tv CNN Newsroom Live CNN January 24, 2023 1:00am-2:00am PST
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different locations. >> this is something we get to watch on the news. >> i needed to do something. i needed to grab the gun and save myself. >> no refuge. >> we will move from this period of darkness be to a period of light even though it hurts so m much. >> announcer: live from london, this is "cnn newsroom" with max foster and bianca nobilo. it is tuesday, january 24th, 9 a.m. here in london. 1 a.m. in california where three mass shootings within three days have rocked the state with some of the strictest gun laws in the rest. one person is dead, seven wounded in oakland. >> meanwhile, the fbi is assisting the police in the coastal city of half moon bay
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after a pair of shootings there. police say the shooter opened fire in two different locations killing at least seven people and critically injuring another. >> one of the sites is a trucking facility. the other a mushroom farm roughly two miles away. police say the suspect may have been employed at either place but the farm's owner say they have no knowledge of him. here's what the local sheriff had to say about where the shootings took place. >> it's a big rural location so people are working. it's spread out. there's people that live at the location as well so, you know, it was in the afternoon when kids were out of school and for children to witness this is unspeakable. >> the suspect is 67-year-old chun li zhaou. here's the moment that officers took him into custody.
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>> come here. hands up. >> reporter: at 4:40 p.m. zhaou was located in his vehicle in the parking lot of the sheriff's substation here in half moon bay via sheriff's deputy. zhaou was taken into custody without incident and a semi-automatic handgun was located in his vehicle. zhaou is believed to have acted alone and there is no further threat to this community. >> cnn senior law enforcement analyst and former fbi deputy director andrew mccabe said investigators will pour over the suspect's life to figure out his motivations. >> they're going to go back with help from people like the fbi
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and others and they're going to try to look through this person's life and piece together what led to this awful moment, going to look at his writings, they're going to look at his social media if he has anything, his electronics devices to see if he's communicated with friends, anything that go would indicate a grievance or world view, whatever it might be that led to this. the and then they'll be able to offer that up to the community as some sort of tragic explanation as to what happened. at the end of that process we'll probably have to move on to another one. >> and california governor gavin newsom says he'll no longer attend events for the national governor's association scheduled for tuesday.
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>> i know exactly what they're going through. as i was watching the press conference it was an eerie deja vu and i can imagine in their community life in monterey park, the feelings are of disbelief. why is this happening in our community? and shock and just sadness over a tragedy of loss of life and more violence. >> in monterey park the 11 victims of the shooting was members honored monday night. california lawmaker who represents the district spoke about the need to come together in the face of tragedy.
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>> now we must go forward as a community were, and what needs to be upper most in the things that we do is to help these victims. these victims who have suffered such terrible loss. >> we will not let this murderer continue. we will move forward with more enthusiasm and more love because the only thing that defeats hate is love. >> cnn has obtained this exclusive footage of the moment the gunman showed up at the second dance studio saturday night before he was confronted and disarmed by a man now being hailed as a hero. cnn's natasha chen has the latest on the investigation. >> reporter: on the eve of the lunar new year in the predominantly asian community in monterey park, california, there was dancing and joyful
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celebration and then gunfire. >> i've got three here and ten deceased. >> reporter: a 72-year-old man armed with a semi-automatic pistol opened fire saturday night. >> investigators recovered a total of 42 shell casings and a large capacity magazine. investigators recovered a norenco from inside the cargo van. >> reporter: not long after the streets were filled at least 11 people were killed in a shooting at the dance studio, several more hospitalized. >> multiple victims, gunshot wounds. >> one more critical, one more immediate. >> after the massacre he left monterey park.
