tv CNN Newsroom CNN March 9, 2023 12:00pm-1:00pm PST
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working as a schoolteacher or a firefighter or any of you in this room. so my plan is to make sure the corporations begin to pay their fair share. it used to be 35%. we cut it down to 21%. i think we should be paying 28%. we should be paying more than 21%. i made clear under my plan, no one making less than $400,000 will see a penny in federal taxes go up. not a single penny. why did i do it at $400,000? i doubt anybody here makes $400,000. i did it to make the case that i'm not going after ordinary folks. we're also going to save billions of dollars on going after criminals who commit
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fraud. you know, a lot of people are saying to me that they don't like the idea, i'm prepared to forgive up to $20,000 if you got a pell grant, or $10,000 for anybody who has a student loan during the recession. guess what? we pay the so-called ppe program, we paid i think it's $900 billion. don't hold me to that number, for anybody who had a tough time with their business during the pandemic. so they could pay employees and do -- but guess what? you may remember, i was running for office at the time. you may remember that i had a big fight with the former president, and maybe future president, bless me, father.
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any way, here's the deal. what happened was, the folks are really going after me -- by the way, 90% of all the debt forgiveness for student loans will go to -- under my plan -- 90% will go to families making under $75,000 a year, okay? 90%. here's the deal. the ppp program forgave a lot more. i'm not suggesting it should. but the big fight going on was, what happened was, our good friend, the former president, decided all the inspectors general, the guys who watch everything, i did the -- a major program under obbarack obama. he asked me to deal with the deficit reduction plan.
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i had all these inspectors checking every decision i made. he fired them all. i said you shouldn't do that. guess what? now we're finding out there is billions of dollars stolen. so my justice department is now going after them. we're doubling down on prosecuting criminals who stole relief workers meant to keep workers and small businesses afloat during the pandemic. we're going to triple our anti-fraud strike force. double the statute of limitations so we have more time to go after these guys. crack down on identity fraud and criminal send yndsyndicates. let's get something straight, my budget cuts wasteful spending by getting rid of tax breaks for big oil companies who made $200 billion in profit last year in the midst of a worldwide
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recession. $200 billion. and folks, over the last two years, we made a lot of things that -- a lot of progress with republican help, as well. sadly, from what i'm hearing, the house of representatives is suggesting cooperation may have come to an end. that's why talk about the maga republicans. this is not your father's republican party. maga republicans are threatening to default on the national debt. keep talking about the national debt, the trillion dollar debt. it took 200 years to accumulate that debt. that's not recent debt. this is all the debt that's been accumulating for over 200 years. by the way, president trump, when he was president in four years, he increased the national debt by 25%, just in four years. remember that multibillion dollar tax break, did you get any of it.
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raise your hand if you did. i'm serious. so 200 years accumulated, and that administration added 25%. i met with the new speakers of the house and how we should settle our differences without jeopardizing the full faith and credit of the united states. we have never reneged on that death. now they're telling me if i didn't do what they want, they're going to renege on the debt. every institution says that will cause a massive recession, a massive recession and put us in the hole for a long, long time. well, folks, here's what i said. instead of making threats about the default, which would be catastrophic, let's take that off the table. let's have a conversation about how to grow the economy, lower cost and reduce the deficit. i just laid out the bulk of my budget. republicans in congress should
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do the same thing. then we can sit down and see where we disagree. my republican friends say they want to reduce the deficit, but we did the math and what they put forward so far. and our estimate, i'm happy to be proven wrong, my plan is going to reduce the deficit by $3 trillion over the years. i want to cut taxes. they want to cut taxes for the wealthy and large corporations. take away the power we just gave medicare to negotiate lower drug prices. as i said, we cut the deficits significantly, $160 billion just by doing that. and if they say they want to cut the deficit, but their plans would explode the deficit, how are they going to make the math work? what are they going to work? as i said in the state of the
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union, you may have seen the back and forth with the maga republicans and me, through their shouting, they seemed to say they're not going to cut social security and medicare. like i said, what about medicaid? what about the affordable care act? what about veterans benefits? what about law enforcement? what about aid to rural communities? what about support for our military? what will they -- how will they make these numbers add up? here's the deal. if maga republicans in congress try to refeel the affordable care act, social security, medicare, medicaid, i'm not going to let them. folks, we haven't even talked about my budget for national security or foreign policy. my budget makes robust investments in our military and defense. let's see what the republicans propose. and let's be clear where i stand, i'm not allowed to --
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we're the greatest fighting force in the history of the world. so we're going on too long and i apologize. let me say this one more time -- if republicans use the threat of default, they're risking america's threat and security, it's dangerous. so let me close with this. my budget is about investing in america and all of america, including places and people and folks who have been forgotten. amid the economic upheaval in the past four decades, too many people have been left behind or treated like they're invisible. not anymore. i promise you i see you. we've got work to do, but we made a lot of progress in the first two years.
