tv Erin Burnett Out Front CNN May 2, 2022 4:00pm-5:00pm PDT
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he will stand out. >> reporter: hey wolf, just talked to the sheriff and they believe they have more video evidence they plan to release to the public within the next 24 hours hopefully they get a little closer to these two on the run. >> ryan, thank you very much and to our viewers, thank you very much for watching. i'm wolf blitzer in the "the situation room," erin burnett, "outfront," starts right now. "outfront" next, intense fighting in and around the steel plant where hundreds of ukrainians are holed up, a commander speaking to "outfront" from inside the plant tonight. saying the attacks right now are nonstop and the situation inside, food and water, desperate. plus the most innocent victims of the war, children targeted in bucha, stories of snipers repeatedly as children were trying to escape swiftly. and just how much trump ivanka trump is giving to the
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january 6th select committee, how her hours of testimony may actually end up being key to the investigation. let's go "outfront." good evening, i'm kaerin burnet the breaking news, russia intensifying assault on a sprawling steel plant where thousands of ukrainians are holed up. i just spoke to a commander there who said the strikes have been literally nonstop over the past few hours yet despite the attacks ukrainian fighters say they still hope to evacuate several hundred people which includes still in that plant, commander tells me, 20 children. as you can see, though, there is heavy black smoke rising over the area where the plant is located. it is, of course, in the area of mariupol, and tonight, russia is cla claiming putin's forces reached the outskirts of the plant and carrying out a step-by-step clearing operation. well captain pladomar at the plant pushed back against russia's claims. >> translator: all of the buildings that they're showing
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or might be showing, they are adjacent to the territory of the asov steel plant. and as of now, the entire plant territory is under our control and our defense is along the perimeter of the asov steel plant and we are holding the defense. >> you're going to hear much more in my interview with captain palomar in a moment. meanwhile, at this hour, 250 miles to the west in kherson, russia's intense military campaign taking out civilian targets with rocket-propelled grenade launchers according to ukrainian officials there and the pictures show the destruction. just outside the city of kherson. matt rivers is "outfront" in kyiv and what is the latest on the ground tonight? >> reporter: yeah, so we are watching very closely, erin what is going on in mariupol. in terms of evacuations, that is the story going on right now in ukraine and you really have two
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different evacuation operations on going or at least trying to be on going. on the one hand, you have operations centering on really the entire city controlled by the russians. that was, is where we're seeing the most successful evacuation operation undergoing, which is what happened. today, we've seen dozens and dozens and dozens of civilians making their way eventually to the city of zaporizhzhia in ukrainian-held territory, on the other hand, that steel plant, which along side all the fighters including the captain you spoke to, also civilians inside that steel plant essentially trapped, there are much fewer of those civilians able to get out of there because it remains a target for russia, this, despite the fact that putin said a week or two ago that he wasn't going to be thinking he would storm that steel plant, that apparently has now changed. of course, not the only fighting going on in ukraine, we're watching closely what happens happening in the east, around city of kharkiv, for example, the second largest city in the country where ukraine has been able to take back several
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settlements in that area that russia managed to take and this is more indicative of what's going on in the east, not seeing largescale russian gains by any means, very incremental, the progress the russians have made and a an interesting report by british intelligence today talking about the fact that of the 120 or so battalion tactical groups that russia committed to this war, these are some of their main fighting units, some 25% of those according to british intelligence are now combat ineffective meaning they cannot do what they're supposed to do because of what's happened and some of the groups which are the best troops the russia has, special forces troops are the units seeing the highest rates of attrition so russia continuing to have issues with the combat troops in the east not making the kind of ground, making up the kind of ground russia clearly want to have done by now. >> matt, thank you very much. "outfront" now, captain palomar, deputy commander of ukraine's asov regiment and
