tv CNN Newsroom CNN January 10, 2023 12:00pm-1:00pm PST
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strict lockdown that the world watched. >> yeah, i mean, so, marc, given that their deaths look higher how is the re-opening going? >> well, the re-opening is having -- is having some difficulty in the sense that the hope was that if china opened up, people would be able to move to and from. however, many countries including south korea and japan have placed some restrictions, whether it be about testing or visa requirements for people from china to move to and from, so it is a bit complicated. this will take weeks, even months, to see the effectiveness of how it unfolds. >> okay. marc stewart, thanks for the reporting. top of the hour on cnn newsroom. good to have you, i'm victor plaquewell. >> i'm alisyn camerota. president biden is in mexico city at a summit with the
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leaders of canada and mexico. the record-breaking surge of migrants along with how to better secure the u.s. southern border is a major focus. >> also on the agenda, trade, economic issue, climate change and the renewed efforts to combat the flow of illegal drugs into the u.s. from mexico. cnn's priscilla alvarez in is mexico city. what are the big takeaways so far? >> reporter: well, so far all the leaders have been reaffirming their strong relationship but it's a rubber hits the road moment when talking about what the commitments are going to be moving forward on this range of issues and first and foremost migration. this is an issue that all three countries have to wrestle with as there is unprecedented mass movement in the western hemisphere and the white house has been quite clear for months now that they expect that regional partners have to work together to stem the flow of migration, an issue that has become a political vulnerability for president biden on the u.s./mexico border and they are rolling out new measures to that
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effect. one of them is a virtual portal that would allow migrants to apply for legal pathways to the united states, mexico or canada or see what they may be eligible for. then two is a center that will open up in southern mexico in tapachula. that is a city in southern mexico that serves as a transit location for a lot of migrants and would also provide services. now, of course, all of these options have to serve and be viable for migrants, many of whom are desperately fleeing poor conditions in their home countries and a senior administration official i spoke with said it is an experiment and they are up against smugglers but think by rolling these things out and providing accessible ways for migrants to come to the united states legally, it could work. now, this is all going to be part of the discussions between the three leaders and we'll be expecting to hear from them later this afternoon. victor and alisyn. >> okay, priscilla alvavez, thank you. while in mexico president biden was dogged by questions about the classified documents
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found in his private office. a source says ten obama-era documents were made up for a briefing material and intelligence memos. >> they were related, we now know, to iran, ukraine and the united kingdom. cnn's phil mattingly at the white house and manu raju on capitol hill. so, phil, what is the white house saying about this? >> reporter: very little today. we obviously have the on the record statement from the white house counsel's office last night detailing the time line of when these documents were discovered, what happened after they were discovered in terms of turning them over to the national archives who then referred the matter to the justice department which started this entire review process that's been underway, but other than that, white house officials being close-lipped. in part that's because they want to stay away from an ongoing investigation, something they've been -- a posture they had for most of the last two years and certainly the case here. the president hasn't weighed in. he has been asked about it several times, as well. at this point in time given the fact they knew this transpired in november 2nd, been more than
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two months before this became public, certainly growing questions and significant growing political pressure at this point. it's going to be interesting when president biden takes questions later tonight in mexico city wlorntsd that's a sustainable position to have but at least at this moment, no significant responses beyond what they said last night, guys. >> manu, house republicans now in control there where you are. how are lawmakers responding? >> well, they have a lot of questions. today the top member of the house intelligence committee chairman mike turner, the incoming republican chairman sent a letter to the director of national intelligence avril haines asking for a damage assessment, what kind of documents were in possession of biden and his private office, what kind of damage it may have done to national security and asked for that briefing. also other committee chairmen too asking questions as well includes james comer, the chairman of the house oversight committee that has oversight over the national archives
