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tv   CNN Newsroom Live  CNN  June 9, 2022 1:00am-2:00am PDT

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a warm welcome to our viewers joining us in the united states and around the world. i'm max foster in london. just ahead -- >> the important stage of the investigation into the january 6 insurrection. are they going to be able to prove that there was? some coordination or connection between the extremist groups that physically stormed the capitol and power centers in the white house? >> to people with money, to people who fund political campaigns, the guns are more important than children. >> these weapons of war cause
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war wounds, things that you see on movies. by the end of this year, we'll see prices dropping. >> it is frustrating, it is not ideal. and i think, you know, things are complicated in the world right now. live from london, this is "cnn newsroom" with max foster. >> it is thursday, june 8. today house committee investigating the riots at the u.s. capitol will start revealing what it has learned. this multimedia review of the attack will be unveiled for a primetime american television audience for the very first time. the bipartisan panel will show how huge crowds supporting the former u.s. president ransacked the capitol on january 6 of last year and they will try to convict donald trump in the court of public opinion saying he is responsible for major abuses of power. among the key witnesses, a
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capitol police officer who was hurt by rioters and suffered a major brain injury and yet she still prevented many from entering the building. and we'll hear from a documentarian whose crew captured the movements around the capitol earlier that day and the very first moments of violence. ryan nobles lays out what the panel hopes all this will achieve. >> reporter: the january 6 select committee is certainly concerned that lot of american's opinions about what happened on january 6 have already been decided, that there isn't a lot of convincing left to do. but they still feel that they have an obligation to uncover everything that led up to that day, including all the violence and chaos that happened in this building behind me and then all of the different things that were happening leading up to january 6 that brought the big crowds here, made them angry, and led to that riot. and they believe this first hearing on thursday night in primetime, will be covered by
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all the major news networks, needs to be a story, a narrative that can be told through a multimedia presentation that will keep viewers' attention, allow them to see bit by bit point by point and connect all these dots as to exactly what happened leading up to january 6 and on the day itself. and they have brought in former president of abc news to help with the production of this television and multimedia event to help meet that goal of trying to keconnect with the american people. >> we'll see if that moves the needle though. so far the committee has compiled around 135,000 documents and conducted more than 1,000 witness interviews. some of them with former trump administration officials. this is all just part of the avalanche of new information that has been unearthed since trump's impeachment trial. but the committee's work isn't over. a federal judge has decided members should get access to a large batch of emails from right wing attorney john eastman that
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are tied to his efforts to overturn the election results on behalf trump. the judge ruled the emails could be evidence of the planning of a crime. the committee is also going after the testimony of these five members of congress who are so far refusing to comply with subpoenas. and they include mark meadows who called for accountability in recently revealed audio from january of last year. >> i know there is doing to be some dark days and then it will get really dark, but the one thing i will tell you, we should take this moment, change course to improve, but more importantly, we got to be united with what the democrats are going to do in the future. we cannot just sweep this under the rug. we need to know why it happened, who did it and people need to be accountable for it and i'm committed to make sure that happens. >> since then mccarthy has called the january 6 investigation illegitimate. during the hearing we're
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expecting a big buzz word to be conspiracy. the panel will argue that there was indeed a plan to create chaos and this was not just a peaceful protest that got a little rowdy. pamela brown picks up that story. >> reporter: after a nearly year long investigation, the january 6 committee is preparing to share their findings with the american people. and they are zeroing in on one man, former president trump. >> i think that donald trump and the white house were at the center of these events, that is the only way really of making sense of them all. >> reporter: from the beginning, the investigation has focused on the unprecedented efforts by trump and his allies to try to stop the transfer of power to president biden. while trump was impeached just days after the riot phone citing the insurrectionists, the