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currently inside the asovstal steel plant in mariupol, and captain, i appreciate your time. one can only imagine the situation you're in. what is happening inside the plant right now? >> translator: so it has really been busy today and over the night as well, the strikes going on nonstop, it's been, tank artillery, volley artillery, and every three to five minutes there were air bombardment and they also made several attempts to attack but our guys manage to repel them and killed five occupiers. however, the most important is that the cynicism of all of this is there is still civilians sheltering in the plant and yet the enemy continues this bombing. >> captain, i know you're
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talking about there are people who are trapped, you can hear their voices, you can't see them. so i know, you know, in the mass space under that plant you don't know everything. but from what you understand and for you and your regiment, do you have enough food and water? >> translator: well, if you are talking about my regiment, specifically, then i have to say yes, that we are extremely short on supplies in terms of water and food. i cannot tell you for sure how much is left for how many days, but i can assure you that we are saving, very fearful without water and food and especially ammunition, but besides, we're also sharing water and food, whatever we have with the civilians and if it comes to
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worse and we run out of food, we'll be catching birds and we'll be doing everything just to stand firm. >> captain, i have to ask you one other question and i know it's difficult to ask, but if -- do you think the russians would respect any rules of war, geneva conventions, if you were in a situation where they captured you and your regiment, do you think you would be able to be treated respectfully as prisoners of war or what do you think they would do? >> translator: you know, only a few days ago you must have heard about this, that five soldiers were captured and one from the
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territorial defense and one of them was ours and there was only on the 19th of april. and then a couple, two or three days later, russians sent an image of our soldier to his mother, which she can see her son who had been tortured by the russians. and this, this is just, just one of the many war crimes that they have been committing and this is already a proven fact that they're not honoring those conventions and they are killing and torturing prisoners of war. just to add to that, unlike russian soldiers, we are treating prisoners of war differently. since the first days of the, this war, we've had prisoners of war with us here in the plant and we have provided them
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conditions to survive, in fact we are sharing with them our provisions. they have the same conditions as we do. we've got an officer, a tank commander, and two other serviceman which are in the same conditions as we are. >> captain palomar, thank you very much. and that's where they are tonight, and they say they will fight and fight until the end because if they were in any situation to consider doing anything else, you heard him describe how the russians have treated ukrainian prisoners of war. "outfront" now, lieutenant army general mark hertling, general, you hear the commander, the fight has obviously been devastating for all of ukraine, this plant, though, has become a focal point for the world. and you have these, the commander, his troops, those civilians, 20 children who are
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there, surviving against all odds and fighting on. what is the fight at this plant costing russia? >> well erin, first, if i could start off by saying that was a powerful interview with captain palomar. the courage and heroism of that group that's fightening that small facility is just phenomenal. it will live on in ukrainian and world history. the plight, you pointed out so very well in the interview where you said what will russia do if you're captured? russia does not abide by the rules of land warfare so they will either kill or torture these individuals as they take them prisoners. so these individuals know what they're going through. it will be very difficult for russia to clear this objective as you started off in your piece with them. because what we are used to do in the u.s. army as we got in afghanistan was look at
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subterranean attacks and how to clear the buildings and what we found very interesting was the attacker in those kind of situations suffering great casualties. when you look at the asovstal steel plant it goes six stories below ground and the size of a city in the baltic countries so you're talking about a huge underground city with a lot of capabilities to attack the aggressors and that's what they're going to do as they go in these city, but it's going to be tough to sustain themselves for food and ammunition supplies. >> yeah, that obviously seems to be his greatest fear and concern is the dwindling supplies. so ukraine, overall, general, does appear to be making some gains. a senior u.s. defense official says ukrainian forces have pushed russian forces about 25 miles to the east of kharkiv over the past day or two. so what do you read into that?
