tv CNN Newsroom CNN December 14, 2022 12:00pm-1:00pm PST
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love through gaming. but now the internet lags and it throws the whole thing off. when did you first discover this lag? 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. it is the top of the hour on "cnn newsroom." hello, everyone. i'm bianna golodryga. >> i'm victor blackwell. good to be with you. the federal reserve just gave a major sign that its fight against high inflation may be working.
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essential bank only hiked rates by half the points. the last time around the board has opted for a 75-basis point jump. since though, stocks have been falling. take a look. >> there you see down over 200 points. the chairman of the fedex fed explained this decision just moments ago. >> despite elevated inflation, longer term inflation expectations appear to remain well anchored as reflected in a broad range of surveys of households, businesses and forecasters as well as measures from financial markets. but that is not grounds for complacency. the longer the current bout of high inflation continues, the greater the chance that expectations of higher inflation will become entrenched. >> cnn's matt egan is at the federal reserve. i think that investigators there are reacting to news that the federal reserve is not done with rate hikes, and thus, we're seeing the selloff.
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>> reporter: yeah. i think that's right, victor and bianna. the fed is saying that there's more work to be done here. you know, it's interesting because even though the white house and wall street have been celebrating these signs of cooling inflation, the fed chair took a bit of a different approach. he said, quote, it will take substantially more evidence to gain confidence that inflation is on a sustained, downward path. in other words, they're not declaring victory any time soon, and powell, he also stressed that the jobs market remains hot. he said that the labor market is, quote, very, very strong. he said we haven't seen much softening. wages are high, and all of that of course, supports inflation. so the fed is now pencilling in another 75 basis points of rate increases next year. that is more than the fed had previously been pencilling in. that means higher borrowing costs for everyone, mortgage
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rates, credit cards, car loans. it means more downward pressure on the economy, and so officials are also projecting some more negatives for the economy. they put out a new round of economic projections, and they were downgraded across the board. the fed now sees near zero growth next year in terms of gdp. that forecast was cut in half. they've bumped up their unemployment forecast. they now see unemployment going from 3.7% to 4.6% next year. that translates to the loss of millions of jobs, and they also bumped up their forecast for inflation. singh so i think you put all of it together, the fed is trying to drive home this message that more work is going to be needed to get inflation back towards healthy levels. >> all right. matt egan for us there at the federal reserve. thank you, matt. >> thanks, matt. well, right now, millions of people in the southeast are at risk for tornadoes as a massive storm system continues to move
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east. police say rescue efforts are under way in southern louisiana after a tornado touched down in new ibiiberia with people still inside. this was captured with our crew in lafayette. a medical center also suffered significant damage. a shelter has been set up for anyone who has been displaced. >> the same storm system tore through the northern part of the state yesterday. a boy and his mother died after a tornado destroyed their home near shreveport, and about 100 miles away in the town of farmerville where a tornado ripped through a community, the drone shows the extent of the damage. look at that. meteorologist derek van dam is in farmerville for us. show us around and tell us what you are seeing and hearing. >> reporter: well, what you are seeing now is the first time that residents have been allowed to come back to assess the damage, to almost look over to
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see the extent of what took place here, and it's been riveting to see. people just pulling out bags of clothes and any kind of things that they can, but i also heard one of the insurance adjusters had appeared talking to the residents saying they're not allowed back into the homes here because the structures are not necessarily safe. you can see the cars behind me have been thrown around like toys. you can see some of the almost debris just plastered onto the sides of these vehicles. we've seen literally some pieces of roof that was wedged into the sides of vehicles, and you can just see the power of what a tornado can do, but i want to bring in a survivor from this horrific, horrific storm. this is tijuana wayne, and i believe this is your home. >> yes. >> were you here during the tornado? >> yes. >> what was it look for you? >> oh my god. it was terrifying. the wind just blowed me through the hallway along with glass, was everywhere. i was -- my husband was asleep on the couch, and i was
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hollering for him, and when i found him, he had fallen from the debris, and we grabbed eaceach other, and the house was shaking. debris, everything was coming in the home. it was just devastating. >> did you have any warning? >> yeah. we had a warning. the warning had came off, and that's why i went out of the bedroom. as soon as i got in the bedroom, it's like the wind and the glass just pushed me all the way through the hallway, and it was -- it was just traumatizing. >> that must have been absolutely terrifying, but what was going through your mind when that -- i'm assuming it couldn't have lasted longer than a couple of minutes. >> i just felt like we were dying. i felt like it was over. it happened so fast. we just kept hearing boom, boom, boom all throughout the home, and it was just traumatizing. i thought we were gone. i thought the house was just going to be lifted up and we
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were going to be taken away. >> tawana, we are so happy that you are here today to tell the story, and to share this with us, and we're glad that your husband, he's okay? >> yeah. he's okay. he had fallen -- he had a stroke previously, and he's -- he's okay. he's okay. >> i'm glad to hear that. i hope that you are able to retrieve as much of your personal belongings, and i'm -- my heart breaks for you guys and everything you went through. >> the only thing i have is the clothes on my back. we weren't able to retrieve everything because everything was so damaged, and my father passed away sunday, and so i'm dealing with that along with losing my home. >> this is just a combination of one disaster after another for people here in the south including tawana. thank you for sharing your story, and it's going to be a long road to recovery. you can see as the cameraman pivots behind, those used to be mobile homes directly over my right shoulder. now just a pile of memories left on the ground.