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planning to send a letter to try to get more information about that, what the archives has found out as well. i asked him whether or not he plans to have a hearing, go public with this at all. those digs have not been made. still questions about what else they may do. the house republican leaders including kevin mccarthy, the speaker would not say whether or not this should be investigated by capitol hill and today his number two, steve scalise, tried to compare it to the situation involving donald trump and the documents he had at mar-a-lago. >> so if then vice president biden took classified documents with him and held them for years and criticized former president trump during that same time that he had those classified documents and only after it was uncovered did he turn them back, i wonder why the press isn't asking the same questions of him as vice president taking classified documents that they were asking president trump. >> well, the white house said very little. as phil noted and we have been asking questions about that but the situation, of course, is different between what happened with donald trump and joe biden,
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the scope of the documents, the size of the documents and whether the two had cooperated. trump himself facing a criminal investigation. another investigation is going but is not criminal as far as we know so a lot of differences in those two situations but nevertheless republicans say that the justice department treating the president differently than the former president. >> all right, manu, phil, stay with us. let's bring in now joshua school, former fbi executive assistant director for intelligence and currently tand brian greer, former cia attorney who worked with the justice department on investigations involving classified information. i want to pick up, josh, where manu left off, we heard the majority leader saying, well, why is it the press asking the same questions of biden and the administration as they did of the former president. just contrast, start out how different these cases are as you see it.
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>> yes, victor, i see them as different in the sense that we have the president's team finding these documents and immediately revealing that they found these documents. whereas, we had a failed subpoena response and a forced search warrant done in the sense of former president trump. where they're similar is both the cavalier attitude towards the handling of classified information. >> well, brian, that leads me to my question. you were involved in the hillary clinton classified classified information situation. how easy is this? how easy is it to walk out of some secure facility, the white house, with classified documents? how often does this happen? >> with a situation like this doesn't happen that often but more generally speaking mishandling of classified information does happen quite a bit. every day within the federal government. it's the sad reality of the
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situation where people are not properly trained and proper procedures aren't in place to catch this kind of thing. and look back now, we've had the last two presidential elections, the major party candidates of both parties have all been at one time under investigation for mishandling classified information. put all the politics aside. there's certainly an underlying problem with how we're training folks on this but the one thing they do tell you when you're in government, when you do mess up, the one thing you have to do is promptly report it. i certainly had some instances where, you know, i messed up on something low level and reported it right away and cooperated. nothing even went in my file because i was so forth coming about it. that's what the biden team did and did the right thing and that is obviously what the trump team did not do and that's why i think they will ultimately be in more hot water. >> you told our producers there is a danger in overcriminalizing mishandling of classified information. explain that. >> yeah, because of the criminal statutes that are out there that
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are old and quite vague almost any mishandling case could potentially be shoehorned into a criminal investigation but going back to my prior point because of this mishandling happening all the time and now it's become such a political football with all three last presidential candidates being investigated, i do worry about while we need to take this all seriously and needs to be investigated, i do worry about overcriminalizing it, things that should be security violations sometimes, those should be handled typically by if you're a federal government employee being disciplined or fired but launching these full investigations that become political footballs is dangerous because it can disinsent vice people from serving in the federal government. we do want to incentivize them to do the right thing, to report it when it happens and not do the wrong thing to conceal and obstruct which is what trump did. >> speaking of reporting when it happened, phil, the white house, we believe, knew about this on november 2nd, okay, so before the midterms.
