tv CNN Newsroom Live CNN January 18, 2023 1:00am-2:00am PST
1:00 am
1:01 am
"cnn newsroom" with max foster and bianca nobilo. hello and warm welcome to our viewers joining us in the united states and around the world. i'm max foster. bianca off this week. just ahead on "cnn newsroom." >> reporter: brian walshe facing murder charges in the mysterious disappearance of his wife, ana walshe. >> even without the body you're going to have enough evidence seemingly to focus on nobody else but him. >> trying to draw a contrast with the way trump has handled his own documents issues. they're trying to draw a picture of cooperation. >> you guys can ask me this 100 times, 200 times if you wish, i'm going to keep saying the same thing. >> reporter: aviation experts are calling it a narrowly avoided disaster at new york's john f. kennedy airport. >> they were in the wrong place at the wrong time. >> announcer: this is cnn
1:02 am
breaking news. it's wednesday, january 18th. 9 a.m. here in london. 11 a.m. in kyiv, ukraine. we're following this breaking news for you developing right now. at least 18 people have been killed in a helicopter crash in the kyiv region. this happened in the city near a residential building and a kindergarten. the national chief says 22 people are in the hospital including 10 children. cnn's claire sebastian is joining us. >> reporter: max, according to the interior minister and his first deputy minister and the secretary of state all on the helicopter all believed to have been killed in the crash. they are among 18 people who have died. 29 injured according to the kyiv regional industry. among the dead believed to be three children. this was a helicopter crash that crashed in the suburb of kyiv very close to the capitol just to the east of the city.
1:03 am
it is a -- it crashed near the residential building. there's a fire in the images that broke out nearby. our producer has taken images of a mangled chopper. victims bodies are there covered in gold foil. he said there was very thick fog in the area, very low visibility. we do not know the cause of the crash. >> the helicopter landing near a kindergarten which is where they're making the assumption the children were in the helicopter. >> just another tragedy on top of what ukraine has had to deal with. we know the reported deaths were in the helicopter. we don't know the details of the locations of the people. this is still a moving situation. they're still unearthing the scale of the damage there. that may have to do with some of the level of fire that you can see in the area there but we
1:04 am
have a comment from the adviser to the interior minister. he said that investigators are still determining the cause of the tragedy. he said they'll soon find out if it was sabotage, equipment failure or violating flight safety rules. he called the three members on the plane patriots of ukraine. >> no one's suggesting that it was shot down? >> we just don't know as of now, max. we just don't know the cause of the crash. looks like they're still investigating it and determining the scale of it. >> claire, thank you. back with you as you have more. >> in just a few hours the husband of a missing massachusetts woman will be charged with murder. brian walshe has been in police custody since his arrest earlier this month. he's already being charged with misleading investigato they found a bloody knife but no body as of yet. cnn's jason carroll reports.
1:05 am
>> i think the number one concern is finding ana and finding out what happened. >> reporter: the time line and the mystery of what happened to ana walsh spans more than two weeks starting on new year's day. that's when her husband brian wall rn claims she left her cohasset home to fly to washington, df.c., for work. prosecutors say there is no evidence ana got a ride or went to the airport. brian walshe says he ran errands for his mother in a nearby town. they find no evidence those trips occurred. january 2nd prosecutors say walshe went to a home depot and spent about 4$450 in cash with cleaning supplies like mops, buckets, tarps. january 4th ana walshe's workplace calls police to report her missing. a police log would later confirm the head of security of the firm is the f irs to report her
1:06 am
missing to police and that her husband has not filed a missing person report on female. her friends begin to fear the worst. >> i think something has gone horribly, horribly wrong when it comes to her. >> reporter: january 6th police start a massive search in cohasset. her husband's internet records in the days following her disappearance show searches for how to dismember a body and how to dispose of a 115 pound woman's body. january 8th walshe is charged with misleading investigators. >> in this investigation the police developed probable cause to believe her husband, brian walshe, age 47, had misled police investigators on material matters important to the search of ana walshe. >> reporter: walshe is taken into custody. january 9th they uncover a bloody knife and finding a
1:07 am
hacksaw and torn up pieces of cloth with apparent bloodstains at a trash facility. this according to law enforcement sources. january 17th walshe is charged with his wife's murder. his arraignment set for wednesday. district attorney says additional details about the case will be released. his attorneys declined to comment on the latest charge. those who knew ana walshe left wondering why the mother of three young boys had been killed. >> she was beautiful every day. when i saw -- every day she was decked out and she was just -- her smile. she smiled. and i never saw her upset. i never saw him upset. it was just the strangest thing. >> reporter: jason carroll, cnn, cohasset, massachusetts. we are now learning federal investigators have conducted multiple interviews as part of a review of how u.s. president joe biden handled classified material. sources tell cnn that mr. biden was amongst those interviewed.
