tv CNN Newsroom CNN March 24, 2023 7:00am-8:00am PDT
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en you pass our house. i was trying to work. we're workin' it too. yeah! work it girl! woo! i want to hear you say it out loud. well, i could switch us to xfinity. those smiles. that's why i do what i do. that and the paycheck. credit woes. get started and time .com ted lasso. jason sudeikis joinsimete tonight at m
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john berman. we have new developments on the u. s contractor killed by a drone strike in syria. we are now seeing video of an iranian military facility engulfed in flames. this is after president biden authorized a retaliatory strike retaliation. from what the u. s says was this iranian backed one way drone attack an attack that killed an american contractor and wounded five u. s service members. president biden is in canada this morning. we're waiting to hear from him on all this. also at this moment, a top lawyer for donald trump, you can see him there. evan corcoran. he is inside washington, dc courthouse and there is no attorney client privilege protection. corcoran is testifying before a grand jury investigating the former president's handling. of classified documents first, though the deadly flare up of hostilities in syria overnight
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scene as natasha bertrand at the pentagon following this for us new information, natasha. yeah, john. so we are told from a u. s official that this suspected iranian drone strike was conducted using a one way attack drone that intentionally crashed into its target, killing that u. s contractor and wounding several other u. s service members as well as an additional u. s contractor there now, this is not the first time that the us has launched air strikes in retaliation for these kinds of attacks by iranian proxy groups . the u. s has about 900 troops currently in syria. largely as a part of that anti isis coalition . and according to general carrillo, who is the commander of us central command, which is responsible for this region, u. s personnel have come under attack by those iran backed groups at least 78 times since 2021 gorilla did tell lawmakers in testimony recently that the us has made its posture is
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changed its defensive posture in the region essentially to better protect us personnel against these kinds of attacks, but parrilla also really in provided some important context for iran's capabilities in the region and why it is so concerning to us officials that they are able to continue to carry out these kinds of attacks. today iran possesses the largest and most diverse missile arsenal in the middle east. thousands of ballistic and cruise missiles, many capable of striking anywhere in the middle east. iran also maintains the largest and most capable force in the region. so as you noted, john the u. s. did retaliate against the strike. they targeted facilities inside syria that the u. s believes these iranian proxy groups were using for munitions and for intelligence, and we should note that all of those u. s service members apart from the u. s contractor of course, who was killed are currently in stable condition. john alright, natasha. bertrand, keep us posted. thank you so much. with me now is retired u s air force
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colonel cedric leighton. colonel great to have you here. i want to take this in parts if i can. first this one way drone strike from iranian proxies. what does that tell you about their intentions and capabilities? well, john. good morning. first of all, their intentions are definitely to at least harass us forces into let their presence be known. they want to make sure that the u. s and allied forces don't forget that they're there , and they also want to make sure that they can, in essence control certain parts of syria on behalf of the syrian government, now, as far as their capabilities are concerned, they're pretty considerable. you know, it's general carrillo mentioned in his testimony. the iranians have a very large the arsenal of u a. b s and rockets and missiles. a lot of the proxy forces that iran it works with, and in some cases, employees in this region and especially in syria are known to have some of these capabilities. they're given to them by the iranians.
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the iranians train them on these capabilities, and they make it possible for them to use them fairly effectively in in these kinds of operations. the response. what does the nature of the target in the us clearly , nic robertson pointed out. clearly, the us seemed to have had a target list here because the response was nearly immediate. what do you make of the target and the level of retaliation? the us chose to take here. so the target appears to have been the basic hasakah and specifically the dormitory area. the living here for the u. s contractors and servicemen, i and, you know, when you look at the types of attacks that they've done, they receive a wage on in which the actually move forward with these attacks. the us response i was clearly calibrated in order to make it known to the arranged means that
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they had gone too far with the iranian proxies that they had run too far. so these efforts are very much calibrated. and we clearly had planned to do this. i want such an attack occurred. we were clearly expecting some of this type. what's iran? up to. i mean, obviously, there's still operating through proxies in syria. we know that they provided drones to the russians to use to attack ukrainians. what's the bigger picture of the plan here? so it appears that the bigger picture john is that the iranians want to establish themselves as at the very least, a regional power and you see the rapprochement between iran and saudi arabia, the one that was brokered just a week or so ago by the chinese. uh what you're looking at is iran has become powerful enough that other countries like saudi arabia, the united arab emirates and others in the gulf are looking at iran as you know. only a threat but a threat that they have to live with. so instead of relying on