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they reported it, they divulged it to the national archives, which is what they are supposed to do, they did not do so to the public, i can understand why they wouldn't. was there an obligation to do that before the midterms? >> heard from republicans on capitol hill questioning given the proximity to the midterm elections, if politics played some role in it. to some extent from what i've heard this was related to the fact there was going to be an ongoing review and referred to the justice department, attorney general merrick garland had advised or had asked the u.s. attorney in illinois to start reviewing this process and that was going to be a process that would be under way for several months and that was a large part of why there was nothing publicly said but i think this is an element of this. so long as white house officials stick to the idea that they're only going to have the statement from the counsel's office which was detailed in its time line, was detailed in its breakdown of what transpired on november 2nd and the day after it still
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leaves questions unanswered. so long as they keep this posture, those questions remain unanswered. that means there are going to be -- we're going to keep asking them and certainly lawmakers are going to be asking them as well. >> manu, as we've said, according to jamie gangel's reporting, briefing materials that cover topics including ukraine, iran, the uk, are house republicans interested, is there some relevance to the content of these documents or simply their existence, the discovery gives them everything they need. >> both really, victor. but expect this to be an area of focus going forward especially how the justice departmented handled this. they'll vote to create a new select cubby committee on the overall house judiciary committee likely to be jim jordan, the chairman. he didn't want to discuss whether he would probe this issue specifically but they plan to look more broadly into the justice department, into ongoing
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investigations of the justice department has on individual citizens including donald trump, expected to be part of that probe so depending how they handle -- the justice department handles the donald trump investigation, how they handle this biden probe which is different, not criminal but different, but is related in dealing with classified documents expect republicans to heavily scrutinize the handling of both and if they're handled differently expect a lot of pushback from the republicans who wield subpoena power, plan to haul up key members of the justice department potentially even merrick garland himself as they plan to press forward with questions and hope to get answers to those question. >> let's talk about what happens now with this. because the -- john lausch, the trump appointed attorney tasked with reviewing these classified documents that president biden's office had did so. he's finished his review and handed it over to the department of justice. how big of a problem is this now
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for attorney general merrick garland already investigating donald trump for this same thing and now can he say, well, not as bad with, you know, vice president biden? >> well, i think this is a challenge for the attorney general. let me first speak about john lausch. i worked with john lausch and i know his character is beyond reproach so i know the investigation was thorough. so i think the attorney general will have to evaluate where was there intent? well, we saw with the president was that the intent was we found this mishandling and we immediately notified the authorities as required. we found former president trump was a failure to comply with the subpoena which then forced the execution of a search warrant. so i think the attorney general will have to really evaluate the intent as well as who had access and what was that information used for if either party was aware of the access points of that.
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>> brian, for you, an angle of that same question, does the existence of one investigation influence the treatment of the other? >> i mean, in reality it shouldn't but the practical reality is it will politically speaking because of the political sensitivities, but i do think from a criminal law perspective in terms of the department of justice's precedence as well they are at least based on what we know so far very distinguishable cases where the biden case is not one that would normally rise to the level of even criminal investigation where the trump case as we've talked about all aggravating factors most notably the obstruction element that make it different and i think if one potential impact could be maybe the justice department zeros this on that obstruction charge and focuses on that and considers dropping charges under the espionage related to the documents themselves but we'll see. >> okay, gentlemen, phil mattingly, manu raju, joshua skule and brian greer, thank you very much.
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president biden is meeting with mexican president lopez obrador and canadian prime minister justin trudeau, so you can see them sitting there with their delegations. they have a lot to discuss front and center the migrant surge at the u.s./mexico border. also we're told on the agenda trade, economic issues, combating the flow of illegal drugs from mexico into the u.s. and climate change. speaking of which the danger is not over in california. severe storms have caused significant flooding and mudslides across the state. mass evacuations and rescues under way right now so we'll take you there live. also this the seattle public school system is suing the biggest social media companies accusing them of harming students' mental health. what the district wants to change. next. okay, well that too. so, we switched to bargain detergent, but we ended up using three times as much and the clothes still weren't as clean as with tide. so we're back to tide. they're cuter in clean clolothes.