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committee says they have found more. >> they have found more than just incitement. >> reporter: committee has interviewed more than 1,000 witnesses including jared kushner, ivanka trump, donald trump jr., bill barr and also obtained more than 135,000 documents. >> we must also know what happened every minute of that day in the white house. every phone call, every conversation, every meeting, leading up to, during and after the attack. >> reporter: the committee is clearly signaling to the justice department which holds the power to charge trump with a crime related to january 6. >> do you believe there was a conspiracy? >> i do. it is extremely broad, it is extremely well organized, it is really chilling. >> reporter: just this week a federal judge again flagged possible evidence of a crime, that same judge issued a landmark ruling earlier this year finding it was more likely than not that trump and a conservative lawyer committed a
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crime in strategizing to overturn the election. trump has not been charged and has denied any wrongdoing. he continues to downplay his involvement in the dead insurrection. >> what a lot of crap. another con job. >> reporter: but for 187 minutes, committee members say trump was derelict in his duty, watching tfv and seemingly pleased had supporters were fighting for him. >> it is a roadmap and i would have to say i think mark med toet meadows is the mvp for the committee. >> reporter: and he helped to decode the texts among the more than 2300 messages obtained by cnn. donald trump jr. texting he has to condemn this shit asap. meadows responding i'm pushing it hard, i agree. but it took trump over three hours to release this recorded
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video. >> so go home, we love you, you're very special. >> you look at the totally of the evidence, and it is pretty apparent that at some points president trump knew what was going on. >> reporter: hearings are not only expected to explore efforts to overturn the results but also the role of far right ght extre groups. proud boys knew they had to break the law to stop the certification of votes, that is according to a plea agreement from one member who is now cooperating with the federal investigation. the doj escalating that criminal case this week charging several leaders with seditious conspiracy. pamela brown, cnn, washington. >> be sure to tune into cnn for live coverage of the committee hearings, it starts at 7:00 p.m. on thursday in washington, that is 7:00 in the morning on friday in hong kong, only here on cnn. former president donald trump and his children's van
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came and donald jr. could soon be testifying under oath, their legal teams have reached an agreement to sit for depositions with a new york attorney general's office which is currently pursuing a civil investigation into the accuracy of the trump organization's financial statements. the depositions are to begin on july 15th. the deadline had been today, but trumps were given time to prepare. the delay will also give them time to appeal the ruling requiring that they give depositions. gun reform took center stage in the u.s. congress wednesday as lawmakers voted to pass a sweeping package of gun control legislation. >> on this vote, the yeas are 223, the nays are 204. the bill is passed. >> and is that is how the protecting our kids anct cleare the house. among other things, it would
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raise the age for buying most semi automatic guns from 18 to 21. but it is pretty much dead in the water because it is unlikely to overcome opposition from senate republicans. the house vote comes as the nation reals from a string of deadly mass shootings including at the school in uvalde, texas that left 19 students and two teachers dead. some survivors who lost loved ones there shared their stories with lawmakers as fiftphil matty rep reports, and one witness was a fourth grader who saw her teacher and classmates being killed. >> did you feel safe at school? why not? >> because i don't want to happen again. >> reporter: the searing words. >> when i went, he shot my friend next to me. and i thought that he was going to come back to the room. so i grabbed some blood and i
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put it all over me. >> reporter: haunting pain in the voices of kimberly and felix rubio. >> i can still see her walking with us towards the exit. and the reel that keeps scrolling, she turns her head and smiles back to us to acknowledge my promise and then we left. i left my daughter at that school and that decision will haunt me for the rest of my life. >> reporter: the visceral detail from dr. guerrero. >> two children whose bodies had been pull lar rised, decapitated, whose flesh had been ripped apart that the only clue of their identities was a blood splattered cartoon clothes still clinging to them. >> reporter: foirt grade survivor, parents of a murdered child, a pediatrician, the voices of uvalde, texas. pleading for action in washington. >> somewhere out there is a mom
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listening to our testimony thinking i can't even imagine their pain. not knowing that our reality will one day be hers unless we act now. >> reporter: as bipartisan senators engaged in another day of intensive talks, weighing a narrow agreement that would include incentives for state red flag laws, opening juvenile records to background checks and funding for mental health programs. a deal if it comes together that would fall short of the explicit requests of the witnesses. >> we think a ban on assault rifles and high capacity magazines. >> reporter: but it presents a most significant opportunity for change, lawmakers say that they have seen in years. recognition of the mhorror reflected in the words of this father -- >> i lost my baby girl. she is not the same little girl that i used to play with and run with and do everything.