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just us forces to protect them, as the saudis and others are basically looking at the iranians as somebody that we have to accommodate themselves to that they have to accommodate themselves to and then when you look at you know the forces around the middle east, such as the syrian democratic forces forces like that they are clearly up against a very tough competitor because the iranians for a very long time have been supporting the syrian regime of butter al assad, even with the syrian civil war started, so you see all these factors coming into play here in the iranians definitely want to establish themselves as a regional hegemon and that demonic policy that they have also allows it to work with the russians and that becomes a to their existence. the russians. and apparently the chinese in some cases as well. colonel cedric leighton. thank you very much. so at this moment , donald trump's attorney, evan corcoran, is inside washington d
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. c courthouse we saw arriving this morning. you see the back of him arriving this morning. he is testifying before a grand jury, and he is expected to be asked about donald trump without the protections of attorney client privilege, and he has to hand over documents and notes related to his legal work with the former president. this has to do with the federal probe into the classified documents found at mar a lago. cnn's caleb poland's live outside the courthouse in washington, d c. i guess one hour of testimony and counting so far, caitlin. one hour. yeah evan corker in this primary defense attorney for donald trump, who was responding on his behalf to the federal investigation into classified records at mara lago after the presidency. he's been inside this courthouse for a literal over an hour, and we do believe he's been with the grand jury for about an hour now. his attorney is here as well. no sign yet that he has finished and really, at this point, we don't know what he's going to
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say, and it's very likely the prosecutors right now do not know what he is likely telling the grand jury or will tell the grand jury. what we know is what they've been investigating, which is the potential mishandling of classified records at mara lago, and then even more crucially possible obstruction of justice after the federal government demanded that those records be turned back over to them, and they were not. corcoran was a key person involved in that response, drafting a statement being privy to the searches, even receiving justice department officials when they went down tomorrow, lago and tried to get back records and we also know what the prosecutors want to ask him. that's based on reporting that a whole team of us have been doing this week. we know that they want to know about that statement that he provided last june that he drafted and was given to the justice department, saying that they had found or looked for classified records and turned over any and all that they had found and also, they want to ask him about a colleague had directly with
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donald trump. last june at the time that there was a subpoena for surveillance footage that would show people moving boxes at mara lago, so a really crucial day for the special counsel investigation. we don't know how to turn out or how long this testimony may go on, john alright caitlin. poland's keep us posted, please. i'm joined now by john dean. he served as white house counsel for president nixon. john. it's always great to see you. it occurs to me and i know the circumstances are different way different, but they're on a lot of lawyers who know what it's like to be asked questions about their client under oath. you happen to be one of them in a certain way. what's it going to be like for evan corcoran to be, you know, testifying today? i'm sure he's not happy where he is. he's a very seasoned lawyer. he's a government will order for much of his career. he's 58 years of age. he doesn't want to go to jail for mr trump. i can assure you that so i think he's a careful lawyer. i think he had
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. we know. he has notes and records of some of the exchanges he had with mr trump, so he's going to be a very powerful witness as well. but i think this is one place he doesn't want to be this morning. is it the type of thing where he can literally be asked. what did donald trump tell you about the documents? yes he can because he was in the direct chain. i we gather probably from other witnesses as to how the letter was written what instructions he may have gotten and onto how to frame the letter. what kind of investigation was in fact, actually done. did he have any resistance? there was another lawyer who's now been compelled to testify. jennifer little in this recent breaking of the attorney client privilege. uh so this is there are a lot of pieces that the government knows about and he can help put it all together and thread it and it
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could be devastating for trump. and there are documents as well. which i imagine john is important because there's evidence, not just testimony, which means you can not only would he have to be careful, but it's something else for the prosecutors to use. yeah documents do not carry 1/5 amendment or any other kind of privilege. they can be work product of a lawyer, but they they have been turned over to the government as well. and documents don't lie. they they sometimes need explanation. but these are apparently records contemporaneous records he made when having his exchanges with mr trump and this is powerful evidence if it goes in front of the jury ever here in manhattan . the grand jury that has been hearing from witnesses about the hush money payments to stormy daniels in the connected laws related. there is not meeting today. as far as we know to hear about the donald trump case, but
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could meet again on monday to take evidence there, john what do you take from the pace of these grand jury hearings? the on and off nature of the manhattan grand jury doesn't to me suggest that the d a brag, has suddenly discovered he's got a weak case. i think he's got a grand jury who might not wan more witnesses and you know there's a remote possibility, john that some of the prosecutor contacted him said do you really have to go first? he knows his isn't the, uh, the strongest most ah presidential type case that it's going to be presented against trump, and he might have been asked to delay and drag his feet a little while because some of these other cases might be ripe for action. i don't know that as a fact it just it just occurred to me the way this grand jury has been on again off again, and prosecutors do have that kind of it wouldn't have to