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>> my first thought was i was going to die here. >> he said he lunged at the gunman. >> i was trying to use my elbows bringing some distance. finally at one point i was able to pull the gun away from him, shove him aside, create some distance. >> the gun still in his hand, tsay said he called police. he's being haled a hero preventing further violence. >> after a nearly 12-hour manhunt they located his vehicle and huu can chung was found inside the vehicle. he may have targeted specific victims. several people say he had taught informal dance lessons at the studio when he unloaded a barrage of gunfire and ex-wife
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says that's where they left. testimony most people were in their 6 o -- 60s and 70s. they're coming to terms with the violence during what was supposed to be a celebration of hope and peace. >> there's no words to describe how i'm feeling. i'm very sad. there's too much hate. >> reporter: police in hemet, california, 80 miles southeast of where we are said the suspect came into the police department lobby on january 7th and january 9th alleging previous fraud, theft and poisoning involving his family in the l.a. area in the past 10, 20 years. they said that he promised to come back with documentation but never did. natasha chen, cnn, monterey park, california. yet another deadly shooting, this one in the u.s. state of iowa.
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police say an 18-year-old suspect preston walls cut off a court ordered gps ankle monitor prior to monday's shooting. he's been arrested and charged in what police believe was a gang-related shooting. >> two students killed and the founder was seriously injured. joom the mass shootings in california and iowa bring the number to 39 in the u.s. in just the first three months of this year. that puts the country on pace for the end of 2023. that's close to what we've been seeing for the past three years.
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a cross-country snowstorm expected to bring snow fall the way to maine. it's expecting 5 to 10 inches of snow. >> texas governor greg abbott has directed emergency management owe -- officials to prepare. it has left people without power and a new storm is coming. since sunday more than a foot of snow has fallen across a stretch land from central new york to the maine/can be dada border. they'll decide whether to release the grand jury report on donald trump election it fraud. the grand jury was looking into efforts by the former president
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and his allies to overturn the election. in washington, d.c., a jury has found more members of the oath keepers guilty of crimes related to the january 6th insurrection. the convictions are a big win. >> reporter: all four men convicted of seditious conspiracy. this is so notable because in the first trial, the first 10-week trial of the oath keepers that occurred in the fall, only 2 members out of 5 were convicted on seditious conspiracy. this is very hard to prove. it's very rare that it's charged at all and rare that it results in convictions. this case represents a huge win for the justice department. more specifically about this case, this involved three members of the oath keepers. one person who's associated with this far right militia. those are roberto minuta and edwar vallejo. they're accused of plotting to
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stop the certification of joe biden's 2020 electoral victory. that culminated in the attack on the u.s. capitol on january 6th, 2021. again, this char is rare. it is severe and it represents basically a slam dunk for the justice department knowing they were able to secure this conviction against all four defendants in this case. in the previous case they were able to secure seditious conspiracy convictions against steward rhodes halves the leader of the oath keepers, the head of the entire organization and another man named kelly miggs. it was the defendant's own words that were caught on video. other times they put these words in text messages in groups, emails, open letters. in this latest case a prosecutor cited one defendant saying millions will die. get your f'ing soul ready. that was the language and a piece of video prosecutors used in the closing argument in this
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case. they all face additional charges and were convicted on some of those charges including obstruction of an official proceeding. all four men now face the possibility of decades in prison. whitney wild, cnn, washington. still ahead, the u.s. justice department is being accused of double standards over the way that it's handling donald trump and joe biden's classified documents probe. how the attorney general is responding to that. plus, a former fbi official is accused of working with a sanctioned oligarch from russia. details on the counterintelligence veteran charges. the battle for bakhmut in ukraine. we'll see how volunteers from around the globe are helping out. >> russian forces are gaining ground. they're on high ground behind me. they're advancing from the north and they're advancing from the south. yet residents stay on and volunteers of all stripes do what they can.
