tv CNN Newsroom CNN February 16, 2023 10:00am-11:00am PST
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the ship. we need new blood because we have some serious challenges. >> later today, haley will make her first campaign spot in new hampshire where failed 2022 senate candidate and election denier don boluk will endorse here. senator dianne feinstein announced they won't run again. katie porter and adam schiff have announced that we'll run, as well as barbara lee. a jarring forecast from the congressional budget office that the government is going to run out of cash as soon as july if congress doesn't raise the debt limit. the agency warning a default on the debt would be a disaster. thank you for joining "inside politics." casey hunt picks up our coverage right now.
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good afternoon. i'm casey hunt here in washington. we're going to begin with breaking news. just moments ago we learned that tesla is recalling hundreds of thousands of vehicles in order to remove the, quote, full self-driving feature. that is the beta software that lets the car drive with minimal human intervention. gabe cohen has our latest reporting on this. this is a lot of cars and a big deal. >> reporter: we're talking about poten potentially 363,000 tesla vehicles being recalled. we are just getting this recall report in that's coming from the national highway traffic safety administration. i want to walk you through what models we're talking about. so we're talking about the tesla model s, model x, model 3 and model y vehicles, spanning
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several years. 2016 all the way up until 2023. as you mentioned, all of these vehicles we're talking about are equipped with that self-driving beta software and now tesla is going to be giving a free software update. in the meantime, they're recalling these vehicles, the federal government is saying that the system, the issue with the system, the software issue, is that the system may allow the vehicle, according to the national highway traffic safety administration, it could allow the vehicle to act unsafe around intersections, such as traveling straight through an intersection while in a turn-only lane, entering a stop sign controlled intersection without coming to a complete stop, or potentially proceeding into an intersection during a steady yellow traffic signal without due caution. and the vehicle may respond insufficiently to a change in posted speed limits. again, this information is really just coming in and we do know that tesla is going to be providing that free software
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update. but 363,000 vehicles, casey, it gives you a sense of the scale of this recall and just how many americans this could be impacting, and certainly this is a story that's been talked about for a while, tesla's self-driving technology has been under the microscope. we saw ads during the super bowl that were criticizing that technology. so this is something we've been watching, casey. but, again, all of this information just coming in in the last couple of minutes, this recall. 363,000 tesla vehicles that are being looked at because of that self-driving technology, the software. >> gabe, can you just refresh me. you said at the top that you listed the models of teslas that are being recalled. i think tesla only has four models. can you just remind me which ones. 2016 to 2023, that's really quite a significant period of time that tesla has been in production at all. >> reporter: correct, correct. we're talking about the model s, the model x, the model 3 and the
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model y. i'm not sure, honestly, casey, if that does span all of tesla's models. but, yes, we are talking about just a ton of tesla vehicles right now that are being recalled. >> well, gabe cohen, thanks very much. you've got a lot of work ahead of you. thank you for getting it for us quickly. we appreciate it. lying under oath, that's what a grand jury is accusing some witnesses of doing in georgia's criminal probe of donald trump's 2020 election scheme. key sppieces were just released and the explosive takeaway is, quote, a majority of the grand jury believes that perjury may have been committed by one or more witnesses. the grand jury recommends that the district attorney seek appropriate indictments for such crimes where the evidence is compelling. there were no names mentioned, but we know that 75 people testified, including trump allies lying rudy giuliani, senator lindsey graham, michael flynn and john eastman.
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cnn's manu raju got reaction from senator graham a short time ago. >> are you confident in your testimony? >> yes. >> you haven't heard from them after that? >> no. >> what's your reaction to the general recommendation? >> there you go. we're covering all the angles with cnn's sara murray, kristen holmes and evan perez. sara, let me start with you. what are we learning from this grand jury report? >> these are really just snippets. the meat of what we want to know is who, if anyone, they recommended for criminal charges. of course that is not part of what we got today. the judge made clear that he thought it was too premature in the interest of fairness and due process to release that. we did get the introduction, conclusion and concerns about perjury. we also got a point the grand jury felt they needed to note, they said we find by a unanimous vote that no widespread fraud took place in the georgia 2020 presidential election that could result in overturning that election. that's in their introduction, it's where they run through that they talked to poll workers,
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investigators, they talked to georgia officials, and this is the conclusion they came to. obviously not the conclusion held by the former president and a number of his allies, but what this grand jury reached after months and months of investigating. now, whether anyone is going to face criminal charges, that is still the big open question. >> and on that question of charges, sara, do we have any sense of what the timeline might be for something like that to actually happen? >> it's really up to the fulton county district attorney, fani willis, if she wants to go to a regular grand jury and seek indictments. in a hearing last month, she said decision are imminent. someone described that to me as imminent in a course sense, not imminent as if we're about to go get coffee. so that could mean sometimes in the next couple of weeks or next couple of months. >> as someone who has worn both political and judicial reporting hats, the word "imminent" is different in those contexts.