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if he didn't want to, but they do have those kind of off the record conversations. i know a lot of former prosecutors. so the grand jury is plowing ahead and they i think they will probably take some action next week when we or the other the former president overnight, issuing what seemed to be some failed threats. ah against alvin bragg in away, saying that there will be death and destruction of bragg presses charges. um what kind of situation do you think that creates? i think it creates a very troubling situation for mr trump when he goes in if he is arraigned, and the judge is going to be made very aware of the statements. ah recall that roger stone, the acolyte of mr trump was indicted and started putting the judge in crosshairs at one point on his line on his on line postings. this could be
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the same sort of thing where a judge has total power. just say listen, no more of that. you do that you're in contempt of court, they could shut down with a gag order. trump and stop this nonsense and these attacks and might well do so because they're already another. there's another case, a civil case, the e jean carroll case is about to go to trial and the judges decided he will keep the jury anonymous in that case because of the mega and trump attacks so that trump comes with a reputation and it's not a good one. john dean. thank you, as always. thank you. so this morning. you want to tell you about a new sentence handed down for a capital rioter 24 year old riley williams barged into then house speaker nancy pelosi's office and later claimed online to have stolen her hard drive. a federal judge gave williams three years in prison in ridiculed the defense. that she was too young to know what she was doing. judge amy
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berman, jackson said quote. i'm sorry, riley. june williams was old enough and tall enough on january 6th into the extent that she comes off as fragile or week that all goes away when she opens her mouth. williams was a follower of a white nationalist cartwright figure at the time of the riot prosecutors say she directed members of the mob during the attack. before being sentenced. williams apologized for her role. happening now. 30 million people from texas to ohio or under the threat of severe storms. we have the latest in the forecast and where we could see a tornado outbreak today. the parents of the oxford high school shooter will stand trial for the deaths their son caused in 2021 how the case could set a precedent and holding parents accountable. and we visit ukraine orphanage near the front lines that sits empty after russian forces allegedly deported the children to russian territory. the heroic actions of the ukrainian nurses who tried to stop it. i can't belieieve ts
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wrinkles. goodbye neutrogena. i'm eva longoria. i'm exploring mexico to see how the people have shaped a culinary tradition as diverse as its 32 states. louisville longoria searching for mexico premiere sunday at 10 on cnn. this morning. much of the united states bracing for severe storms, the south could see a tornado outbreak while other states could be the other states could be hit by dangerous flooding. meteorologist generic for gray and the weather center watching all of this tell us what we should look for. john this could be a significant day . the storm prediction center is forecasting strong tornadoes, ef three or greater and strength and also long track tornadoes. tornadoes are going to stay on the ground for a long period of time. we already have storms firing up from texas all the way through the mid atlantic. we had a lot of golf moisture that's basically feeding these storms. and so throughout the day, you're going to have the daytime heating interacting with the
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storms, and so really, by late this evening into the early overnight hours as when we're really going to see these storms peak, we're talking about strong tornadoes, damaging winds, large hail and this area with the black lines. that's going to be our greatest risk for a strong tornado, and it's going to be basically between six o'clock tonight through midnight eastern time. and so putting these storms into motion any of these storms ahead of these by this evening could produce a weak tornado or two, but the strongest ones really will be around the area across the arklatex or the mississippi. happy valley and then on into this portions of the southeast. that's eight o'clock tonight and then by 11 o'clock tonight, you can see the storm's starting to leave that area. they will lose intensity. slightly during the overnight hours, but they could still remain strong all the way through the overnight, j. so we're looking at also a flooding potential. we could see 2 to 4 inches of rain across portions of the mississippi valley into
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the ohio valley. so flash flood watches and warnings are in effect anywhere from oklahoma all the way through the ohio valley, so we do have a moderate risk of excessive rainfall through this region. that's a level three out of four. so significant flooding is possible as well. john it's a pretty concerning maps. there are jennifer gray. appreciate it. i do hope those people stay safe overnight in the tornado zone. the parents of the oxford high school shooter will have to stand trial for involuntary manslaughter for the four deaths their son caused. jennifer and james crumbly, are accused of failing to secure a gun and ignoring the mental health needs of their son. michigan appeals court has ruled that prosecutors have presented enough evidence to take the case to trial. their son has pleaded guilty to terrorism and murder charges, and it could be sentenced to life in prison without parole. attorney areva martin joins me now, reba. great to see you. so what kind of precedent? i mean? how novel is this for a parents to face trial for crimes committed by their child? thank
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you, john. we know that typically, courts don't like to hold parents responsible for the intentional actions of their children. all those states around the country have been enacting laws, particularly those related to the access to weapons and guns like this case where there's allegations that these parents not only bought the gun that was used in the school shooting, but also left that gun in an unlocked box, and you can tell by this court's decision that it is very aware of setting a precedent that could in some ways hold parents responsible for poor parenting. they give lots of examples in this case of the yet the man who shot the kids at the school of reaching out to the parents asking for help talking about his mental health issues, and in some cases, the parents actually ignoring the cries for help, so this could be a precedent setting case. we've seen lots of cases where kids go into schools and shoot and kill other