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bianna and victor, back to you. >> just at a loss for words when you hear tawana's story about her husband recovering from a stroke, her father passing away and surviving miraculously this tornado, and one thing we keep hearing is the speed with which quickly. >> she got the notification it was coming, and then the wind and glass pushed her down that hall. vivid story. glad she and her husband survived. derek, thank you so much. >> thanks, derek. well, it is not just the tornadoes. this storm system is pounding middle america with heavy snow and blizzard conditions. >> visibility is down to almost nothing in some areas. of course, you know, the travel is a mess. cnn meteorologist jennifer gray is tracking the storm. so we were there in louisiana with derek. which areas are facing the biggest concern right now? >> you know what? i still think it's that tornado threat. it hasn't gone away. it's lasted throughout the overnight hours and still continuing as we speak. we do have that snowy side and the wintry side of this, but i
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think the biggest threat right now as you're mentioning is this tornado threat. we still have a tornado watch in effect for southeast louisiana, mississippi, portions of alabama. these are all tornado warnings. all these hot pink boxes are tornado warnings which means there could be a tornado in progress, and if people in these areas have got to get to their safe spot. these are now pushing into portions of alabama. this is still a huge threat. this is ongoing. this is going to last throughout the afternoon and evening hours. here are all the tornado reports so far. we know this began yesterday evening as we were reporting. so as we go forward in time, these storms will finally start to move to the east. they were going to push through alabama, georgia, on into the carolinas off the east coast in the coming days and of course, the wintry side as you were mentioning, duluth down to half a mile of visibility. the snow is still continuing for this area, guys. we were still under those blizzard warnings as we have been since yesterday. guys. >> all right, jennifer gray watching it for us. thank you, jennifer.
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>> thanks. the house january 6th committee is set to release its final report next week, and when it does, it will not include phone records that the committee has been seeking for more than a year. >> this week the committee withdrew multiple subpoenas for phone records. cnn's katelyn polantz joins us. what have we learned? >> reporter: they sent lots and lots of subpoenas into the hundreds. some of those subpoenas were for phone records. they sent them to phone companies like verizon, at&t, t-mobile, and a couple of handful -- a couple of dozen people sued the house select committee. largely people who were very closely allied with donald trump after the election, and when those particular people sued, it put on hold the ability of the house to get their phone records, and so what was happening was there was a waiting game happening. in court, all of those people were waiting to see whether any
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courts would challenge the committee or allow their challenges to move forward. the lawsuits really hadn't gone very far, and so now with one week left to go with this house select committee, the house is essentially dropping these disputes that they had in court. they're withdrawing the subpoenas. they're just not going to get those records from maybe a few dozen people. we've already seen about six or so notices in court this week where the house select committee is telling people, we're not going to be seeking your phone records anymore. them. >> so this is all happening, kat katelyn as they've tried to get scott perry's text messages. tell us about that. >> reporter: right. well, one of the things that the house select committee was trying to do was they really wanted to get phone records for people that were very close to the president after january 6th or around the election. one of those people was mark meadows, the white house chief of staff at the time. made does was in touch with lots
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of people and publicly we have seen meadows was in touch with people like representative scott perry, a republican from pennsylvania. we know the justice department investigation took an interest into scott perry and his phone, particularly this summer. there was a search and seizure done around him and then after that, cnn has been able to confirm that there was a confidential proceeding in court in this fall where the justice department was pursuing data from scott perry's phone. we know he was the type of person around trump who was not just in touch with meadows, but he was interested in getting in touch with lots of people to push forward this idea that there may have been -- there should be not trust in the elections or that there may be election fraud, and so we know that the justice department is trying to get a handle on who else perry may have been in touch with. >> thank you. the 2024 presidential race may feel a little deja vu, but
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new cnn polls out today reveal what voters are thinking about when it comes to the 2024 presidential race. former president trump has already declared his candidacy, and president biden says he intends to run for re-election. >> but these early numbers indicate that america doesn't necessarily want this rematch. cnn's senior data reporter harry hinten is here with more. what are we seeing from these poll results? >> let's start off on the republican side.