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thank you for clarifying that. kristen, how is the former president and his camp react to go this? >> they were very concerned about this, they were watching it closely. we know advisers were worried about criminal referrals. they weren't sure what was going to be in the exhibits. once it was released they spent time going through it. we did get a statement from the campaign on this report. this is what they said. the long-awaited important sections of the georgia report which do not even president trump's name, have nothing to do with the president because president trump did absolutely nothing wrong. it continues to say, the president participated in two perfect phone calls regarding election integrity in georgia, which he is entitled to do. in fact, as president it was president trump's constitutional duty to ensure election safety, security and integrity. so a couple of things to note. one, as you mentioned earlier, there were no names, so it's not just former president trump's name that's not in here. there were zero names. but also there is a conflict here. he talks about election
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integrity and we know this grand jury unanimously voted that there was no election interference that would have me m merited them overturning the 2020 election in the state of georgia. one other piece of this, which is a new defense that i heard recently from former president trump and again in this statement, he goes on to say that there were lawyers on both of these calls and that nobody raised any objection to the fact that he was asking for these votes to be found. just an interesting twist here, something that goes along the lines of trump saying that it's freedom of speech for him to be able to say this on a phone call. we'll see, again, how the rest of trump's orbit is reacting to this news. >> and, evan, let me bring you into this just to expand our conversation beyond georgia to the special counsel. there's some major developments there as well. mark meadow getting subpoenaed and we're getting new details about the secret court battles. what do we know? >> look, you can see there's
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been a certain acceleration, i guess is the word you might want to use, of jack smith and the justice department's investigation. we saw just recently that they subpoenaed mark meadow, trying to get documents and testimony. of course he also just subpoenaed the vice president, the former vice president of the united states, mike pence. and a number of other people from the white house. and all of this, a lot of this, of course, is playing out behind closed doors, in secret. we know of at least eight court battles, and that's not including the coming ones over the former vice president and probably mark meadow, who certainly they're both going to fight their subpoenas. all of this playing behind the scenes in a secret court battle with the justice department trying to force people in the trump world to provide testimony that they and the former president are desperately trying to block. the only way we know about this is because we have people at the courthouse, casey gannon sits
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there all day every day, and we've been able to fwglean what been going on. the justice department is trying to say that because of the great public interest and because these things are extraordinary, that's the reason to keep it behind closed doors, which sort of turns transparency on its head, so to speak. the bottom line, though, is that this is an investigation, the justice department investigation that is accelerating. trump is doing everything in his power to slow it down, to try to run out the clock because he knows, and you, of course, know that the political calendar is upon us, and he's trying to figure out a way to make it impossible for the justice department to bring charges that could affect his run for the presidency, of course. >> it's a good point. props to the shoe leather reporting we've got going on. that's why it matters so much, we're able to find out tidbits and unspool this.
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thank you all very much for that reporting. let's bring in cnn analyst jen rodgers and ron brownstein to talk more about this. thank you both for being here. jen, what stands out to you in terms of the parts of this report now turning back to georgia that were made public? >> well, unfortunately, as we said in the prior segment, we didn't get a lot of information. i think it is notable that the grand jury unanimously found no fraud in the election and that sets them up to say, listen, we've talked to 75 witnesses, we reviewed a lot of other evidence and it sounds like they're going to recommend charges against more than one person, not just for perjury, but we can assume for other things as well. so we're all going to wait for that. but the perjury thing is interesting in part because when you think about the people who testified, the trump allies who testified in front of the grand jury, to charge perjury you can't just say an opinion that turns out to be wrong, like a statement that i think there was fraud in the 2020 election is
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not chargeable. you have to have a factual statement. that's why it's interesting to see who they will actually charge. it will have to be someone who alleges some sort of thing that is proven false. >> we don't know who they're accusing of perjury, we don't have any names in this report. but it does seem significant to me this is yet another group of people who are building a case against the former president's claims that this election was stolen. i'm interested to know how you think this plays out politically, especially as we approach campaign season here. 2024 already starting to get under way. how will the president's supporters view this and how do you think it affects the viability of a trump challenger in a republican primary? >> good questions. i think the answer to that question is different than it was the day before the midterm election. i think last year there were many analysts and strategists in
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the republican party who thought there would be a rally around the flag effect, that if trump got indicted by either georgia or the federal government, that his supporters would double down that this is proof the deep state is conspiring against him and out to silence you by silencing him. but i think the election may have changed that dynamic significantly. what we have seen since november is a growing number of basically republican elites, donors, strategists, elected officials, who believe that whatever they think about trump personally, he cannot win again. and i think through that prism, casey, indictments might become more evidence of that kind of conclusion. and i do think that there may be parts of the party that do, in fact, rally around him. i think it's guaranteed that if he gets indicted by one or more entities that it will only deepen the belief among republican leaders that he's too damaged to win again.
