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tv   CNN Newsroom  CNN  January 31, 2023 6:00am-7:00am PST

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investigation. for now, that boulder, though, is still in the home. i mean, just barely missed her. wow. they are okay, luckily. >> close call. >> close call. >> that's it for us. >> see you tomorrow, post-lakers. >> we will see if there are any bad calls tonight. >> was that humble brags right here. we're going to the lakers game. >> you're going, too. >> i don't know. >> i grew up not going to nba games so i'm excited. >> it will be fun. we will see you tomorrow. have a great day, everyone. "cnn newsroom" starts right now. good tuesday morning to you, i'm jim sciutto. >> and i'm erica hill.
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right now secretary of state antony blinken is in the west bank, set to speak at any moment. this at the end of his three-day tour of the middle east, the trip gained new urgency following an outbreak of deadly violence. he met with mahmoud abbas earlier today and met with benjamin netanyahu yesterday in an effort to get both sides to work together to end the bloodshed. also kevin mccarthy will meet tomorrow with president biden at the white house for the first time since becoming house speaker. top of his agenda the debt ceiling. republicans with that slim majority in the house are holding the threat of defaulting on the nation's debt to demand budget cuts. and this morning two more memphis police officers have been put on leave in connection to the death of tyre nichols. that in addition to the five officers who have already been fired, charged with second-degree murder. plus, the memphis fire department has also fired three employees for their response or nonresponse to the beating.
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we will be live in memphis just ahead. we are keeping a close watch on the weather this tuesday morning, nearly 1,000 flights already canceled at this hour and even more are delayed as severe ice storms are snarling travel for much of the south and the central united states today. more than 40 million people right now under winter weather alerts. >> in texas several school districts in the dallas forth district are closed, ice making driving dangerous. one person is dead after a ten-car pileup on icy streets in austin, texas. ed lavandera is live in dallas, chad myers in the weather center. ed, first to you. i'm curious what you're seeing there, also what you're hearing from emergency officials. >> reporter: well, emergency officials and transportation officials all over north texas urging people to stay off the roadways if they can, and you can see behind us that many people listening to this warning, this should normally be rush hour traffic, this is
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highway 75 and 635 in the north dallas area, this is, you know, one of those areas where we've often seen drivers coming down these highways slipping and sliding. we've seen few cars on the roadways this morning. despite that, a high number of accidents across the region. icy roadways all over the place as well and that is expected to worsen here in the hours ahead where we're anticipating a sporadic mix of sleet and icy conditions that will be off and on throughout much of the day, well until tomorrow as well. these winter advisories and winter warnings extend not just into north texas, but oklahoma, arkansas, and austin and san antonio as well. we've already heard reports of one fatality in the austin area because of the winter weather and roadways here.
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treacherous conditions that will only continue to worsen here throughout the day as these flurries and ice and sleet is expected to continue falling throughout much of the day. erica and jim? >> ed, appreciate it. chad, as we look at what is ahead, what does the forecast look like for the rest of today and even into the week? >> i mean, really doctors forth all the way to stephenville, this is the area that's getting hit the hardest right now. what came through last night, about a quarter of an inch of ice in some spots, has already moved away and in toward the northeast, warming up a little bit, not as much freezing going on, but the next of three systems, one, two, and then one you can't even see yet, will now move into dallas, texas, and is moving in right now at this hour. thunder, lightning, rain and 26 degrees at love field, and that's not a good combination at any time of year. right now this is going to be a