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families across the country are starting to breathe a little either, but we got further to go. and i can honestly say, i have never been more optimistic about america's future than i am today. i mean that sincerely. as you can tell, i've only been around a few years. like 400. folks, let me -- we just have to remember who we are. we're the united states of america. there's nothing, nothing beyond our capacity. i mean it. nothing beyond our capacity, if we do it together. so god bless you all, and may god protect our troops. thank you, thank you, thank you. ♪ ♪ >> >> joe biden there in philadelphia, talking about some of the elements of his budget plan there. top line elements here, cutting
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the deficit by close to $3 trillion over a decade. he mentioned some investments in innovation, affordable housing, law enforcement as well, and securing and saving medicare, social security, solvency for medicare there through 2050. let's bring in our team here. cnn's capitol hill reporter. arl arlette, let's start with you. we talked about it last hour that this would have the energy of a campaign speech. i counted at least a dozen references to maga republicans. what did you hear? what stood out? >> yeah, victor, that stood out to me, as well. you repeatedly heard joe biden trying to draw a contrast between his proposals and those espoused by "maga republicans." of course, the maga republican
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label is a way he tries to tie the republicans currently in congress to former president donald trump. there were also several mentions of the former president in his remarks, including one moment where the president seemed to reference the upcoming re-election battle, saying -- referring to president trump as the former president and maybe future president. he then did the sign of the cross. but this certainly provided the president with a venue and opportunity to try to draw a contrast between his proposal and those being proposed by republicans. he tried to argue that his budget is aimed at protecting and enhancing the security of those who have been forgotten, those who have felt inviz i believe in this country. he talked about the efforts to lower prescription drugs, expanding money for child care, as well as reinforcing or reinstating the child tax credit, and talked about capping
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insulin at $35 a month for all americans. but of course, this is all playing out against the backdrop of that upcoming fight over the debt ceiling. one thing the president did in this speech is call out house speaker kevin mccarthy, urging him to up veil his own budget proposal for republicans. the president saying he's willing to meet with mccarthy once he has that budget outlined. so the president here today trying to lay out the stakes about the policy and the political battles that will ensue in the coming year. >> melanie, the white house acknowledges that this budget suspect going anywhere on cap tom -- capitol hill. what has been the reaction on capitol hill? >> we have seen republicans coming out swinging against this. speaker kevin mccarthy tweeted in response to the fact that the budget would increase spending on a number of programs. he said washington doesn't have a deficit problem, it has a
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spending problem. it's not about the revenue but how much they're spending. that is what republicans want to target. but what joe biden did today was essentially dare republicans to put their ideas on paper that. is something that kevin mccarthy plans to do. he's been having these quickly meetings within his party. they're trying to find consensus on a budget. but it's been a slow-moving process. i conduct up with the house budget chairman, and he said they're in no rush. he suggested that it might be may when they put something forward. a spokesman later walked that back. but republicans are trying to achieve something very difficult. they are trying to enact a deep spending cut without touching social security and medicare. and without raising taxes. so obviously, the buse are not binding resolutions, but with