1:08 am
he made the initial discovery of documents at the former office in a delaware home. cnn's evan perez has the details. >> that's right. this is a long-time attorney for president biden, political campaign attorney. his name is pat moore and he's based out of boston and he was among the people who was at the penn biden center, the private office that president biden was using during the trump years and this is where the first set of documents were found back in november and as part of that initial review that was done by the u.s. attorney in chicago, john lausch, the fbi was doing an be assessment. they interviewed pat moore as well as a number of other people who were involved in the moving of the documents and in the case of pat moore he was there when they found these initial documents. among the things that we've learned is that, you know, they
1:09 am
immediately obviously returned those documents they found, the classified documents, to the national archives. our jamie gangel said out of an abundance of caution they took a bunch of boxes, even if they didn't have classified information, decided to return it, give it to the national archives, said, here, take a look at these. as a last measure pat moore had some documents involving personal speeches and reference materials taken to his office back in boston. he had the national archives come and retrieve those documents. what you're getting a picture of there is a biden team that is, you know, i think trying to draw contrast with the way trump has handled his own documents issues, right? they're trying to draw a picture of cooperation. >> the investigation is now in the hands of robert herr who was appointed special counsel just last week. andrew mckay weighed in on some of the questions that may be
1:10 am
asked. >> it's going to first be you think of it as chain of custody type of questions. they're going to say to somebody who was present when the documents were discovered in the penn biden office, they're going to say, okay, where were you in relation to the closet where the documents were found? what did they look like? what were they stored in? was that storage container sealed with tape or with other materials? who lifted it out of the closet? what did you do next? you know, where did you then keep these documents until the national archives folks came to retrieve them all down to the details of any involvement and then broader scope. people who were in that office who can talk to you about the scope of people who had access to the office over time. people who can talk about president biden's habits in terms of how often was he at the office? when he was there, where did he
1:11 am
sit? did he ever ask you to get things out of the closet for him, things of that nature. so it's going to be very broad and specific and probably very wide in scope. >> the white house is facing criticism over its handling of the matter including what it disclosed publicly and when, but on tuesday it defended its actions and the press secretary defending her own answers to questions about the investigation. >> i have been forthcoming from this podium. what i said yes to was what the statement at the time we all had. you all had the statement and i was repeating what the counsel was sharing at that time. >> are you upset that you came out to this podium on friday with incomplete and inaccurate information? and are you concerned that it affects your credibility out here? >> what i am concerned about is making sure that we do not politically interfere with the department of justice. >> the spokesman for the white house counsel's office explained
1:12 am
that protecting the justice department's investigation has been restricting which details they release. police are investigating after gunfire broke out at the end of a basketball game at an oklahoma high school tuesday. >> wait, wait, wait. finished when the shots were fired sending fans running and the game of commentators there ducking for cover. the school's principal said it happened after a fight broke out. at least one man was shot taken to hospital. no word yet on his condition or whether he's connected to the school. the los angeles county coroner has conducted an initial autopsy on lisa marie presley. has not determined the cause of that. the child of elvis presley died after an apparent cardiac
1:13 am
arrest. the medical examiner's office is requesting more investigation. a public memorial for presley is planned on sunday at graceland. roger cohen said it appears he'll be meeting with federal attorneys again. he met with the manhattan district attorney's office. the authorities investigating the trump organization. the meeting is the clearest sign yet that investigators are zeroing in on the trump organization involvement in hush money payments to stormy daniels. cohen was a key player in the scheme. still ahead on "cnn newsroom," failed republican candidate in new mexico is charged with shootings at the home of democratic officials. george santos has been given his committee assignments even as some members of his party are calling for his resignation.
