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tv   New Day Weekend  CNN  August 28, 2022 3:00am-4:00am PDT

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good morning, everyone. welcome to your "new day." i'm amara walker. >> good morning, amara. i'm boris sanchez. there are new developments this morning pertaining to the classified documents taken from mar-a-lago. we're going to tell you why the director of national intelligence is now involved and how a judge is responding to trump's request for a special master in the case. >> if you are capable of getting out now, get out now. evacuations are under way in parts of mississippi in anticipation of heavy flooding.
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how the state is preparing and why this will be the second round of flooding for some. plus, we are on the eve of history. one day away from the launch of artemis i, nasa's next mission to the moon. how the forecast is shaping up and some of the more interesting things that are heading up to space in that rocket. plus, how extreme weather is uncovering some of the world's ancient treasures. thanks so much for waking up with us this sunday, august 28th. we hope you're having a great weekend. the start of a new week. good morning. >> i have a confession to make, i just gorged myself with a cupcake for breakfast, so i'm beating you out on the prosciutto, much healthier.
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good to be with you. the sugar keeping me awake. some news to get to this morning. up first, assessing the damage to national intelligence from classified documents found at donald trump's mar-a-lago estate. the director of national intelligence tells congress she is conducting a damage assessment of the documents. material recovered in january included classified and top secret information. >> also, a judge is considering trump's request for a special master to review material from the mar-a-lago search. she says she has the preliminary intent to grant that request. that means she is prepared to appoint a third party that would sift through documents and filter out any privileged material. the government has until tuesday to respond, a hearing on this matter is set for thursday. >> of course, all of this follows the release of the heavily redacted version of the affidavit that authorized the search of trump's residence. cnn reporter marshall cohen has
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more. >> reporter: new developments this weekend in the investigation of donald trump's handling or possible mishandling of classified documents. the top u.s. intelligence official says that intel agencies are now conducting a damage assessment of the documents that trump took with him from the white house to mar-a-lago. avril haines, the director of national intelligence, told u.s. lawmakers in a letter that her team and the justice department are reviewing the materials that were recovered from mar-a-lago to see what is still classified. she also said that once that's done, her office will, quote, lead an intelligence community assessment of the potential risks to national security that would result from the disclosure of the relevant documents. now, this all comes shortly after the doj released the fbi affidavit that investigators used to secure that historic search warrant of mar-a-lago.
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doj refused to release that affidavit, but they were ordered by a federal judge to make public a partially unredacted version. and that affidavit, once we got to see what was inside of it, it showed how investigators came to believe that there was probable cause that crimes had been committed at mar-a-lago, specifically related to possible mishandling of classified material, as well as potential obstruction of justice. for his part, donald trump denied all wrongdoing. in the sworn affidavit, an fbi agent described how the national archives found 184 classified documents among the 15 boxes that were recovered earlier this year from mar-a-lago. there were 67 documents marked confidential. 92 were marked secret. and 25 were top secret. that's the highest level. according to the affidavit some of the materials had classification markings indicating that the records were about cia sources and spies. other documents were related to
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extremely sensitive nsa surveillance programs. all this is precisely why the u.s. intelligence community is now doing the damage assessment. marshall cohen, cnn, washington. >> marshall, thank you so much. let's discuss this damage assessment for the mar-a-lago documents now with cnn national security analyst juliette kayyem. always great to have you on, especially bright and early. we know it's tough. appreciate you, good morning. talk to us about the work being conducted by the odni. how does this process work? >> so, it is an important assessment at this stage because we have a tendency to view this story as being about donald trump. but the truth is it is about the biden administration and our present national security capabilities. and so what the odni is doing is basically making an intelligence assessment, these are typical assessments, this is a very atypical situation, in which all
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of the different intelligence agencies that may have been impacted by potential disclosure or even just the fact that these documents weren't protected will assess whether that information is still pressing, whether it is still relevant, whether it may have made someone or some entity vulnerable. its possible impact on our allies and their confidence in our ability to keep secrets. this is going to be a thorough review that really puts this in the present tense. this is one of my concerns with this story is that we often look at it, like, there's trump who did something in the past and he shouldn't have done that. this is really impacting our present u.s. intelligence capabilities. >> so what can potentially come after the review, especially if it is found that secrets may have been exposed. >> yes. so we actually don't know a lot at this stage. we don't know if in january when