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>> what i read into it is exactly what ukrainian forces are doing, counterattacking any reconnaissance force by the russian military, primarily in the north around kharkiv and also in the area around the northern pincer as we call it of that shoulder that the attempted to can youdouble envelop so the some great battles going on there, the russians not achieving objectives in the northern part and truthfully, not achieving objectives in the southern part because of these heros of mariupol. they are finding the russian forces and not allowing them to attack to the north in the access advance that they're looking at. what you have to look at erin, as you look beyond the powerpoint map we have on cnn, the roads, the rivers, the bridges, the mountains, all the things in this area are very
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difficult for military operations and the ukrainian forces are using it to advantage. it is their own turf, they understand what is going on and truthfully, in my view, the russians are continuing to not do very well in their combined arms. >> one ukrainian soldier telling me and he is outside kyiv, but he doesn't need google maps to know where he is and a poignant way of saying it. thank you, general, i always appreciate your insight analysis. >> thank you, erin. next, the gut wrenching stories of russian troops targeting innocent ukrainian children. these children were scared, all screaming, she says. and i asked the soldier to help us. i was begging them, saying don't you have kids of your own? plus a cnn exclusive, new details tonight about ivanka trump's testimony to the january 6th committee, talk to two reporters who sat down with the former president.
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before forcibly being taken out of ukraine to russia, this as teams on the ground are hearing accounts of what putin's forces are doing to the youngest victims of this war, a sarah outside tonight in kyiv and a warning the video you're about to see in her report are disturbing, the families, though, want you and the world to see their faces. >> reporter: 68-year-old galena stands over her 7-year-old grand daughters fresh grave, only the second time she's been able to visit the remains of her sweet, funny girl since the russians ran into town, snuffing out life as casually as putting out cigarettes. two sisters the families said were shot in an attack in bucha, 11-year-old flinches in pain, hospitalized, her seven-year-old sister lies motionless besides her, and never regains consciousness tell me about your
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grand daughter. >> translator: nastya, she says, calling her grand daughter by her nick name, she was so nice, everyone loved her where we lived, she would ask me to sing a song for her. >> reporter: would you sing the song your grand daughter loved for us? >> she refuses because the song that used to bring them both joy only brings her pain now. she was there to witness the murderer of seven-year-old anastacya and the wounding of a second grandchild who remains hospitalized. she says a russian sniper shot through their vehicle from these woods as the entire family, seven children and three adults tried to escape the russian siege of bucha. these children were scared, they were all screaming, she says. and i asked the soldier to help us. i was begging them saying don't you have kids of your own?
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funeral director says theirs is a story that has played out again and again here. what are these families enduring? russians would not let them bury loved ones at the cemetery, they would have to bury them in their own back yards first then later at the cemetery. the family has to endure two burials, she says, go through that pain, twice. at the cemetery these days, ukraine's old war heros are being joined by young war victims. in bucha alone, the local prosecutor says at least 41 children were killed by russian forces. 19 injured. are these war crimes being committed? war crimes, yes, that will never be forgiven neither in heaven nor on earth. they must burn in hell. seething anger pours from her
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lips. she's seen too much death, too many fresh graves all at once, including the burial of 15-year-old anya alongside her mother, both shot and burned to death in their car after encountering russian tanks as they tried to flee bucha. it was a nice, happy family. the mom gave all her love to her children. anya's 14-year-old schoolmate said the russians killed a girl with a warm smile and big talent, the art anya made a reminder of the beauty she brought to the world at such a young age. they just wanted to save themselves and they were shot, just because russians wanted to do so. those bastards don't know why they came here, but they had fun doing it. and on nastacya's case, her son in law already talked to authorities but for now, her once bright lively granddaughter is alone, her final resting place awaits her remains.