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should trump be the gop's 2024 presidential nominee? back in january or february, it was basically a mixed bag. 50% to 49%, 50% saying yes. look at trump's numbers though, the trend line. that yes dropped to 44% in july. now it's just 38%. the clear majority, 62% of republicans say no. trump should not be the republican nominee, but it's also interesting when ewith look at the favorable ratings among republican voters. the favorable rating of ron desantis who has not declared b you there's a lot of whispering he will run in 2024, a 77% approval rating. donald trump among republicans, just a 62% approval rating. >> so donald trump losing momentum among republicans. >> yes. he is absolutely losing momentum among republicans at this point, and i want to just sort of compare that to the democratic side at this particular point, right? there's not really momentum here. should joe biden be the democrats' 2024 presidential nominee? what do we see here? we saw back in january and february, 45% yes.
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in july, it dipped all the way down, my good ness, to 25%. now it's back up to 40%. the majority say no, he should not be the nominee, but the difference between the democratic and republican side is joe biden is still the most well liked democrat at this point. his favorable rating 82%, and potential nominees, kamala harris, 62% favorable rating. gavin newsom with just a 47% favorable rating. even though a lot of democrats maybe don't want joe biden to be the democratic nominee, he's still the most well liked, unlike donald trump on the republican side. >> that is the difference between where both stand is that while americans may not like dem -- democrats may not like have joe biden again, and republicans don't like trump, they still prefer biden over where we're seeing trump headed. >> that's exactly right. one last thing that i want to kind of note here is among the general electorate right is because obviously we have been looking sort of at the primaries. if we look here, i think this
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kind of fgives you a keen idea f why republicans wanted donald trump to stay away in georgia. views of joe biden mainstream, 63% of americans say yes, his views are generally mainstream. well, compare that to donald trump, just 32% say that. look at the too extreme column. look at that. 68% of americans nationwide say that donald trump's views are too extreme, and that may be part of the reason why donald trump is losing momentum among republicans. >> and the only declared candidate so far. harry, thank you. >> thank you. joining us now, cnn chief political correspondent dana bash, and cnn chief political analyst gloria borger. as you listen to these numbers, and listen. we've got a long time and president biden hasn't even confirmed whether or not he will run. we expect him to. how much is the white house digesting numbers at this point? >> i don't know how much they're digesting these particular numbers, the numbers that they're mostly looking at, i think, are things like the
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interest rate going -- bumping up half a point. the cpi which, you know, bianna, you have been looking al tt tho numbers on the regular for years. most americans are tuning into it now because inflation is affecting them in their everyday lives. those are the numbers, and another number that, you know, goes without saying which is 80, which is the president's age. i think those are the key numbers that they are looking at more than how he is faring in the democratic field because i've not talked to anybody, and i would love to know if gloria agrees to me. i have not talked to anybody in the democratic party up and down who does not think that if joe biden runs, he's not going to get a real challenger. >> gloria, let's look at the republicans and the question of if not trump, who should be the nominee? >> yeah. >> so in the latest numbers just out today, 53% say they want
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someone other than trump. 38% of those folks want -- of the people want someone else. they want ron desantis. if we look at the same question from january of this year, ron desantis is the only person who's shown any progress, any improvement. anyone else who's at 1% was at 1% at the start of this year. i mean, we're still far out from iowa, but this is essentially two people that are in this conversation so far. >> well, yeah. i think one of the reasons you've seen the numbers peak on whether or not republicans want somebody else other than trump to run is that they think they have an alternative here, and the alternative they believe obviously, according to our poll, and the numbers you just showed is ron desantis. personally i think he's peaked just a little too early. people don't know a lot about him. he hasn't been on the campaign trail. they know he won overwhelmingly in florida. republicans overwhelmingly believe he did a good job there, but obviously they have an alternative, and that, again, is
