. >> all right. alarming inflation numbers, spears of huge disruptions to the food supply. now russia is shutting off gas supplies for two important european countries. what does it mean for the global
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my fellow xfinity customers. hi tim. the biggest week in entertainment is almost here. watchathon week presented by xfinity rewards. with free access to stranger things from netflix. the boys from prime video. hbo max, starz, and peacock. just say watchathon into your voice remote and get ready to watch. i love you. i love you. i love you all. russia cutting off natural supplies for bulgaria.
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european commission president calling it another attempt by russia to blackmail the eu. let's discuss now with our economic richard quest and the anchor of "quest means business." i'm so laep to have you here. >> delighted. >> i got do watch you a lot. i learned a lot. let's talk about the shut off nap was a really bold move for russia to do today. what's going on? we haven't seen gas prices this bad since 1973. sg >> it's warning shot. russia is saying you want to play hardball, we will cut the oil and gas to poland and bulgaria. we already know that hungary is paying the money.
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>> you're saying you don't know why. might you have some idea. do you have some. >> a work around has been found. the foreign minister said they weren't going to play this game. >> the truth is, the germans have found a way around it. >> that's what i want to talk about. germany is one of the most dependent countries on russia energy. >> 45%. >> what is going on? why won't germany do it? because it's 45%. >> that he can't. the hungarian foreign minister said we have no choice. more than 70% of our gas comes from russia.
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if you were the stop overnight russian oil and gas, the economy will contract by 5%. if you contract germany by 5%, you're putting the whole of europe into a deep recession. there are those who say that's a price that should be paid. there are those who say you'll find it elsewhere and won't be nearly that bad. when you look at austria, germany, you can say they should have seen this coming after the crimea in 2014. >> there's no work around for germany? >> not at the moment. how much pain do you want to inflict? do you inflict more pain on russia or more pain on myself? >> is this an incentive to not be so dependent on russia? >> they say that will be out of it by the end of the year. >> i want to talk about food supply. ukraine one of the biggest
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exporters of grain in the world. >> you'll see the highest rise in prices. thank god we're hearing the farmers in ukraine are planting, which means there will be a crop this year and later into next year. how you get that out is another matter. you're going out of the west to get the crop out, but, add in russia. russia is also a huge agriculture export. that's hit by sanctions. here in the united states and europe, it will be higher prices but it's those countries, the poorest countries that rerye on these things. >> they will be basiced by it.
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the world food bank is warning prices will remain high through 2024. it expects energy prices to jump by more than 50% and this year the food prices to soar by nearly 23%. the most likely to be hurt by the rising prices are -- >> pay more. those will be hurpt tht the mos poor countries. we already got inflations roaring up in the united states. >> that's what i want to go from this. it's happening here in the united states. >> it's an impossible situation. it's got to get rid of inflation. >> the question is recession. is that what you see coming? that's what i'm hearing all of our financial folks, our economists. you and others on cnn international. are we look at a recession and it's a global one?
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>> no. yes. the u.s. could skirt a recession. the average worker, the average person, there's not a huge difference between growing that much and going down that much. it will feel bad. the united states over the next 12 to 18 months is going to have this sluggish growth that will feel like a recession whatever the formal numbers show. if there is going to be a formal recession, it will be late next year. tun likely to be before mild of next year. >> the rising interest rates? >> you're asking me to comment on fed policy. >> yes, i am. >> whether it's the right thing or not -- the real question is why did they let it get so out of control? >> let's go with that. >> because they thought they were doing the right thing by
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leavie ing money around for lon. easy to second guess them. should there be three or four half a percentage point over the next 6 to 7 months? the answer to that is do you want to get rid of inflation? i'm old enough to remember the years of inflation. >> i do too. we're the same age. thank you. it's a pleasure. haven't seen you almost three years or two years. >> looking better than i am. >> thank you, sir. really appreciate it. a pattern of discriminatory race baiting policing going back a decade. that's how an investigation is describing practices at the minneapolis department. the mayor said it make him sick to his stomach. that's coming up. ( ♪ ) ♪ walking on ♪ ♪ walking on the moon ♪
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a bomb shell investigation into the minneapolis police department launched after the killing of george floyd revealing a pattern of discriminatory race baiting policing by officers going back a decade. the minneapolis department of human rights releasing a report based on interviews, hundreds of hours of body cam footage and almost 5,000 pages of document detailing racist behaviors from officer and horrific encounters that black people had with police. i'm so glad to have both of you on. i can't believe it. yet again, i can believe it. this report details some horrific encounters between black people and the police, including teenagers. listen to this. in one case from 2017, a supervisor approved the use of force of an mpd officer who came
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into a black room who found onnen unarmed black teen on the phone. when he did not stand up when instructed to do so, the officer hit the 14-year-old with the flash flight splitting his ear open and grabbed him by the neck and placed him in an unconscious neck restrants. by deeming this use of force, the supervisor authorized the officer to continue using such force in the future. how on earth was that allowed? >> i think this is problematic. it goes back to the chief of police sets the tone. i believe the chief of police in the derek chauvin case should have been fired and it didn't happen. you should be the professional as a police officer. i worked in the internal affairs bureau in the nypd and i understand a lot of these horrific allegations that are being lodged in this case and i hate to say it but i'm not surprised. we need to do more about it.
