tv CNN Newsroom Live CNN January 15, 2023 2:00am-3:00am PST
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>> the reality is this is just an eighth of what we anticipate will be nine atmospheric rivers we're not done >> severe weather is once again pounding california. looks like it's not going to let up any time soon. i'll discuss with climate expert how unusual this weather really is. and new documents mean new questions for the biden administration. look into what this new timeline means for the president, plus, >> a race against time in ukraine to save the people believed to be trapped in this rubble after a russian missile strike. live from cnn this is cnn newsroom. with kim brunhuber. >> we begin with the storm that is continue to slam central and northern california. over 25 million people across the state are under flash flood watches, where a powerful storm
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fueled by a strong atmospheric stormed. and another coming today, president biden approved a major disaster declaration clearing the way to help the state in the coming weeks of storm and torrential flooding, warning people to prepare for more weather disasters here he is >> this we're mindful this is occurring as we're experiencing a 1200 year mega drop over the western united states and here we are, by some estimates, 22 to 25 trillion gallons of water fallen over the course of the last 16, 17 days, stacking of these atmospheric rivers the likes of which we've not experienced in our lifetimes >> the reality is this is just the eighth of what we anticipate will be nine atmospheric rivers, we're not done. >> we'll take a look at this video of a swift water rescue in
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lagoona hills california thursday, emergency center received a person from a person hanging on to a tree from are a creek in flood waters, they were picked up and taken to safety. natasha chen has more on flooding and mud slides from fairfax, california this is a common site around town, some urban flooding, the roadways mark with signs to drivers can be told to be careful and slow down. now, while there has not been as much rain on saturday. compared to the storms in the previous couple of weeks in california, the ground and the rivers are so saturated that it doesn't take much for flooding to happen for mud slides to happen, like the one that happened here in fairfax one street over multiple trees cash i do not the back of an apartment building causing 19 residents to have to evacuate. there were also evacuation orders in santa cruz and santa
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clara, areas prone to flooding here is a building have to be evacuate from fairfax describing the moment the mud slide happened. >> i thought i heard thunder, it was not thunder. it was a hill side giving way behind the two flats behind us. trees went into their bathrooms. there were little kids there. there is fortunately a lady across the street is an emt fire person in san francisco. we had no idea what was happening till i came outside. and there were floods this is nothing. it was coming down this broad about this deep. all mud flow. >> fleisher told me he lived here since the 1980s and never seen anything like that and thankfully everyone was ok and got out of the building.
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another dangerous situation on saturday, cal fire shared pictures where part of the road there fell off of a cliff. a lot of warnings to residents and drivers just that even though the rain is less than they may have seen the last couple of weeks, the ground is extremely saturated. at one point on saturday, more than 30,000 customers were out of power and more than 25 million people under a flash flood watch. natasha chen, cnn, far fax california. jay david is an extreme professor of exterioric scientist at the university of california los angeles, thanks for being with us put this in context for ihow unusual and historic is what we're seeing in california now? >> i'll give you one hand and on the other hand. california always gets big swings in extremes, always has.