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rules for democrats and republicans and the rules for the powerless and rules for the rich and poor apply the facts and the law in each case in a neutral and nonpartisan manner. the justice department applies the facts and the laws and we apply in neutral ways without regard. >> the u.s. attorney general insisting that the justice department is being unbiased. >> they're requesting new information after more documents were found. >> reporter: house republicans are pressing ahead demanding answers after the latest
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revelation after more documents were found in the fbi search of joe biden's home in wilmington, found some documents from his time as a united states senator. james comber asking for visitor logs, people who came to joe biden's house and may have had access to documents and other communications involving that as well. this comes on the heels of comber himself asking for records from the national archives, from the white house about some of the issues that occurred here and the house judiciary committee trying to understand the efforts behind naming the special counsel in this case. the question is, will they get the information they are asking for? at the moment it seems they will be unsuccessful in at least some of those efforts, including the justice department indicating last week that it would not provide information undercutting a law enforcement investigation. it's unclear if they provided information james comber wanted. getting the logs seems unlikely.
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they don't keep that kind of information. also, the secret service did not actively monitor joe biden's house from 2017 -- middle of 2017 until about 2020 when he became the presumptive democratic nominee so there will not be information that the republicans want. there are other communications they are seeking including from the white house which is indicating that it will talk in good faith with comber about trying to get some of the information that he is seeking on these matters. the question though is if it does not -- if the republicans don't get what they want, what do they do next? some are threatening subpoenas. will we see what we saw in the trump years? democrats battling with the trump administration went to court, trying to get information, sometimes successful, sometimes leading to lengthy, protracted court fights. that is still a possibility here as the new house republican majority presses ahead. manu raju, cnn, capitol hill.
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ukraine's deputy defense minister has resigned. the defense ministry says the claims are unfounded and baseless but says it accepted the resignation in the interest of transparency. >> in a separate move they have also stepped down. he posted a statement on his official telegram account saying it was his decision although he didn't say why he was resigning. meanwhile, senior u.s. military official has said russia sent tens of thousands of reinforcement to the front lines in ukraine over the past few months ahead of a plan but the troops are ill equipped, ill trained and have made little difference in the fight. >> bring in selma across all of these rapid developments. there are tanks on their way. >> right now we're still very much in this deadlock with germany. we heard from the germany defense minister, he was standing alongside nato's chief
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and what he said is germany's still in the process, they're going to make a decision soon on the tanks but it's important to remember here germany giving the green light is not just about germany. there are 2 thousand tanks across 13 different european countries. the rule is you cannot deploy them to ukraine unless you get the preauthorization. the nato chief saying he is confident that decision will come soon, consultations are ongoing. over the last couple of days we've seen pressure piling on berlin. i'm going to point to poland in particular. poland's foreign minister said, well, if that's the case, we might go ahead and send those tanks to ukraine without that authorization if there's a coalition willing to do so. germany said, we are not blocking the deployment of these tanks. training can begin so for ukraine this is a bit of bureaucracy that they want be to see resolved right now.
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>> now let's talk about what's happening on the front lines. so we understand or are hearing reports that they're trying to crack down on the discipline of russian troops. he, of course, is now in charge of the invasion. what do we know about their numbers and their level of training? >> a lot of what we understand is happening on the ground is from western officials. these are troops with very little training and experience. you'll remember that partial mobilization effort that brought in 300,000 reservists. some deployed from home to the front lines in a matter of days and weeks according to western intelligence. we have wagner, private military, mercenary group commended for successes on the ground. that is made up of 50,000 personnel and the u.s. says 40,000 could be convicts. so real questions about how to read the makeup of the men on the ground fighting for russia,
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but also their ability. their experience as they head into the spring months in this encounter. >> thank you so much. an important point to bear in mind is the wider context of this. the zelenskyy saying he has a zero tolerance into corruption and more profiteering. that's exactly what ukraine doesn't want the international community to be seeing. they can't jeopardize the use of support of fighting the russians off. >> thank you. ukraine says it needs more modern, versatile a tanks as salma was saying. they said weapons will make a difference in cities like bakhmut. ben wedeman is there. t the. >> reporter: eli worth jones is a long way from his hometown of