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treacherous day for dallas forth from paris all the way up to texarkana, including parts of oklahoma, arkansas and even towards memphis and the like. the storm moves to the east, watch the pink, this is where it is freezing raining and sleet. the next system comes in tomorrow. no relief here. what we're seeing with this heavy rain coming in in dallas at this point with temperatures 26, even in the areas that have been salted, the salt is getting washed away and now all of a sudden the ice is accumulating. in texas they had a quarter inch of ice. whelan, willie and the boys if i put that song in your head for the rest of the day, i'm sorry, don't get luken balk on your map very often. >> i think that is a sorry/not sorry but i will let it slide because i like you. chad, ed, thank you both. stay safe. overseas now secretary of state antony blinken he is speaking at the end of his trip to the middle east, earlier he
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met with palestinian president mahmoud abbas. cnn's nic robertson is in the west bank this morning. there is no peace process to speak of there, there wasn't even one with a more moderate israeli government, now you have a harder right israeli government. i wonder what the expectations are of what the u.s. secretary of state can accomplish there. >> reporter: they're very low. the expectation here is that he can't deliver what they want, although secretary blinken did speak about that, about what people want. i think if you listen to his words on that subject where he talked about we need to reestablish and then he corrected himself and said actually we need to rebuild a relationship with the palestinian people, i think that gives you the sense that this is not something that's broken down, it's something that's sort of disappeared. the faith that the palestinian people have that they can get from the united states the level of support that the palestinian people feel is going to the
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israelis, this sort of parity of, you know -- parity of security guarantees, parity of freedoms, united states, palestinians will point out, are very strong in supporting and giving security support to the israelis, but they don't feel they get that. so i think that gives you a sense of the heavy lift, the diplomatic lift, that faces secretary blinken here. he has talked as well about the two-state solution and he has talked as well about this far right government of benjamin netanyahu and the responsibility of it building more settlements and he said that is a key thing that would destroy the possibility of a two-state solution, but, again, secretary blinken aspires to that, wants to keep that idea alive, yet here in ramallah most people would tell you they don't believe it is possible to have a two-state solution anymore and that's particularly true amongst a younger generation, it's their future and horizons that the secretary was speaking about.
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>> many israelis say they have hope of a two-state solution anymore. nic robertson in ramallah, thanks very much. in washington biden preparing to head to queens, new york, in less than an hour where he is expected to announce nearly $300 million in funding from the bipartisan infrastructure law for the hudson tunnel project between new york and new jersey. >> cnn's senior white house correspondent mj lee joins us now from the white house. so the president here in effect looking backwards to say here is what we accomplished in the first two years. is that intended to be the bulk of the message in these next two years given that they have lost the majority in the house? >> reporter: jim and erica, basically if you take a look at president biden's travels and speeches and events going back to last week and heading into this week as well you actually get a pretty good roadmap of not only his state of the union speech that's coming up next week, but also his 2024 reelect pitch. what white house officials are
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telling us is that if you look at biden's schedule, it is being crafted in such a way that he is doing several important things ahead of both of those things, the state of the union speech as well as his expected 2024 announcement. one of those things is obviously touting the economic progress of the last two years, we've heard him do that a lot, whether it's talking about the jobs market, being robust, or talking about inflation finally seeming to moderate. and then there's the implementation part of the legislative accomplishments of the last two years. you know, we are going to see him do this when he talks about the infrastructure bill at an event in new york today and we also saw him do this yesterday as well in baltimore. take a listen. >> it's about making investments in american cities, towns, heart lands and rural america. it's about making things here in america again. it's about good jobs, it's about the dignity of work, it's about respect and self-worth and it's about damn time we're doing it.