1:14 am
1:15 am
hi. i'm shannon storms bador. when we started selling my health products online our shipping process was painfully slow. then we found shipstation. now we're shipping out orders 5 times faster and thanks to shipstation's discounted rates we're saving a ton. honestly, we couldn't do it without shipstation join over 100,000 online sellers who get ship done with shipstation go to shipstation.com /tv and get 2 months free. introducing the limited edition disney collection from blendjet. nine exciting designs your whole family will adore blendjet 2 is portable,
1:16 am
which means you can blend up nutritious smoothies, protein shakes, or frozen treats, just about anywhere! recharge quickly via usb-c. it even cleans itself. order yours now from blendjet.com and bring a little disney into your life. hi, i'm lauren, i lost 67 pounds in 12 months on golo. golo and the release has been phenomenal in my life. it's all natural.
1:17 am
1:18 am
despite calls to resign for lying about his life's story and qualifications during last year's mid-terms, republican congressman george santos got his committee assignments on tuesday. he'll serve on the house small business committee and the committee on science, space and technology. manu raju asked some of santos's republican colleagues if they had concerns? >> concerns about naming someone with all of these questions about his past to your committee? >> i don't condone what he's said, what he's done. i don't think anybody does. that's not my role. he has elected a million people. >> he hasn't committed a crime. he hasn't been indicted on anything. in this country you're innocent until proven guilty. we're going to treat him like any other member and keep an eye on him. >> there's been precedent. steve king lost his committee
1:19 am
assignments. what's different here? >> it was the nature of what he's said. like other things others have said in the past, we're condemning of other people. basically he said some things about himself. >> meanwhile, santos's legal problems aren't going away. prosecutors in new york are investigating his finances whilst law enforcement forces in brazil will reinstate fraud charges against santos related to a stolen checkbook in 2008. two other republicans with a history of bad behavior have been given committee assignments in the house. marjorie taylor greene who has made incendiary statements will serve on the homeland security security committee and paul gosa gosar got environmental committee assignment.
1:20 am
a republican candidate who ran unsuccessfully for a senate house seat in new mexico last november is under arrest. solomon pena has been charged with contracting four gunman to shoot at the homes of democratic officials after he visited them to dispute his election defeat. police say he's scheduled for a pre-trial detention hearing this afternoon. cnn's kyung lah has the story. >> one came right through here and then we've got the rest over here. >> reporter: about a dozen bullets embedded in the outside of debby o'malley's home. the. >> i was very angry and just disgusted at the whole thing. >> these are significantly sized holes. >> they are. it was so loud. this happened when my husband and i were asleep. >> reporter: o'malley immediately suspected who the gunman might be. this man. >> hi, my name is solomon pena. may i speak with debby o'malley.
1:21 am
>> he went to her daughter's address and then to her home a month before the shooting. this is him on the other side of the fence. >> he seemed agitated. he seemed a little aggressive to me. i didn't consider him a threat then but he was upset that he had lost the election. >> reporter: police arrested him monday in connection with a string of what they called politically motivated shootings of four democratic leaders in new mexico. no one was injured. >> we believe he is the mastermind behind this. >> reporter: police say he's expected of hiring a contractor for cash for two of the shootings from december 4th to january 3rd. he was a republican candidate for a statehouse seat in new mexico. he spent years in prison for burglary and larceny. they allowed him to be on the ballot calling it unconstitutional to serve. >> i had nothing more than a desire to improve my lot. >> he lost by a lapped slide,
1:22 am
then accused his opponent of rigging the election. wearing a maga sweatshirt, pena tweeted he stands with trump and never conceded his own results. election denialism that he heard at rallies like this in phoenix of 2021. penia tweeted saying he camped out all night to see trump. photographs show pena pictured with this man. the warrant alleges he's one of the suspected shooters. he was arrested with one of the guns used in the shootings. he texted the home addresses of four democratic targets to four suspects to carry out the shootings and in an exchange they certified it. they sold us out to the highest bidder. they were literally laughing at us while they were doing it. >> everybody has to be more worried. >> adrian barbeau a was also targeted.
