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tv   Anderson Cooper 360  CNN  September 19, 2022 9:00pm-10:00pm PDT

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good evening from windsor castle. what is behind you with the lights now dark, about four hours ago the longest reigning monarch, all of the second was finally laid to rest. the chapel here named after her father, king george the six it was a private moment ending ten days of public grieving on like anything the country's ever seen in 70 years, or might never see again. yet, despite the possibility, despite the changing monica, the kingdom there was a timelessness about today. every site any ceremonial step started with a procession to westminster abby, was a reminder that -- black and white newsreel footage this much irrelevant in the 1926 of elizabeth the second birth. not the 2022 of her passing. the funeral was no different. 2000 voices feeling less minister what the lord is my shepherd, the queen's favorites all matter wedding also here 75 years ago. the archbishop of canterbury, another song and another -- from past to present.
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>> her light majesties -- during covid, lockdown, and it with we will meet again. words of hope from a song of -- christian hope, means certain expectations of something not yet seen, we can all share, the queen's hope which life and death inspired her servant leadership. service in life hoping that. all who follow the queen's a little inspiration of
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trust, faith in god. can with her say, we will meet again. >> the final ended with a simple incantation, -- the british counter part to taps. >> the father, the son, and the holy spirit. be among you and remain with you always. >> amen. >> -- big ben chimed once for
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every one of the queen's 96 years, the procession continued company by troops them across for the kingdom and commonwealth, london are seeing their final farewells. >> and at wellington arch, the king, princess anne, prince
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edward, william, and harry all out of tension or children, grandchildren nearby as the coffin was transferred to a horse for the final trip west to windsor castle. three decades ago, fire consume the castle and in the year of tragedy and scandal, the queen herself meant it. about 30 years where, with the monarchy flax she returned home. two of her beloved wells corgis, sandy and nick, we're waitin g outside
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of st. georges chapel or yet another sign of continuity of the past. music was composed by sir -- henry harris. and the organist here, toddles about piano when she was a girl. after a brief ceremony, after the lowering of the coffin we saw sequence of staff, and sites never before televised signal buying the end of her reign, and the beginning of the next. [noise]
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>> in the name of the holy spirit, whose strength -- in communion with the saints. ♪ ♪ ♪ >> with me now, jane singer, she's photographed the loyal family for more than 25 years, she's the author of diana: portrait of a princess. jane, thank you for being with. that's for you to watch the images today it's obviously brought back i'm sure a flood of memories from your career with the royal family. what did you think about how this day
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would happen? >> i thought it was beautiful. it makes you very proud to be british on days like that. i think a time when britain struggling with a lot of things, it's sort of restored our faith in a lot of good things about the country. and the beauty of the ceremony. i traveled the world so many years with the queen. the ceremonies, they never failed to excite you and to impress you, they're immaculate. but today's i think it really surpassed everything. >> i kept thinking, given the troubles that faces all of the world, britain in particular right now, you look at windsor castle as 1000 years old and it's seen great troubles and great triumphs in that time and it's still stands. i feel like the continuity that we saw today, the tradition on display, i found it hopeful.
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>> it was hopeful -- to feel london, windsor, to see how mad everything in the world is now. so everything going on just to have that peace and quiet, listen to the marching of the feet. it was something calming about it, very calming. >> you taught yourself photography taking pictures on pole of graph -- of prince charles playing polo. -- you start working with the royal family, your first trip with the queen was to africa, wasn't? it >> 79, when my first official tour with the queen. i was a very young photographer, it was daunting. >> you are 18? >> i was about 18 or 19, very young. i hadn't got a clue what i was doing. >> and you are in what, zambia, botswana, tanzania. i was all over. >> i read she was flying out on a nice plane, you were in the plane -- with >> i was in the back, yes, hanging on to the next. with the queen's luggage. well, that was funny when the queen went on safari, and we are excited that she was gonna stand there and look at these animals. and not one animal turns out. there
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was nothing -- there was nothing, she just stood there. but we got very excited because the day wasn't ruined, we got very excited the fact that she's wearing trousers. which sounds stupid, you never see the queen in trousers. when we're working and the royal circle, anything like that would come up. photographers would get excited. and say, oh, cleans got trousers. on so, the day wasn't really wasted then. >> what was it like to see her on a frequent basis up close? >> it's weird, you spent so much time staring, members of the royal family but they spent a lot of time staring at you. so, you have a rip or were you notice things about them, when you get the chance to speak about them -- something a little notice about me that's one of us -- got a new pair of shoes or it's quite astounding. you forget that. you stand there staring at them, taking pictures of them.