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there was a huge flood in 1862 that swamped most of sacramento and the lake in los angeles was about ten miles long instead of 100 miles long. we get all our rain in relatively few storm per year, so if the track of those storms coming across the pacific situation and little to the north and hits seattle, oregon, we get less rain. if it swings south and hits us straight on, we get a lot more rain, we've always had extremes. that being said, our extremes are gradually getting worse, and that is substantially due to climate change. >> and we have been sort of telling the tour about drought. which has been exacerbated by global warming and climate change. but explain to us we're seeing the drought map right now and how that sort of been changed by
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all of this rain, but there also that link between this opposite phenomenonal, the extreme wet conditions and climate change, and how is that paradox possible? >> yes, the increase in droughts and the increase in extreme precipitation are linked to each other. the basic aspect is warmer air can hold more moisture, and when you come to a strong storm, the circulation is bringing the moisture in, it holds about as much as it can. holds more so there's more available to rain out in the storm's circulation. at the same time, you have to have a balance with the amount of water that's evaporated and with the global energy balance. so if you're raining more intensely in some spots, you're going to have longer between rain storms in other spots and in other times. and that when you talk about
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longer times between storms, that means more inclination to drought from precipitation side and at the same time, your land is warmer and it's losing water faster so that contributes to drought in a very substantial way as well. >> so it's this kind of weather whiplash, i guess, it's called, not just california that sees this. explain how many other places in the world could be seeing sort of similar phenomenonal as well. >> yes, and i love that used the term weather whiplash, couple of years back, we were writing paper, daniel swain at ucla my group and alex hall at ucla were looking for a term that would convey the switch between extremes, at that time we moved from a drought to a situation where the hole down had a major spill way incident in large
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rain, and whiplash seemed to be the right term to capture how strong this switch between extremes is. so not everywhere we'll get the same amount of whiplash, if you are further north in seattle, for instance, the increases in rain tend to prominent the droughts you know, the tendency to drought is there not as bad as in california. if you go down to mexico, central america, the tendency to drought can be even stronger in that region, so it will vary from one place to another in the world. but the basic thing warmer temperatures more water vapor greater swings between strong rains and longer periods between them, stronger i vantage point representation, that will be quite widespread in many parts
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of the world . >> i appreciate your analysis, jay david neelin, thanks >> my pleasure, good talking to you. president biden approved a major disaster declaration for the state of alabama comes as people in the southeast continue to clean-up and sort through the damage left by a string of tornados this week and allows communities devastated by storms to rove federal aid for loans, temporary housing, home repairs and other programs. at least nine were kill, seven in alabama, two in georgia including a 5-year-old boy. no casualties reported in the historic civil rights city of selma alabama but people still devastated here's what the mayor of selma had to say >> it's tough. lots of people are hurting.
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the devastation is real. we've got a lot of work to do. >> the national weather service says survey team will be assessing the damage the next several days. in washington, questions are growing for president biden about his handling sensitive materials from his time as vice president, officials found more documents with classification markings in delaware, sources say none were marked top secret. cnn evan paris has more what was found he and how the white house is reacting. >> lawyers for president biden say they turned up another five pages of classified documents during a search of his home this week, that's the second time in two days that the white house has had to correct what it says was incomplete information about the number of documents found in searches of a number of locations associated with the president. now, altogether, we're talking about 20 classified records that biden's team found and turned
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over to the justice department. the shifting story line created a major political and legal headache for the president. who is now the subject of an investigation by a special council appointed in recent days by attorney general merrick garland, it began with the discovery of government records including ten classified documents from obama errata private office in washington that biden used during the presidency of donald trump. second set was found at biden's home in wilmington, delaware on december 20th. but the white house didn't disclose any of this until just this week, even then, they told him the leading story only mentioning the initial set of 10 documents the lawyer bob bower said biden has tried to be forthcoming and cooperative the president's personal attorneys attempted to balance the important of public transparency where appropriate and the established norms and
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limitations necessary to protect the investigation's integrity. we should note that the justice department didn't prohibit the white house from disclosing everything that the president's team turned over. we don't know the level of classification of the latest record that were found, we do know that among the initial batch of ten were documents that were marked tssci, sensitive compartment information. these are among the most sensitive government secrets which raise concerns about the exposure of sources of methods. now, one of the questions that the new special council rob herr will have is are there any more documents out there that have not been accounted for? evan paris, cnn. washington. >> earlier i spoke with document scandal with charlie dent, a cnn political commenter and former house republican and asked him what spoke him most about the latest development in the story, here's what he said. >> i guess what i find most remarkable about the situation
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is that president biden was so careless and reckless and irresponsible with classified material, i had the privilege of being able to view classified material and i thought the rule what you we're supposed to view classified material in secure settings. and we read material. there's someone there to answer the questions if we have them, returning material, there's no taking this stuff out that secure location. that is what's so stunning, of course, we've also had the drip, drip of you know, there's bad news, never gets better with time. why would they not have, announced all of the materials that had been located not just those at biden center in washington but also at his home and garage. by his corvette. i mean, it just struck me as, you know, terrible public relations they would have to release this information on separate days. i think it looks awful. >> they haven't fully accounted for that even though we've been
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asking them about that but how much of -- how much of is this to republicans right now politically do you think. >> sensible congressman jim jordan who will be overseeing the judiciary is salivating and gitty over this opportunity to obscure the president. at a political matter, donald trump has his problems with classified material which frankly are more serious than those of donald trump because donald trump seemed to be obstructing and not compliant with the department of justice, and joe biden appears to be cooperating. as a political matter, republicans have been able to change the subject. they can turn away from what happened last week with the speaker election and to a lesser extent with george santos and now they can focused their fire on a serious misstep by president biden, in men respects i believe the biden team given republican as little bit of a life line. >> next hour we'll be live from washington with more on this
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story. rescue crews are racing against time after russian missile strike that ukraine. still ahead, rescuers try to communicate with survivors who may still be trapped in the rubble of a collapsed building. tracking the crash of a passenger plain in nepal, the latest in a live report coming up. plus a husband arrested after the disappearance of his wife was accused of threatening her years earlier. the latest clues in the search ana walshe ahead. ♪. ♪.