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>> reporter: and the response from those who have witnessed the carnage firsthand. >> making sure our children are safe from guns, that is the job of our politicians and leaders. in this case you are the doctors and our country is the patient. we are bleeding out and you are not there. my oath as a doctor means that i signed up to save lives. i do my job. and i guess it turns out that i am here to plead, to beg, to please, please do your. >> reporter: and in talking to white house officials, there is skre genuine if cautious optimism that something can get done. to be clear it won't be everything that president biden laid out and at this time the president is on the west coast for the summit of the americas, but that plays into the strategy, give lawmakers space, allow the senators to reach their own deal, recognition that the president will obviously have to sign anything that they agree organization but they don't want to do anything to unsettle a very dell rat set of
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negotiations. if it falls short of what the president lays out, one official told me you cannot overstate the significance of getting something, anything, done after more than a decade of a blockade due to republican opposition. they just want to get something across the finish line. phil mattingly, cnn, the white house. president biden took his message on gun control to late night television. jimmy kimmel asked the president why he hasn't taken more executive actions on gun violence. have a listen. >> knlts you issue an executive order? trump passed those out like halloween candy. >> well, i have issued executive orders within the power of the presidency to be able to deal with these -- everything having do with guns, gun other than ship, whether or not you have to have awaiting -- all the things within my power.than ship, whether or not you have to have awaiting -- all the things within my power. i don't want to emulate trump's
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abuse of the constitutional authority. >> mr. biden added that using question able tactics will put u.s. democracy in jeopardy. a california man faces attempted murder charges after he showed up outside the home of justice brett kavanaugh oig. court documents indicate the man said he wanted to kill kavanaugh because he was upset about the leak of the roe v. wade opinion on abortion. the fbi says he had a knife, misstal with ammunition, pepper spray, zic zip ties, a hammer a other items. president biden condemned the man's actions in the strongest terms. about a third of u.s. states are now reporting a surge in gasoline prices past $5 a gallon. national average is $4.97. and an increase of 25 cents from a week ago and nearly $2 higher than a year ago. u.s. energy secretary says increased production should help
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bring prices down but not right away. listen to this. >> by the end of this year, we will see prices dropping as a result of that incremental increase in production in the united states and globally as well. but the bottom line is it is still going to be expensive and we are continuing to ask the oil and gas companies to prioritize production so that we can stabilize this mismatch between supply and demand. >> of course the cost of gasoline is closely tied to the global oil market and the prognosis there is not good. u.s. crude has hit its highest close in three months at more than $122 a barrel. benchmark brent crude was even higher. analysts at goldman sachs are predicting oil will reach $140 a barrel in the third quarter. now, some u.s. lawmakers are pushing for restrictions on the weapon of choice at many mass shooters, while many other lawmakers push back. next, cnn goes to a gun range to show you the raw power of
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assault-style rifles. plus the u.s. midwest can't get a break from severe and da dangerous weather. derek van dam explains. >> that's right, a tornado struck a city in ohio yesterday. i'll show you what that looked like. plus give you an idea who needs to keep an eye to the sky today. o 20 gallons of water. skip t the rinse with finish quantum. its activelift t technology provides an unbeatable clean onon 24 hour dried-on stains. skip the rinse with finish to save our water. through the endless reasonto stop... through e challenges, the hurt, the doubt, the pain. no matter what, we go on. biofreeze.
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violent weather has again hit parts of the u.s. with a possible tornado spotted in tipp city, ohio. the woman who shot this individual why said several homes in the neighborhood were damaged. a nearby distribution center took a direct hit. an entire corner of the massive building sheared off. derrek van dam is joining us. >> you can imagine seeing that in the distance from your own house? that would be terrifying moments. fortunately there have not been any reports of injuries from this particular tornado, but as you showed, the distribution center had sustained some damage from this apparent tornado which has been confirmed by the weather surveyervice by the way.