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>> sometimes they're just standing around during ceremonies. >> sometimes they stare at us and think, -- so-and-so got a new boyfriend yet. or what's going on with this. they were quite curious in the same way we were curious about them. >> charles noticed you early on, when you are taking pictures. there are 20 women photographer. >> most of my career, there wasn't any other women. i was a pipsqueak of a girl, i used to ride up and go, hello, and he would stand there and pose for me. i think over the years, they cut like having a woman. because so many big photographers on their cameras, pushing and shoving, and i would come along and stand quietly, they quite like. that >> you spent a lot of time looking at charles, those images of him today at st. georges, what did you see in his face? my
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>> heart went out for him. i saw broken. wasn't a, exhausted. and really needs a good break, doesn't it. a good sleep. yeah, my heart went out for him because he does raise emotions on his face. unlike the queen, she was very june, thank good at controlling our emotions. i think charles doesn't hide them as much. you so much for talking you'll probably see that a lot in, to us sooner years he'll show's emotions a lot more. but yeah, my heart went out to. when he was struggling with that. >> june, thank you so much.. i will talk more >> my pleasure. with our next >> i want to talk more with our guest about what lies next guest about what lies ahead ahead for the for the monarchy, at the end of monarchy, where at the end such are literally remarkable display of continuity with of tradition, before we do i want to a remarkable play for you a bit of footage and a display of continuity. saying, that would've seemed odd i want to at least to our own earlier show some traditions along with other world footage that might seem leaders, singing god save the king. odd to our earlier traditions. the american president and other world leaders singing gods sing by king. >> ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪
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♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ >> god save the queen. joining us now, kate williams, max god save the king. joining us now cnn royal historian king williams, foster, clarissa ward. cnn correspondent max forester, clarissa ward.
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what happens tomorrow? what is there's been such focus on, -- what happens obviously, these last weeks, for tomorrow? there's been such focus on king charles, obviously, they've obviously these last continued a morning period. weeks. max, for the but for the monarchy, what changes? royal family, for king charles, obviously, they have continued mourning period. but for the monarchy, what changes? >> it >> at that moment, wasn't, it was moving to see prince charles, king chiles, sitting in the queen seat. she has been sitting there for 70 years, that was quite profound. seeing the tears in his eyes. watching the coffin goes down. i think what happens, now it's all on him. and that's what that moment signified. they've still got a week of mourning. so we won't see much of them. we're not being told what they're gonna do tomorrow. we were so we want even see them tomorrow. they have to recalibrate, look at their diaries. and the king is in charge of those diaries and will be stepping into what the queen will be doing in the past. i think that will take a whole lot of recovering because
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underneath him and all fours to the other two of as well. the prince of wales has gonna have to get his head around the ditch of cornwall, a billion dollar estate. he will have to start running that. and prince george was there today which i think was incredibly hard for him to see all this unfold. that's the reality. he's stepping up as well. >> how old? >> he's nine years old. >> when you say he's stepping up, does he have lessons? and according to some historians may not agree. >> i think definitely we will look back in history as
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>> the countries basically been on pause now for the last ten days. the last time she tweeted publicly about government issues was talking about an energy tariff plan to deal with the soaring inflation and energy prices in this country. she has her work cut out for her -- just try to define who she is and said her mark.