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it was determined that certain, say, human assets, those would be people that are either helping us or our own spies who have infiltrated some bad entity in other government or terrorist organization say. we don't know whether there was a response then. in other words, the -- this -- just the fact that this information was not protected makes someone vulnerable, one of these assets vulnerable. so we don't know if people have been pulled, there has been some reporting by "the new york times" and others about concerns about the vulnerability of these -- of our -- what we call the our assets or allies' assets in terms of whether they have been protected or whether they have been exposed, so that would be primary, just to protect human life. the second is to try to give some confidence to ourselves and our allies about what in fact has been exposed, what needs to be changed, and how do we have to pivot from what donald trump did, because, you know, we always go to what his motivation
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is, in many ways it is irrelevant for this assessment, whether he -- worst case scenario, whether he -- whether he's reckless and have this weird sort of desire to keep this information, that doesn't really matter for this assessment. his motivation doesn't matter. all we know is that information has been exposed and it is relevant. so we'll have to -- the intelligence agencies will make that assessment and determination if they have to pivot or reassess some of their capabilities. >> though it may not matter his intent, in terms of the review, i am curious, because i asked this of other intelligence officials, and it is hard to get as soimple reason, is there a legal and perhaps reasonable explanation why donald trump would want to hold on to these documents? >> no. there really isn't at this stage. he doesn't have security clearance at this stage. president biden when he came in based on the reckless behavior
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of donald trump and intelligence does not provide him with any access to classified information. so there is really no reason that i can think of that would be justified in terms of his retaining this. it is not his information. it is not the president's intelligence. it is the united states intelligence. this is important because what we have to -- we have present national security needs. this isn't about donald trump's conduct as president or even as a former president. it is about our capabilities today and how he threatens them. >> and, the judge signaling -- >> sorry, hold on. >> got me there? >> yeah. sorry about that. >> no, no worries. technical difficulties, they come up with being up so early in the morning. we appreciate you joining us. >> thank you. >> the judge signaling preliminary intent to assign a special master in this case. >> yeah. >> that has to be kind of a delicate decision because of the
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content that special master is going to be reviewing, right? >> yeah, exactly. this is -- this is a little bit confusing, so i'm going to reserve judgment. i know a lot of lawyers have been concerned about this preliminary assessment in terps of why would this go to a special master, especially because donald trump's request was, let's just say, not exactly great lawyering. it was not clear what he wanted. i'll reserve judgment at this stage. if there is some evidence of privileged material, rather than classified, in other words his conversations as president, sort of a privileged conversation, yes, that would not be relevant to espionage or any of the -- any of the legal claims made against donald trump. so i think we should reserve judgment. i would say it is unusual. i don't think this is great for the united states because they are going to have to make yet another case about, you know, why they're doing this, and
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justifying it, and each time that sort of exposes some of the information that they're trying to protect. it is a catch-22 for them. it also sort of increases the political noise each legal challenge. and while this say legal fight about president trump and his liability or culpability or recklessness, it is important to remember we have a country still to protect and those documents may be relevant to our present capabilities and of course our ability to protect ourselves today. >> we're grateful for your expertise, thank you. >> thank you. >> of course. and if you want more information, we recommend heading over to cnn.com for an even deeper dive into what these unsealed -- rather what the unsealed affidavit says and what it does not say. we have a page by page annotation that breaks it all
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down in very easy to understand language. this morning, mississippi governor tate reeves has declared a state of emergency for parts of the state bracing for some major flooding. the state is using drones to monitor water levels and has deployed 126,000 sandbags in preparation for rising river levels. now, residents in jackson have been urged to get out now as mississippi's pearl river is expected to crest at 36 feet tomorrow. a whole day earlier than initially projected. >> if you are capable of getting out now, get out now. get out as soon as possible to prevent any incident or challenge with people trying to leave the area all at once. it is possible for approximately 100 to 150 homes to be impacted