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kevin mccashrthy working with h majority, the clock is really on starting today, now that biden has his budget out, all eyes are on republicans to see what they come up with. >> catherine here with me. your top takeaways? >> i think what was interesting here is that besides of biden taking a victory lap, he's trying to portray republicans as the fiscally irresponsible party. that republicans always say democrats are big spenders, big government, that they can't be trusted with your dollars. biden is trying to flip the script and say, the republicans are the ones who don't have a budget that adds up. and look, to be fair, in biden's own budget, he tacitly admits that most of the trump tax cuts are things that he would support extending. he doesn't account for that cost when he says i'm going to reduce deficits by $3 trillion. he doesn't include the cost of all of that. so there's some budgetary
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gimmicks in there, as well. i saw a lot of this positioning being about, we are going to portray or in biden's view, we are going to portray democrats as fiscally responsible. we're going to raise the debt limit, and we are the ones that will get the budgets to add up. >> one thing that melody mentioned is that the clock starts now on what the republican plan is, and if there is something that has some substantial spending cuts that 218 republicans can agree on. some say you can't touch the pentagon. there is, of course, the majority, if not all of the republicans in the house who say we're not going to cut -- not all of them, most say we're not going to touch social security or medicare. so if you make some substantial cuts, there's not a whole lot of territory left. >> i know. they have rolled out almost every possible mathematical path for doing so.
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not only have they ruled out defense cuts, entitlement cuts, veterans benefits, et cetera, they have ruled out tax increases. in fact, they want to extend all of the trump tax cuts. which costs money. if you add stuff up, you have to zero out almost everything else in the budget. they're not going to zero out border security. so even if somebody in the caucus could come up with a plan that makes sense, i don't believe they have the votes to get it through. >> clock starts to see that plan. thank you all very much. joining me now, alice stewart, maria cardova. alice, the president making medicare solvent, keeping it kol
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vent through 2050 -- solvent through 2050. your reaction to what we know about the president's budget plan? >> the first thing i was encouraged by, he starts off the speech in a positive way talking about how he had the conversation with speaker mccarthy weeks ago and agreed look, we're going to put out a plan, but this is a good place to find where we agree, where we disagree, and how we move on from there. but the question now, is what is going to happen when it gets back to congress? this bill, this proposal as he's put out today is dead on arrival with republicans in washington. not maga republicans, i'm talking about republicans, simply because of the large emphasis on taxing the job creators in this country. what mccarthy said, what we have in washington, we don't have a revenue problem, we have a spending problem. republicans are going to focus very carefully on what they can do to cut expenditures,
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specifically with climate change and global warming policies, but cutting the spending and not working and putting a focus on taxing people. i talked with many republicans. they say there is a plan in place, but they want to look at biden's proposal and see where they agree on this. but then put out a very thoughtful, calculated plan that would balance the budget in ten years but look at cutting wasteful spending without touching social security and medicare. >> i want to come back on balancing the budget in ten years and what that would take, but maria, catherine said inside this budget the kind of admission that the trump tax cuts are not going away. does that sit well with you? >> well, i think what the focus for the president is that he wants to help working class families, middle class families, with as much -- taking away the tax burden as much as possible. so all of that is in there.