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there was an awkward moment during those service at westminster abbey today where an australian network incorrectly identified her as a minor royal, which granted, she is relatively new on the scene, and maybe not so well-known to an international audience. but this will really not be the moment where she has to step up to the plate, confront some of these major challenges facing the united kingdom, and really try to put her own mark on how she's going to cap -- tackle them in her government. >> how organized is the transition, obviously, we've seen the funeral plans have been incredibly organized -- but charles waking up, king charles waking up tomorrow morning and -- is it already organized? that he receives the daily diaries? >> there's different roles. there's the head of the family, which he is now. so, it's the head of the nation, which is the more emotional side
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appearing in the moment. a celebration of grief and, you know, being identified as someone who is -- daily life. you'll see him giving the christmas messages as well as all that. but then there's head of state, which is a very formal role, and he's now already opening the red boxes. he receives them every day, from the government. these are government papers saying what's going on in government. he's gotta be completely across that. he's been doing that ever since the queen died. >> so he's been taking over, i mean, gradually, duties that sh e normally would've done over
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the last year or so? >> yeah. and you never have a holiday as a monarch. you've gotta open those red boxes every day. we'll be doing that -- i think the pressure is that the queen didn't have any sort of training. she just got dropped right into a. that might have helped her. he's had the longer sort of training, apprenticeship ever. the pressure that comes with, that he's been thinking about all these years, and suddenly to get up into action, it can be overwhelming, i imagine. it's a lonely place to be, being monarch. so he's gonna have to rely on the prince of wales heavily, i think, as part of that. but i think we've seen as well, haven't we, princess and stepping up as well and prince edward. i think they're gonna have much more prominent roles going forward. >> clarissa, what's the expectation, you think, for king charles? how he'll be different? >> well, i think that from people who work closely with him, he's known for being incredibly hard working. at his desk until midnight, up at six in the morning. passionate about a lot of issues. we heard jane talking before the break about how you can really see the emotions on his face when he's moved, when he's cross. he's had these issues that he's very pressured about. obviously, he's gonna have to pull back on some of those. it'll be very interesting to see what his coronation is going to look like. it's gonna look anything like his mother's? which of course, was an extraordinary event. 8000 people from 129 different countries. i think the expectation is that this will be somewhat leaner and
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more slimmed down, and also reflective of a very different britain. more diverse, more emphasis on multi faith, which is something that, you know, king charles feels quite fast passionately about. i do think you'll see him, really, and never quite soon to try to put his own stamp on things. >> and kate, his coronation will be -- do we know when? >> we're expecting it to be starting, at, say may, june, next year. so june, 1953. i think he does want to get started quickly. but certainly, core nations tend to be in the finer weather. so i do think me, june. but certainly, i agree with teresa. i think we will see some of the -- of his reign and that coronation. the queen's, this great moment in 1953, coming out of the post war misery, the fully televised coronation, first televised coronation, it's an incredible moment all over the world. it was a propaganda moment, selling britain to the post war world. and the post imperial world. what charles what, do i, think is very different, and
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we'll have more slimmed down. but i think certainly, what do you expect to have is that camilla will be crowned with him. he will have camila crowned with him as queen consort. that'll be quite significant. we haven't, of course, seen that the queen was crowned. >> thanks for staying up. long day. live report from puerto rico next, or at least two people are now dead, as much as the island is still without power after hurricane fiona tore through the island. later, 2024 presidential politics. the question whether the current president will run again. a question he addressed this weekend, not quite fully answering, but giving some answering, but giving some hints.lergies don't have to be scary. flonase sensimist stops your body from overreacting to allergens with a non-drowsy, ultra-lightweight mist. psst psst...flonase. all good!