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the onslaught of severe weather is now blamed for 16 deaths statewide. 34 million people are under flood watches as this system pushes south. heavy rain in central california drenched communities, it left homes and cars underwater. thousands were forced to evacuate yesterday as downpours unleashed these torrential flooding. the rain turned the roads and creeks into raging rivers. >> crews responded to hundreds of emergency calls. first responders rushed to rescue people trapped in rising water. heavy rain caused this massive tree, look at this. to come crashing down in santa cruz. good news, no one injured but officials say downed trees are responsible for at least two of the 16 deaths across the state. let's bring in now cnn's mike valerio in montecito. mike, what are you seeing? >> reporter: well, victor, thankfully we're seeing water levels start to come down in our backdrop. the same creek we saw in ellen
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den r-- degeneres' video. thankfully again as water levels are coming down, we wanted to show you over my right-hand shoulder if we can pan ever so delicately so we do not lose our shot here, this is a boulder collection system that was built five years ago after the devastating landslides and what you see are metal spikes in the ground about six feet tall and boulders caught by these barriers so they do not fall into the riverbed and into these neighborhoods behind our camera. as we zoom in you can see a second and a third barrier with less and less of those black poles visible. neighbors have told us that, hey, that shows that our neighborhoods are being protected. these boulders have been brought down by recent rain events and we are so glad this is here. victor and alisyn, we ran into a traveler who is trying to navigate around these mud filled
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roads to get back home. listen to what he told us. >> we were hoping to drive up north today, but, yeah, i guess a bunch of flooding and mudslides so, yeah, in order to get around, get back up north we'll have to go inland, get on the 5 and head on all the way back, about a six-hour drive. >> and all of this water drains into the pacific ocean but before it gets there it hits pch, route 101, one of the most beautiful drives in america but that is shut down because these waterways have been raging since yesterday afternoon. right now they're starting to come down but the hope is that 101 will re-open in the coming days. we have a reprieve from the rain right now but it only really lasts until saturday. this is one of four, victor and alisyn, atmospheric river events between now and next thursday. guys, we'll send it back to you. >> nice that it looks sunny there at the moment for a little
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reprieve and we hope that it can clear out before the next one hits. mike valerio, thanks. officials on california's central coast have resumed the search for a 5-year-old boy last seen during the worst of the storm. kyle was swept away in floodwaters near a river in san luis obispo county. crews were forced to suspend the search for the boy yesterday after they say conditions in the area became unsafe. joining me now is tom swanson, he's the assistant chief of the cal fire in san luis obispo. let's start with the search for this 5-year-old boy kyle done. do you have a pretty defined area you're searching for him? what can you tell us about this search to bring him to his mother? >> yeah, the call came in to us shortly before 8:00 yesterday morning. we did a full swift water rescue response including over six fire engines, hand crews were able to
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incorporate an aerial search with a helicopter later on. the 5-year-old boy was swept out of a truck that got stuck in a stranded low water crossing that was water levels came up extremely fast and the search still continues for the missing 5-year-old. the mother in the vehicle was fortunately rescued shortly after the vehicle did become stranded. we currently have search teams out there combing the shorelines and in the water with a dive team on standby. >> there were two deaths yesterday related to this storm in your county. can you tell us the circumstances surrounding those and does that number still hold? >> yes, two confirmed fatality, one which occurred, a vehicle that tried to make it through a flooded roadway, the water was coming up. this was in the avila beach area
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south of san luis obispo and the woman became trapped in the vehicle and then the other one occurred in morrow bay in a boat-related incident in the harbor. >> i mean, these often in natural disasters people come out, they want to see what's happening but in this case, the water came so quickly that people could not get out of the way of it. it rushed in so rapidly. i checked an affiliate's map of road closures there and there are so many across the county. just give us an idea broadly as we show more of the video of the damage how bad it is there. >> it rained so hard yesterday morning, before daybreak that the water levels continued to rise throughout the day yesterday as we had multiple rescues and resources were spread thin. bridges were being compromised that were impassable. trees were blocking access and
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egress to residences that we had to gain access to and stranded vehicles and some other windows where we could work a helicopter in to get these people extracted from vehicles that were stranded on a bridge or on a closed off road. so we just tell people, just, you know, use extreme caution with heavy rainfall. the water rises quicker than you may be able to escape. >> are there still rescues happening this afternoon? >> we have a break in the weather window right now, which fortunately is lending itself in a positive way to our continued search for the missing 5-year-old boy. but is just north of paso robles in and around the salinas river basin and port los angeles. >> chief, thank you for your time. thank you for the work that you're doing and stay safe. >> thank you very much.
