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tv   CNN Tonight  CNN  December 13, 2022 12:00am-1:00am PST

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storm has been slamming the west is now moving east and more than
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10 million across more than a dozen states are under winter weather alerts. >> you could be facing blizzard conditions flooding or possible tornadoes the next few days. meteorologist in the cnn weather center what are you seeing? >> yes, the system is massive stretch from the north plains back into the four corners all the way down into the deep south and again ranging from snowfall ice even the threat of severe weather. snowfall depth currently across the sierra mountain range into the central rockies range from a foot to feet of snowfall. the heaviest snow fell across the sierra mountain range the last 24 hours where we picked up almost six feet of snow above 5,000 feet and all that moist moisture over the mountains pushes up through the central rockies into the northern plains and upper midwest today and tomorrow some of us dealing with
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slick conditions you'll see pink on radar that's ice. a quarter of an inch to a half inch expected up to an inch in some areas that are under the ice storm warning so this will continue on and the thunderstorms you'll see lightning nebraska into texas panhandle already. this is going to be continuing the next 24-48 hours. blizzard warnings in effect 35 mile-an-hour winds over three hours visibility knocked down to quarter mile. winds in goodland 55 miles per hour sustained with gusts stronger and as the low pushes north you can expect that in north dakota. areas in red most vulnerable areas of severe weather stretching from central plains across the southeast moving into the lower mississippi valley where we will have the threat of damaging winds hail and long
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lived tornadoes. wednesday that will push into the florida panhandle. >> thank you. turn now sperk counsel ramping up the criminal investigation surrounding donald trump subpoenaing georgia sect sect. errol is here with john dean, former nixon witt counsel and ashley allison joins us and look. john let me begin with you for a second. in less than a month a as special counsel you have jack smith issuing subpoenas for election officials asking a judge to hold trump in contempt for failing to comply to a subpoena, people before a grand jury and i think he is still in europe recovering from a bike accident. this is a lot of ground to cover in short time. what do you make of it? >> lawyer say think he's right on top of i. he's been on top of
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it from day one. he filed a pleading in the 11th circuit when the argument was about to be made contesting the statements trump people made in their brief sending people to grand juries he got top aides two counsel from the trump witt and stephen miller so he's pushing it quickly. >> ashley our panel last hour raised the question what's taken so long? basically it's been two years for some of these investigations that have been going on, and now we're seeing brad rathenberger, they're now moving faster than the department of justice was. >> is that for me? >> no, for ashley. >> at some point i wanted it to
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be more efficient, but making sure that people who try to overthrough our democracy face the necessary constant consequences. i think the department of justice has done a lot of work laying the foundation when the special counsel was appointed. they've taken the baton and it may seem like it is moving faster but a lot of work has been done by doj so i'm willing to be pisht as long as justices want. >> i think about the groundwork being done and the reason you can hit the ground running because of the foundation remains to be seen but scott we are days away from a new congress being sworn in, obviously doj is a separate and intends to be separate from grist and the government but what do you think the results of this will be? do you think this is a politically viable investigation where the electorate is behind it? >> well, look.
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the investigation has momentum. i mean it's been going on as you pointed out for a couple of years. a lot of people have been interviewed. a lot of documents have been obtained, grand jury's impanelled so this has momentum. strikes me the people he's currently seeking to talk to that they are getting to the point they're going to start making some decisions so yes it's viable because real things happen. january 6 happen. the phone call to the georgia sect sect happened. a lot of things were said and done right in the open. we all saw it with our on you two eyes. i also would say political viability of an investigation public opinion of an investigation is irrelevant. the point should be justice shrub done whatever public opinion is, that's what we should all want for any crimes that were committed to be prosecute to the fullest extent of the law and for everybody to have their day in court in the system we agree to.