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call to get an epson rapidreceipt smart organizer delivered right to your door. i came, i scanned, i conquered. epson rapidreceipt - visit buyrapidreceipt.com or call. piece of cake baby! . developments in nepal where local official said at least 32 people dead in plane crash west of kathmandu, yety airlines confirmed 72 people went down on board, short run from kathmandu, the prime minister said he's deeply saddened by the crash. >> the incident was tragic, all forces deployed for rescue operations the investigation is going on now, i have called in emergency cabinet meeting and i'm going to the cabinet
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meeting. >> we're joined live from hong kong with more, christy, we're learning more details what more can you tell us >> just imagine for a moment the agony the families taking in those new details and just processing all of this, a yety airline jet liner crashed on sunday in nepal. this took place earlier today, at least 32 were killed, including a baby, airline said there were 72 people on board this atr 72 plane including four crew members and 68 passengers, some 57 nepal citizens were on board, including four from russia, two from south korea on board when australian and irish national and argentinian, and a spokesperson from the aviation authority said rescue operations are indeed on. according to the rising nepal a state-run newspaper, plane flown
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for nepal to kathmandu 10:00 local time on sunday and crashed in this city river gorge, earlier today, the prime minister of nepal took to twitter to address the tragedy, he said this, quote, i'm deeply saddened by the sad and tragic accident of the airline flying from kathmandu with passengers i sincerely appeal to the personnel all agencies and general public to start an effective rescue, unquote. the spokesperson for nepal civil aviation authority says that the weather was clear at the time of the accident, we know that pokhara some 80 miles west of kathmandu, the capitol of nepal. we know that nepal is home to some of the world's highest mountains, eight of the world's 14 highest mountains, including mount he have rest and sadly had a record of air accidents in the aftermath of this latest air
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accident against search and rescue is happening, underway, and of course, also underway the agonizing wait for information and for answers. back to you, kevin. >> we'll keep track of that story, thanks so much. the dwej death toll keeps growing as officials look through the building in ukraine, at least 20 people are dead after a russian missile hit this apartment building in dnipro in on saturday, still are unaccounted for as crews look for victims or believed to be trapped. more than 70 people were wounded and have a look at this. >> those rescuers were trying to communicate with survivors who may be stranded in at the rubble urging them to shout so rescuers could hear where they are. the strike was part of a wave of missile attacks arcticing energy facilities across ukraine on
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saturday. officials say the power is out in many places across the country and crews are working to fix the damage. we're also getting a first hand account from a witness who saw that missile strike in dnipro, scott mclean has the story. >> reporter: smoke rises from the rubble. the aftermath of one of more than 30 russian missiles fired across ukraine, largely aimed at energy infrastructure but this was no power facility. it was a nine-story apartment building in the city of dnipro. what's left of it looks like a hellish, scene >> we could see debris many cars on fire and explosions because of the impact of the fire. we saw a dead man near cars on the sidewalk, many people trapped in their apartments yelling. >> ukrainian president vlodymyr zelenskyy said emergency crews are fighting for every person,
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every life, some rescuers scaling the twisted debris to look for survivors is. others lifting cars falling away a broken tree in the hopes of finding anyone still alive. painstaking moments of success. at time overshadowed by fears the death toll will grow and it wasn't just dnipro. this neighborhood near kiev was rattled awake, this man was sleeping when he heard an explosion shook the windows and saw a massive crater-month warning signs, in kiev people took cover in the underground metro, ukraine said about 2/3rds of missiles were shot down. one that is landed hit energy facilities in five regions, the worst in levive and kharkiv. on the front lines, ukraine
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insists there are still fierce battles raging in sold dar east of the country, despite russians claims they're in control and the shove of the private military claiming he's visited. >> it's falls nearby could be the next major target, her husband disappeared there in may. his son went missing in june, they were among the hundreds of mostly women he don't gathered in central kiev to draw attention to missing and captured soldiers. >> i fall asleep with tears in my eyes and wake up with tears as well. the only thing i ask god is to know my husband is alive. >> there are no bodies, nothing. i have a big hope that they are in captivity my heart feels he is alive. i know that. i'm praying and asking god for that. >> tania's husband is fighting