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anastacya will finally be alongside her own mother who died of cancer not long after anastacya was born. >> i could only imagine what it was like to see that and document it. when you hear a story like this and there was a moment when you said, you know, when she says don't you have children too, to the russian soldiers. do you have any sense or has anyone you spoke to, how many soldiers may have been involved in war crimes in bucha alone? >> reporter: officials there believe at this point, that they can, they're trying to identify, about 10 soldiers, russian soldiers, one of which we are now hearing but have not confirmed may have been identified, finally, but there are these 10 people who they call the despicable 10 that they are trying to investigate and talking to people we know that investigators have been out knocking on doors and as i said in the story, that the son in law of that grandmother there
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actually was interviewed by investigators for this case in particular. but there are just so many stories like this and you can imagine, it's overwhelming to the prosecutors, to the investigators, trying to figure out whether or not a war crime has been actually committed and then who did it. >> sarah, thank you very much. next, a cnn exclusive. new details tonight on just how helpful ivanka trump has been to the january 6th committee and the surprising twist in the man hunt for a murder suspect, a correction officer who vanished with him now also wanted. what she told other officers before the two disappeared. we'll look at what you've saved, what you'll need, and help you b build a flexible plan n for cash flw designed to last. so y you can go from saving.. to living.
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from epic trips... to jurassic-themed at-home activities. join over 3 million members and start enjoying rewards like these, and so much more in the xfinity app! and don't miss jurassic world:dominion in theaters june 10th. wrabreaking news cnn exclus, ivanka trump's nearly 8 hour testimony has been helpful to investigators, you heard me right by confirming what was taking place in the white house as the insurrection was unfolding and shedding light on former president trump's state of mind that day, that is what benny thompson is telling chief political analyst and gloria
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joins me now, look he's not saying this lightly, ivanka trump is obviously a very polished and poised person but he wouldn't say if it weren't what he thought and you wouldn't expect her to do anything that would hurt her father, that's what thompson is essentially saying she did. tell us more. >> well he did say, erin, while she didn't give away any trade secrets while she was interviewed for the eight hours, she did answer questions directly and succinctly, different offer information but when asked a question she answered it, let me tell you what was said, there were questions asked about what she was doing at the time the insurrection was occurring at the capitol and she told us. they asked certain questions about her awareness of what her father was doing and she told us so in that respect, been able to systematically with our depositions and interviewing of witnesses able to fill in a lot
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of the gaps and the gaps he's talking about, erin, are those white house call log gaps. usually kept by the diarist now just an important, let me add one more thing thompson told me, he said her testimony kind of supported the fact that the president was told he had to do something to stop the january 6th insurrection, that he had to be public with it, that he had to be direct. so she confirms the scene inside the white house which is people, presumably herself, going to the president and saying look, you have to do something and there are other witnesses who have said she spent a lot of time with the president that day. >> so former president trump as you know, have reported extensively, gloria, asked many advisers not to cooperate and are going along with that, facing contempt charges for doing what he wants, why did jared kushner by the way and
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ivanka trump decide to testify? >> well according to a source close to the family, they decided, because they hasn't been subpoenaed it wasn't going to be a contentious interview, they could answer questions and remember jared was coming home from a trip that day. it was really ivanka inside with the president that day, that they could answer questions directly without hurting their father. and i believe they believed that that is what they did and what the committee gets out of it is corroboration saying okay, ivanka spent time with her father, her father did x and then she confirmed that so that, in and of itself, i'm sure the committee lawyers knew would be really crucial for them and clearly the chair of the committee thinks it was really important. >> it's interesting and to your point, i think it's important for people to remember you have hundreds and hundreds of people testify, right, so in a sense, you don't need to have somebody important tell you everything but if they give you the right slivers can help a lot.