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we have new developments in the search for the missing massachusetts woman. investigators are now testing items they collected from the trash. we have the details of those next. thank you! like your workplace benefits and retirement savings. with voya, considering all your financial choices s together... can helplp you make smarter decisions. for a more confident financial future. hey, a tandem bicycle. can't do that by yourself. (voya mnemonic.) voya. well planned. well invested. well protected.
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it says it's affecting its ability to fulfill its educational mission. >> donie o'sullivan joins us now. this is unusual. an entire school system suing. so what they say was causing the problem. >> reporter: we've seen from the previous lawsuits this is such a relatively new phenomena. we've heard from experts who say we don't know what this will do, being on social media all day will do to kids' brains because it will take some time to fully understand that but what we have heard from this school district and i want to read out part, defendants at the social media companies have successfully exploited the vulnerable brains of youth. their misconduct has been a substantial factor in causing a huge mental health crisis and talks about higher rates of anxiety, depression and self-harm. look, this might not necessarily
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be a successful lawsuit. but what it will do is put this, you know, crises really into the national conversation and, you know, if it does go all the way, that the school board we might learn a lot about the discovery process in court about what is it these companies know. how much consideration have they put into designing these platforms to not impact mental health of young people. >> yes, some questions have always been in the air about the algorithms and how they treat young people. let me ask you about another platform. twitter here, reinstating the accounts of some well-known election deniers. who is back on? >> yeah, so almost two years to the day since the january 6th have attack on the capitol, some we won't even name here, but, you know, this over the past 24, 48 hours we've seen two very prominent people who played
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roles in fanning the flames of conspiracy theories in the lead-up to january 6th, all that stuff, the steal nonsense, two-year anniversary, elon musk put them back on the platform with no real explanation but also we have heard from at least one of these people, praising what's been happening in brazil, over the weekend, so an interesting time to replatform these people. elon musk says he is a free speech absolutist despite banning some journalists from the platform. >> yeah, his sense of free speech is situational. all right. thank you very much, donie. okay, joining us to discuss the seattle school's lawsuit is clinical psychologist lisa stroman author of "digital distress: growing up online." it's fascinating to see the seattle school district taking matters into their own hands for what they say, what the teachers say they have witnessed in their students. i'll just red a portion of the complaint. that they're filing against, you know, tiktok, meta, instagram,
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facebook, snapchat, they say from 2009 to 2019 there was an on average 30% increase in the number of students at plaintiffs' schools who reported feeling so sad or hopeless almost every day for two weeks in a row that they stopped doing usual activity, end quote. as more youth became depressed more youth reported considering suicide making plans to commit suicide and attempting suicide. so, you've studied this. can all be traced to social media use? >> i think that we can, drank yo -- thank you, alisyn. a correlative factor. if you look at the recent results of the cdc's 2021 report, they look at this and you can actually see at every moment where you have sad and hopelessness on i national basis with these kids you will see from instagram was released then when snapchat was released and when tiktok was released you see a spike at every moment.