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by this year's event. >> and jackson's mayor is also warning that there is a high likelihood that homes impacted during a similar flooding event in 2020 may experience flooding again this time around. >> and those communities could start feeling the effects as early as this evening. so let's bring in cnn meteorologist allison chinchar. she's live at the weather center for us. allison, how widespread is the flooding expected to be? >> it is mainly across two focused states. we're talking mississippi and louisiana. the key thing here is the timeline. when you move that timeline up by 24 hours, that limits the time the folks have to evacuate, to get out before that water level gets too high. here's where the current flood warnings are. focused across mississippi as well as louisiana, this is a look at the pearl river, current level is 35.16 feet. it is forecast to get to 36 feet, which does bring it into that major flood stage. that's where we expect it to
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crest, by tomorrow morning. so you're talking less than 24 hours from now. in addition to that, that's regardless of whether we get any additional rain. we do have rain in the forecast. again, we're not talking 6 to 10 inches of widespread rain. but there will be several areas of pop-up showers and thunderstorms along the gulf coast. the heaviest will be focused across florida, but, again, notice these areas of mississippi, eastern texas, louisiana, still looking at 1 to 3 inches of additional rainfall possible. we also have still some areas of severe thunderstorms and flooding potential across the midwest. severe wind gusts, large hail, even a couple of tornadoes are also possible. so two separate areas here that we're talking about flooding, but one other factor that is going to be for much of the gulf coast is also watching the tropics. this has gotten very crowded, very busy across the atlantic in the last 24 hours. we now have four different tropical waves that we are keeping a close eye on. three of them only have a 20%
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chance of development. but it is this one in the center here that has a 60% chance of development over the next five days. the question is that westerly tract, does it continue to take it into the gulf coast region, which at this point doesn't need any more rain than they have already had. >> yeah, they do not. thanks for tracking that, allison chinchar. appreciate it. and stay with us. coming up next hour, we'll be joined live by the mayor of jackson, mississippi, for a look at the preparations under way. and his message to the residents. there are also hopeful signs we want to tell you about in the coronavirus pandemic. the fda set to meet this week to approve the next wave of covid booster shots. just ahead, we'll tell you what makes these different from previous vaccines and also the trends we're seeing when it comes to new infections. plus, we're also counting down to history. artemis i set to lift off from kennedy space center tomorrow on a mission to the moon.
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and millions of other talented pros, right now on upwork.com new this morning, a biden administration official tells cnn that the fda is expected to authorize pfizer's updated covid-19 vaccine booster for people age 12 and older within the next few days. now, production of the updated shot which is designated to protect against the newest omicron variant is already under way. and white house officials have said they expect doses to become available in early to mid-september, as states can order doses ahead of time. the authorization comes as covid hospitalizations continue to decline. last week they dipped below 40,000 for the first time in more than a month, but still
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twice as high as they were. >> joining me is chris parnell. dr. parnell, good morning to you. waynd to star i want to start w good news. they predict covid deaths will start declining over the coming weeks. how optimistic are you that things are headed in the right direction and where do you think it is all going to end up? >> i'm happy to be with you this morning. we have positive news coming out of the cdc, stats are starting to move in a better direction. we're seeing deaths below 500 a day, hospitalizations around 30,000 currently. and we're seeing our case load below 100,000. while those are all positive signs, the most important thing for the public to be focused on is preparedness. preparedness is knowing which prevention behaviors or prevention tools are in your prevention tool kit and how to
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use them. >> so, speaking of prevention, we also just mentioned that pfizer, moderna submitted their applications for the fda for the emergency use authorization for their updated booster shots targeting the omicron subvariants. how important is it to get an updated booster. right now i feel like i'm boosted. but i still feel vulnerable to this omicron variant. >> i think it is very important because what we learned throughout this pandemic is that the virus is going to try to stay ahead of us. how that this virus do that, by mutating and we get variants that are typically more infectious, they spread more easily. we have ba.4 and ba.5 and we'll have a tool in our tool kit that is specific to those variants and that's good news. >> let's pivot to monkeypox now.
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that's obviously the other virus that many of us are concerned about, including parents. first off, you know, what should parents be doing, how concerned should we be? >> parents should be doing what everyone else is doing. i want to first emphasize that the risk of children contracting monkeypox is low. although it is low, it is not impossible, so what do you do? we know monkeypox is spread by direct skin to skin contact with someone who is infected, meaning someone who has the monkeypox virus rash. so don't share bedding, don't share towels, don't share clothing, don't share -- in addition, we know that hand hygiene is one of the most basic bread and butter infection prevention tools we have. wash your hands with soap and wa wa water, and/or alcohol-based hand sanitizer.