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from cnn laya santiago. what are you seeing there tonight, leyla? >> anderson, where in the capital, the northeastern part of the island. i have talked to families in the interior, a swell is the southern part of the island. that's what was hardest hit. they're in the dark tonight, and wondering when will the rain stop. >> almost the entire island of puerto rico remains in the dark after hurricane fiona slammed into the southwestern coast of the island sunday afternoon. pounding rainfall causing catastrophic month slides and flooding. -- the storm coming just as parts of the island were finally recovering before hurricane maria's destruction 45 years ago. >> it was rough. it was hard to get it back. everything was destroyed. restaurants, houses, everything was destroyed. and we just -- went all the way back. a lot of
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people, more than maria, lost their houses now. lost everything in their houses because of the flooding. >> this is the neighborhood way the national guard had to come and rescue people. still a lot of flooding. i can hear generators powering the home, and it is still pouring down with rain. neighbors looking out, wondering exactly what will come next as hurricane fiona, the remnants, continue to demolish this area. the family rescued overnight, now safe and shelter. she says this was worse than maria. >> she's pointing out they've already been underwater for 24 hours, and the rain is still coming down. she's concerned about the 2500 families that she says are impacted by this here. >> about 100 people rescued
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from floodwaters, hundreds more rescue still underway as responders navigate through difficult to reach areas. the interior part of the island, 25-year-old -- watched this bridge come apart in just minutes and wash down the river. on the west side of the island, rainfall swelling -- surpassing, its previous record height at one 8. 59 feet set during hurricane maria. now gauging to over 29 feet. well if you hospitals have regained power, number gen zers are racing to get electricity back to the island. >> i take so long to get things back up because so many of the systems are connected. some of the main lines go through the hills there, that's those main lines get damaged, they don't have the ability to get the other sections up and running. >> sunday morning, president joe biden approving and a more agency declaration for puerto rico that authorizes all emergency measures needed, including fema. >> there are 300 respondents on
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the ground from fema working hand in glove with emergency structure. >> how long do officials expect recovery efforts to go on for? >> you know, that's the big question right now. how quickly can freeze respond? some areas still flooded, it might be a safety question as to how quickly they can actually get in. but already, numa -- private power country in charge of -- really start to restore power here on the island. i should also manson, anderson, about 66% of customers do not have water either. not just power, not just flooding, but also water is a big issue right now. and the timing of this, tomorrow marks five years since hurricane maria struck this island. so there's a lot of anxiety and flashbacks, if you will, to what they went through five years ago. >> wow. thank you, they let santiago. coming up next, presidential politics. president biden was less than definitive about whether he decided to run for a second term. he was quite honest about it . could the democrats be in
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[inaudible] >> -- i said i would run again. that was the intention. but is it a firm decision? that remains to be seen. >> biden said election laws are part of a reason he's not announcing a firm decision. also if he does run he does mention that he's in pretty good shape. perspective now from senior political commentator -- they, president biden's known as being off the cuff. is there any political rationale to him not committing to running for reelection? >> look. i think there is. one is it's very early, as he said, to formally announce -- their legal reasons why you shouldn't. for political
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reasons why you want to put that kind of announcement off. but he also, i thought, was very candid. look. we never experienced this before. if you are six years old or 50 years old, but when the any question about him running for reelection. he's not. he's gonna be 80 and december, and what he said was i'm a believer in fate. that's my intent to run, and i'll make that decision at the appropriate time. and i think there was a certain honesty to that that was commendable. >> there is this idea that if president biden commits to only
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one term, he could be more free to make difficult unpopular decisions because he doesn't have to run for reelection. there's others who say, you know, you're not gonna run again, you lose a lot of power, leverage. >> and this political environment, i don't really know what the popular decision would be. i mean, he's done a lot of things over the last few years they have been really bumped up those numbers as high as he would like in terms of his approval. the other piece of context here as that it is taken in the past a long time to decide to get in the race. in 2016 craig me if i'm wrong, david, he took so long he couldn't mount a credible race if he wanted to jump it. he's one of those rare candidates who would say out loud, i'm not so sure about that. lastly, he's gotta wait for midterms. this is gonna show whether in his agenda and his term so far something the party can actually run with successfully. >> david, if biden chooses not to run for reelection, what would that do the planning for democratic presidential hopefuls? how much advanced warning what they need to start building an organization? >> i think a fair amount. that's why he's making a decision in the near term is important. not now, but after the midterms and before the first quarter of next year. because democrats, there is no obvious candidate for the democratic party. democratic
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party desperately needs a primary campaign to surface again. remember, bill clinton was at 1% when he started running for president. barack obama was considered a very long shot when he got into the race and 2007. and the campaigns are where you prove yourself. but if the campaign is short because the president decides not to run any and now answers that light, it really curtails the ability to have the campaign that the party needs. >> do you think he does run again, he would face a primary challenge from the left? >> that's a really interesting question. it's hard to say, given how loyal people are to him. i think it does have a good reputation inside the party. but that doesn't mean that there wouldn't be a challenge or maybe representing a generational shift, so to speak. that's something biden himself has talked about. but you know, right now, the language is not there. it's a little like what you're saying on the republican side. people aren't saying i'm definitely gonna run because trump isn't running, right? they just laying the groundwork very publicly. and i think that when