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>> it's actually a really interesting point, how much of that may have shifted when the election did not move as strongly in republicans' favor as anybody expected in 2022. to that point, on this legal question, you may have seen that statement that kristen holmes brought us, again calling the infamous phone call to brad raffensperger to find votes, quote, unquote, perfect. how does that phone call and what occurred on it, how does it operate as a piece of criminal evidence here? are they further jeopardizing themselves by continuing to say in public, hey, this was a perfect call? >> well, certainly any statements the former president makes is usable in a criminal trial against him. so, sure, to the extent he keeps talking, prosecutors keep recording and setting that aside for possible use some day. but that call, the recording of that call, is a terrific piece of evidence for prosecutors because it's an hour-long call where, despite being rebuffed at
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every turn, raffensperger and others are saying there's no fraud, there's nothing to be done here within the bounds of the law, he keeps pushing and keeps pushing. it's evidence that he's not listening, that he's being told there's no fraud and that he cannot win legally and he keeps telling them all he needs is for them to help him win illegally, is the implication. it's great evidence and they're going to keep listening to what he says and putting it away for possible use if an indictment comes down. >> ron, of course, we shouldn't lose sight of the fact that obviously we're covering it from a national perspective, but this is happening in georgia where it's going to be covered widely in the national and local and regional press, and georgia has become a more and more important swing state. trump lost it in 2020, republicans have lost the senate there. let's say trump is the nominee because we would have to obviously get to a general election before this would
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really matter, but how much damage does this do to donald trump in a state that actually really matters if you want to win the white house? >> really good point. you look at the swing states, at the absolute fulcrum of american politics, the five states that flipped from trump in '16 to biden in '20 and made biden president, we saw a very clear pattern, in arizona, michigan, pennsylvania, where republican candidates, who are aligned with trump, just cratered in the white collar suburbs. the one exception to that pattern was brian kemp in georgia. it was largely because i think he was defined to the suburban voters as independent of trump because of his standing up on the 2020 election. i think the message is pretty clear that in all of these places that ultimately decided the election in 2020, it's going to be an uphill fight for trump
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to reclaim the voters who said no to him in '18, no time in '20, and no to him again in '22. it is a clear warning sign, i think, for republicans about his ability to win those places. that's not absolute, the economy could be bad enough and so forth. but i think the fact that kemp did better than nominees in other states is a really important signal of just how toxic trump was in these places that are likely to decide the next presidential result. >> and kemp showed elites as well that you can actually win with a, quote, unquote, normal republican that's not donald trump, even when trump is on the ballot. jen, let me talk to you for a second about the mark meadow doj subpoena briefly. how does it suggest the special counsel sees meadows here? what are they looking for from him? >> well, he had been cooperative, if you remember, with the january 6th committee, turning over tons of electronic
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messages at the beginning, and then he stopped cooperating. so some thought he might actually be cooperating with doj. i think the subpoena shows that he is not currently cooperating, otherwise they wouldn't need to subpoena him. it looks like they want him as a witness, if they were planning to charge him with evidence that they were collecting from other witnesses and other information, then they wouldn't call him to the grand jury. doj rarely brings targets. it seems to me he's not cooperating, but they're looking to bring him into the grand jury. they'll likely have the immunize him. they want his testimony. i think they're planning for him to be a central component of whatever case they end up bringing. >> interesting. jen rodgers and ron brownstein, thank you both for being a part of the discussion. i appreciate your time. just minutes from now at the top of the hour president biden will speak about the objects recently shot down by u.s. fighter jets. cnn's jeremy diamond joins us. what are we learning about this?