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but what you will also see and hear is that joe biden does want to focus on balancing the budget and reducing the deficit, which is why the $3 trillion of reducing the deficit is a huge priority and is really emphasized in his speech today. i think what is interesting, victor, and we'll see what the details are. i do want to see what he keeps in there and what he takes away in there. but what is interesting, even putting that aside, is that my friend, alice, talks about how republicans are focused on the problem of spending. well, it's interesting, because when trump was offering all of his tax cuts, and we know that they cost trillions of dollars, and he bloated the deficit and exploded spending, there was no word whatsoever from those same exact republicans who were supposedly worried about spending in terms of what trump
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was spending for tax cuts that did go mostly to wealthy corporations around to the richest americans. and so that's what i want to see, both the details of biden's budget, as well as the details from what the republican budget is, because right now, this is, and i agree that it is probably dead on arrival, but from a messaging stand point, joe biden and the white house and democrats are winning because they are focused on helping middle class, working class families get ahead, focused on protecting social security and medicare, when you have republicans talking about cutting it. so we'll see. >> alice, you said this plan coming from republicans is thoughtful and gets to a balanced budget in ten years. so social security and medicare are off the table, i think both parties agreed to that. we saw the president talk about it. and speaker mccarthy said that. there are many republicans who say that they're not going to be defense cuts. the pentagon is off the table,
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too. the committee for responsible federal budget finds to get to a balanced bum etdget, all other federal spending would have to be cut by 78%. is that realistic to make this claim you're going to get there, if that's the kind of cut you have to make? >> it's very difficult, and it will take a lot of negotiating. but republicans are committed to doing just that. as you said, victor -- >> a 78% cut to everything else, including veterans affairs, to homeland security? >> well, they made it quite clear they're not going to touch homeland security, unlike the biden administration, even amidst the crisis we have at the border. what they are going to look at is policies overall that are wasteful federal expenditures and will look line by line, agency by agency where they can cut. it's no secret that republicans are opposed to a lot of the climate change proposals that this administration has put
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forward. also, the tax relief for student loans. so there are many programs they are looking at very carefully that they plan to cut. but most importantly, the focus will be on spending cuts, and not taxing job creators in this country. smaz rheeia, alice, we have to wrap it there. thank you for being with us. by the way, they have a podcast together, hot mics, from left to right. ladies, thank you. >> thank you, victor. more than 77,000 u.s. workers were laid off last month, and while that is down 24% from january, it's more than quadruple what we saw last february. the tech industry is seeing the worst of it. cnn's matt egan is here now. businesses are laying off workers like it's 2009. >> yeah, in 2009, that was during the depth of the great recession. there's a couple things going on here. one, a lot of companies, especially tech, they overhired during covid, now they're correcting.
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and also, investors are worried and are cutting costs. if you look at the numbers, almost 181,000 jobs have been cut through the first two months of this year. that is five times the same point last year, it's the most since 2009. what is interesting, though, when you look at the official government statistics, the jobs market looks healthy, although that could be starting to change. new numbers show that initial jobless claims, that's a proxy for layoffs, that jumped by the most since early october. this is a weekly number, but it is worth keeping an eye on. this comes ahead of tomorrow's big government jobs report. that is expected to show that hiring slowed to 205,000 jobs in february. that is a big slowdown frombust january. unemployment would be tied for the lowest sense 1969.