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biden makes more space for people to do that, if that's when he decides to do, you will see people fill that vacuum. i think david is in a better position to say whether or not that would invite direct challenge. >> yeah. actually, anderson, i think if joe biden runs, he will be the nominee of the democratic party. one thing that's happened over the summer's's numbers, which are lagging, have bounced back in part because of the legislative victories that he had over the summer. i think there's affection for joe biden within the democratic party. if he has a primary challenger, i still think he's gonna beat nominee. it will impede his ability to win. but i said this many times, i don't think is a calculation is a political calculation. i think it's an actuarial calculation, and whether or not he feels -- he'll be at 82 when he takes office a second time. whether he thinks he's appropriate and whether he's up
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to that. >> david axelrod, audrey, great conversation. thanks so much. >> just ahead, i'll be joined by the young poet who became a sensation after an appearance at president biden's inaugural today. amanda gorman debuted a new problem at the united nations. -- we will hear it from her next. the >> concern of the new king, climate change was one of the many global challenges front and center at the united nations today. one of those on state of -- american poet amanda gorman. you may recall the poem she read during president biden's inauguration where she spoke of, quote, a nation that isn't broken, but simply unfinished. the following months, she became the first poet to perform for the super bowl. a new poem is called an ode we owe, and her words stay focused on the issues not just affecting a country but a planet. >> how can i ask you to do good
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new projects means new project managers. you need to hire. i need indeed. indeed you do. when you sponsor a job, you immediately get your shortlist of quality candidates, whose resumes on indeed match your job criteria. visit indeed.com/hire and get started today. we were told, super young, that you have to be tough, you have to be macho in a male perspective. you feel like, you know, you're not able to open up and, you know, be vulnerable with your feelings, you know what i mean. you have this idea of this machismo, right? like that you have to always be the toughest, the strongest. for me as a man, it's about opening up. not feeling too macho to tell someone how you're feeling when you're feeling down. opening up your heart and sharing with other people the way that you're feeling. i have a twin sister who, when i'm sad, i call her and talk to her and we normally have the same feelings. i face time, my grandchildren. that always seems to kind of give me a boost,
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my cholesterol is borderline. so i take garlique to help maintain healthy cholesterol safely and naturally. and it's odor free. i'm taking charge of my cholesterol with garlique. >> concern of the new king, climate change was one of the many global challenges front and center at the united nations today. one of those on state of -- american poet amanda gorman. you may recall
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the poem she read during president biden's inauguration where she spoke of, quote, a nation that isn't broken, but simply unfinished. the following months, she became the first poet to perform for the super bowl. a new poem is called an ode we owe, and her words stay focused on the issues not just affecting a country but a planet. >> how can i ask you to do good when we've barely withstand our greatest threats yet? the depths of death, despair, and disparity, atrocities, across cities, towns, and countries, lives lost, climactic costs. exhausted. angered. we are endangered, not because of our numbers, but because of our name nurse. -- numbness.
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>> and i'm very pleased, amanda gorman joins us now. it's a lovely to see you, and thank you for all that you're doing. tell us about the background of the poem and what inspired you. >> thank you so much. it's great to be here again, and to tell you a bit about the poem, i was really excited at this opportunity to have poetry represented at the united nations. and to use it to speak to some of the most pressing issues at our time, whether it be the climate crisis, poverty, gender in equity, all of these issues are connected, and making solutions means we need unity and solidarity. >> is there a particular part of the poem that resonates with your most, something you can read or share? >> absolutely. for me, one of the parts of that felt resident for me was the ending. i wanted to be a call from action. here
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is an excerpt. this morning, let it be sworn, that we are one human can, ground it, not just by the grief that we bear, but by the good that we began to anyone out there. i only ask, that you care, before it's too late that you live aware and awake, that you lead with love and hours of hate. i challenge you to heed this call. i dare you to shape our fate, above all, i dare you to do good, so that the world might be great. >> i love that. what was the line, it's not just grounded by the griefs we share but the good -- >> we began. one human can grounded not just by the grief we bear but by the good way --
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>> i love that. i will think about that a lot tonight. would you want people watching and listening to take away from this moment, and how do you rank poetry, how long does it take you to do something like this. do you happen to have a concept first, or does it just sort of, the words calm and then they fit together? >> anderson, we don't got time for my poetic process. but to give you a snapshot, really, [laughs] my poem start with the heart of the matter. so, to answer your question. the things that i want people to take away from my poetry, that's where i began. i began with the wound, i begin with the place of pain, and then i like to feel a move towards what brings us together, where is hoping the darkest of ours. and that dictates what i write and how i feel. >> that notion, begin with the womb. that's fascinating.