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that's what i want as an american and hope the special counsel gets us there. >> if you have something to add feel free but i want to see what stephen miller is up to. >> yes, we definitely want to get that the even receiving the subpoena in wayne county michigan, allegheny county pennsylvania, maricopa county arizona it has a beneficial effect. anybody contacts with the justice system subpoena with your name on you're going to think more carefully next election whether you want to engage in speculation about stolen elections and issuing memos about seizing machines and so forth so the investigation is longer than people would like but it's had a beneficial effect. >> good point. to stephen miller remember he was the architect of the child separation policy at that time border among other things so he has started this anti-white bigotry good and he is suing
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when things crop up in the government that he thinks are discriminate against white people for instance billions of dollars in pandemic aid that was going to go to black farmer, billions of dollars to minority and female owned restaurants and he's winning in court. >> this is how it works. social movements give rise to counter movements so you have black lives matter and a counter movement with the thin blue line flag all over the place. you had the george floyd protests in 2020. well, stephen miller and company you know in reaction to all of the different really interesting projects that happened all over the country where people are trying to sort of come to terms with past injustices gives rise to a countermovement where stephen miller has apparently got 10s of millions dollars collected going to court making case that no we should not
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rectify these past injustices. it is what happens. i don't think he will be successful. >> he already has been in court. >> he can win this or that case but you look at the broad picture the reality is white men are not being criminal nate against and most americans under 18 years old are kids of color. the country is changing as the president is constantly saying this new younger generation they're the smart test most tolerant the best educated the most tech savvy generation we have ever had. i would bet on the kids. >> i think the fact is you make a great point the idea how you judge the success but the talking points to be used nonetheless to show there's some discussion about why it's problem at length when it's problematic to correct past wrongs. i wonder from your perspective going forward as we are starting on a time with a new congress
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looking back one woman marjorie taylor green from georgia talking about what she would have done differently with a january 6 insurrection and how it have been successful. take us back to your reaction this is a punchline to this day. >> it's kind of a sorry commentary to say we would have done it better if we would have done it more aggressively and we would have done witness arms. she seems to forget there were lots of weapons there but i think these are attempts to gather attention. there's an attention economy out there they talk about and people on the right like marjorie taylor green like to draw attention to themselves and do it with outrageous statements one after another. it's sort of the standard mantra of the right now to see what can be more outrageous than the last person said. >> okay. thank all very much for those insights. next, what the happened to a 21-year-old american studying
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abroad in france? his family has not heard from him in a couple weeks. his fellow students have reported him missing now. we have the latest on this mystery. to destroy 5x more plaque above the gumline than floss. for a cleaner, healthier mouth. listerine. feel the whoa!
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>> a new york college student studying abroad is missing, the parents of kenny say they haven't heard from him in weeks and they're desperate for information where he might be a. french prosecutor has opened an investigation but unfortunately the trail that is gone cold. cnn's jason carroll. >> this may be the last known image of kenny as he entered a sporting goods store in the south of france. that was december 3rd. >> i just hope that he reaches out to us. >> delan a 22-year-old sen year at rochester new york is part
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after study abroad program in france at the university grenble alps. >> we were just exchanging how he was doing and has been traveling. he's been having a great time. we shake our heads. we don't understand why he's not reaching out to news is his family launched a web site seeking answers an detailing his last known location. they say their son boarded train. public prosecutor's office in grenoble opened and investigation after his fellow students reported him missing. december 3rd he made an 8.40 purchase at the sporting goods store located about 80 miles
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from grenoble. >> any normal conversation that we have had he's telling me of a time he's having in europe and he was looking forward to coming home for christmas and starting to put the lance in place for that. >> the french prosecutor's office telling cnn delan said he was underprepared for overseas study and had trouble making friends. st. john's says it's working closely with the american institute for foreign study on the case saying: back in his hometown a prayer service held at the clifton springs united methodist church. >> i would like to see you come home and preferablely before christmas for your family sake
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and for yours too. be safe. >> his community and family praying that he will soon be found safe and sound. >> we are waiting. we are worried. we don't know what, you know, where he is. >> jason carroll is here with us along with errol lewis. does this seem like foul play to you or like he have left of his own accord? the reason i say is the report says the young man told people he was underprepared for this study abroad and having difficulty making friends. >> part of the issue is he's 22. if he wants to walk away he can walk away. it's not like a missing child. i think that's why his parents are having trouble because he's an adult hand b, the french have extraordinarily complex laws about privacy and sharing anything that's and