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there were two tornadoes across the midwest, and 148 wind reports that caused damage as well. several reports of hail. a lot of this happened in the mid mississippi river valley and mid-atlantic as well. today the severe weather threat is across the central and southern plains. north platte to garden city, oklahoma city, so basically nebraska to kansas, all of oklahoma, even the texas panhandle. that is a slight risk. threats today include severe wind gusts, large hail and a couple tornadoes can't be ruled out as well. and don't forget about the marginal risk across the deep south along the coastal areas of florida and louisiana, that is an area that could produce a few stronger thunderstorms later today. there is a look at thunderstorms rolling through the afternoon and then once again on friday, we have a slight risk of severe storms. so this is a multiday severe weather setup, on friday the start of the weekend, slight
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risk arkansas to the gulf coast states including new orleans and pensacola, that is the area that we need to be paying close attention to. over the next three days, could have rainfall totals in excess of 1 to 3 inches, so that could cause localized flooding. and the other big weather story is the excessive heat over the western u.s. over 80 potential high temperature records broken, shattered or died from this heat dome, it will trap all the heat from the sun as it builds and continues to strengthen over the next coming days. a lot of the heat will be confined to the desert southwest, but many of it will be impacting las vegas into phoenix, high population densities, and eventually move its way into texas as well. >> thank you very much, derrick dan value tn damme there in atl. and driver plowed a car into a crowd in berlin.
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one person was killed and 17 others injured. section are still fighting for their lives. nada bashir is joining us from the scene. they have the suspect, so why don't we know more by this point? >> reporter: the police investigation is still very much ongoing. they did apprehend the suspect at the scene, a 29-year-old was identified to the driver who was handed over to police shortly after the incident and taken for medical examination before facing police questioning. but that investigation is still ongoing. but we are learning a little bit more about the suspect in question. this morning just in the last hour or so, we heard from berlin's mayor, she spoke to local radio and described the suspect as being severely mentally impaired and also as to the police investigation, she said statements that he had
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given to the police at times seemed confused. so that may give us some pointers as to where programs the police are looking as regards for the cause of the incident. but police haven't at this stage haven't defined the cause. they are still trying to determine whether it was an accident or a deliberate act. take a listen. >> translator: to reconstruct the event we're obviously looking if this was an intentional act or traffic accident that might have occurred due to a medical emergency. that is why so many colleagues are working here right now to collect evidence to reliably determine if it is one or the other. >> reporter: now, we are expecting to hear more from police today, but at this stage they are still trying to determine the facts of this investigation. of course as you mentioned, it was a tragic incident, at least 17 people injured, some of them with life-threatening injuries and of course one person confirmed dead. >> thank you.
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returning to the gun control debate in the u.s., we want to give you an idea about the shear power of the weapons at the center of this issue. semi automatic weapons have been used by multiple mass shooters and in most states they are perfectly legal to buy for people age 18 and over. but as josh campbell reports, they take firepower to a whole new level. >> reporter: they are known as assault-style weapons and have been used in some of the country's deadliest shootings. from uvalde, tulsa, and he will pass a, to parkland, san bernardino and sandy hook, it is the weapon of choice for many of the killers. the los angeles police department demonstrates an ar-stila ar-style rifle for us. >> you have a 16 inch to 20 inch barrel, you have a stock that is shouldered, you would be accurate at farther distances as opposed to a pistol. >> reporter: not to mention like
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some other weapons, it can fire a bullet with enough power to pierce soft body armor. something this sergeant knows firsthand. he took assault weapons fire during the now infamous 1997 north hollywood shoot-out where two bank robbers wearing body armor fired on police for nearly an hour, injuring eight people and 12 officers. >> you are being hit with pieces of the vehicles we were hiding behind, asphalt, rate diator fl. >> reporter: and that prompted them to change policy. firepower from weapons is studied inside a ballistics lab at wayne state university where researchering simulate the bullet's impact on a human body. >> it is meant to represent soft tissues. >> reporter: watch as they fire at 1,000 feet per second.