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united needs into -- sustainable development goals. do you talk a little bit about what those are, what they mean to you for people who may not be up on this? >> absolutely. the sustainable development goals are around 17 goals that have been highlighted by the united nation. it ranges from things such as, facing gender inequity, education for children, goals around poverty and hunger. and what makes them so supportive, -- that collectively oriented for the room. we're not just talking about towns, cities, countries. we're talking about the globe. and more often than not, these are goals that our government can get to on their own. they really need the activation, the engagement of people, i think especially
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young people. because they don't know about the stds, please look them up. we would love to have -- your leadership. >> amanda gorman, always a pleasure congratulations on all your doing. >> thank you so much. >> all right, coming up, a reversal of fortune for the man profile for the true climbs prod cap cereal. why a judge throughout the murder conviction of -- where the search for answers and the young woman's death go from here. that's next. in a year for like $11k. hmm! order 11! yes, see you at 11. ♪ 1111 masters blvd. please. that'll be 11 even, buddy. really? the clues are all around us... some things are too obvious to be a coincidence. ♪ president biden signed the inflation reduction act
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>> back in the u. s. tonight for the first time in two decades, i've none silent is no longer behind bars. -- vacated his murder conviction and life sentence in the killing of his ex girlfriend. you might remember the case drew national attention from the first season of the hit podcast cereal. -- but prosecutors to their extraordinary reversal and why nothing about this case is closed. >> free from prison after 23 years behind bars, a crowd
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swarmed at nine syed outside a circuit court moments after the judge -- saied didn't stop to speak, was whisked to away in a car, and was asked to wear an ankle bracelet -- dropped all charges for the death of his ex girlfriend, a high school student, strangled to death in 1999. her body was discovered weeks later. >> we're not yet declaring, not yet declaring, adnan saying it is innocent, but an interest of fairness and justice, he's entitled to a new trial. >> santa has maintained his innocence since he was convicted in 2000. defense
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attorneys have repeatedly tried to have him exonerated. >> it felt like, it's gonna have the wrong guy. >> a popular hbo series raise new questions about the case against adnan saied in 2019. but it was the hit podcast serial that brought the case and the possibility there had been a miscarriage of justice to national attention in 2014. leads brother, young li, telling -- this is a podcast for me. this is real life. carefully adding, whenever i think it's over, it's ended, it always comes back. but the judge ruled in favor of the motion filed by prosecutors who asked for science immediate release following a yearlong investigation into the -- and a 21-page court document. among, them the unreliability of cell phone data used in the original trial, advances and dna testing, and most critically, nearly devolved information about two alternative suspects, and the state's failure to disclose critical information about the suspects to the defense at the time of the trial. >> my investigation uncovered that one of the suspects threatened miss ali, saying he would make her disappear. he
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would kill her. we also received information that provided motive for that same alternative suspect. >> final motion on whether to actually proceed with the new trial will likely hinge, according to prosecutors, on the results of touch dna testing of some items recovered from the crime scene. the technology didn't exist at the time of the crime., still for throngs of syed's supporters, this is the first victory more than two decades in the making. the family of miss lee, the start of a search for more answers in the death of their beloved. >> his family is -- they want to know more than anybody who it was who killed their daughter. >> -- what recourse, if any, does the victims family have right now? those are putting
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hinge on what the prosecutor decides to do? >> actually, the attorney that's representing the family now says that they have some options for an appeal. the decision to release saied from prison. it still seems too soon for them, that. the family is very much in a state of shock. for more than two decades, they have believed that adnan syed was the murder of their daughter. they believe that today's decision signifies the prosecutors in the court of change their position. they also said to be disappointed by how quickly this happened. prosecutors have responded by saying they understand the families disappointment, but they're holding up the importance of ensuring a fair and just process for the defendant as well, anderson. >> alexandra field, appreciate it. we'll continue to follow. coming, up much more from inside of winds with council as england says its final goodbyes the queen elizabeth. the most unforgettable moments, and we'll look at the special bond between the queen and our only daughter. >> it like, folds in half. i love my phone i would never even think about switching. (gasping) ♪
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