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>> that's right. we're expecting president biden to deliver remarks within the next 40 minutes or so, at 2:00 p.m. he is expected to for the first time in a more formal setting address this issue of that chinese spy balloon that the u.s. spot down, and also those three unidentified objects that were shot down between pfriday and sunday. this will be the first time we hear from the president comprehensively on this matter, and it comes after several days of discussions among white house aides about the possibility and the merits of the president speaking on this matter publicly or not. and what has really changed over the last couple of days to get white house aides to the point where the president is, in fact, going to speak on this now, is two things. first of all, there has been growing calls from members of congress on both sides of the aisle for the president to come out and address the american public to try and quell the concerns that have rightfully emerged over the weekend after we saw all of these objects
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being downed. and secondly is also the notion that u.s. intelligence officials are increasingly confident that those three unidentified objects that were shot down between friday and sunday, that they were likely benign or for commercial purposes. they've grown increasingly confident in that assessment. now we're at a point where the president can come out and talk about that and he'll also likely talk about the interagency effort that he has tasked the national security adviser, jake sullivan, with launching, which is to identify how the u.s. responds to these types of aerial phenomenon going forward. the u.s. is also expected to release some new protocols on how they will treat these objects, particularly like those that were flying within commercial airspace, unlike that chinese spy balloon, flying at some 60,000 feet, way a lot of commercial airliners. these last three objects were in that area of 20,000 to 30,000 feet, where you might see issues with commercial flights. >> right.
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and on another topic, the president today went to have his annual physical exam. he just returned to the white house in the last hour or so. do you know when we could get some results from that and if what we see will actually tell us anything? >> yeah, we are expecting to ssee some kind of summary. so far we just heard the white house press secretary, karine jean-pierre, come out and say it was fairly straight faforward. he did undergo a battery of tests at walter reed national medical center this morning. he spent several hours there getting these various tests done. we know that it does not appear that he was put under anesthesia at any point. we know that previously if there is some kind of colonoscopy, that the vice president is temporarily empowered. that does not appear to have happened this time. but of course this comes as president biden is preparing for his potential re-election
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campaign and questions about his age are sure to be a central focus. he is, of course, the oldest sitting president in u.s. history and that is certainly something that is on the president's mind and on, of course, the minds of voters as well as we approach that 2024 campaign. >> jeremy diamond, thank you very much for your reporting. the outrage and worries are growing in eastern ohio. residents are demanding more answers and more help after the toxic train disaster has upended their lives. the epa is set to talk about it later this hour. we're going to bring that to you live. >> plus, chilling new details about the michigan state university shooter. what we're learning about his weapons and list of targets. for adults with generalized myasasthenia gravis who are positive for acetylcholine receptor antibodies, it may feel like the world is moving without you. but the picture ishanging, with vyvgart.
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environmental protection agency is at the site of the toxic train derailment in east palestine, ohio. he is looking into norfolk southern's response. ohio's governor is asking for federal help with the recovery effort. last night rail company officials did not show up at a town hall meeting over safety concerns. angry residents did show up, of course. they're worried their town isn't safe and they want answers. >> we find it very hard to believe that there is no particulate matter in the air that can cause us harm here in our small community. >> cnn's jason carroll was at that meeting, unlike those norfolk southern representatives. what's the latest? >> reporter: well, first of all, the head of the epa made it very
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clear that he was disappointed that representatives from norfolk southern did not show up last night and he made it very clear that they will be held accountable. last night we heard from a number of residents who still have a lot of unanswered questions. they want to know if there are going to be people out here who are going to be able to test them for medical reasons, maybe five or six years, maybe ten years from now. they want assurances that the air and the water is safe, and they also want to know how much longer the epa intends to be here. will they stick it out and stay through the course? i put that question to the epa administrator just a short while ago. >> we will be here for as long as it takes to see this process through. i want to assure the people -- >> when you say as long as it takes, i think the question is long-term. is someone going to be here a year from now, two years from
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now, to come back and test the water, test the soil? >> i'm very clear when i say as long as it takes. we will go through this process with the citizens of east palestine for as long as it takes. the federal government will be here for as long as it takes. >> reporter: ohio's governor, casey, did speak with the white house this morning about the need for more federal help. according to his office, they requested assistance from the department of health, as well as the cdc, saying that they need some of those people from the cdc on the ground here immediately to try to meet with people who say that they are having symptoms as a result of what has happened here. and i also want to go over a little more here, new information we're getting in from the ohio governor's office. according to the office, they say they have tested 474 homes, the air quality inside those homes, and initially 75 of those homes had elevated levels of
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some of the toxins that were released as a result of the train derailment, but then they said further testing showed that those contaminants were not present. so once again, officials out here saying that the air quality is safe, that the municipal water quality is safe, the residents not assured of that. >> yeah, can i just follow up with you on the question about the water? because there had been some questions yesterday where people were warned like, hey, drink bottled water anyway while we figure this out. obviously there are other questions about water use, like when you take a shower. what is safe and what do we know about the water quality right now? >> reporter: and all very valid questions. the state and local officials are saying that the municipal water supply has been tested and that it is safe. now, those people who have wells, what they are suggesting is if you have a well, you should still continue drinking bottled water until your well water is tested.