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investigation especially with another country especially about an adult so tie it all up in that. but get back to your question looks leak we walked off the set of the study prying if he's 80 miles away in a sporting goods store. the problem is when he goes off the grid totally, no communications, the cell phone ping, the credit start stops moving you have to wonder if he walked way under his own volition did something happen to him, is he okay, where is he, why is he off the grid. >> the parents obviously worried their son, they want to know where he is. there's the concern you raise allison. has there been frustration about the lack of information? >> absolutely. they're worried sick as any parent would be worry if i had they child had gone missing. they say it's out of character for him because he had been communicating every single day checking in saying i'm doing
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this, i'm doing that, whatever, but again as john brings up because of these french privacy laws it's causing a great deal of frustration on the behalf of his mother and father. they want to know from french authorities who are you talking to, what are they saying to you? he's an adult 22 years old so french privacy laws are there to protect you even sometimes from your own family giving out information bought because the family is working with the state department, because this story has got so much international attention behind the scenes one would theorize that they are getting some information but of course, these are two parents who are worried sick about their child. so whatever information they're getting it's not enough. >> yeah it's a nightmare when it happens in this country but the idea of happening in a different country where there are different laws is upsetting. >> one would hope with or without the cooperation of the french police they would put the
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message out including this message tonight, let as and people as possible see it, tell them that call in your tips and call in any information a sighting and so forth. i hope they're doing that in con centric circles around this story in the market, asking street musicians have you seen this kid. we all hope he's on the having an adventure meeting new friends traveling around maybe without credit cards forget to go call him and if he finds out people are looking for him perhaps he will call in. >> do you think state departments should be involved in some respect? >> in terms of escalation it happened once. his friends from school call an said he's not showing up. i think that's one of the reasons the parents were pushing back from french authorities saying he wasn't making friends, they did acknowledge that learning french was a lot more difficult in terms of what he
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thought it would be but it started to escalate after his friends noticed that he did not show up for class. so then of course they alerted local authorities and the ball started. >> there is a host family? >> there is a host family. from all accounts the host family speaks very little english but that's the way it works when you go with one of these exchange programs but he got along with them. the host family took him to switzerland took him on a visit. that's why there are so and questions an frustration on the part of the family wanting to get more information from french officials. >> lets hope this helps hall media awareness. thanks so much guys. well it's a riddle scientists have been trying to crack for decades, how to harness nuclear fusion. now they've made a huge breakthrough and it could have a major impact on clean energy. >> we are going to explain how it all works.
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i signed us up for t-mobile home internet. ugh! but, we found other interests. i guess we have. [both] finch! let's go! oh yeah! it's not the same. what could you do to solve the problem? we could get xfinity? that's actually super adult of you to suggest. i can't wait to squad up. i love it when you talk nerdy to me. guy, guys, guys, we're still in session. and i don't know what the heck you're talking about. >> u.s. scientists making huge breakthrough, a source tells cnn for the first time ever researchers have been able to create energy from a fusion reaction. now, laura i could explain all this in great detail but basically it's a giant step toward a clean energy future without dependence on fossil
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fuels. >> enough said. the department of energy officially announced the breakthrough in just a few hours. to help explain to us chief climate correspondent bill weir and educator bill nye. mr. nye although allison and i clearly know everything about fusion feel free to ask us any questions we might have. could you explain how this is such a miraculous occurrence? >> so i'll ask your question. do you know that the sun is a continuous fusion reaction? >> naturally. >> definitely. >> so, a nuclear weapon like we have to terminate world war ii are splitting very large atoms
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apart. but another thing happens in nature where you smash tiny parts of atoms and they fuz an convert a tiny amount of their mass into heat and light. that was the hydrogen bomb, but for all this time for 80 years, people have tried to get this idea where could you do itn a controlled fashion, using a tiny amount of material and the material would be hydrogen that has an extra neutron and if it has two extra's it's tritium. so using lasers they zap this gold thing with the deuterium the lasers create x-rays and the
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k. raise get it to fuse without the gravity of a start. it's the first time by all accounts they've got more heat out than they put in. this is as far as i know in the reporting the last few days, no one mentioned that enrique fermi and his colleagues in university of chicago did the first chain reaction which led to all the nuclear power plants we have now. on december 2nd, 1942. >> okay. >> so it's quite a little chin stroke that it's very close to 80 years late tore the day that this breakthrough occurred, so you guys, if this would work, it's a harbinger. if this is really the beginning of something huge it would change the world. >> thanks for explaining.