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another difference with the democrats because while the democrats may say, okay. we want someone other than joe biden to run. when you ask that same question to them, they really have no idea who their favorite is. i mean, according to our poll, 72% of democrats say they have no particular favorite. so it's really different, you know, in the parties. if the democrats had someone else to point to, dana suggests and i agree with her, that if biden decides to run, somebody might decide to challenge him, then they'll have a choice, but at this point, they're kind of going, okay. as opposed to whom? and we don't know the answer to that. >> we talked about what could happen in the future. let's talk about the numbers that boath parties are focusing on right now, and that's finding common ground and not seeing another government shutdown. dana, i'm curious to get your response to what we're seeing behind the scenes versus what's happening in front of the
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cameras specifically on the republican side with kevin mccarthy still wanting to grasp hold in a speakership position and appealing to the far right by saying publicly that he doesn't want a deal, but privately he's saying something else. where do you see this headed? >> there's so much performance happening here. understandable performance because he, kevin mccarthy, is -- it's go time for him. he needs every single one of the republican votes that he can get, and if he did anything other than what he is doing now, which is getting out there and being so forward-leaning into the idea that he hates the idea of this year-long spending bill, hell no. even criticizing mitch mcconnell, that is all for one goal, and that is to shore up the vote that he needs in january -- on january 3rd on the floor of the house to become speaker of the house. the mcconnell part of it is really fascinating because i've
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spoken to a number of republicans who are very much in touch with even part of the base who say that mitch mcconnell right now is sort of persona non grata among republicans, those that are the staunchest, and those that are going against him or seeming to in public, that is very much part of his campaign to be speaker of the house. >> and, you know, i spoke with someone who is an ally of mc mcconnell's who said, you know, he doesn't have a relationship very much with kevin mccarthy to begin with. this won't make it better. when you look back at the speaker ryan days, the speaker boehner days, mcconnell had a much better relationship. i think now it's frayed and it'll get even more frayed because the feeling among the mcconnell folks is that mccarthy
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is being held hostage to a fr fringe of a minority, and i bet in his heart of hearts, that is what mccarthy believes himself, but he wants to be speaker as dana said, and so there is very little he can do. >> all right, dana bash and gloria borger. thank you. >> thank you. >> sure. the widow of sports journalist grant wahl is speaking out for the first time since he died at the world cup. what we're learning about his cause of death up next. and today marks ten years since the sandy hook elementary shooting forever changed this country. cnn's special report, tonight. no matter your purpose, at pnc private bank we will work with you evevery step of the way to help you achieve e it. so let us focus on the how. just tell us - what's your why?
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ellen degeneres says that she is heartbroken about the death of stephen "twitch" boss. the former deejay of her former talk show. >> she posted this photo and described him as pure love and light. now there's no further information about the cause of death. he rose to fame as a dancer on "so you think you can dance." it's also where he met his wife. in a statement today, she wrote,
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to say he left a legacy would be an understatement, and his positive impact will continue to be felt. boss leaves behind his wife and three children. he was 40 years old. >> such a beautiful family. also this news. grant wahl, the sports journalist who died suddenly in qatar while covering the world cup suffered a ruptured aortic aneurysm. >> his widow addressed his death. >> grant had collapsed, that they had tried to do cpr for some 20 minutes and then took him off the to the hospital. >> mm-hmm. >> and two of his other colleagues were following in a car behind the ambulance, and that's what i knew at that point. >> mm-hmm. >> and so i started to try to track down somebody at the hospital to tell me what had happened. i kept on asking, did he have a pulse? >> you were asking doctor questions. >> well, i knew that was a sign. if he had a pulse when he left the stadium, that would have been a good sign, but no one would answer the question. >> mm-hmm.