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let's talk about general motors. they said that they could save $2 billion without layoffs in january. what are they saying now? >> they just announced they're going to offer buyouts. they are encouraging workers to look at this buyout offer. they're offering it to all u.s. salaried employees who have been there five years or more and buyouts to executives who have been with the company two years. they say this will cost them $1.5 billion but will make them more competitive. this is coming during a time of really big uncertainly in the auto industry. not only are they worried about a potential recession, they're dealing with higher borrowing costs and this ambitious and expensive transition away from traditional engines to electric vehicles. so that is forcing them to rethink their business models and rethink how they're spending money. >> matt egan, we'll look ahead to that jobs report. ukraine's military is on high alert for more air strikes after russia bombarded major
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now to a cnn exclusive. for years, an iranian american businessman has been wrongfully detained in iran, housed at the notorious prison in tehran. while his battle for freedom started in 2015 when he was first denied the right to leave the country. now in a rare interview from prison, he spoke to our chief international anchor christiane amanpour, and she's here with me now. i was telling you before that i planned to watch this a little bit on your cnn i show of the interview. once i started watching it and listening to him tell his story, i couldn't turn it away. >> i know. as a journalist you realize how extraordinary it is to interview somebody in prison. you have to be careful how far you go so they don't get in
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trouble. already he's taking the risk to speak out to us. as you said, he's been in for seven years. he was convicted of some nebulous charge basically amounting to cooperating with a hostile country, assuming that means the u.s. he's u.s.-american. and he's very out of options and at the end of his tether and wants to figure out what he can do to get some attention from the white house and to see whether the white house and the administration will do what it says, and that is make the release of all of the american and iranian hostages in prison their top priority. this is a little bit of what he said to us. >> they have chosen this risk, and it should just tell you how dire my situation has become at this point. i've been a hostage for 7 1/2 years now. that's six times the duration of
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the hostage crisis. i keep getting told that i might be rescued. >> he also talked about his time at the detention center, being treated like a dog, fed from a bowl on the floor. and during your interview, i wondered how is this possible that he's having this conversation with you from prison? >> how is it possible indeed. he was specifically talking about his first two years in prison when it was solitary and those terrible conditions. now he says he's in a general ward, ie, a more communal part of the prison with others, including perhaps, although we don't actually know, there are
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two other americans there, iranian-americans. and i guess, you know, i guess he's allowed to talk to his lawyer and others occasionally. any way, that's what we think. he wanted to do this. as i said, he was out of options. there is a -- an analyst has told us that there is some kind of process that's been underway, but in the end, it will probably involve a deal between iran and the united states. and for the u.s. is sometimes unpalatable. but experts believe the u.s. needs to be able to chew gum and walk at the same time. condemn iran for the things they disagree with on iran, and yet work with them to get back their nationals and to get a nuclear deal to make the world a safer place. so this is something that will fall on joe biden's desk. that's why he's appealing directly to the president. >> and was speaking directly to the president. the questions, the frustration of watching other americans come home. we all know the stories.
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>> there have been at least three times since he's been in jail since 2016, where iran and america have swapped prisoners. each time he's been left off. we did put this to the u.s. government, the state department just recently said, we remain committed. it is a high priority. we do have regular contact. the fact is, the white house has not had regular contacts with the family. america has been dealing with this since 199. he talked about the hostage crisis in 1979 at the belt ging of the iranian revolution. but he's been there six times longer, and they're desperate, taken in for no good reason at all, except for political pawns. >> the entire interview is online. he talks about his father who came for him and was -- >> was arrested as well, and only recently in october was released by the iranians on
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medical grounds. he's 86 years old. >> remarkable interview. thank you for bringing it to us. ukrainian military officials say at least 11 people are dead after a russian missile attack. several regions were bombarded by more than 80 missiles. the russians targeted critical infrastructure, residential buildings. and people in kyiv called the attack savage. >> translator: it's hard to say. it doesn't make sense to me, how this can be in the 21st century. they are some kind of wild people, just savages. >> military officials warn that the threat is not over. cnn's melissa bell is in kharkiv, one of the targeted areas. melissa, tell us what you're seeing there. >> reporter: not a great deal, victor. this is a city that's entirely in the dark ever since these missile strikes overnight. 15 landed here in the kharkiv