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>> i was going to say all that. bill tell us what we need to know. >> it's a star in a box. this is whole idea. this is why nuclear physicists have been salivating on this idea forever. it's taking a star and putting it in a box on earth and taxing that energy that goes on forever. it's this endless clean energy machine and the appeal of its you don't have any nuclear waste there's no fallout no accidents, we don't have to drill or mine for fuel because the fuel is seawater. we have 30 million years of seawater to feed these machines but what bill is describing lasers aimed at essentially a pepper corn of hydrogen a long way from there where can you plug in your house into this stuff. it's for our grandkids probably as a mean full technology.
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bill maybe you're more optimistic about how fast this ex. meantime there's all these incredible breakthrough wes wind and solar and more will go on line than in the next 20. so those who say we should put billions of dollars into energy sources before we go for amazing moon shots but at the same time the promise of this you know private money is going to chase public after this so it could be a brave new world. >> bill do you think it could be in our grandchildren's lifetime, or sooner? >> absolutely. so just think about how quickly went from discovering chain reaction sizzler crossing the street in 1928 and then just two decades later we had nuclear
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power plants. this could be the beginning of something amazing so everybody you know this expression-20, there's no shortage of hydrogen. if we can make this happen continuously ghu is capture the heat and almost certainly capture the heat boil water make steam run a turbine just as we do now in a coal fired plant or natural gas fired plant or nuclear plant using fission. it shows you the value of investing, just invest in basic research. there is no right answer and i got to say, bill, to me it's don't make me pick. we don't want to have to pick and because the climate situation is so serious, we want to do as i like to say, everything all at once. we want to develop wind and solar.
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we want to develop this fusion technology if possible. we want to avoid you may know not in my backyard. we walled want to avoid banana, built absolutely nothing nowhere near anything. we have got to find ways to distribute electricity an including everybody in the future so we have a higher quality of life for more people on erpt than we can avoid catastrophic climate consequences. this is one more piece in the puzzle invest invest invest plus people i was born in the u.s. i don't know any better so i want the u.s. to lead in this technology. i doen't want to be catching up with researchers in other parts of the world who are fine people but i want as an american for it
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to happen here. >> this is such a great story. so often bill we have you on and it's discouraging climate news an this is such a hopeful exciting story so thank you both for explaining it so well to us. >> let's invest, change the world. >> i used to be a lot more fun. thanks to the scientists at livermore labs where we are today. >> go science. >> it's so great to be able to report a great story. >> a good kind of investment. >> there is a huge development in the collapse of cryptocurrency exchange. the founder of that exchange has been arrested in the bahamas the day before he was supposed to testify in congress.
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the back, now sam bankman-fried has been arrested in the bahamas after the united states filed criminal charges before he's supposed to testify before a congressional committee. >> the question was, was this a result of fraud or incompetence? the u.s. department of justice southern district of new york says it's fraud. that tells us believe he took intentional misstatements so looking at criminal charges. the office is page us for these wall street corporate prosecutions from junk bonds cases through bernie madoff. what's next? the united states is going to try to extradite him. we have a treaty with the bahamas. the question let him out on bail or the prosecutors will try to lock him up. those are the next stages of the prosecution an he's got money so
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it might be suspicious. >> the sports world, remembering journalist grant wahl who died after collapsing in a world match. ahead we speak with another journalist who was sitting right next to him during his final moments. listerine. feel the whoa! bye, bye cough. later chest congestion. hello 12 hours of relief. 12 hours!!
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>> the sudden death of journalist grant wahl on friday still shaking up the sports world. wahl was just 49 years old covering the world cup in qatar. tribute to him. some journalists who were in the press box speaking out about
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their final moments with grant wahl including rafael who was right next help between the match of argentina and netherlands. he joins with us sports illustrated editor john wortheim. i want to start with you because there are so and questions. it's so mysterious what happened to grant and disturbing for everyone. you were sitting next to him when he suffered some kind of medical emergency. could you tell he was in distress? what was happening? >> well, he was in our row. he was last in the row. behind him was in metallic structure. he was the last one. i was sitting next to him. the space was tight so we were like chair against chair. this happened at the very end of the game.