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in back moot right now and not worried her invest-year-old father volunteered to fight in this war, now he's in a russian prison colony. >> it's killing me, killing us. and it's just hard, it's just -- you were a family and now you need to survive each day. >> scott mclean, cnn kiev. and ukraine's military is getting some help from western alleys ahead of an expect russian spring offensive, saturday britain became the latest country to promise tanks to ukraine following a pledge from france, u.k. said it will provide 12 of its challenger tank, poland and finland are moving to supply tanks but still need a green light from berlin to do that. ukrainian general said last month he needs about 300 more tanks to beat the russians back. just ahead, deluge and drought
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. this is cnn. welcome back to all of you watching us here in the united states, canada and around the world i am kim brunhuber this is cnn newsroom, a search for the missing massachusetts woman continues a newly revealed police report shows ana walshe told police someone threatened to kill her and friend, police
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confirmed her husband brian walshe was the person named in the report. filed in washington before the two were married. the case was dropped when ana refused to cooperate with prosecutor, brian was arrested after his wife has been missing around new year, cnn has details. >> a law enforcement sources have confirmed that the person involved in the 2014 report was brian walshe, however, the victim, alleged victim in that case decided not to cooperate with the prosecution, which is why it never went anywhere, the two eventually went on to get mandatory, now, ana walshe has been missing since the early morning hours of january 1, almost two weeks ago, and here's what we know about the case. we know that she went missing shortly after new years eve, we know her husband, brian walshe was seen on surveillance video at a home depot the next day spending hundreds of dollars to
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buy clean supplies. there was a search that was eventually called off by local police, and now, we are learning more about ana walshe from those who knew her, say she was an ambitious young woman who deeply cared about her family and children. >> everyone shattered. everybody is looking at this and i think everyone across the world looking at this case feels a connection to ana and feels this sense of empathy and i feel that collective the world knows something awful happened. seeing everybody come together in the midst of all of this has really been beautiful in such a dark time. >> law enforcement sources confirmed to cnn they have collected several pieces of evidence at three different locations including near the walshes home, we also can confirm they did find a hacks saw and some blood stain materials, all of this will be looked at the next several days, we're told that law enforcement
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is likely trying to find a dna connection between these items in an walshe and possibly her husband, brian walshe, in new york, cnn. >> cnn reached out to brian walshe's attorney but hasn't heard back. back to one of our top stories, more than 25 million people across california are flood watches as another atmospheric flood event hits today and another on alert tomorrow, wind alerts in place across much of the coastal and valley portions of the state which strong gusts are possible which could lead to downed trees and power lines especially since the soil is so saturated. forecasters say up to six feet of new snow is possible through monday in the sierra nevadas. california is obviously to stranger to extreme weather and the effects of climate change but even as state seen a deluge of rain and snow in recent weeks, it's still not enough to
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get it through the mega drought. chief climb correspondent explains. >> it has just been relentless, seven atmospheric river event since christmas in california. a little respite now but more coming for especially the northern part of the state as well. this is not unprecedented, there are really big ones in 1861 that drowned hundreds of thousands of cows and killed about 1% of the population in california. and there is predictions in science on a warmer planet heated by fossil foundation, those sites mega events are much more likely, this is a fraction of that what they're going through, but there are millions more living there than the olden days as well, 40 million people, and about 19 fatalities so far in this storm. it's the mud slide as suspect. this, a lot of burn scars from the wild fires exacerbated by
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the relentless storms there as well. daniel swain at ucla put out a study a few years ago that said, you know, as the climate changes possibilities for a mega flood saw trillion dollar storm, something much bigger than any earthquake worries he talked about the big one in california could be more likely in the next half century or so. again, this is a fraction of that. but maybe a good warning for officials to think about new ways of water management, the mega drought is ongoing, this does help soil moisture, but it doesn't fill the reservoirs nearly enough to end the drought, which is the worst in 1200 years or so and how to store this kind of water that comes all at once and save it for the summer growing seasons could be the engineering question in the next generation in california. for now, 25 million people are under flood watches or warnings, and hope for a break.