1:23 am
more bullets ripped through her room where she was playing with her granddaughter. >> makes me angry that we have a former president and current elected officials in highest level of government that think it's okay to invoke violence. yeah, range of emotions. disappointment. >> reporter: despite how emotionally draining and scary this has all been, what we're not hearing from any victims is that any of them are backing down from representing the people in politics and government. pena makes his first court appearance on wednesday. kyung lah, cnn, albuquerque, new mexico. futures, all eyes on the nasdaq. can it extend its winning streak for the eighth straight day. the futures are suggesting it could. tech stocks have soared this
1:24 am
month. americans aren't spending as much as last year. spending fell to 7.7 p% at the end of last year and that's down from a series of higher marks over the last few years. survey revealed americans are holding off on large purchases like cars. responders who recently bought a vehicle fell to their lowest level since august 2020. spending will likely not be an issue for former ceo walt disney company after regulatory findings found bob chapek is eligible to take home a senchs pay package in addition to $20 million in addition to the 24 million he made last year. chapek exited the company in november after a turbulent two years being replaced by his predecessor, bob iger.
1:25 am
ukraine could be getting a boost on the battlefield. the u.s. secretary of state antony blinken hinted at the possibility in washington on tuesday. the top u.s. diplomat said the best part is to give ukraine a strong hand on the battlefield. >> as this aggression has evolved, so, too, has our assistance to ukraine making sure it has what it needs to meet the aggression head on. i will anticipate you'll hear more announcements in the days to come. meanwhile, dutch prime minister mark rutter met with president biden in washington. his country plans to join the u.s. and germany to send patriot missiles to ukraine.
1:26 am
>> we will join what you are doing with germany on what you are doing on the patriot project, the air defense system. we think it is important to join them. we discussed this this morning and then on accountability because putin and russia can't get away with this. it's our accountability to take them to court. >> german chancellor schultz is set to address the people in davos. anna stewart is going to be watching that. it's extraordinary, isn't it, watching germany to issue all of this military aid which wouldn't have been done ten years ago. >> reporter: there's pressure to do more and proving we export licensed tanks from elsewhere. lots of countries have pledged this, and i feel like this speech is coming at a bit of a crunch point for germany. we know last night the german chancellor spoke to u.s. president joe biden on the
1:27 am
phone. that came ahead of the speech. we heard from antony blinken. he said they're going to make sure ukraine has what it needs. there is a lot of pressure from schultz to make some sort of announcement. it might be a diplomatic speech. it might be the importance of the western alliance. we now have a spokesperson that the leaders have agreed there must be effective, sustained and closely coordinated action. in addition to that, i think what we will be looking out for today is comment on germany's economy, the european economy which has been in the grips of an energy crisis and that is a by-product of this war in ukraine. i think you'll hear some bullish comments from the chancellor saying they have met that challenge head on. they have introduced new gas infrastructure and they will weather the storm. that's what we can expect. >> back with you after the speech. still to come, house republicans push to impeach u.s. homeland security secretary.
1:28 am
he spoke to all party members on board. plus, nobel laureate acquitted of four tax evasion charges in the philippines. we'll have the latest in a live report. .9% of illness-cacausing bacteria detergents leave behind. cleaean is good. sanitized is better. ah, these bills are crazy. she has no idea she's sitting on a goldmine. well she doesn't know that if she owns a life insurance policy of $100,000 or more she can sell all or part of it to coventry for cash. even a term policy. ev a term policy? even a term policy! find out if you're sitting on a goldmine. call coventry direct today at the number on your screen, or visit coventrydirect.com.
1:30 am
1:31 am
lets you search and browse pria blocking most trackers all forf your search history is never tracked, so it can't be shared. and when you leave search, duckduckgo helps keep companies from watching you as you brows. join tens of millions of people making the easy switch by downloading the app today. duckduckgo, privacy simplified. welcome back to "cnn newsroom." i'm max foster. if you are just joining us, let me bring you up to date with the breaki ing news this hour. at least 18 people are dead and 29 injured at a residential area in kyiv. claire sebastian joins us with more images.
1:32 am
>> we have images from our producer on the ground and it shows the level of destruction from the helicopter. you can see the mangled wreckage. bring it up there. you see it there. the you can see casualties on the ground covered in gold foil and we're getting more information from the deputy head of the residential administration who just held a press conference there, max. he said that he can confirm the death of the interior minister as well as his deputy first deputy and the state has three high ranking members of the ministery. more than 20 people in the hospital including children. several of them are in intensive care. he said there is some damage to the kindergarten close by and they're working to dismantle a ceiling that collapsed in one section of it. there are nine people in the helicopter and the others were injured and killed where people are bringing their children essentially to the kindergarten. >> they weren't in the school, we don't think, they were killed on their way to the school?