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actually, four minutes before the end of the second half of the extra time. we had been sitting there for more than two hours. grant, i don't recall him moving at all during those more than two hours. he was talking with us, not much but normally but we were commenting someplace the game. what i can say he was coughing and we knew that he had bronchitis but you would never expect what happened at the end of the game. >> on that point, before he had the sort of medical emergency had he explained to you how he was feeling? i'm also curious as to what happened that you were first alerted to their being an issue. >> well, at that time of the game we were all kind of in our computers and then the person on my left, which knew grant, from
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a long time, and i started listening, grant, grant, what's happening? then i turned to my right and i see grant in distress, i don't want to be specific, i don't think we need to, but definitely he was in a critical situation. i tried to talk to him. i wrapped his face, trying to communicate with him. he was not responding. we started yelling for a medical team. the whole media area got up, because we were concerned and i don't remember how many seconds until the first paramedic, it was a female person that arrived to where we were. i was holding grant. meanwhile he was trying to talk to her and for me, i mean, it
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was a very long time maybe it was not that long but i wanted her to do something because i tried first actually to make him react. she was trying to talk to him but that was not obviously working so she took his pulse and at that moment, she said, okay, we have to put him on the floor. and because the chairs were regular chairs, not like stadium seats we took away the chairs and we put him on the floor and more paramedics arrived and they started doing cpr on him. >> john, it's so shocking, he was 49 years old seemed to be in good health other than bronchitis. it's sent a shock wave everywhere. >> john you worked with him so
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long and spoke beautifully what an inspirational writer he was. just share with us what was so inspiring about grant? >> some of it was just the quality of work he produced whether it was long form journalism, whether it was reporting news breaking but also podcasting video. this was someone who knew soccer as well as anyone but wasn't so much about the games as the people, but apart from the work product it was also the way he went about the job and he was compassionate but he was principled and he was absolutely thorough and dignified and he was curious. he traveleder where. he covered the men but also the women. he loved how international soccer was. it really was a model both in terms of the work he did but also his approach to the job as well. >> and john, we have heard from so and icons in sports thinking about how they impact, how he impacted their lives.
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we remember thinking about even lebron james obviously a titan in field of basketball remembering a cover story when he was in akron written by your colleague and thinking about those moments being able to identify the talent to have with him after all these years thinking about it. i'm sorry you are here talking about him in this way but tell me what would you like the world to know about the legacy you hope his work leaves? >> i think just that you can have this kind of success and also this kind of humanity and passion. it was great that lebron james an billie jean king and so and from the soccer world weighed in but so did interns and people that were lower than him on the mast head on the chart that he helped along the way. he took being a had mentor very seriously and this was some one who had this incredible amount
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of success and incredible amount of access and he didn't want to hoard that. he wanted to share that. so it was lovely that lebron james remembered him from 20 years. that was remarkable especially the sport grant was known for and lebron remembered him two decades later but as up thing for me were people that remember his small acts of kindness. >> as you point out the sport he's known for which is soccer which is not every american's favorite sport. we are much more a football country. what was it about soccer that so captivated grant? >> great question. it's not as though he was a college player or had a pedigree in the sport. he was captivated by the sport when he went to south america in college and just saw the magic in it and he just never got rid of the passion. it only grew the more he emerged the more contacts the more trips
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he went on. i remember he covered the world cup in 1998 the first time he went to europe and he was glowing when he got back and said now he's got to convince editors to let him cover the women's world cup the next year. i think he understood this was a sport poised to grow. think he got the magic and the subtlety but also he loved the culture of this laboratory this microscope and he conveyed that so well in the work he did. >> certainly rafael you know this as well, the magic of the sport being able to cover it and i'm sure it's a great comfort to his family to know he was not alone and somebody was caring for him when he needed it most. >> i have to say that we latinos live for soccer, you know that. it's our main sport by far, and all the reporters the
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journalists that cover socker in the u.s. and in the spanish language we knew grant wahl and respected him a lot and thought he was the best by far english writing or reporter, soccer reporter in the u.s. >> thanks for adding that. >> very nice into rafael, john thank you both. >> really appreciate it. >> and thank you all for watching. >> our coverage continues. and the giggles. and the great dane pup. and grandma's gluten-free gooseberry pie. which is actually pretty great. the family that takes delsym together, feels better together. and try new delsym no mess vapor roll-on for cough.
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