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i spoke to a woman who lives just downstream from where we are right now. there were dead fish in the stream behind her home. she has a well. she has been drinking bottled water and she is still waiting, at last check, for someone to come out and test her well water. for those people in east palestine using private well water, the suggestion is that you continue using bottled water until testing can be completed. >> important information. jason carroll, thanks very much for your reporting. cnn chief climate correspondent bill weir joins us now. good to see you. some people in the town say that they've had a hard time breathing or they felt burning in their eyes, and obviously we were seeing pictures, ohio has confirmed thousands of fish died in the wake of the train wreck. can you help us understand what is in these chemicals that made this such a disaster? >> absolutely. it's really sort of a witch's brew cocktail of at least five
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different chemicals. some of them were not initially revealed to the folks there. that's one big reason for the mistrust you're seeing. the big one, vinyl chloride, in pvc piping. as it burns, it burns into a world war i weapon, respiratory weapon, as well as hydro caloric acid. we saw in california when the homes burned, the pipes when they melted soiled the water supply. benzene, these are carcinogens in long-term exposure. the butyl acrylate, isobutylene, these cause nausea and aquatic life in the long-term. you talked about fish killed, the 3,500 fish, they believe that's in a plume moving down the ohio river. so they can sort of track that
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as well. and there's no new source of this chemical that's like a pipeline spill or rupture that's continuously pumping chemicals into the water supply. they think by dilution of that in the water and then in the air, by burning off all of that vinyl chloride in the early days there, a lot of that, experts tell me, is probably out of the air. it's the soil that hasn't been moved that has residents worried about what's going to happen to that. >> you walk through it that way, no wonder people are so concerned. bill weir, thank you so much for that update. still to come here, chilling new details about the michigan state shooter. what we are learning about his guns, his ammunition and his possible list of other targets. , we tried electric unicycles. i think i've got it! doggy-paddle! only pay for what you need. ♪ liberty. liberty. liberty. libertyty. ♪ i'm off to america's best
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two guns, bus tickets, more ammunition and a list of targets. today police revealed chilling new details about the deadly michigan state shooting, including where the gunman may have been heading next. adrienne broaddus is in lansing. what have we learned? >> reporter: casey, we learned the two guns recovered were purchased legally, but according to investigators, they were not registered. investigators also telling us they recovered a backpack the
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shooter was carrying, and in that backpack they found eight loaded magazines of 9 millimeter ammunition. they discovered a pouch containing 50 loose rounds of ammo and two empty magazines. investigators saying today inside of a wallet, they found a note. and that note was two pages. it listed businesses, this 43-year-old shooter wanted to target. investigators saying among the businesses was a warehouse where he once worked. they also told us about the encounter before that 43-year-old man ended his life. >> two officers made contact with the shooter approximately two feet from mcrae. they exited their vehicle, ordered him to show his hands. however, he produced a weapon and then killed himself.