1:33 am
>> that is what he's saying. he's unclear if that relates to all of the casualties. >> it's just a horrific story, isn't it? no suggestion at the moment of foul play. >> in its early days they are investigating this. you can see from those images that the weather is pretty bad. our producer on the ground said there's low visibility to the site. there's a fire that broke out around it. you can see that. high up images shot of the area. it looks like there's a lot of destruction and damage and they're still trying to determine what exactly happened here. >> claire, back with you as you get more. thank you. as republicans take control of the house they are moving quickly to build a case against u.s. homeland security security secretary. we have the details. >> reporter: migrants lining up along the u.s./mexico border. cities overwhelmed.
1:34 am
it's a crisis, republicans say, of the administration's own making and they argue homeland security secretary is to blame even teasing potential impeachment. >> should that person stay in their job? why is the issue they shouldn't? so the thing that we can do is we can investigate and in that investigation it could lead to an impeachment inquiry. >> reporter: republicans allege that mayorkas failed to support the immigration laws and they argue he lied to congress when he said this to a house committee. >> will you testify under oath, do we have operational control? >> yes, we do. >> we have operational control at the borders? >> yes, we do. >> reporter: just days into the start of the congress, pat fallon of texas introduced articles of impeachment against mayorkas. the exceedingly rare move has picked up steam with key committee chairs already laying the groundwork and preparing to hold a series of hearings on border security.
1:35 am
gop leadership has yet to move forward on impeachment. mayorkas remains undeterred. >> i have a lot of work to do. i'm proud to do it alongside 250,000 dedicated individuals in the department of homeland security and i'm going to continue to do my work. >> reporter: the constitution gives the house authority to impeach on treason, bribery or other high crimes and misdemeanors. experts say it is ultimately up to lawmakers whether something is impeachable but political disagreements are like will you not enough. >> there's no precedent for impeaching an officer simply because congress is of the view that the officer has carried out their duties in a way they find distasteful or disagreeable. >> reporter: the biden administration has been wrestling with a growing number of migrants for months amid mass migration in the western hemisphere. the protocols officials have relied on are the same ones they
1:36 am
have used under former president donald trump. they take issue with how the administration has enforced the law at the border but not all are on board with impeaching may okay as. >> impeachment is in case of emergency, break the glass. it seems like we've taken it for a common thing. he's made a lot of mistakes and there's clearly a lot of people upset. >> reporter: while there is division in the republican conference about whether to impeach mayorkas, there is question about the mishandling of the of the u.s./mexican border. that will come to light as early as this month. my colleagues report the first judiciary committee on the border is expected later this month or in early february. mayorkas says he will not resign and they say they should work on
1:37 am
immigration reform. the only cabinet official to be impeached was u.s. secretary of war william belknap and that was in 1876 over a kickback scheme. the. journalist nobel laureate has been acquitted on four charges of tax evasion ending a slew of legal hearings she says were politically motivated. the charges brought against her by the government and a fifth tax evasion charge still looms. now the veteran filipino journalist said the ruling is a victory for truth. cnn's paula hancocks joins me from seoul with more. a lot of people have been supporting this journalist throughout because they feel it was politically motivated. >> that's right, max. we've certainly heard many of her advocates and human rights
1:38 am
advocates say this is a victory. the human rights watch said the acquittal is a boon for press freedom in the philippines. she spoke outside the court. she was clearly emotional saying it's not just a win for her and for others but saying it's a win for every filipino who's ever been unjustly confused. she had pled not guilty. she had said they were politically motivated saying it was from the previous administration, from president due duterte. she has been covering his bloody war on drugs. that's why they became a target. there are still legal battles they have to win. rapla saying there's three active cases at this point but certainly today they see as a victory. we spoke to maria ressa earlier today. >> it's been a tough six years
1:39 am
or so, right? this is -- the world was really turned upside down. in less than two years i had ten arrest warrants. this was the cost of trying to do journalism in our country. is it turning around? look, i don't think the problem is just the philippine government. as long as our information ecosystem prioritizes lies, how can facts win? this is what social media and technology has done. today i am optimistic. the sun is shining, but the fight must continue. >> reporter: so this is really the first high profile test of whether these legal issues that have surrounded maria ressa and her website are going to continue under the new president ferdinand marcos jr. we asked her whether she felt she was acquitted because there was a new president. she said it's more the fact this
1:40 am
level of fear has been lifted, she believes, in the country since the previous president stepped down. she has faith in the legal system and she hopes going forward that will be the same as well. those advocates have been applauding what has happened today. max? >> paula in seoul. thank you. just ahead, new questions are being raised after a near collision at new york's jfk airport. we'll have the very latest on that investigation.