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i think it's been a glacial process moving forward. >> how often, i've been sitting here for cnn doing these stories for 15 years and we always say i'm not surprised. we should be surprised that it continues to happen. laura, i want you to weigh in here. talk about the culture and the investigation found this. some mpd officers used racial slurs. they called black individuals n words and monkeys and black women black b word. community members reported instances of calli ing hispanic beaners. they called some nappy head and cattle. officers slurring their own colleagues. why should the community believe they will be treated with respect when this is happening inside of their very own police
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department? >> there in lies part of the problem. this feels very personal. i'm from minnesota. to read bhawhat they have said about human rights and the abuses and this culture. my colleague talked about a glacial pace but the pace, the paralysis of dealing with these issues and remember, this began only because of the death of george floyd. they did not go into an individual case by case scenario to determine whether there was guilt or innocence or probable cause. it was part of a pattern and practice. they were looking at overall the connected tissue. what they found instances such as mpd using covert social media accounts to try to dig into the affairs or lure people in some way who are black officials or
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members of the community with no public safety correlation. the idea of usie ing excessive force upon a population, 42% of the overall population in minnesota but 93% of the people who have been killed by officers or the better part of a decade. these are extraordinary figures into the idea of trust. this is the same community that was calling for the defunding of the police based in part on a lack of transparency, fundamental distrust and now this report actually confirms a lot of what people have relegated and now it's data that will lead to a consent decree. >> look at the report. this is the huge report that we were talking about here. laura, you were a prosecutor. let's talk about this finding. i'm going to quote from the report again. it says city and county prosecutors noted it can be
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difficult to rely on mpd officers beside worn camera in court because of how disrespectful and offensive the mpd officers are to criminal suspects, witnesses and bystanders. investigators make the case that the behavior of officers is so bad that it undermines the criminal justice system. >> now, imagine that. one of the first things you ask of a juror in a voir dire process is whether they would give more weight and assign more credibility to a police officers testimony by vir stue of them being police officers. you would be surprised how many people will say i'm going to trust the officer because no one put s on a uniform to break the law. then you have something here counter intuitive that it's happening the opposite effect. because it's a police officer, because somebody in the uniform based on what's been observed and the behavior and perception
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among the community that you're not going to believe what they said. imagine case where it doesn't involve an officer who is the defendant, an officer whose own conduct is under the microscope but an officer who is supposed to be the person to relay information about two civilians or about other criminal activity that might be particularly violent in nature. you're talking because of what they have done to the community, they can't be trusted there. the prosecutors cases are now undermined. maybe fatally so even in cases where they are not the defendant. that speaks volumes about the efficiency and efficacy of prosecutors and it's why it's so im impactful to have instances like these reports that go in depth to talk about the pattern and what corrective action needs to be taken to give prosecutors and the communities they present a fighting chance at justice. >> yeah. then what's the fix here. >> this has been a systemic problem for years on end.
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i think we need greater overnight. i think a lot of the misconduct you see in a lot of police departments are becoming more surrep surreptitious. i think we need more facets within policing to ensure we ultimately it's the policing community relationship being fractured based on these messages being amplified to the public. >> fixable problem? >> i think it's fixable however we need the appropriate elected officials in place to pull the charge and handle to ensure that this happens. >> thank you both. i appreciate it. >> thank you. dr. anthony fauci trying to clarify what he meant by saying the u.s. is outlet of the pandemic phase. are we, or aren't we? to f freeze your pain and your doubt. heat makes it last. so you'll never sit t this one out. new icy hot pro with 2 max-strength pain relievers.
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dr. anthony fauci having to do some cleanup today on confusion that he created about where the united states stands right now with the covid-19 pandemic. this is what he said last night on pbs news hour. >> we are certainly right now in this country out of the pandemic phase. namely we don't have 900,000 new infections a day and tens and tens of thousands of hospitalizations and thousands of deaths. we are at a low level right now. >> okay, by saying this country is out of the pandemic phase a lot of people took that to mean the pandemic is over. dr. fauci responding immediately and clearly saying and i quote here, "we're not over the pandemic. don't let anybody get the misinterpretation that the pandemic is over. but what we are in is a
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different phase of the pandemic, a phase that's a transition phase hopefully headed toward more of a control where you can actually get back to some form of normality without total disruption of society, economically, socially, school-wise, et cetera." to hammer home his point fauci noting covid cases are trending upward again but nothing like the omicron wave over the winter. russia escalating the rhetoric over ukraine to alarming new levels. putin now vowing a lightening fast response to anyone who interferes in his war.
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