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>> obviously a lower risk it seems when it comes to children. but racial disparity, is that something that the cdc director dr. rochelle walensky highlighted during that white house briefing on friday. i think she mentioned black and hispanic men, they represented a disproportionate number of new monkeypox cases, yet they're the least likely to be vaccinated against the virus. why are we seeing these kinds of disparities and do you think the biden administration is doing enough to address that? >> we continue to see these types of disparities because of systemic racism, because of health inequities. what we know is that those in historically excluded groups like black and latino populations have less access to care, when you have less access to care, you're less able to prevent yourselves against
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outbreaks or any chronic health conditions that might be predominant in community. you can see data out of georgia and north carolina, it shows that of those who are infected with monkeypox in those states, that's ranging anywhere from 70 to 82%, but only 22% of those who have been vaccinated have been black men or men who have sex with men. we have to keep equity at the front and center of our public health practices and pandemic preparedness. is the administration doing enough? the administration has made gains, but they can do more. we must center and lead with equity and that means from the go, from the advance, how are we accessing those communities, where we know they will have disproportionate risks and what are we doing to eliminate that risk. >> outreach extremely important in this as well. dr. chris parnell, appreciate you joining us this morning. thanks so much. >> thank you. so we're just one day away from the launch of the artemis i
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checking in now on this morning's other top stories, the families of several victims of the uvalde school shooting are calling on texas lawmakers to pass gun reform. remember in may, 19 students and two teachers were killed at robb elementary school. >> yesterday, some of their families families joined a march for our lives rally in washington. they want texas governor greg abbott to call a special session to raise the minimum age to purchase an assault rifle style weapon to 21. it included some survivors of the shooting where ten people were killed in santa fe. a major settlement has been
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reached in a case involving hundreds of nursing home patients who were evacuated to a louisiana warehouse during hurricane ida. you're watching video that a patient shot showing a crowded unsanitary conditions inside the warehouse. the families of some of the residents filed a class action lawsuit last year against several -- seven nursing home facilities. they claimed the patients endured horrific and inhumane conditions. several patients died. the owner of the nursing homes was later indicted on felony charges. the final settlement amount has not been determined, but it could be as much as $15 million. looking at the vatican now, pope francis has installed 20 new cardinals from around the world including the amazon, nigeria, mongolia and the united states. during his homily, the pope asked the new cardinals to remember poor families, migrants and the unhoused. the pope has now installed 83
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out of 132 cardinals who will eventually choose his successor. five decades, it has been that long after the last apollo mission. we're now 24 hours from what could be the next era of space exploration. >> nasa hopes to launch artemis i on monday, its orion capsule won't touch down on the lunar surface, but nasa is hoping that future artemis missions will put astronauts back on the moon. >> we're going back to the moon in preparation to go to mars. that's the difference. 50 years ago we went to the moon for a day, a few hours, three days max. now we're going back to the moon, to stay, to live, to learn, to build. >> all right, joining us now is janet ivy, president of explore mars and ceo and founder of janet's planet incorporated.
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what did i miss? what are you all laughing about? >> every time we have janet on, she has amazing backgrounds. i call her the snoceo of snazzy backgrounds. >> we're not talking to you in space? i thought we were talking to you in space. now i know. i want to ask you this, it has been 50 years, that is a generation since we sent someone to the moon, right? but we have done this before. we know the technology that it takes to get to the moon. so, i mean, obviously it feels like a long time coming. what has been taking so long? >> well, again, it is like remember that was 50 years ago, and when you think that was on rotary telephones and slide rules, it was amazing human feat. now we have built this orion spacecraft that will go further than any human rated vehicle ever and it is going to -- we're going to push it to its limits
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with artemis i, we're going to make sure it is fully ready for the next humans. and so -- and also it is going to go 40,000 miles further than any human-rated spacecraft, making way and testing the systems so that one day humans can set foot on mars. >> and, janet, what is it that they're specifically looking at with the first artemis launch. what aspects of this launch are they studying to ensure they'll be ready for the moon in 2025? >> well, it is like it is really fantastic. there are three mannequins on board, two have torsos with all kinds of radiation sensors. another one called commander campos, and it is going to be equipped with all kinds of radiation sensors to test the levels of radiation that a human might endure on a very long-term mission. and, you know, on the moon. they're going to be releasing