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>> to me, i was scared. >> cnn's omar jimenez is with us now with more. what else are we learning about this? for her to answer the medical questions and deal with the emotions, now a widow. >> unaimaginable. >> indeed. what are you learning? >> it was awful. we're hearing there was a bulge in the aorta that burst over the past week. this was something that was growing undetected really until this past week, of course, and that's citing an autopsy from the new york city medical examiner's office, and even on her recent podcast episode, grant wahl had talked about chest tightness he was having, but like many people, he thought it might have been bronchitis or something much more common. it wasn't, and what we're left with now are tributes from those that knew him best and for his now widow, dr. celine groounder she has said it's brought some comfort. >> to know that he was so loved
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by so many people, it makes me feel a little bit less alone. >> uh-huh. >> it feels like, you know, that's -- it's like a warm hug when you really need it. i want people to remember him as this kind, generous person who was really dedicated to social justice. you know, i think that's another aspect of soccer thaps rt was ry important to him that, you know, promoting the women's game, the recent statements he made about lgbt rights. that was -- that was grant. >> and she also posted to his sub stack which is a newsletter platform and she said in more detail, the chest pressure he experienced before his death may have presented the initial symptoms. no amount of cpr would have saved him. there was nothing nefarious about his death. that latter portion meant for some of the theories that circulated on line that this may have been government retaliation for his coverage of migrant
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worker deaths and the construction of these stadiums of his being detained for wearing a rainbow flag. this is meant to throw a little bit of cold water on that. what is clear is he was a mountain of a journalist, much more to the people that knew him, and will be sorely missed of course, as we head into this world cup final this weekend. >> certainly will. omar, thank you. today marks ten years since a man entered sandy hook elementary school, and killed first graders and adults. those who survived, their lives were never the same. cnn's alisyn camerota is with us. good to see you. >> you too. >> you spoke with the families who lost loved ones and those who survived the shooting. tell us about those conversations. >> reporter: well, they were raw. they were very sad, of course. the grief never leaves them. as i've said, we were all crying during portions of the interview.
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the parents, me, our camera crew, and yet we all left our time with these parents feeling incredibly energized because what they've done as grief-stricken as they were that day and still are, they've harnessed that grief, and they have managed to turn it into action to try to save other families from having to two through the devastation that they have gone through, or to try to stop school shootings. here's a clip of the some of the stuff they've done in the past ten years. immediately after the tragedy, barden and hockley started sandy hook promise. >> it's been one month since i lost my son, dylan. i still find myself reaching for dylan's hand to walk through a parking lot. i do not want there to be a next time. >> the goal is to prevent other families from having to endure a life of pain due to preventible violence, and that is what we are doing. >> and how are you doing that? >> it took a lot of research to
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understand that 100% of school shooters give off warning signs. 100%. every single one. >> say something teaches you how to recognize warning signs, especially on social media. >> reporter: barden and hockley's program teaches kids and adults what those warning signs are. >> there are some that are very overt, you know, really noticeable such as bragging about access to weapons, such as telling people, don't come to school because, you know, i'm going to shoot it up. it's the subtle threats that we really want to teach kids more about. changes in behavior or appearance, like we're talking drastic changes. being bullied or being a bully, really pulling away, thinking that the whole world is against them, and that they need to retaliate. >> students, you know, are the eyes and the ears in these social media platforms. the parts aents and teachers ar
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seeing the same things the students are. we train them to look for these signs on the social media platforms or on the school bus or in the calf feteria. >> reporter: in another program called say something, they teach kids when they see a warning sign to tell a trusted adult. >> this is where a tipster can put in what they know, what they're afraid of. >> reporter: they can anonymously report a tip through an app, linked to a crisis center operating 24 hours a day, 365 days a year. >> when the crisis center gets a tip from anywhere in the country, they already know the administrators, the school principals, whatever support systems are available in that area, the first responders, if that's what's necessary. >> if we teach to you do these three steps -- >> reporter: their work has trained more than 13 million students and educators, and they've stopped other shootings. >> and victor and bianna, i want to emphasize what we ended with
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there. according to school police and administrators, 11 planned school shootings were prevented. so these are school shootings that we'll never report on, that the rest of the country will never know about, and that other families won't have to grieve because of all that work of awareness they've done, and so tonight you'll hear about that more, and you'll also hear about their other victories, and there have been many. so though it is hard to go back to that day and remember the intense grief that we all felt that day, ultimately this is a hopeful documentary because a lot has changed in the past ten years. >> alisyn, we all remember where we were ten years ago today, and that tragedy was such a gut punch to the country as a whole, and to hear those families, no one can imagine what they went through, and to hear and see them contribute selflessly, so other parents don't have to endure what they did.