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>> for this round you will see the bullet come in on this side, you see the tiemporary cavity that happens and it chances down. >> reporter: and now watch as they fire from an assault rifle. >> this round breaks apart, it doesn't exit, so it is about 3,000 feet per second and all of that energy goes in to the soft tissue. we have a piece of plastic here to reflect do the videos. and it actually lifted the plastic up off the table with the energy. >> reporter: an after math photo of the handgun round show as relatively straight line through the tissue exiting the other side. but not so with the round from an ar-15. >> it basically goes into the body and creates an explosion inside the body. >> reporter: trauma surgeons say the wound from an assault rifle can be catastrophic. >> worst part is in a child, all the vital organs are that much closer together, so each of those bullets causes irreversible damage. >> reporter: and in uvalde
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families were asked for dna swabs to help authorities identify their children. >> as a mom it really affects me, right? because i cannot imagine having a child endure this. >> reporter: and with high capacity magazines, suspects can shoot for much longer. the discussion about high capacity magazines largely centers on reducing the amount of time that suspect can fire without having to reload. as a former fbi agent we were trained to quickly get your weapon reloaded and back up on target. but for a suspect who isn't trained, you can see that that is a process, it involves removing the empty magazine, obtaining a fresh round of ammunition, loading it into the weapon, charging the weapon, getting it back up on target. those are all precious seconds where victims can be fleeing, the gun could jam or the suspect could be engaged by lawmaker or bystanders. >> reporter: researchers hope their critical findings lead to
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awareness. regardless of where one comes down on the gun control debate, it is in-disputable that the as saelt weapon causes significant damage inside the body. >> definitely, but this is the reality, this is what is happening. >> reporter: the justice department says handguns have been used in most mass shootings but it is important to note that the deadliest mass shooters have opted for the ar-15 style rifle and you can see why, that demonstration showed the disastrous effect that this weapons system can have on the human body. this weapon that was originally designed for use by soldiers on the battlefield is causing unspeakable carnage here at home. and just ahead, russian forces on the verge of capturing a city in ruins in eastern ukraine. why it is so important to moscow. plus new allegations from kyiv about russia's theft of hundreds of thousands of tons of grain. how the kremlin is responding.
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ukrainian fighters have fallen back to safer positions in severdonetsk where local authorities say most of the city is under russian control. it is a major turn of events after ukraine claimed to control half the city just a few days ago. severdonetsk has been a key russian goal for weeks as vladimir putin's forces look to capture all of the luhansk and donetsk regions known as the donbas. ukrainian military commander says his forces are catastrophically short on artillery pieces needed to fight fight off the russian advance. civilians who remain in the region are taking shelter from continuous shelling in basements and wherever they can. russia's military says ukraine is suffering significant losses of manpower, weapons and
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shipments of equipment throughout the donbas. ukraine is accusing russia of stealing about 600,000 tons of grain as well. one official says the grain is taken from occupied regions in the south, sent to ports in crimea, then shipped to the middle east. russia has yet to respond. clare sebastian is with me here in london. but we begin with salma abdelaziz in kyiv. give us the latest in eastern ukraine because it seems like there has been a change in fortunes for the ukrainians. >> reporter: absolutely. this is a back and forth. just last week severdonetsk looked like it was about to fall to russian forces and then there was a claw back if you will from ukrainian defenders. this is a battle where they are outmanned, they are outgunned, superior russian artillery has been grinding down ukrainian forces for weeks now. take a listen to how president zelenskyy described the battle.