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>> and a huge part of the president's political messaging, too, will be casting house republicans as extremists who are trying to undo some of that economic progress and, of course, don't forget fundraising, that is going to be a huge part of the president's portfolio as well. in fact, he will be headlining a fundraising today in manhattan. so all of this really just adds up to what we expect to be a 2024 announcement that could come in the next several weeks. jim and erica? >> mj, appreciate it. thank you. with us margaret talev. good to have you on. here we go again. 2020 all over again. it looks like trump has already announced, not clear the republican party entirely behind him. is the democratic party entirely behind joe biden as their 2024 nominee? >> well, jim, for now the answer to that question is yes, and i think what you're seeing biden do with this series of
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messagings around the infrastructure spending is a couple of things. there are plenty of swing voters and republicans who do not care about construction under the hudson river or what happens in new york, but looking at what this is part of, it's more than a billion dollars in those mega grants that also have been dedicated to spending in places like account and ohio and north carolina and oklahoma and louisiana and mississippi. and the jobs that come with them and this particular project in new york that mj was just talking about, the promise is the creation of more than 70,000 jobs. and this is all coming ahead of tomorrow's meeting between biden and speaker mccarthy over the spending cuts that republicans are demanding in terms of an offset for raising the debt ceiling. so i think biden's messaging is to show the democratic party that he can take a winning message into 2024 and to try to
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message to the center of the country the same thing. >> it's not just that winning message that he's hoping to deliver, right, pointing to those accomplishments in the first two years, but there's also this push to go after extremism and the extreme far right and maga republicans. is that going to be effective heading into 2024, especially if that field becomes a little bit more fractured? >> yeah, it's really interesting, there is a new marist poll out that's getting a fair amount of attention and that poll you could argue shows something not good for biden which is that more than half the country, six out of ten americans say the state of the union is not strong. if you are the person delivering the state of the union address those aren't the best numbers. i guess they could be worse, but they are not good. but there is a kind of subnote to that survey and what that survey also found is that more than half the country says one of the reasons that the state of the union isn't strong is because of partisan extremism in
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both parties and people feel it more acutely on the republican side, but republicans see it on the democratic side as well, the sense that there's too much extremism in both parties. that's why i think you're seeing biden really lean into this sort of center or pragmatic position because actually when you look at the polling what americans are saying is we think extremism is one of the major contributors to the fact that we feel uncertain about the future of the united states right now. >> okay. so speaking of extremism, if one of the messages of the midterms was that the far right of the republican party, that their message including election denialism didn't work for republicans, why is the speaker with that slim majority doubling down on the threat of bringing the u.s. over the debt cliff in effect? is that politically beneficial to him or is it purely about keeping the speaker's gavel and keeping that wing of the party
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happy? >> the two answers are completely intertwined because kevin mccarthy is not running for president, kevin mccarthy is trying to maintain his speakership and he has such a narrow majority, no democrats support him, that he has to keep the right flank of his party at least satisfied enough that he's raising their issues. you see the duality of his messaging, he's already saying that he is not in favor of replacing the current tax structure with effectively a 30% regressive sales tax. he's already saying that he's going to take off the table basically two of the biggest contributors to the national debt which would be modifications to social security and medicare. so there is a dual messaging going on, you're seeing it with kevin mccarthy, seeing it with james comer on the oversight committee. the messaging to the center of the country and a parallel messaging to the right flank to conservative media and to the viewers and listeners of those media.
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>> it is fascinating stuff as we look forward. margaret, always good to talk to you. thank you. >> you, too. thanks, guys. coming up next, the investigation into the killing of tyre nichols has led to two more memphis police officers being relieved of duty. this morning we are getting new details about what was in the initial police report, misleading to say the least. that's coming up. >> that's an understatement. also ahead a protest erupts at a new york hotel after a group of migrants refuse to move from their rooms to a shelter in brooklyn. we will take you there live and get you up to speed. plus maybe you saw it on tiktok, the 100 envelope challenge. why financial experts are split on this money saving move. that's what you get from the morgan stanley client experience. you get listening more than talking, and a personalized plan built on insights and innovative tecechnology.