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las vegas, nevada. a medic, he's delivering supplies to residents just a few hundred yards from russian lines in bakhmut. he does it because he can. >> i'm young. i've trained for this. the this is what i do for a living. a lot of people need it here and i'm happy to be here, stand with the people that are being stepped on. >> eli is with a group called front line medics and you can't get much more front line than this. fellow medic curt eriksson from norway explains how they work. >> you've got a list of patients but you don't really know what's wrong with them. we don't have any idea before we see them and we do an assessment. >> reporter: our interview cut short by an incoming russian
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ro round. at a site a safer distance from the fighting they park their mobile clinic and treat who they can. alexander said his feet are in pain. >> can you ask him which foot it is? >> both. >> okay. >> reporter: he lives in an unheated apartment. he is suffering from frostbite. they'll take him to a hospital outside bakhmut and he couldn't leave a moment sooner. the russian noose is tightening. slowly russian forces are gaining ground. they're on high ground behind me. they're advancing from the north and they're advancing from the south. the worst is yet to come says british volunteer soldier danny burk. >> the movement around bakhmut. we're going to try to go past it
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through the fields. >> reporter: yet residents stay on and volunteers of all stripes do what they can. victoria linick is doing the rounds handing out food and water. are you a little nervous with this situation here? >> oh, look at me. do you see nervous? no. >> reporter: nerves of steel as the shelling goes on. ben wedeman, cnn, bakhmut. >> amazing spirit amongst them, isn't it? >> absolutely amazing. still to come, we'll hear from a man who disarmed the gunman after he carried out a mass shooting. >> and a man who was killed after being beaten nonstop.
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welcome back to "cnn newsroom." i'm max foster. bringing us up to date. authorities in oakland, california, are investigating mass shooting that left a person dead and seven injured. it's one of three mass shootings in that state in three days. in half moon bay, suspect is dead and a 67-year-old chun li zha 00 u was arrested hours after the shooting. >> a man is being haled as a hero for confronting and disarming the monterey gunman. cnn has obtained exclusive footage showing brandon stsay
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approaching him. it captured the struggle. tsay says he sprang into action after realizing there was an imminent threat. >> i did freeze up. i had many thoughts and something happened, something came over me. i had this rush of thought and adrenaline in this situation and i was able to conclude that i need today do something. i needed to grab the gun. i needed to save myself and the people inside. he looked like he was still trying to fight but as i pointed the gun at him and told him go, go away, you've got to leave. go, get out of here and i also threatened him that i would
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shoot and i had many thoughts. i thought i would actually have to kill him, shoot a person. he was trying to contemplate whether to attack. there was a brief standoff where he was just thinking about coming after me with his body. i was thinking, i would have to hit him but he actually came to the conclusion to turn around and leave and that's when he exited the door and jogged back to his van. >> tsay also said he's grateful for his ability to survive the situation. it's providing some hope to others. >> amazing story. attorneys for the family of a black man who died during a traffic stop say the video of his arrest shows the police beating him nonstop for three minutes. 29-year-old tyrei nichols was hospitalized in critical condition earlier this month in memphis, tennessee, where he died just a few days later. his family has seen that video but it hasn't been made public
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yet. cnn's nick valencia has more. >> reporter: attorneys for the family of tyre nichols did not hold back in the characterization of the video of his arrest seeing it for the first time monday alongside his family. benning monday krump said the video reminded him of the 1991 beating of rodney king. he said the video was so hard to watch that tyre nichols mother couldn't make it through the first minute. during what they called about three minutes that police officers were beating on nichols he asked them reportedly what did i do? >> our son ran because he was scared. he did not run because he was running from drugs, guns, any of that. he ran because he was scared for his life and when you see the video, you will see why he was scared for his life. >> reporter: the family and the attorneys said they were careful to offer too many details of what they saw in those videos
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because there's an ongoing investigation. not only is the shelby county district attorney's office investigating, so is the tennessee bureau of investigation and the office of civil rights investigation and the department of justice. meanwhile, those five officers that were involved in tyre nichols arrest have all since been fired. i did reach out earlier and speak to the spokesperson at the district attorney's office in shelby county who said it's not a matter of if but when the video gets released saying it is likely to be released sometime later this week if not next week. they are bracing for the public's reaction. this as the parents of tyre nichols are asking protestors to keep any future demonstrations peaceful. nick valencia, cnn, atlanta. a former fbi official has been arrested and charged in two separate cases in the united states. one indictment alleges that he worked for the sanctioned russian oligarch when he retired.