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>> exactly. >> gloria, thank you very much, with gloria's reporting there, comes amid even greater legal threat to trump in georgia where a grand jury has been selected to investigate whether trump and allies broke the law when they tried to overturn the 2020 election results, you remember the call with the secretary of state saying call me one more vote than the amount i lost by and i win the state. john martin and alex burns, authors of the excellent new book, this will not pass, trump, biden and the battle for america's future out everywhere tomorrow and obviously includes discussion of so many until your book, unheard tapes and conversations about what happened that day. let's just start with this situation in georgia. you sit down with the former president for your book. do you think he's worried that he could face criminal charges in this probe in georgia? >> well he never portrays any concern about legal jeopardy. he is the sort of face of or the
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picture rather of confidence, that's the donald trump brand that he sort of dismisses any questions about about challenges politically or in the legal realm, but clearly this is something he does spend time thinking about and look no further, erin, than the comments he constantly makes about whether it's in georgia or here in new york. the prosecutors who are examining his affairs, he's always criticizing and disparaging the inquiry so obviously it's on his mind because those statements don't lie. >> so now, okay, as we talk about elections, coming into these crucial primaries for midterms. tomorrow is a crucial g.o.p. senate primary in ohio, trump endorses jd bands who obviously had been nasty to him, critic of his but now, over the weekend, trump makes headlines because he confused jd vance, with
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mantel -- >> we've endorsed dr. oz, we've endorsed jd mandel and he's doing great. they're all doing good. i think vance is doing well. >> jp, jd, mandel, vance, i mean do flubs matter and how important will it be tomorrow night. >> i don't know, but it's a very close race and for the headline to be the president bumbled his own candidate's name probably not super helpful. that race is one of the episodes we zoom in on in our book because it shows the way trump has reasserted himself after january 6th in the way candidates from across the gop, including former critics of his like jd vance have come to kiss the ring in florida. infamous scene last year where
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the major candidates in ohio, including vance and mandel went to mar-a-lago and engaged in that apprenticeship style for the president, told meme right after january 6th, i am done with trump and in a matter of months they're down in florida kissing the ring because they think that's the way to win. >> so much of our book is about 2021 and this drift back among a lot of republicans to donald trump's embrace and we chronicle page after page, how even though in the moments after january 6th, a lot of them, including kevin mccarthy and mitch mcconnell were talking tough in private, even some cases in public, we have the tapes. it was a matter of time. and they all came back to trump, because their voters like trump so they're bowing to their voters and it's one of the most extraordinary stories of our time. a disgraced former president,
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twice impeached still has a grip on the republican party and in our book we explain why that is at great length. >> so, you know, you have him possibly going to run again. it certainly looks that way, from where we are, and then that puts a lot of pressure on biden who also has a lot at stake here in the midterm. so today the former white house press secretary ari fleischer makes a prediction in op-ed, in a little over six months republicans will likely win the house and senate, as important the 2022 elections, what happens the next day will be more significant, the day democrats turn on president biden, will take weeks 0eor a few months unl biden acknowledges reality and declares he will not run for re-election. >> what i think he's right about is there's an open secret among democrats whether biden can, will, and should run for re-election. i do think there's really good reason to be sceptical the democrats would turn on the
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president that way. again, one of the things we've seen over and over again in recent years is democrats have a much stricter command and control hierarchy in their party. they do not like internal conflict. they do not relish bloodsport in the way the republican primary voters and republican candidates do. the question would be, are there people in the democratic party who at some point decide it's time to communicate diplomatically to biden, you know, sir, maybe it's time to think about riding off into the sunset but the other dynamic here is they are terrified of donald trump running again and j joe biden is terrified of trump running again not because he's such a strong candidate but concerned what it wok would mear the country and said several times -- >> that the the thing you, you can't say one thing to me and the other to him so in the book you write this issue that he's got president biden, every option of running unless he changes his mind, he'll be 81 at the next election so you're right though none would say so
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openly, about your reporting, biden's age was a constant subject of private discussion among democrats, particularly those who had known him for a long time. biden's voice remains sharp and authoritative on matters of policy, travelled less, took longer to recall peoples names. >> i'll be candid with you. this is an enormous story that is constantly talked about in private by democrats in washington and other parts of the country, but because the right wing media has so fixated on biden and biden pro portedly having cognitive issues has made it always impossible for democrats to talk about in any public way because that's what the other side is so fixated on. >> right. >> has this perverse affect on chilling what is a real conversation by the way in private. so much of this book is the gap between private conversations and public discussions. >> right on both sides you're talk begun that. >> certainly when it comes to trump but my goodness, is that ever true with democrats and joe biden. and it's not like they're going
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to push for the trap door like ari fleicher suggests, more like they're looking at their watch, tapping their foot and clearing their throat waiting for biden to do or say something about whether or not he's going to run again and the clock is ticking. >> thank you very much and again, everybody, available tomorrow, "this will not pass" wonderful to see you both in person. >> bookstores tomorrow, tuesday. goes to buy in-person. >> in-person. and next, what is the plan, that question for biden coming from democrats who are breaking from him specifically, in this case, on border policy. and taking you to one ukrainian village where an he hav have, effigy of a russian soldier greets them as their return to what's left of their homes. >> if there's a building in these homes not t damaged by fighting, we haven't seen it yet.