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kim, back to you. >> and before we go to break, we want to leave you with the word, sounds and images from this week's storms across california. have a look. >> we've been watching the storms since december 26th, that's a long time. that's over two weeks. and we're concerned about because it's a slow moving 18 unlike wildfires when rivers are cresting we're watching the crest, right now, we're watching it in the area, we're talking about the slay news river, like john stein beck it can be dangerous, we only have three ways to get in, all areas can be overcome by flooding depending on mother nature and the amount of rain, when it comes to water, for whatever reason maybe because we don't get enough in the state of california they see the river think it's pretty and
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rivers are dangerous, you know, the fury of a river, you don't know standing water you don't know how deep it is. you know, one foot of water can move car we've lost life up and down the state driven into flooded areas thinking it was safe caught in cars people trapped in their homes, not heeding evacuation orders and warnings and fury of the ocean on top of it. >> we woke up to incredible wind and rain this morning, i'm getting notices about evacuation warnings, or evacuations happening just a couple of miles away from my house right now, sheriffs are going door to door. we've been very lucky in that we're fortunate. we'll do what we can to help with rebuilding, we're going to come together as a k kingdom an make sure we're all taken care of.
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. global condemnation after iran's execution of dual british iranian ali reza akbari, vice president pence denounced the act calling it despicable and barbaric, they said akbari was hanged after committed of espionage and corruption. there's been plenty of international outrage over this execution, take us through the reaction you've been tracking. >> absolutely. out cry from across the globe particularly here in the united kingdom akbari was a dual national. we've had response from the government and foreign secretary in a tweet laying out how the u.k. government plans to hold iran regime to account. they've are going to discuss his
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execution as well as the announcement of new sanctions against iran's prosecutor general who they say is at the very heart of iran's use of the death sentence across the country. usually now the united kingdom is planning to temporarily recall its ambassador to iran for consultations and there has been suggestion there could be further steps still ahead the u.k. may take to hold the iran regime. but in response they've summoned britain ambassador to iran what they described as unconventional interference in iran's internal affairs, ali reza akbari was detained in 2019 after allegations of spying on behalf of the united kingdom previously under the ministry and news outlet of iran's judiciary arrested and sentenced to death after identified by iran's intelligence ministry for spaing on behalf of mi6 and receiving
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reportedly large sums of money for providing important national information. these are allegations ali reza akbari legal representatives long denied, also allegations that had the british government and members of ali reza akbari's family are politically motivated take a listen. >> it was a surprise accusation that is did come out of media that were not expected by me. i don't think they're correct the character that i knew would have never done anything to harm the country nor the regime. i can't speculate that it was political gang but in the country but also a way to potentially to end uk politics towards iran. >> ali reza akbari execution centered around the allegations of spying comes after at least four young men were executed in
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contact with their participation in even regime protestism we've heard out cry from groups saying this is yet another indicator that the iran regime is clamping down on any act of decent within country and there are concerns dozens could face execution in the coming weeks. kim >> thanks so much. give you an update on a story out of nepal local officials say at least 64 people are dead in a plane crash west of kathmandu, domestic carrier yeti airlines confirms the flight went down with 72 people was on a short run from kathmandu to pokahar.