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tyre nichols who ultimately died from those injuries. so let's bring you up to speed on the latest. first, we've learned that it was not five officers who were initially put on leave and ultimately fired and charged, as we know in tyre nichols death, but seven. that's right, two more memphis police officers at the same time were put on leave. officials say preston hemphill and a second unnamed officer are subject of a an internal investigation. they have not been charged. there's also, again, they were placed on leave at the same time -- there is also new reporting "the new york times" obtained a picture of what the "times" says was the initial police report. cnn has not been able to verify that photo, but we can tell you that that reporting is that the initial police report was not at all what we initially heard and, in fact, was contradicted, jim, by the videos that were then released. >> the initial police reported according to the "times" and again this is reporting that made no mention of the officers punching and kicking tyre nichols and it also matches up with something that i noticed,
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erica, looking at those videos yesterday from the scene, which is that in the immediate aftermath you heard officers talking about saying, well, he tried to grab my gun, he went for us, he punched at us, when there was, in fact, no evidence of that, at least in the videos we've seen and the police chief citing similar. cnn's ryan young is live in memphis today. ryan, you've been there for some time, i wonder what you're hearing from the community and from authorities. >> reporter: when you look at this police report from "the new york times" you can understand why people have more questions involved in this case. obviously you have what the officers were saying initially in the body camera, in fact, some of the words they were using in that body camera footage talking about him reaching for the gun is apparently in that report. we are working to obtain that report ourselves and we will be reaching out to the memphis police department in the next few hours to get that. when you add on that there were seven officers who pretty much were pulled from duty, you have that one unnamed officer which
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we are trying to find out who that person is and then you have preston hemphill who was suspended. we know he's been an officer since 2018, he was a part that have scorpion unit and he is the one who was initially in that body camera footage, you see him wrapping the taser back up afterwards. listen to some of his words right after that initial stop. >> they found him. >> huh? >> martin and all them were over there chasing them. >> stomp his ass. i hope they stomp his ass. smith is calling for other cars because him and mark are chasing him. ? >> reporter: you can hear those words being said i hope they stomp him. people in this community were upset about hearing that language. we now know from his lawyer that he has been talking to investigators as well. still trying to figure out who the seventh officer is. you have to think about the fire department also making some
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moves yesterday, firing three of their employees who did not do an assessment initially after watching that video which was so tough to watch as someone desperately needed help after severely being beaten the way they were, as we all saw on the video and not getting that immediate medical attention. now there are more questions because obviously you wonder are there going to be more charges? when you look at that police report could charges come from filing a false police report. these are questions that need to be answered at this point. we have this new reporting but it's something we will have to dig down to as far as how the next steps go, especially with the da and this police department. >> not only about that police report but also seven officers were put on leave at the same time, why did we only hear about five of them initially, an important question as well as you point out. thank you. joining me now is former chief of the atlanta and louisville, kentucky, police departments, erica shields. chief shields, thanks for taking the time this morning. >> yeah, good morning. thanks for having me. >> first with what appears to be a false police report in the
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initial wake of this and, by the way, it's not just the report here because when you watch those videos you could see the officers begin to it seems concoct this story in the wake of the attack on tyre nichols saying on tape, oh, yeah, he went for my gun, he threw a punch at me even though there is no evidence of that on the tape. this echos george floyd's police report. is this a consistent problem that you have seen in the forces you've commanded and how do police departments police that? >> yeah, i think this is why it's so important that body worn cameras be required hand that they be audited because what you tend to find is on use of force incidents that were questionable there is a tendency by officers, not always, but some of -- some officers do embellish and flat-out lie. this is why we have body worn cameras, they have to be worn, they have to be audited because we owe it to the public to get