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again, we can't directly as your reporter said say that's a causative factor but we can look at and say that what we do know is not only do we have two decades of research that show the more time that our kids are on social media, the more anxious they become, the more depressed they become, the more suicidal and disordered eating and take that science and say we can connect it under that purview and hold them accountable for developing these products in that way. >> that's so interesting. here's what the seattle school says in terms of the correlation, how they've connected it. they say, in 2021 parents of teens in washington state where the plaintiff is located estimated 47% spend between one and three hours on social media platforms. 20% between three and five hours and 10% spend more than five hours a day on social media platforms. as you say, it's -- it feels connected, feels like there is an association, i don't know if in a court of law there's a
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direct -- what do you think degrades teenagers' mental health so much on social media. >> i think we're kind of in this unique place in history where we have this generation growing up and they have always been online and it is their normative place to ask online siri or google and ask all these things so they live in that space all of the time. but when you take a psychological concept like the e ericsonian development phases and they need feedback that gives them some sort of response into the world, it is no longer just our families or our local communities, they're going against 4.8 billion people online and so much of that coming back is negative. the amount of time they're staying online and the number of students that are failing in
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classes and decreased test scores, i do think that the seattle public schools, i give them -- tip my hat to them. somebody needs to hold them accountable and somebody needs to be able to say we need help because all of the congressional testimony, all of the times we've brought all of these big tech giants and ceos into the halls of congress, we still have not been able to get them to regulate this or help us in this fight against what is happening online with our kids. >> yeah, we'll be watching this very closely to see what happens with this lawsuit. lisa strohman, thank you very much. author of "digital distress: growing up online." great to see you. >> thanks. a virginia police chief says the mother of the 6-year-old who shot his teacher may face charges. the latest on that investigation next.
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new developments in the search for ana walshe. police have recovered several items in the search of a trash facility that are now being tested for a possible connection. >> law enforcement sources tell cnn that her husband, brian walshe, who has been charged with misleading authorities in the case also searched online about how to dispose of a woman's body. investigators found a bloody knife during a search of the couple's home and also have surveillance video of him buying cleaning supplies around the time she disappeared. john miller is cnn's chief law
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enforcement and intelligence analyst. the evidence, again, he has not been charged with anything relating specifically to her death but the evidence piling up against him is certainly troubling, let's say. >> well, victor, what you're watching almost in realtime is one clue seems to, you know, come every hour in this case is probably heading to a grand jury this week, maybe as early as today where they will start to put this evidence in front of grand jurors and probably move to go beyond the charge they have right now which is misleading the police in an investigation but what you see is a bloody knife, purchases of drop cloths, tyvek suit, mops, cleaning material and then what appears to be a move of those materials to a garbage bin laden near his mother's house which is, you know, 40 minutes away and then a search of a dump
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where that trash was deposited by truck where they found biological material, fabric likely from the drop cloths, what might be a hacksaw, so that is going to be going into dna testing and at this point, you know, her dna will probably have to be identified by taking samples from her three children, because that will be a direct blood line match. something very similar to what we saw in the idaho case just last week. >> john, isn't this what detectives call an open and shut case, a bloody knife, all of these cleaning supplies he bought. he isn't where he said he would be. his ankle bracelet tracks him to the dumpster where they're finding all this. is all so damning. >> it's a very strong circumstantial case but without a body and in this case where they believe a body was dismembered or body parts, they still have to establish that this murder occurred and yet all of these elms that appear to be
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the planning and the cover-up are mounting. >> so let's turn to this case of the 6-year-old boy who shot his teacher, the gun came from his parents, his mother purchased it. the police chief there says it's quite possible that the mother could face charges, what happens between now and those potential charges? >> a couple of things, victor. one, there will be an assessment of the home, the home environment, whether the child was safe at that home, whether the child needs particular services, which is likely in any circumstance where you have a 6-year-old boy who takes a gun armed to school, gets into a dispute and shoots a teacher, that is under virginia law and common sense probably a child in need of services. no criminal charge really works against a 6-year-old who has to be able to understand the charges, the criminal justice process, be able to assist in his defense, that's kind of out of the picture at that age, but
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as your question pinpoints, culpability on the part of the mother, legal firearm, legally purchased by her. >> legally stored. >> legally stored in the home, but there are no laws in virginia that have requirements about the storage of guns, meaning some people want to sleep with that on the bedside table in case the burglar comes through the window at night but there is a specific law about keeping loaded firearms away from children, and that in the virginia state law is probably the place where the focus of if there's going to be a criminal charge against the mother where they'll turn. >> okay. john miller, thanks for the update on all of this. >> thank you. we're ten days into the new year and are you sticking with your healthy eating resolution? a new study suggests -- >> are you asking me actually. >> i'm asking no one in particular. >> a new study suggests that you really should. how your diet can cut the risk of early death by 20% is next.