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d . pentagon report is detailing a dramatic increase in ufo sightings, more than 350 since 2021, many of them are explained as being drones, birds or weather events but about half of them remain unexplained. cnn space and defense correspondent christian fisher has details. >> capitol hill has been waiting for this report from the office of the director of national intelligence or the odin, what
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this found is there have been more than 300 new sightings of what the government calls uap's or unidentified area phenomena, more commonly u, ifos, since the last time they put out a record in 2021, back then the odni could in the explain 144 sightings of uap's this time they can explain 171 of them, and one part of the report that stands out is this, saying some of these uncharacterized uap's appear to have demonstrated unusual flight characteristics, or report. is it advanced technology from a foreign adversary like perhaps china or russia or is it extra torestrial in origin or something else entirely? we just don't know, and the us
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government says that it doesn't know either or at least it will not say so publically in this unclassified report. but they did give some explanations for about 163 of the sitings that have been detailed in this report, and here's how they explain those. the vast majority are either balloons or balloon entities. a handful were drones, another handful were what they call airborne clutter, things like birds, weather events, or airborne debris, like plastic bags. so the bottom line here, members of congress say that this is a step in the right direction to reducing the stigma associated with reporting sightings of uap's it's also a step in the right direction to enhancing national security because remember, a lot of these sightings happened right around military bases or assets, but while it's a step in the right
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direction, members of congress say the pentagon office of the director of national intelligence still have a long way to go to giving them the answers they ultimately want. >> the nfl playoffs kicked off saturday with game for the ages jacksonville jaguars pulled off one of the biggest comebacks in history stunning the los angeles chargers as time expired. i'm old enough to remember the bills oilers from the 90's, but this one was close. any chance we'll see something like that throughout the weekend >> you know what, we love the nfl playoffs, we never know, i was a kid in houston when that happened. it was dark day when the bills came back and beat the oilers, if you turned off the jaguars game in the second quarter last night you're waking up to quite the surprise this morning, the jaguars was historic comeback
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and needed it because quarterback trevor lawrence threw four interceptions in the first half called it worst half of his football life. chargers took a 27 lead but give lawrence credit he followed them with four straight touchdown passes last one to christian kirk with over five minutes to go in the fourth, put the jags within two and then they would get in position to connection a game winning field goal no time on the clock the jags stunned the chargers winning 31-30 the third largest comeback in playoff history. >> the cool to see what can happen when everybody believes, i wouldn't have been able to do what i did today and offense was able to do in the second half also the defense if we didn't believe in one another. through four picks in the first half. those guys besides me offense and other side of the ball never lost faith, that's one thing makes it easier when you know you got guys that believe in you. >> and the other game saturday
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mr. irrelevant, purdy continuing his fairytale run, san francisco, puare, dy, going for 74 yards put the game away in the fourth and 9ers won easily, 41-23 after the last player taken in the 2022 draft, purdy is seven and 0 and the first rookie quarterback to win a playoff game since wilson did that back in 2012, labron james is loving every moment of it tweeting purdy got game. he was asked if he seen his tweet. >> you are a labron fan. >> yes >> do you know he tweeted about you >> i did not. >> labron said that >> that's sweet. yeah. that's awesome. >> got to be pretty cool for him. three more games coming your way sunday including the bills hosting the dolphins, big question, will damar hamlin be there? he was released from the
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hospital earlier this week, nine days after suffering cardiac arrest on the field, would be amazing if he's able to be on the field, maybe lead the team out of the tunnel, with hamlin doing so well so fast the bills say it's been an emotional boost for them as they head into the playoffs. >> all the weight jumped off our shoulders and you could immensely feel it the brain is powerful when all of that stuff is weighing on you, you can feel it when you sleep, walk around even in your every day actions, going into a week like this with you know, like the stress and all of that other stuff behind us, it's a good thing. >> could be a pretty cool day there in buffalo with hamlin able to be there and they're big favorites over the dolphins >> it will be emotional no matter. >> for sure the first game of the playoffs and they're trying to make a run to the super bowl. >> thanks so much, appreciate it. friday the 13th turned out to be lucky for the owner or
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owners of the winning ticket in the second largest mega millions jackpot in history, a stunning one and a third billion dollars. we're still waiting to see who will claim the big prize, lottery said the ticket was sold at a gas station in the rural town of lebanon maine, owner said he thought the 6:00 a.m. call from the lottery office was a scam, listen >> it's almost incomprehensible to wrap your head around how much it would change somebody's life regardless of, regardless of the status of where you are, that kind of payout. we're just glad to have it here in our small town, again, i've been a long-time supporter of the lottery, play responsibly and i suggest everybody do the same. somewhere else there. somebody does win. >> the next drawing for an estimated 20 million dollars is slated for tuesday night. that wraps this hour of cnn newsroom i'm kim brunhuber follow me on twitter for viewers
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