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this right. >> i wonder as someone who has commanded officers in two major cities here, it's a basic question, what were they thinking? there are cameras recording every moment of this and yet they file a report that is easily contradicted by the video evidence. >> well, go back a step further. they knew they were filming themselves and yet they still beat this man to death so that tells you their comfort level with behaving this way, and i suspect when you go back and you review their other incidents there won't be anything this egregious, certainly, but you are going to find that these folks just thought they were above the law, thought they were above training and it's frightful, quite frankly. >> what is the fix for that? there is a renewed effort on capitol hill for legislation which failed after george floyd's killing, two parties unable to come to agreement. is the fix primarily a legal one or is it a cultural one, and how
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would a cultural fix be accomplished exactly? >> so the legislation last year really got held up on qualified immunity. >> yeah. >> what i would say is it's an important piece but the reality of it is these officers could care less about qualified immunity, they filmed themselves killing a man. it's not to say it's not important but i do think there's room for legislation to be done that is proactive. so, for instance, there are body worn camera analytics coming on the market now so that as i saz a chief i can actually put in key phrases that i want. so imagine you put in that you want to get -- beat somebody's tail or a racial term and i can start identifying behaviors before we get to this point. so i think that there's -- we've put so much investment into technology to fight crime that we need to look inwardly and leverage that technology to weed out behavior. so i think that -- and i do think congress has a role here
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because one of these areas that is so -- where people push back is the cost associated with it and then what you run into is state laws on record retention and what the state law -- so in kentucky which has strong collective bargaining, a sizable amount of my operations were dictated by state law. well, as a chief trying to drive change that's extremely difficult. so i do think there is room -- a role for congress. >> but you're saying that if qualified immunity were the sticking point again, that there could be positive change even if that was set aside? >> absolutely. absolutely. >> understood. well, chief erica shields serving both in atlanta and louisville, kentucky, thanks so much for joining us this morning. >> thank you. dozens of migrants are currently camped out on a new york city sidewalk, they're protesting the city's plans to move them from a midtown hotel to a relief center. we will take you there live next. ♪
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dozens of migrants at this hour are camped out on the sidewalk outside of a hotel in midtown, manhattan. they are there because they've refused officials' attempts to move them from that hotel to a larger official shelter in brooklyn. >> this is why. video shows cots packed tightly together in a large shared space, some of the migrants told cnn they are worried the brooklyn terminal will be cold, uncomfortable and inconvenient for those who work. cnn's polo sandoval is outside the brooklyn crews terminal shelter. what are the options? is the option to try to extend
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them in this hotel? is that even possible. >> reporter: at this point they say that is absolutely not an option. many people did become comfortable being in these settings, in a hotel setting in manhattan, close to any potential job opportunities, however, city officials also are very aware of their legal obligation to house families and mothers with children in those kinds of private environments in those hotel rooms so the reality is they are the ones that have to take a priority when it comes to offering those kinds of accommodations. as for the single men, these asylum seekers, city officials maintain this is the best they can come up with right now given what is still a challenging and fluid situation, which is this large barracks-style housing facility and i spent all day yesterday speaking to these migrants outside of the watson hotel, many of whom say they'd rather sleep on a sidewalk than come here. it's not about comfort, it's about convenience. many of their potential job opportunities are in manhattan,
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so being relocated to this part of brooklyn, a cruise ship terminal that is not very easy to get to if you don't have transportation, that just presents yet another obstacle. so it really is a complicated situation not only for these adult male migrants that are being asked to relocate from manhattan here to brooklyn, but also for the city that's trying to keep its head above water when it comes to finding housing for well over 70,000 homeless people. this includes those chronically homeless and also the tens of thousands of recently arrived asylum seekers. i want you to hear directly from mayor eric adams as he actually visited this particular site here, trying to put any concerns among those asylum seekers at ease. >> i just liked to come here when i started hearing all the rumors about it is too cold. my brother got on shorts. it's warm inside. about the food not being there. you know, healthy food is