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democrat, calling on the biden administration for not being prepared of a surge of migrants at the southern border, one of a dozen democrats sounding the alarm of biden's plans to end title 42 which allows officials to turn away migrants at the southern border. casey hunt is "outfront." >> reporter: hi everyone, here in arizona right now at the mexican border. >> democratic governor maggie hansen filming this video 300 miles away from her home state in new hampshire, because biden turning away a hittal 42 rule allowing border states to turn away migrants, happening just away from the elections. >> i'll be pushing the administration to develop a strong strategic plan for how we will secure our borders when title 42 is lifted. >> reporter: right now about 7,000 migrants being apprehended everyday, the highest in years
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and department of homeland security says the number could double or triple if title 42 is lifted. >> it is our responsibility to be prepared for different scenarios and that is what we are doing. >> so far more than a dozen members of the president's own party expressed concerns of the administration lifting title 42. mark kelly of arizona says there isn't a good plan. >> there hasn't been enough preparation, hasn't been a plan put in place. >> reporter: so the administration has no plan? >> well, they've got a little bit more of a plan as of a couple days ago. but it's still not sufficient. we have this arbitrary gate, about 30 days from now, where this policy is supposed to go away and we see that increase numbers and it hasn't even been decided where the facility would be. >> reporter: wow, so you're saying thousands of people would come across the border and -- >> we have no place to put them. we don't have the basisics of how are you going to handle 18,000 individuals a day, safely, and, you know, in
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occurrence with our ethics and principles. that plan i haven't seen yet. >> reporter: etexas democrat putting it bluntly. >> the actions by the administration not helping democrats. >> reporter: pushing ahead under intense pressure by immigration activists they feel they were promised a sharp break from the policies and rhetoric under former president donald trump. >> this is the first president in the history of the united states of america somebody seeking asylum has to do it in another country, that's never had happened in america. >> reporter: in new hampshire, hansen facing backlash to the left over the border wall that trump championed. >> previously, accusing the administration, now you're utilizing the immigrants to win some vote. shame on you. >> reporter: but hassen has another challenge, winning over independents in a general election.
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republicans across the country are dialing up their criticism of democrats on immigration. >> as the real trump conservative, i will fight to finish this wall, secure this border and crack down on the drug cartels. >> reporter: those ads could get even tougher for democrats if images like these taken during the last border surge blanket american airwaves again because of a massive surge this summer. >> immigration activists privately expecting the nation's courts to keep title 42 in place well past may and possibly even past the midterm election. louisiana judge blocked the administration from lifting title 42 after 20 states sued to keep the administration from doing it. erin. >> wow, casey, thank you very much for that report. and next, we'll travel to one of the hardest hit towns in ukraine to see the staggering damage from putin's inspiration. . >> this is probably somebody's kitchen. you can see an oven there, pots and pans, a microwave.