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>> the other is he concealed money he received from an albanian official. >> reporter: the oligarch was sanctioned by the u.s. for his dealings with russia. he's a close associate of russian president vladimir putin. so the fact that mcgonna gall was the top official at the new york fbi agent, the agent in charge of the counter intelligence investigation, he had overseen investigations into darapofka. if you do any business with someone who's sanctioned, you're subject to the same prohibitions in the u.s. that was the first load of charges we saw. then there was a second indictment announced by the u.s. attorney's office in washington, d.c. they allege while charles nbcgonigal, while he held that position, he received $225,000 in payments from a former
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employee of an albanian intelligence agency. they say that he was working with that albanian receiving those payments. they say that he also didn't disclose any travel that he took overseas and he took multiple trips with him and he did not disclose on government forms as required the meetings he was having with any foreign nationals. he pleaded not guilty and he was released on a $500,000 bond. the parent company of ticket sales giant ticketmaster will face lawmakers over last year's taylor swift concert debacle. the cfo for live nation said sales for swift's tour were disrupted by record bot activity and the company has learned valuable lessons. >> ticketmaster canceled a sale after the website was slammed. the company has come under intense criticism for them
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investors on wall street are hoping to keep positive momentum until a few hours time. the momentum isn't there at a moment. on monday the dow rallied to finish 3/4 of a percent high je. the nasdaq had a better day and the s&p finished more than 1% higher. a keep economic barometer -- breathing for me now. a key economic barometer hints a u.s. recision may be coming. it declined for the tenth straight month in december. one economist predicts economic activity will likely turn
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negative before rebounding in the final quarter of this year. anyway, a new survey finds most business economists expect companies to cut payrolls in the coming months. a survey by the national association of business economists found they predicted an employment increase whilst 19% believe payrolls will decline. days after announcing plans to layoff thousands of employees, tech giant microsoft is confirming a multi-billion dollar investment in open ai. the investment in chatgpt. the chatbot was released late last year and quickly went viral. it can provide thoughtful and eas eerily sound thoughts. the u.s. food & drug
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administration wants to make the covid vaccine like an annual flu shot. some may need one vaccine dose each year regardless of how many they've had before. >> but two shots might still be needed for young children, elderly and those with compromised immune systems. much like the flu vaccine, the fda hopes to identify strains by june so vaccines can be developed for the fall. china looks dramatically different since scrapping the zero covid measures last month after public protests. some residents say they're still paying the price for being part of those rallies. celina wang spoke with a woman who said her friend seemingly vanished leaving a chilling video behind detailing what may have happened. >> reporter: if you're seeing this video, that means i've already been taken by the police. these are the chilling words of a young woman in china who took part in china in beijing on november 27th. it was one of dozens of
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anti-zero covid protests. >> they are chanting that they don't want covid tests, they want freedom. >> reporter: police mined the streets. many were there to mourn the losses in the city where deadly fire broke out in a locked down building. this 26-year-old woman an editor in a publishing house, that is why she and her friends took to the streets. they followed the rules and didn't have any conflict with the police. soon after filming this she was arrested. she knew her time was nearing. cnn has learned from sources that weeks after the protests police started rounding up her friends one by one, most of them also young female professionals. we tracked down and interviewed one of her friends who's been tirelessly searching for her. we're not revealing her name or any of the sources we've spoken to because of fear of
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retribution. authorities want to intimidation normal people. we can't even gather to grief. police swiftly cracked down on the protestors. in some cities violently pushing and dragging the demonstrators. they peacefully dispersed. authorities checked cell phones for virtual private networks and tracked down participants with cell phone data. soon after china dropped its zero covid policy and opened up. in his new year's eve address, chinese leader xi jinping said it was, quote, only natural for different people to have different concerns or hold different views on the same issue but behind the scenes their loved ones say the retribution continues. she's paying a heavy price. we were born into this land so naturally we would want to make