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present, even the snacks are healthy. we just need to stop the anxiety. >> reporter: and that was what i heard from one official is that they do believe there was misinformation circulating amongst some of the migrants. that they do have this opportunity, they do have a warm place to stay. i spoke to one individual as they were walking out this morning, they were going to take a bus into the city to try to find employment. they told me at least they have a warm place and a roof on top of their head, but there's so many others that are reluctant to relocate. >> polo sandoval, appreciate the reporting. important. thank you. today meetings of the federal reserve begin with the central bank expected to raise interest rates again tomorrow but importantly this time by much smaller margin, a quarter of a percentage point, a lot of the raises we have three quarters of a percentage point. still, another rate hike will still make borrowing, mortgage rates likely, more expensive. >> it's not just the borrowing cost that folks are focused on, it's the price of every day
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items like eggs. i feel confident you have likely had a conversation about egg prices in the last week or two and that's raising concerns and questions about just what and how much americans are saving which brings us to the latest tiktok challenge. the 100 envelope challenge, cnn's christine romans is here with me. so this is an effort to get people to save which i know, romance, having known you for almost 20 years how important saving is to you. this may not be the best solution to your savings. >> but i'm telling you this hashtag has 150 million views. so this is financial advice via tiktok, so i'm going to put it right there. essentially it's 100 envelopes and the more aesthetically pleasing and beautiful the envelopes are because it is tiktok and social media that's even better. you make it look better. in the first day you put $1, the second day $2, third day $3, for 100 days you will have saved
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$550 on the 100th day. that is saving money. in 100 days people don't make $5,000. it looks like it has results it and has inspired some people, i saw a video of one woman who did it three times, she saved more than $15,000 in just like six months or something, but it feels to me a little like a fad diet when you want to have healthy eating all the time and proper nutrition and exercise, this is putting it all in one 100 day span. remember, it's always important to be saving. if a tiktok video gets you to save more, especially for young people, i'm all for it but maybe stretch it out over the year. >> there is the obvious safety problem, it's not in a bank, it could be stolen. there is not -- savings interest rates are low. >> put it under your mattress, it will be fine. >> christine, you've written several books about money, ways to save. what are the tips you give to folks out there? >> i hear from young people that
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the higher interest rates and higher rent prices in particular and they think that this year they will probably have to start paying their student loan minimums again. they're worried and i get it and they just say i just can't save. i will be able to save later. i want everyone to remember the younger you are the more money you will save. if you save $5,000 a year from the age of 25 to 65 you will have a $1.2 million nest egg. you just have to consistently and early be saving. you have to burn less than you earn and you have to figure out how to live a little bit below your means, invest the difference. don't just put it in an envelope but save and invest and that's financial freedom, especially for young people who think they can't get out under these bills. >> there's automatic saving deposits you often hear they help. you don't have to make a decision to put a certain amount. >> they're critical. >> just like automatically if you have the benefit of a 401(k), automatically choosing that amount, choosing your savings a little bit goes a long way. christine, thanks.
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i think they're putting an enormous onus on average people to risk their lives in these situations. >> they are, but there's also renewed discussion when we look at every day heroes like brandon tsai who disarmed a gunman in california and that is also giving credence to what experts are saying needs to say. brynn gingras joining us now. law enforcement officials what happens not surprisingly they are not necessarily united on what should be the protocol here. should it change or should it not? but just discussing it is sort of an important first step. >> you hit it right on the head, it's not an easy conversation today, it's not like we should be telling people that they should always fight. the point is that this advice was made by the fbi since columbine. a lot has happened since columbine, they've learned from actual examples in active shooting. the idea that is spreading among law enforcement that's becoming louder than a whisper is maybe we should retrain our brains, rethink of how we respond in an active shooting situation.
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>> reporter: this is the moment brandon tsai fought back. >> he was preparing his weapon to fire. >> reporter: disarming a gunman in monterey park, california. in colorado springs, it was an army veteran. >> i needed to save my family. >> reporter: who helped wrestle away a gun from a shooter at club q nightclub, saving countless lives. james shaw junior disarmed an active shooter inside a tennessee waffle house in 2018. >> the decision to fight was because there was nothing else for me to lose in that moment. rorh seemingly daily mass shootings in america more people are fighting their assailants, heroic acts that have some in the law enforcement community opening saying -- >> the time is now to rethink how we prioritize what we're telling people who might find themselves in a mass shooting. >> reporter: you have probably heard these three words, run, hide, fight. >> you can survive a mass shooting, if you are prepared.