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>> translator: we defend our position and flipped significant losses on the enemy. this is a very fierce battle, very difficult. probably one of the most difficult throughout this war. i'm grateful to everyone who defends this direction. >> reporter: now, that is president zelenskyy's rhetoric of course, but local officials are painting a different picture. they say that it looks like they will have to pull back to strategic positions that of course the artillery of the russian troops is superior to theirs. we might see a strategic withdrawal here, that would be the term used by ukrainian forces. and this is important because russian backed separatists say luhansk is already 97% under their control. it is that major step towards taking the donbas and you have to remember russia is already solidifying these gains. i want to pull up the man here
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so y the map here because the goal was to create a land bridge between russia down the south into these new gains through the donbas and into crimea to give russia access to warm water ports in the black sea. these would be ports that function year-round, important to economy, important to trade, important to security for moscow. and what they are doing is taking the gains that we see and solidifying them, building railways, making access, flowing from ports up into russia. >> salma, thank you. that is the military movement on the ground. there is a wider issue with grain, isn't there, clare, because ukrainians are accusing russia of stealing grain, selling it, presumably using that money to fund the war? >> well, yeah, this is what comes from the leader of the russian backed military operation in zaporizhzhia region, he says that the
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first -- well, he said the first railcars coming from ukraine kran xw grain and left the region and perhaps traveling to even turkey since turkey is supposed to brokering the talks. and we heard around 600,000 tons of ukrainian grain have been stolen by russia since the beginning of this conflict. russia has denied that, kremlin spokesman ensaid wednesday that he doesn't think this is the reason for the food crisis, that there is really not that much ukraine kran grain at stake here. but the pressure from the international community to do something is mount. we had talked yesterday between laug sergey lavrov and his turkish counterpart and they did not make a breakthrough. but listen to this. >> this is a cold, callus and calculated siege by putin on in
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of the most vulnerable countries and people in the world. and therefore honorable members, food has become now part of the criminal ly kremlin's arsenal of terror. >> and time is running out. they tried to start exporting through rail, road, things like that, but most of it is usually exported by sea and you can't leave it in storage forever. so that is why the pressure is mounting. >> and now let's go to barbie in rome. is this hitting western markets as well. >> reporter: that's right. we're seeing the effect of the crisis in terms of uncertainty, it is not just the grain here in italy, it is all the other factors that are driving up the costs. the price of fertilizer has gone up by 150% for some people, the price of basic elements you need to make pasta has gone up 100%. and so some of these producers
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are trying to take on the cost themselves so they don't have to pass them on the on to the consumer, but in some case the price of basic things like pasta has gone up 30% and a lot of that is driven by not just what is going on right now, but the unearn is at the-- uncertainty future. they don't know how long the war will last. and going forward, it is just not knowing that is making everybody really nervous right now. >> barbie, thank you very much. now, still to come, we go to rwanda to learn how the country is preparing to take in migrants deported from the uk and hear what critics are saying about the plan. stay with us. you both stay comfortable, and to help you get almost 30 minutes more restful sleep per night. and now, save up to $700 on n select sleep number 360 smart beds. plus, 0%0% interest for 36 mont. only for a limited time. do you have a life insurancece policy you no longer need?d? nw you can sell your policy - even a term policy - for an immediate
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conviction that democracy is not only the defining feature of american histories, but the essential ingredient to america's futures. >> u.s. president biden officially kicking off the summit of the americas in los angeles. in the coming hours leaders and representatives from nations in the western hemisphere will meet on key issues like climate and immigration. he wants a collaboration to increase food production to export. the uk is set to deport migrants meanwhile to rwanda next week hoping that it will deter others. they are paying more than $150 million to house these asylum seekers, but the plan is coming under fire. larry madowo is joining me now. what does it looks like?
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>> reporter: this is a place that used to be a place for young survivors, they have renovated the hostile and they will now host the first 50 migrants expected here on wednesday next week. it is very simple, it is functional, it is not luxurious. and they will have two migrants sharing a room, they will have communal bathrooms, a prayer room, computer lab. migrants here will have access to health care and support for at least five years or until they are self-sufficient. but the big thing they say, migrants will be free here, not in detention like they are in the uk. and this is one way to fix the broken asylum system in the uk by giving people a chance to settle here, to be free and try to make a life. but this is a system that has been criticized by so many people here in rwanda, internationally and many groups in the uk. they say it is cruel, my grants are being forced to come here
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when they want to get to europe. and to be forced to come to a country 4,000 miles away. and one local legislator told us that this decision should have been brought before parliament, that the government should not have made that decision on its own. but this is a global migrant leader. when rich countries don't want certain my gigrants, they can s them off onto rwanda. we understand the government tells us that they are working on a similar deal with denmark. so it seems to be a way that they see it as a place for vulnerable people to rebuild their lives and they say this is their philosophy the last 30 years despite all the criticisms including about the human rights record and lgbtq migrants will
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be safe here in a country where that is frowned upon. >> larry, thank you very much. here boris johnson hoping to rebuild police political stast -- his political standing. he is expected to deliver a speech in the hours ahead outlining his plan. and among the pledges he is expected to make, make home ownership more acceptable, recover from the covid pandemic. johnson's leadership was severely weakened on monday when he survived a closer than expected confidence vote in parliament. still to come, the liv golf tournament is about to tee off and supporters say it could be a game changer but it is dubbed by controversy. stay with us. the hurt, the doubt, the pain. no matter whwhat, we go on. biofreeze.