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cube sets looking for ice and mapping hydrogen on the south pole of the moon to make sure we can use resources. it is going to test out, and nasa said everything to its fullest. when the orion command module returns and enters earth's atmosphere, it is coming in 25,000 miles an hour. friction will be like 5,000 degrees as that spacecraft re-enters the earth's atmosphere. and those astronauts inside that capsule will eventually experience 9 gs. astronauts returning from the international space station only ever experience 3 gs. so they're going to test out all those systems, mannequins are on board, tons of other experiments there, but we're going to figure out how we can go up there, it is going to land there for 42 -- i mean, not land on the moon this time, but be out there for 42 days, testing all the
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systems. so for artemis ii, we're ready to fly a crewed mission to fly to the moon. and the first woman and the first person of color on the moon and get there -- their boot prints there. >> there are so many cool aspects to that, first woman, first person of color, rocket scientists can even achieve a feat like this is just mind boggling to me. so, when we talk about the goal, janet, so 2025, not that far away, right, to get someone on the moon. but there is also a plan to get an artemis base camp up there, like housing for the astronauts. that sounds pretty out there. e explain what is the goal there. walk us through what it is going to look like up on the moon. >> to establish that lunar moon base, what friends like my friend robert howard jr. at nasa has been aiming for a long time is to test out those systems
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that could eventually push humanity further into space, living and working there, we will know the constraints and be able to calculate what that might look like for humans that might venture on to mars. so it will be everything from testing out systems, even on board this first artemis i mission, there is amazon's alexa mixed with cisco's webex, testing out systems of voice activation and ai and all of those things. so a lunar-based living, working, staying on the moon will provide ultimate data for how humans can thrive in a sustained living environment on another celestial body that will be approving ground for how humans may get to mars and live and survive and thrive there as well. >> i just want to give our viewers a heads up. we're taking a live look at the
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launch site at kennedy space center in cape canaveral, florida. you're not far from there. you're in coco beach, i believe, it appears you're in outer space. this has to be -- >> in my mind, i'm always in space. i'm right here on coco beach. and it is, like, i'm so excited. i'm gifted with the opportunity to be at kennedy space center tomorrow, and i will be watching with bated breath there as i watch the launchpad, the historic place where apollo and space shuttle missions have launched and there will be artemis i on launchpad 39c, taller than a football field, like 8.8 million pounds as it lifts off. it is really exciting for me and everybody. the launch director is female, charlie blackwell-thompson. she will be giving the call for go for launch. 53 years ago, apollo 11, there was one female in that room in mission control, poppy northcut.
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there will be 31 women in mission control and so it is historic on so many levels. and i think it is going to prompt an entire generation, like the apollo program did, and in the words of gene cernan, i would love to leave with this, when he was leaving the moon, he really kind of urges all of us to think about that, god willing we shall return, and we will do so with peace and hope for mankind. and that's my hope for the artemis mission as it launches tomorrow, that we do so with the idea of peace and hope for all mankind. >> such meaningful words. yes. that is everyone's goal, right? thank you so much, janet ivey, for being with us. and, yes, fingers crossed for a good weather window between 8:33 and 10:33. thank you so much. >> thank you so much, janet. >> nasa engineers are looking
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over launchpad 39b after lightning strikes nearby. a little too close for comfort, i would say. nasa says rain and thunderstorms are over the area of saturday and three lightning strikes hit the protection system towers. nasa says the lightning protection system towers are 6600 feet tall and are there to protect the rockets by steering lightning currents away. >> let's get a look at the forecast for the launch now. allison chinchar is back with us. allison, florida, summertime, you're going to get rain, you're going to get lightning, what are you seeing? >> any day, any given day in the summer over florida you run the risk of thunderstorms. monday is no different than that. yes, we have a 60% chance of rain showers in the forecast around the cape canaveral area on monday morning. the real key is going to be that exact two-hour window, though. here you can see to the radar, you got some of those pop-up showers and thunderstorms in
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that general vicinity. the concern is will there be a big enough window within that 8:33 to 10:33 a.m. time frame tomorrow for them to launch safely? as of right now, it is about a 30% chance of a weather violation. meaning a 70% chance that this is still likely to take off . we will get another forecast at some point later this morning, we'll have to see if there is any updates with that. but, boris and amara, a lot of concerns here, cloud cover, wind direction, wind speed, rain, a lot of factors here they have to take into consideration. >> hope it cooperates is all i can say. you see that tiny window. allison chinchar, thanks. we'll be right back.