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i was struck by what president biden said. we should all have societal guilt for taking to long to deal with this problem. alisyn, thank you so much. be sure to tune in for alisyn's important special report. "sandy hook: forever remembered." that starts tonight right here on cnn. the man accused of attacking the husband of nancy pelosi was in court today. we have details for you. that's ahead. lily! welcome to our third bark-ery. oh, i can tell business is going through the “woof”. libut seriously we needird a reliable way to help keep everyone connected from wherever we go. well at at we'll help you find the right wireless plan for you. so, you can stay connected to all your drivers and stores on america's most reliable 5g network. that sounds just paw-fect. terrier-iffic i labra-dore you round of a-paws
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the man accused of attacking nancy pelosi's husband paul pelosi is back in court today. prosecutors used 911 audio, police body cam footage and sworn testimony to piece together what happened that night. >> cnn's josh campbell has been following today's hearing. what more do we know now? >> this hearing is still under way. this is a preliminary hearing on the statement charges for the attacker of house speaker nancy pelosi's husband, paul pelosi. the suspect who we obviously have been reporting on, 42-year-old david depap faces attempted murder charges as well as assault and elder abuse. there is a separate federal prosecution going on as well, but right now in this state hearing we're learning new details about how that attack tran transpired. now according to our affiliate up in the san francisco area, prosecutors actually played some of the 911 audio as well as the police body camera footage from the day of that attack, and they just -- it indicates that the suspect told police his ultimate
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target was nancy pelosi. they were able to go to the hospital where the suspect had been taken and conduct an interview of him, and he allegedly had indicated that he went there on that day, confronted paul pelosi. obviously engaged in this brutal attack that left mr. pelosi with a skull fracture and serious injuries, be you the suspect allegedly confess. we'll continue to monitor this hearing as it continues. the prosecutors are laying out initial evidence there in court. we'll expect the defense will go after the validity of some of the information that's presented. we're learning more details about that night, october 28th when the suspect allegedly went to the pelosi house, confronting mr. pelosi and engaging in this brutal attack. >> josh campbell watching that hearing for us. thank you. >> you bet. well, moroccan fans are hoping to pull off another upset in its semifinal match against france. unfortunately, i don't think that's going to happen for them, given the score right now, but we will have the latest.
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to free speech. just one month after elon musk said that he would never do it, twitter now has suspended the account that tracked the location of his private jet. >> the master mind behind the page is 20-year-old florida student jack sweeney. oliver darcy is here. i guess this isn't that big of a surprise given the behavior we've seen from elon musk the past few weeks. what happened here? >> it's somewhat of a surprise
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because elon musk went on twitter and said his commitment to free speech was so great he was not going to take action on this account that was basically posting where his private jet was flying off to in real time. this account had gotten under his skin over the years. at one point he apparently tried to pay the kid to take the account offline, he refused. so it's something that bothered elon musk but he said he was not going to take action on this account. he said it was because he has such a great commitment to free speech. now we're finding out not only has he banned this account tracking his jet but the account of his kid -- the personal account. and it's unclear why this is happening. >> no explanation from twitter? >> no explanation from twitter. we should note they basically laid off their entire communication staff. >> it's hard to explain. >> not much transparency coming from twitter these days outside of what elon musk himself is casually tweeting. >> let's talk about how the
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twitter mess is impacting the other brand the one we knew elon musk for first. the tesla brand. >> this is where a lot of elon musk's wealth come from, tesla share. we're seeing it's dipped 28% since elon musk took over twitter. that's a pretty significant amount of money that has basically vanished into thin air. and this is for a few reasons, probably. the market has not done so well lately. but also, tesla shareholders are very worried about elon musk spending all his time working on twitter and not tesla. he is sleeping at twitter headquarters. that's where his efforts are. so i think to some extent you're seeing this perhaps in the share price. >> unfortunately he's not the richest man in the world. now second richest. >> darn. >> a few billion lost there. >> once you get over a billion, does your rife really change? >> oliver darcy, thank you. >> thank you.
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beat morocco in the semifinals for the world cup. >> let's go to patrick snell. it's the end of the cinderella story for morocco. what happened? >> reporter: heartbreak for the national team who have so much to be proud of, 2-nil against the french national team, the defending champion. the cry across the fans who support the team. they got a dream start early on in this one, after four minutes hernandez putting them ahead. but morocco gave everything. the atlas lions do not know the meaning of the word defeat, it was a relentless attack, especially in the second half, but they couldn't get the leveller i feel they deserved. but then they got hit with a sub
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coming on, scoring after 44 seconds, one a moment for the 21-year-old who plays in germany, he was born in the year 1998, when france hosted the last world cup in that country. they won on that occasion, four years ago in russia in 2018 and victor they are looking to become only the third country in world cup history to win back-to-back titles after italy and brazil. the scenes in the french capital city of paris, in the heart of the french capital, they know all too well the meaning of the word victor. back to you. >> morocco, that team can go home proud. they accomplished so much at this world cup. patrick snell, thank you. the lead with jake tapper starts right now. the fed says along with lower inflation will come more
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