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concertgoers waiting to see a performance ended up witnessing rain streaming in to the venue in columbia, maryland soaking the crowd. water streamed down into the covered outdoor venue and then flooding the floor. the concert was delayed several times before being canceled.
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halsey posted that the safety of fans was most important. the u.s. space agency $10 billion telescope has been destroyed by a micro meteor roid. the telescope is the largest most powerful set to deliver its first batch of photos in july focusing on the stars and other worlds. and the liv golf series kicks off in a few hours. the first several events boast purses of $25 million each, would you believe. so lucrative that top golfers are leaving the long established pga tour to join up. and with such an ocean of money coming from a sponsor with a widely condemned human rights record, the tournament is awash in controversy too. alex thomas has more.
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>> reporter: backed by saudi arabia's billions of dollars, liv golf could fundamentally change the professional men's game. the new series offers players fewer tournaments and guaranteed prize money. lots of it. dustin johnson and phil mickelson are the biggest stars to sign up and the pair are earning more from this than their entire prize money from a combined 45 years on the pga tour. >> this is something that i thought was best for me and my family. and i'm very excited about playing. obviously this is the first week and it is, yeah, something exciting, something new. i think it is great for the game of golf. so that is why i'm here. >> reporter: liv golf ceo greg norman says the new series is game changing especially for lower ranked players. >> pga tour doesn't give a rat's ass about what will happen to you after you finish playing the game of golf. they don't. >> reporter: but the money hasn't impressed everyone.
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norman told the "washington post" that tiger woods turned down a high nine figure sum to join. while another golf legend jack nicklaus says he also rejected an offer to get involved worth $100 million. >> i had zero interest in it. i don't care what kind of money they would throw at me. my allegiance is with the pga tour. i helped found the pga tour as it is today. and my allegiance is there and it will stay there. >> reporter: it is the backing by saudi arabia's pin investment fund chaired by crown prince bin al salman that has attracted the criticism, accused of using popularity of supporting events to clean up its reputation for human rights abuses. and u.s. intelligence report claim bin salman himself sanctioned the murder of
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journalist jamal khashoggi in 2018, something bin salman denies. even mickelson said it was scary getting involved with the saudis but he said golf desperately needs change and real change is always preceded by disruption. >> i don't condone human rights violations at all. i don't think that -- nobody here does. and i'm certainly aware of what has happened with jamal khashoggi and i think it is terrible. i've also seen the good that the game of golf has done one throut history and i believe that liv golf is going to do a lot of good for the game as well. >> reporter: despite the reservations, liv golf is forging ahead with eight tournaments this year, five of which are in the united states, with the season finale at the trump national doral course in florida. alex thomas, cnn. after sunday's blowout loss, the celtics came roaring back to win game three of the nba
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finals. jaylen brown and jayson tatum led the celtics to a 116-100 victory last night over the warriors. it is the seventh time the celtics have bounced back from a playoff loss. celtics are now up 2-1 in the seven game series. game four set for friday in boston. thanks for joining me here. i'm max foster. "early start" is next.
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gnood morning, it is thursday, june 9. thanks for getting an early start with us. >> welcome to our viewers in the united states and around the world. >> and tonight the january 6 house committee will begin to reveal its findings to america in primetime. lawmakers plan to make the case that former president trump was at the center of a conspiracy in 2020 to overturn the will of the people and block the peaceful transition of power. the committee plans to show video of previously unseen deposition testimony, including interviews with trump white house aides, campaign officials, and members of the former

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