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some parts of the world are dealing with extreme drought right now. >> yes. they are. and while it made life difficult, it is also uncovering some ancient treasures. cnn's michael holmes has the story. >> reporter: one of europe's largest rivers, the rhein, in germany, dehydrated and shallow. swaths of farm land in northern mexico parched, dotted with dead livestock. millions in the horn of africa facing starvation, aid agencies warn. from europe to the americas to africa to northern asia, extreme heat waves and little rain is impacting communities thousands
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of kilometers apart after a month or more of unrelenting droughts across much of the northern hemisphere. but amid the global hardship and scenes of devastation, blistering temperatures and water shortages are also revealing prehistoric secrets. >> claw marks. >> reporter: emerging from the receding waters of the biloxi river in texas, dinosaur tracks thought to be 113 million years old. the prints have been long preserved by sediment under water, but amid ongoing drought in the southern u.s. state, they are now visible for what is likely the first time. >> kind of a double-edged sword. without the river, we wouldn't be able to see them, wouldn't know they were there. once they're exposed, that's when they start to degrade, like any other rocks, they break down over time. >> reporter: another ancient site revealed in a diminished reservoir in spain, as the country battles its worst drought in decades. dubbed the spanish stonehenge,
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this vertically arranged stone formation is thought to have been created by humans roughly 7,000 years ago. and as drought drags on in china, another rare site, receding waters of the yangtze river uncovering ancient buddhist statues thought to be hundreds of years old. >> translator: i think the reason why our ancestors built this was because they wanted to pray for a peaceful world and beautiful country. i hope that wish can be passed on forever. i hope the water levels can go up naturally and we may still have a peaceful and healthy world and country. >> reporter: ancient discoveries among the rare benefits of blistering temperatures and water scarcity wreaking havoc across the globe. one small consolation for millions who are suffering in the new extremes of an increasingly warming world. michael holmes, cnn. >> thanks to michael holmes for that report. there is a goat on the field. tom brady suiting up for the
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the buffalo bills have cut rookie matt araiza two days after he was accused in taking part in a gang rape of an underaged girl. >> let's bring in cnn's coy wire now. >> the investigation into matt araiza has been going on for close to a year. it went public thursday when the rookie punter was named in a civil lawsuit accusing araiza of -- and two former teammates at san diego state, of raping a 17-year-old at a halloween party last year. yesterday, buffalo general manager brandon bean made the decision to cut araiza from the team. >> we tried to be thorough and
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thoughtful. and not rush to judgment. and i would say it is not easy. you're trying to put facts around a legal situation, you know, sometimes with limited information. >> all right, now, we're going to change gears here in a moment. but do know that no criminal charges have been filed yet. the san diego county district attorney's office says it is still reviewing the case, and in a statement thursday araiza said, quote, the facts of the incident are not what is being portrayed in the lawsuit, unquote. to some of the action on the field yesterday, all it took was one drive and everybody knew it was tom brady who was ready to go for his 23rd nfl season. first game action after his 11-day personal leave, the super bowl champ goes six for eight leading the bucs to a field goal against the colts, more than enough work for the goat with two weeks until the regular season opener in dallas. as for the time he took away in the middle of training camp earlier this month, here is what
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tb 12 had to say about it. >> it is all personal, you know. everyone has different situations they're dealing with. we all have really unique challenges to our life, and, you know, we're -- i'm 45 years old, man. there's a lot of [ bleep ] going on. you got to try to figure out life the best you can. a chance to play in the mercedes-benz stadium yesterday. but facing the mascot was not warm and fuzzy like they thought it would be. atlanta braves mascot blooper showing no mercy, looking look a pull running through pamplona, handing out stiff arms and big old slices of humble pie for those little guys. i'm glad that one of my children was not out there, trying to have some fun. >> not nice. >> if form from the mascot. good form. got it right. coy wire, thank you so much. >> you got it. a state of emergency has been declared in mississippi. there is heavy rain there and
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rising water that is threatening to flood the state's capital. we're going to be joined at the top of the hour by the mayor of jackson, mississippi. stay tuned for that. "new day" continues in a moment. ♪ voltaren. the joy of movement. ♪ ♪ with 20 made-to-order griddle combos, there's a perfect plate for everyone. great value for all your favorites only from ihop. download the app and earn free food with every order. ubrelvy helps u fight migraine attacks. u rise to the challenge. u won't clock out. so u bring ubrelvy. it can quickly stop migraine in its tracks within 2 hours... ...without worrying if it's too late or where you are. unlike older medicines, ubrelvy is a pill that directly blocks a protein believed to be a cause of migraine. do not take with strong cyp3a4 inhibitors. most common side effects were nausea and tiredness.
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good morning. welcome to your "new day." i'm boris sanchez. >> igood morning to you. i'm amara walker. there are new developments this morning pertaining to the classified documents taken from mar-a-lago. why the director of national intelligence is now involved, and how a judge is responding to trump's request for a special master in th

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