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ukrainian official say they are decimating luhansk in eastern ukraine. the official adding russian troops are only nondwoonsing in and i quote the areas they have completely destroyed. matt rivers is out front, after visiting another village that was leveled by russian artillery. >> reporter: at the entrance of the ukrainian village, an effigy twists in the breeze. a uniform stripd off a dead-russian soldier, stuffed and hupg from a tree. people hate russia here because of what it did. the tine think town northwest of deefb has been leveled. russian bombs, rockets, bulgts destroyed streets, after street,
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after street. this was the site of some of the most intense of the war so far. on their drive toward kyiv, russians attacked soldiers and civilians alike here. ukrainian bunkers, alongside ordinary houses, shelled rele relentlessly to detective stating effect. >> this was problem somebody's kitchen. you can see an oven there, some pots and pans, a microwave. this isn't a big city but the sail of destruction in in village is on par with anything else we have seen across ukraine. main i mean, this house gets hit and just look, it is eviscerated. if there is a building in this village that hasn't been damage in this fighting, we haven't seen it yet. >> boom, boom, boom, fire, fire. it wiz everywhere, it was nightmare. >> reporter: valentina has lived here for years, and never knew war before it landed on her
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doorstep and faced her down into a neighborhood's basement. >> how scared were you? >> translator: we were very scared. my heart was beating very fast. we thought we would die there. the russians fired indiskrim naptly. >> the fighting only eased when russia withdrew from the entire-kyiv region. valty that, emerging from the basement to shell fooind shell casings in her garden and whatever else the russians left behind. so all -- all these things, she says the russians left behind oh this, washing your hands. another cup of some kind here. there is some sort of lifejacket that the russians use and then here are you have got old meal boxes. >> for nearly two months after fighting, residents stayed way. a trickle have now started to return. for them, vrussia's lasting effects here more than just bullet holes and bomb craters.
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senator only people so often have to start from scratch, but there remain so many mines and speess of unexploded ordinance that authorities are considering thosing clown to town for a few days until this can clear it. it is open for now, though, which meant valentina could come back home for first time in weeks. the weather and nice, so her niece and nephew played on the swing. different than the last time they were here, when they hid in a basement as bombs dehe destro everything above. >> is it difficult to think about that? >> i don't even know what to say. >> reporter: what we can say is that this tiny town has turned into a symbol of sorts. a village mercilessly attacked that, in the end, stood its ground. a microcosm, perhaps, of the country in which it lies. >> and, erin, that town is only
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about 15 miles or so from where i am standing right now in the center of kyiv. those soldiers that we spoke to that said had the russians been able to take that town, there would be street fighting right now where i am right now. key to winning the ukrainian battle of kyiv. >> and next, a corrections officer vanishes with a murder suspect just days after she filed for retirement and sold her home.. discover a simple way to use colors in managing diabetes! inspired by nature, onetouch verio reflect® meter shows inantly if you're below, within or above your range. it ches you on and provides guidance. connected to your health and yo. visit onetouch.com today.
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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. under district attorney gascón, i prosecuted car break-ins. all repeat offenders, often in organized crime rings. but when chesa boudin took office, he dissolved the unit and stopped me from collaborating with the police on my cases. now home and car break-ins are on the rise because repeat offenders know they can get away with it. chesa boudin is failing to do his job.
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there's a better way to keep san francisco safe. recall chesa boudin now. and tonight, manhunt nunt n alabama. arrest wrarnt warrant nor a an alabama corrections officer allegedly involved in the escape of a inmate. she was last seen friday when she is taking him for a mental health vague val wagz at the county courthouse. there was no mental health evaluation scheduled for the inmate ha day. county sheriff telling cnn that the two appear to be in cahoots. >> she is certainly an accomplice. she took him out of the jail, out of the detention center.
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and, you know, it is obvious from the evidence we have gathered that he didn't cape kidnap her. >> casey white, mean time, was serving 75 years in prison. thank sochs form joining us. ac 36 0 kwoets starts anyway now. >> geemgd from kyiv. there is lot of breaking thinks that we want to get to, even as ukraine appears to have had success against russian forces in the east. its evacuation civilians from a massive steel plant in the battered port city of behavior yo y mariupol has stalled again, all because of bombards. say ukraine officials. it is one much two evacuation every times around the city. we will get to that in a moment juz a short time ago, we learned u.s. and western officials before vladimir putin might
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