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region, targeting that infrastructure. so people are without electricity, heat, water, and that is the point of these attacks. we've just been hearing from an adviser to president zelenskyy saying these attacks are about reminding people inside ukraine that nowhere is safe. we haven't had these kind of strikes in about a month, so we had been expecting a fresh round of these attacks. that's what happening, said the adviser, where they had made it through. more than 80 missiles, about more than 30 were intercepted and stopped. six missiles made it through, and the point is, although they were ballistic missiles, they are nuclear capable. that's why ukraine at this stage is anxiously urging the west to do more to help in air defense systems, because we haven't seen them use that much. in the beginning, we saw them using the hyper sonic missiles, and it's taken all this time to
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be used again. they are extremely expensive and extremely dangerous. this is the concern now of the ukrainians. >> so what's happening with the fighting in the east? explain what's happening today there. >> reporter: that's right. i mean, this is an attempt to scare people around the country, to show nowhere is safe. the majority of the fighting, the intense fighting we have been seeing, is along that frontline. once again, bakhmut hit hard, but at other points to the north of that in places they are trying to push that front line westward. that tells you beyond the nationwide strikes that we saw, we've been hearing the air raid sirens here tonight that may continue for a second night, there is a determined effort along that frontline to put as much pressure on ukrainian forces as they can. >> melissa bell for us from kharkiv, thank you so much. the families of the two americans abducted and killed in mexico are eagerly awaiting for
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autopsy. the two roar aother americans w survived are also in brownsville. authorities are still learning and slowly releasing details of what happened here. what have you learned today, rosa? >> reporter: well, we are learning more about what happened in the hours and in the days after the kidnapping. this is according to mexican authorities. they say that they found, and law enforcement in mexico, found a clinic where the americans were given first aid, and also they seized an ambulance that was used to transport the americans to that clninic. it's important to note there are private ambulance services in mexico, and there are these clandestine clinics. mexican authorities are saying that no one was arrested at any of these locations, whether it was where they found the ambulance or the clinic or both. no one has been arrested. so far, the only individual that has been arrested is that
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24-year-old who was arrested when the americans were found on the outskirts of the city by this wooden house. now, normally when there is a high profile case hike this one that involves americans, mexico usually responds by sending troops to the border, to show some sort of force on the border. that's exactly what we are seeing right now. mexico announcing that hundreds of soldiers have been deployed, intcluding 200 mexican soldiers and 100 mexican national guard soldiers. they are expected to be here in the area. where i am right now, and what you see behind me is an international crossing between brownsville and the town, and what we are expecting, victor, in the next few hours is for the repatriation of the two
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americans who died. so we expect to see a caravan that will cross into brownsville, and that caravan is expected to head directly to a funeral home here in brownsville. what's going to happen after that is a second autopsy. and victor, quite frankly, that second autopsy will be the independent account that the u.s. government will have about what happened to these americans. it will be an independent cause and manner of death and toxicology reports. quite frankly, it will be the closest they will get to an independent verification of what happened so they don't have to rely on forensics for that to mexican authorities who conducted the first autopsy. right now, we're waiting for a repatriation of these two americans, and the two other survivors are not too far from here in a hospital, still receiving treatment. victor? >> rosa flores for us there in brownsville. thank you.
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today, leaders in louisville are vowing to make changes after the justice department released that scathing report about the city's police department. the report says officers routinely used excessive force and aggressive style of policing, and unreasonable tactics against black people. the city's mayor people and interim police chief spoke with our team on cnn this morning about the report. >> we're not waiting, we're not stopping, we're moving aggressively ahead. whether the doj was here or not, we should be a premiere department. we should be a department that the citizens of louisville can be proud of. and guess what? for us internally, to be proud of ourselves. so no, we're not waiting. we're moving forward. >> as the department of justice themselves said, the vast majority of our officers are good and honorable people who are in their public service roles for the right reasons. that are doing their job, working to keep everyone safe. so we're building with that team.
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>> the doj launched this probe after the botched no-knock warrant and search that killed breonna taylor. next week marks three years since her death. tiger woods' ex-girlfriend is suing him for $30 million. she claims that he kicked her out of their home. and that's not the only accusation she's leveling. details ahead. you go by lots of titles. veteran, dad, hair stylist. so adding a student title mighfeel daunting. national university is here to support all your titl. national univeity. supporting t whole you. let's get started. bill, where's your mask? i really tried sleeping with it, everybody. now i sleep with inspire. inspire? no mask? no hose? just sleep.