1:41 am
hi. i'm wolfgang puck when i started my online store wolfgang puck home i knew there would be a lot of oers to fill and i wanted them to ship outast that's why i chose be shipstationrs to fill shipstation hes manage orders reduce shipping costs and print out shipping labels it's my secret ingredient shipstation the number 1 choice of online sellers and wolfgang puck go to shipstation.com/tv and get 2 months free save big during blendjets new years sale and crush your resolutions. the blendjet 2 portable blender gives you ice-crushing, big blender power on-the-go. throw in your favorite ingredients and blend up a delicious smoothie anytime, anywhere. blendjet 2 even cleans itself. just add water, a drop of soap, and blend. recharge quickly with any usb port. order now from blendjet.com and make 2023 your best year yet.
1:42 am
1:43 am
1:44 am
middle of the night on tuesday. they assessed the situation for safety before evacuating the two member crew. rescuers in nepal have found two more bodies. the search remains for one final person. there were 72 people on board including four crew members when it crashed into a river gorge near pokhara. we're learning new information about terrifying close call between two commercial airlines at new york's jfk international airport. the investigation has revealed confusion and it could have ended in a catastrophe. pete muntean has the story. >> there are urgent new questions from investigators and experts following the near disaster on the runway at jfk. the national transportation
1:45 am
safety board tells cnn interviews are ongoing after they were on a collision course friday night. >> american airways -- >> reporter: they detailed how american was told to go to runway 4 left but crossed that runway in the path of the delta flight that was taking off. a mistake caught by air traffic controllers with just seconds to spare. >> [ bleep ]. delta 9243 cancel takeoff plans. delta 9234 cancel takeoff plans. >> the delta pilot slammed on the brakes. the faa says stopping approximately 1,000 feet before where the american airlines flight had just crossed the runway. >> it would have been catastrophic had a collision taken place. >> reporter: former ntsb managing director say they will dig into where the fault was apparently confused over
1:46 am
directions from air traffic control. >> the last time i heard we were cleared to cross. is that correct? >> american, we're departing runway four left. we'll listen to the tape. you were supposed to depart four left. you're currently holding short of 31 left. >> after the incident the american airlines flight continued on to its destination of london heathrow. it has not said why it did not go back to the gate. american airlines is conducting a full internal review and cooperating with the national transportation safety board in their investigation. >> there were plenty of visual cues for this flight crew to know that they were in the wrong place at the wrong time. >> reporter: meanwhile, the faa has not said how it will fix its computer system that failed last week causing a nationwide ground stop and thousands of delays and cancellations. sources tell cnn that transportation secretary pete buttigieg is pushing for
1:47 am
upgrades faster than planned. >> we're going to clear the runway so there will be an administrator and that administrator can do his job. >> reporter: there is one issue with the american airlines flight continuing on to its destination at london heathrow. they are worried the audio from the cockpit voice recorder might be lost. typically they only record for two hours. the ntsb wants that for up to 25 hours, something the faa has not acted on. pete muntean, cnn, washington. the sumpt s. trans poor tapings security information wants more information. hits keep coming for elon musk.
1:48 am
the twitter and tesla mogul is back in court this week over a tweet in 2018. musk had considered taking tesla private at $420 a share adding funding secured for the venture when no such stock was there. they're suing musk over the details. climate activist greta thunberg has been released after being detained by police for the second time this week. police say she and other demonstrators broke through a police barrier heading for a coal pit which could have collapsed. an alarming new study finds children affected by covid-19 and other respiratory viruses
1:49 am
are more susceptible to have severe health issues. a detailed report next. t by der? it's neutrogena® rapid wrinkle repair® smooths the look of finene lines in 1-week, deep w wrinkles in 4. so you can kiss wrinkles goodbye! neutrorogena® i control my septic system. it does not control me. i do not fear 2-ply. i will use rid-x monthly to help prevent a backup. because rid-x is scientifically proven to break down septic waste.