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>> reporter: those tactics from the fbi are echoed to law enforcement agencies across the country. they're used to teach civilians about how to react if confronted by an active shooter. security expert juliette kayyem penned in a recent article that advice may be dated. >> run, if you can, get away if you can, but what we've seen is that engagement with the shooter, trying to distract him, trying to demobilize him, trying to prevent him from reloading his gun, all of those things can help in minimizing the harm. >> 50% of active shooter events end before law enforcement get there. it doesn't even matter how much we train for these active events, but it matters a lot on how we train our civilians. >> reporter: franklin county sheriff's deputy has already adopted a different way of teaching his community on what to do in an active shooter situation. you teach avoid, deny, defend. >> correct. >> how is that different from run, hide, fight? >> hide, that's the big part
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that is different. these people go around looking for targets. when you have a hero step up it saves all of those targets from being potential victims. >> reporter: experts recognize fighting back hasn't always worked. in 2019 a north carolina college student charged a gunman and died, a week later a colorado high school student met the same fate. for shaw who lived when he fought back -- >> everybody is not wired like that, but if that's the only thing that you can do in that situation, that's the only thing that you can do. >> the more we understand what tactics of engagement do work, the more we can empower people to help and protect themselves. >> brynn, i have to ask a question here because basically they're saying surge of charge a highly-armed individual, right, which i suppose i could see that, asking that of an adult perhaps, but of children? i mean, is the advice for kids in schools to confront an adult with a gun? i mean, are they going to say that to my 14, 12 and
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7-year-old? >> look, this is why it's a very uncomfortable conversation to have, right? the whole idea, though, is to have a plan in place. they are not saying, you know -- the advice is to charge someone. the advice really is to rethink what you might do in that situation and those two examples that i gave you with brandon tsai and james shaw, listen, both of them froze, which is what most people do in those situations, but then something clicked in them and they found the opportunity to go after the gunman. that deputy that i also interviewed actually said think about it this way, if you are an active shooter situation and 20 of you in the room have this mentality of we can fight this person, you might have more luck disarming them than waiting for law enforcement because we've seen law enforcement cannot do their on their own and that's the point. >> there's also -- brynn and i were just talk about this in the break -- my 16-year-old had a lockdown drill at the high school and we talked about it. what he said to me s mom, i would run, i know where the exits are, the teachers say if you want to run now instead of hiding, that's fine, which
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brought to mine a conversation that the two of us had after uvalde when my son said to me when i look at the people coming to schools to shoot them up, at 15 years old he said they've been doing the same drills i've been doing my whole life. they know where to find me. they're going under the desk and in the closet, i'm not giving them the chance. >> we've had so many examples since then. uvalde, parkland, where we've seen it works, disarming this individual, even though it is a very uncomfortable conversation or advice to give. >> a lot to ask of a child. brynn gingras, thanks very much. coming up next, a terrifying moment caught on tape as -- well, plus as the u.s. spends four times the amount on health care as most other high income nations, a new report shows we are not any healthier.
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so, listen to this, the u.s. spends the most money on health care among high income countries, but has the worst
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health outcomes which is the results of a new study. america had the highest rate of people with multiple chronic diseases. >> sadly, this is not surprising. cnn reporter jacqueline howard says that the u.s. spends a lot on health care, but there is not a push for access to health care in this country. >> it is not surprising as you said, erica, that even though we spend the most, more than $10,000 per person, there is not easy access and most americans cannot afford the services they need, but we are spending two to three times more than south korea, new zealand and japan and you can see it on the chart that we are an outlier, and yet, we are seeing more chronic disease and we have the highest rate of avoidable deaths, when you are looking at the deaths by assault, again, we are the outlier, and we have assault death rate that is seven times higher than most high income countries, and this is what is
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eye-opening here, jim and erica, that we are spending more and seeing more lives lost as well. >> this is consistent message as well for some time, and other studies have indicated the same and is there some recommendations for the outcomes for the spending of that money? one of the researchers says that americans are living shorter lives because the health care system is not working as well as it could be to catch up with the other high income countries administration and congress would have to expand health care and act aggressive to health care costs and invest in services that would lead to a healthier population, and this is is the take away, jim and erica, and we will have to see what happens moving forward and how the lawmakers respond moving forward. >> it is a big policy change. thank you. and now, over 1,000 flights cancel and snarling traffic on
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visit coventrydirect.com. top of the hour this tuesday. i'm jim sciutto. >> i'm erica hill. happening right now, a dangerous winter storm bringing sleet, snow and ice to several areas. schools are closed in some area, and officials are urging people to stay home. as of this hour, more than 1,000 flights are canceled and the number of delays as well. we will take you to some of the most impacted areas ahead. >> secretary of state antony blinken is in the west bank finishing up a trip to the middle east.