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- life is uncertain. everyday pressures can feel overwhelming it's okay to feel stressed, anxious, worried, or frustrated. it's normal. with calhope's free and secure mental health resources, it's easy to get the help you and your loved ones need when you need it the most. call our warm line at (833) 317-4673 or live chat at calhope.org today.
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the white house counsel's office is responding to the news that classified documents were found in president biden's private d.c. office in november. in a new statement, they say that they're limited in what they can say now because the justice department is looking into the matter and that further details may be shared in the future. >> okay, well, since the news broke, the white house has refrained from commenting. >> it turns out the secret to living a long life really is in what you eat.
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a study followed more than 100,000 people for more than three decades. >> based on your eating habits, you can cut your risk of dying early by nearly 20%. what do we need to eat to live longer? >> this is very important. they looked at four different patterns of healthy eating, al of them had similar components, e plant based. i know you said you were a pescatarian for a few years. >> but i fell off the wagon. >> less added sugar, less processed food. but the bottom line was you could have a flexible approach. you did not have to pick one diet. any one of these four diets if you adhered to it in this study, there was a 20% decrease in mortally and it was for cardiovascular disease, cancer death, neurodegenerative disease death. it was a big and long study.
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more information that tells us how powerful food is. food is our medicine and we need to pay attention to that. >> this isn't a revelation. we've known more fruits, vegetables -- >> nobody follows this. i'm a cardiologist and it's really hard once your 20, 30, 40 years old to change how you've been eating. we need to start teaching kids how to build a healthy plate so it's much easier when people get older. it's never too late to make those small changes, little choices every day that are smart and building those healthy eating patterns. i love the mediterranean diet which is one of the ones they talked about here particularly for cardiovascular health. >> you need to cut out lots of red meat, eat fish and
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vegetables -- >> the occasional chicken breast. >> red wine. >> or white wine. >> thank you. so the classified documents recently found in president biden's private office from his time as vice president included intel materials related to ukraine, iran and russia. cnn has exclusive reporting next. whoo! we gotta go again. only payay for what you need. ♪liberty liberty liberty♪ ♪liberty♪ welcome to my digestive system. with align probiotic. when your gut bacteria is out of balance. yomay feel it. but just one align daily helps omote a balanced gut and soothe occasional digestive upsets. join the align healthy t team up. bringing together real align users and experts! to help you get the most out of probiotics. learn more at alignprobiotics.com try align for a month
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i screwed up. mhm. i got us t-mobile home internet. now cell phone users have priority over us. and your marriage survived that? you can almost feel the drag when people walk by with their phones. oh i can't hear you... you're froze-- ladies, please! you put it on airplane mode when you pass our house. i was trying to work. we're workin' it too. yeah! work it girl! woo! i want to hear you say it out loud. well, i could switch us to xfinity. those smiles. that's why i do what i do. that and the paycheck. who wants to be a billionaire? tonight's mega millions jackpot is estimated to be a whopping
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$1.1 billion. >> 568.7 million, if you take the lump sum. >> that's a ripoff. why is it so little? why do you have to pay that much in taxes? >> a winning ticket would be the third largest jackpot in mega millions history. >> all right. you convinced me. actor tom hanks debuted his new cocktail on the late show. it has two ingredients, diet coke and champagne. >> we were debating what the name of it it should. and i came up with it because it is coke and champagne. it's obviously diet cocaine. >> i like it. i like it. i don't like the -- the sound of it. i like the name of it. i think it's funny. >> not a fan. but he likes it. "the lead with jake tapper" starts right now. are we going to know all the details of the side deals that
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