1:52 am
pre-rinsing your dishes? you could be using the wrong detergent. and wasting up to 20 gallons of water. skip the rinse with finish quantum. its activelift technology provides an unbeatable clean on 24 hour dried-on stains. skip the rinse with finish to save our water. - [announcer] do you have an invention idea but don't know what to do next? call invent help today. they can help you get started with your idea. call now 800-710-0020. we want to bring you one
1:53 am
more update on our breaking story at this hour. at least 18 people are dead, more than two dozen injured after a helicopter crashed in ukraine. that's just outside the capitol of kyiv. authorities say all nine people on the aircraft were killed. the other dead and injured were locals, parents and their children arriving for the day at the nearby kindergarten. ukraine's interior minister, first deputy and secretary of state are amongst the dead. a ministry adviser says investigators are working to determine the cause of the tra tragedy. new study finds when kids under 5 years old test positive for covid-19 and other respiratory viruses, they tend to be become sicker and it shows others with another virus increase oxygen support. a study in the journal "pediatrics" comes amid viruses
1:54 am
of rsv, flu, covid that have overwhelmed pediatric hospitals. covid hospitalizations were far below previous winter waves but concerns remain around the risk of new variants emerging. cnn's jaclyn howard has more. >> reporter: max, covid-19 hospitalizations are increasing in the united states but levels are well below what we've seen in the past. here's a look at the past two years. in january of 2021 there was a significant spike in hospitalizations and then in jajajajay 2022 you see there's another spike again in the middle of the chart, but at the end of the chart is january 2023 and you see while there's a small rise in hospitalizations, it's nowhere near what we've seen before. and what this means for the upcoming spring it's still unclear, but at this point in the pandemic health officials are still worried about the
1:55 am
emergence of new coronavirus variants and here in the united states there's been slow uptake of the updated covid-19 booster that targets the original strain and omicron strains of the virus. so those two concerns are still looming. max, back to you. >> thank you. now to the australian open where defending champion raphael nadal has crashed out of the tournament in the second round. he was facing american mackenzie mcdonald on wednesday and was down a set when he pulled up with a hip injury. after a medical time-out he elected to continue but unable to fully move. he was ousted in straight sets 6-4, 6-4, 6-5. the this is only the second time the spaniard has exited the australian open this early in the tournament. now meanwhile nadal's great rival novak djokovic was given a standing ovation during his first round victory at the australian open on tuesday.
1:56 am
the serbian is a nine-time champion. ahead of the tournament he was deported because he was not vaccinated. he was ruthless in hits tournament winning in straight sets. actor channing tatum says he may remake one of the most famous films of the 1990s. ♪ ♪ >> yes, "ghost" may be coming back to life. the original 1990 film starred the late patrick swayzee and demi moore. his production company already has the rights to the movie and plans to do something different with it. tatum is also gearing up for the final "magic mike" movie
1:57 am
released february 10th, just in time for valentine's day. i'm max foster in london. "early start" with christine romans is next right here on cnn. even the most chill of parents know when it's time to go into protect mode. nothing kills more viruses on more surfaces ththan lysol disinfectant spray. ♪
1:58 am
and it's easier than ever to■ get your projects done right. inside, outside, big or small, angi helps you find the right so for whatever you need done. with angi, you can connect with and see ratings and reviews. just search or scroll to see upf on hundreds of projects. and when you book and pay throug you're covered by our happiness it's easy to make your home an a check out angi.com today. angi... and done. and i'm the founder of the stay beautiful foundation when i started in 2016 i would go to the post office and literally fill out each person's name on a label and now with shipstation we are shipping 500 beauty boxes a month
1:59 am
it takes less than 5 minutes for me to get all of my labels and get beauty in the hands of women who are battling cancer so much quicker shipstation the #1 choice of online sellers go to shipstation.com/tv and get 2 months free ♪ this feels so right... ♪ adt systems now feature google products like the nest cam with floodlight, with intelligent alerts when a person or familiar face is detected. sam. sophie's not here tonight. so you have a home with no worries. brought to you by adt.
131 Views
Uploaded by TV Archive on