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it does appear that from the body worn camera that mcrae did not verbalize anything to the officers prior to him shooting himself or taking his own life. >> reporter: we didn't find out why mcrae targeted michigan state university. it's something investigators say they still don't know. >> adrienne broaddus, thank you very much for the update. let's bring in cnn law enforcement and intelligence analyst john miller to help us understand this a little better. john, thanks for being here. in his note, the shooter did list several targets, some of which he seemed to have a history with, and there were some potential misgivings there. but at the end of the day, he chose michigan state. what do you take away from this reality? >> so in the note he says, you know, he has 20 members of his teams and that they'll be going out to other targets, but he states, you know, my name is
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ant anthony mcrae and i'm going to shoot up the state university. he basically assigned that location to himself. but having talked to profilers who have reviewed the contents of the note, what they suggest is here is a loner, he has no relationships, he has no friend, there are no teams. but he has created this note to increase the feelings of fear, the menace that he possesses to make himself out to be this leader of a group to help stoke that fear. his target list, the question there is, casey, did he expect to get away with the shooting at the university, and then to go through other targets that were mentioned in his note, perhaps leaving the note behind, again, to instill fear? or was he always intending to either be confronted by police
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or take his own life? >> right. so one of the things that stuck out to me, the gunman made references to past active shooter situations and mentioned the supermarket shooting in colorado. what does that say to you and the idea that these are copycat shootings? what can be done about that? >> well, in his note he makes a reference to the same supermarket, but in colorado springs, as opposed to boulder where the shooting happened. so the question, you know, with people, the behavioral science unit at the fbi academy in quantico who are going over the note, did he mix that up or confuse that, was that a target that means something to him because it's in a different city? what do all of these targets mean? but, you know, he paints himself to be the victim. he says people hate me, they made me what i am today, a killer. no one noticed me, why do they
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hate me? i am a person. so what you get the sense of is not just that he's a loner, which his family told us, but this increasing feeling of isolationism, injustice collector, all of these tiny sleights or things that bothered him in his contacts have build up to the point that he's created a target list and that he is trying to re-write his story. >> really tragic outcome from all of that. john miller, thanks very much for digging into that a little bit with us. we appreciate it. a new report released minutes ago raises new concerns about america's youngest children. the solution could be as close as the produce aisle. use it to set t and track your goals, big and small... and see how changes yoyou make today... could help putut them within reach.
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america's youngest children are falling short in their daily intake of fruits and vegetables. that's the word from a cdc report released just minutes ago. cnn's senior medical correspondent, elizabeth cohen, joins us with more. i have a 3-year-old. tell me what i need to know. >> what you need to know is that many american children just aren't getting enough fruits and vegetables. let's take a look at what this cdc report found. they found, and this is a huge study with more than 18,000 children, ages 1 to 5, so we're talking little children, almost half did not eat a vegetable every day, about one in three did not eat a fruit every day, almost 60% drank at least one sugary beverage a week. this is at a time when childhood
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obesity rates are high. 13% of children ages 2 to 5 are a b obese. 14 million children and adolescents in the u.s. are obese, and i know as a mom of four how hard it is to get your children to eat right. it definitely is a struggle, especially when packaged foods are so attractive. >> elizabeth cohen, thank you so much for that update. we really appreciate it. another leak, another delay for a mission to the international space station. we're going to have the latest coming up next. and feeding ththeir dogs dog food that's actually... well, food. developed with vets. made from real meat and veggies. portioned for your dog. and delivered right to your door. it's smarter, healthier pet food.
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stranded in space. an astronaut and two russian cosmonauts at the international space station could have to wait months longer to return to earth after issues with multiple spacecraft needed to bring them back. kristin fisher joining me now. what's going on here? >> it all boils down to, believe it or not, coolant leaks on not one but two russian spacecrafts. a coolant leak in space much more difficult to fix than a coolant leak on earth when you can drive your car to a garage and get it fixed. the first leak happened in december, that coolant spewing out into space from the soyuz
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spacecraft. that was caused by a micrommicro micrometeroid strike. the second leak, that brown dot right there. that is a second coolant leak. russia doesn't know what caused the leak. they say the two incidents are not related. this is highly unusual, very problematic for the three-person crew that was planning on riding that first soyuz spacecraft back to earth. that crew involves two russian cosmonauts and one nasa astronaut, frank rubio. you can see him on the right. now russia is delaying the launch of the spacecraft that was supposed to be their replacement ride to replace that first one that sprung the coolant leak. this crew, those three
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astronauts, they were all expected to spend about six months in space. now this means that they could be spending about twice as long. they could be spending up to a year in space. it's happened before, but just imagine if you're that crew or you're the families on the ground waiting for them, you think you'll be gone for six months and you're gone for a year. it could happen. >> i was going to say, my heart goes out to the families waiting for them to come back. thank you very much for that. that will do it for us this hour. thank you so much for joining us. don't go anywhere. we'll have more news coming up next. to see homes in your b bud. you're staying in school, jacobob! realtor.com. to each their home. i think i'm ready for this. heck ya! with e*trade you're ready for anything. marriage. kids. college. kids moving back in after college. ♪ finally we can eat. and then we looked around and said, wait a minute, this isn'even our stroller!
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