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china better, but now i feel there's nothing we can do, she says, breaking down into tears. authorities have made no official comment about the detentions and will likely never know how many people have been detained in connection with the protests. if it's dozens, hundreds or more. as people across china are celebrating the lunar new year with their new found freedom, the young woman says the mothers of her and her friends want to know why their daughters were taken from them. in her final words in the video message she made this call for help. don't let us be taken away or convicted arbitrarily. don't let us disappear from this world unjustly. >> cnn has asked for comment on the young woman seen there. we have not heard back. she's one of eight people who have been quietly detained after the protests. people who know these women tell us they were confused as to why they were taken describing them
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as young female professionals working in publishing, journalism and education saying they were socially minded. experts say the police may have been suspicious of young, politically aware women. they have a well-documented history of targeting feminists and at least one of the women detained was questioned during her interrogation about whether she had any involvement in feminist groups. celina wang, cnn, beijing. now still to come, this ufo shaped cloud stunned onlookers in turkey. we'll have the details of what was a natural phenomena. rapid wrwrinkle repair® smooths the look of fine lines in 1-week, deep wrinkles in 4. so you can kiss wrinkles g goodbye! neutrogena®
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for 24 hours. aveeno® the nationwide power outage that paralyzed pakistan is officially over this morning thankfully. the country's energy minister says more than 1100 electricity grids shaare up and running. >> pakistan's prime minister tweeted no apology for the outage. cnn's barbie nadeau has the
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story from roam regarding an art piece missing. >> reporter: these an choent artifacts worth some $20 million represent the latest success for the cultural heritage squad. many were trafficked and ended up in the collection of michael steinheart who has been banned from life from cloekting antiquities. this bronze bust as well. they are back in italy thanks to the antiquities trafficking unit. >> these are not just pieces of marble and limestone and frescos, these represent our shared cultural heritage. in one respect they belong to the world, but legally for my
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purposes they belong to the country of origin from which they were pillaged. >> reporter: the new york unit has conducted 75 rates; recovered $55 million worth of artifacts returned to italy. but their real value is their place in italy's rich cultural identity. many of these pieces that were in museums and private galleries and up in storage facilities once back in italy. >> the artifacts have to, deserve to, must go back to their home country. that's fundamental. even if they're not the most important pieces compared to, let's say, the rich collections that exist in italy, the point is they were robbed from this country. they deserve to go back to their
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home country. >> reporter: there may be calls for celebration now, but these pieces represent only a drop in the bucket. authorities say more pieces are being stolen every moment. >> and barbie is with us now from rome. how long have the artifacts repatriation been going on? >> reporter: these investigations take multiple years. in fact, to get these 60 items back, some of this started more than 20 years ago, first identifying they're missing, f filing falsifying documents and finding them and then repatriation takes years and years. we're talking 60 items. there are thousands that are out there that authorities are trying to bring back home. >> barbie nadeau, thank you so much. now out with the old, in with the new. candy maker mars says the animated spokes candies are going on indefinite hiatus.
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they tapped comedian maya rudolph to represent them. they're swapping the green m&m's go go boots for sneakers and introducing a new purple spokes candy. do you understand? >> when i read it i knew we would not understand it. >> you understand it? >> broad brush. >> the m&ms are making some lineup. they're having a spokes human instead of their animated spokes candies. the unique cloud baffled people in turkey. >> the country's meteorological department said it's an example of a lens cloud that is a result of strong winds. it remained intact for an hour. >> doesn't explain the color. that's extraordinary. >> the northernmost community in the u.s. saw the first sunrise.
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it's in a small town in alaska that used to be called barro. >> it's got a small glimpse of sunlight, one hour and thirteen minutes. >> unbelievable. thank you for watching. "early start" is next with christine, i believe. >> we'll see you tomorrow. it's the modern way to transform fragrance infused wiwith natural essential oils into a mist. air wick essential mist. connect to nature.
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