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lawsuits filed by his ex girlfriend. one is an attempt to nullify their nda. the other is trying to get money from tiger's trust. cnn's jean casares is following this for us. what is going on here? >> reporter: this has to do with their relationship. legal documents say they were together for six years. they broke up in october. he asked her to break up, and he asked her to leave the house, according to the defense. she is saying no, no, no. i had an agreement that i could continue living in the home. it was an oral tenant agreement that i negotiated with the trust representatives, because the home is in a trust. and he is saying, i invited you into the home to live there with me, but when we broke up, i uninvited you, and i asked you to leave. now, she's going on to say, and she's asking for in excess of $30 million in all of this. she's also stating that one, she was still living in the house, that they actually took her
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belongings out. she was gone. they took her belongings out. they told her that she needed to pack her bags and she had to take a trip. so she went to the airport. at the airport, they said you are now locked out, you are not wanted in the home any more, you can't go back. they had attorneys. these are the trust representatives to help her negotiate a deal so that she wouldn't be left without a home. but she's saying they also misappropriated $40,000 of her cash. now, that's the first lawsuit right there. the second one is, because the defense was saying there is a known disclosure agreement, this has to go within that. there is arbitration. it is confidential. you signed it in 2017, and she's saying nope, nope, with this second suit just filed. she's saying this should be null and void because of two statutes -- the ending forced arbitration of sexual assault and sexual harassment act of
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2021, and the federal speak out act. she's not saying anything else, but federal law says if you have allegations of sexual abuse, you can't do it in this secretive, nondisclosure agreement environment. that's where we are at this point. but in the initial suit, she had to mark a box, is this anything to do with sexual abuse? it was "no." so between october and now, that "no" has become a yes, and what this means we don't know. >> so, okay, let me try to understand this. she wants to stay in the home, although they're not together. and tiger and his kids still live there. >> that's what the defense is saying, yes, that they still live in the home. >> what's next? >> to have a response to this nda issue right here, to see if it still has to stay within. because she says in her filings that she's got a lot of things she wants out. she has recordings of herself.
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she has written things she wants out, and she wants this out of the nda. the defense is saying this is a lot of gamesmanship going on right here, and this is not right. >> jean, thank you so much. >> thank you. californians still digging out from last week's deadly snowstorms are now bracing for a massive rainstorm that could unleash widespread flooding. scientists call it an atmospheric river threat. it could melt the snow and cause even more structural damage. several counties, talking more than 17 million people are under flood watches. jen, explain more of this atmospheric river and what's coming. >> that's right. we have another atmospheric river event. these are basically what we have seen this entire season, where we had just incredible amounts of moisture pointed at the state of california. it's brought rain, heavy snow. the problem now is, we have so much snow, and even some of the lower elevations, with the next
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system, that heavy rain is going to fall on top of areas thatan rapid snow melt across some of the lower elevations. we are going to have very, very high winds with this system that will result in power outages. and we also have that storm threat for the higher elevations that will get snow, and in the pacific northwest, winter storm alerts there, as well. so you can see the clouds stretching all the way back, almost to hawaii. this is the moisture source, what's pulling all of this right into california. you can see it's just going to drive in throughout the rest of the week, on into the weekend. by the time we get into next week, we could see several more. so all of these impacts are just going to compound each other. you can see the rainfall coming in. this is a live radar in san francisco, sacramento. we see snow here in the higher elevations. we could see several inches of rain and up to seven feet of
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snow, victor. this is going to be an impactful snow system. >> seven feet of snow. not what they need right now. jen gray, thanks so much. "the lead with jake tapper" starts after a short break. what if we live to like 100? that's 35 years of being r retired. i i don't want to outlive our money. and d i have been eating all these stupid chia seeds! i could totally live to be 100! why do i keep taking such good care of my- since we started working with empower, we're able to get all our financial questions answered, so we don't have to worry. so you never- no. never. join 17 million people and take control of your financial future to empower what's next. start today at empower.com
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