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students. and the question is, are parents going to be held accountable? in all of those cases. what is or are there any things that are unique about this case that make it the type of things where the parents can be held accountable? yep in this case down with the courts, really laying in on is the issue of foreseeability there saying, look, you have a teenager who's troubled. he's telling you that he's troubled. he's asking for help. you're ignoring his cries for help. he's telling you that he's prone to danger that he may harm others and then with all of that information, you go and buy a gun. and you put that gun in a place that is unsecure. so i think or i think that's the issue. that is really driving. this decision is the knowledge about the mental health issues, the purchase of the gun and the fact that the gun was in a place that was not secured by these parents. what do you think the standard for guilt will have to be here? the jury will have to decide what for a guilty
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verdict. yeah i think that's going to be concerning in this case because again, you don't want to hold parents accountable for poor parenting. you know, parents have different ways that they approach their children. in this case. maybe they didn't believe their son. maybe he had a history of not being truthful , truthful with respect to certain issues, so the issue is really going to come down to how serious were these, uh, calls for help by the sun. what's the actions were of the parents with respect to how they handle the information that was coming to them. and i think the real issue here though, john is gonna be the gun. why in the face of this information with parents buy a gun. and if they did buy a gun legally, why wouldn't they take greater efforts to secure that gun? and we know in this case, something else very unusual happened. the parents were called to the school. they were told that the sun was making drawings about harming people, and they refused to remove him from that school campus. i think that's also going to be really important to jurors as they
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assess this case very quickly, areva. i know this will be appealed to the michigan supreme court. do you think an appeal has any likelihood of success? i don't think so, because the courts in michigan have been pretty consistent in the way they have handled this case, and they have been consistently saying that these parents are responsible or potentially could be responsible when this case goes to a jury, and it is going to be precedent setting, but i think course want to send a message to paris. you have to take greater care, particularly when you have information that suggests that your child could be a danger to others. areva. martin. great to have you on thank you. thanks, john. well. alex murdoch serves two life sentences for killing his wife, maggie and his son, paul, hundreds of items from their estate or on the auction block. people lined up for six hours to bid on items taken from the hunting property known as moselle, the same property where paul and maggie were murdered. some of the items up for sale include pictures that once hung on the walls, a large rack of
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hunting equipment, furniture, dishes and other things, the item that sold for the most was this furniture set? which was $30,000. the u. s strikes back after a suspected iranian affiliate drone killed an american contractor and wounded five u. s service members in northern syria. we do have some new information next. i i think hehe's posting about all that ancient roman coinagege making real time money moves with meryl matter what the market's doing. he's ready, and that's how you collect coins. your money never stops working for you with meryl, aank of america company were ey. everyone would do it as well as ue green. does it true greens online tools, help ensure your custom treatment works to deliver a greener, healthier lawn guaranteed. it's time to trust your experts at true green go online today. somewhere out there. is that one in a million someone who thinks
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developing this morning. a u. s contractor is dead in five u. s. troops are wounded after a suspected iranian backed drone hit a u. s housing facility in northeast syria. in response, president biden authorized what the u. s calls a precision strike on facilities used by the groups affiliated with iran. you're looking at the aftermath here. cnn's mj lee. is at the white house for us this morning . mg i know the president is in canada, and he made this call for the retaliation while there that's right, john. you know these were urgent deliberations that were taking place as president. biden was traveling up to canada last night. so let me just catch you up on exactly what we know from these developments overnight. we know that it suspected iranian drone struck a facility in syria that was housing us personnel and that resulted in the killing of one american contractor and injuring five u. s service members. and in response to that
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we saw president biden authorize a precision airstrike in eastern syria that targeted iranian affiliated facilities. now we saw defense secretary lloyd austin, describing the strike as proportionate and deliberate action, and he said that the strike was aimed at both limiting escalation and also limiting casualties as well. and this morning what we're hearing from senior white house officials is a warning that the u. s. this will continue to retaliate, retaliate if the administration sees that as beg necessary. thiswhat nsc spokesperson john kirby said this morning on our air. we've got militant groups that are supported by iran, that are the ones conducting these attacks against our troops and our facilities. we're going to continue to do whatever we can to defend themselves. and if we have to retaliate like we did yesterday, we'll do that. the president, of course, has a very
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busy day in ottawa. he's going to be meeting with the prime minister justin trudeau and the two leaders are also set to have a press conference as well. so we'll see if the president for the first time really publicly addresses what happened. and, of course, john. the bigger context is important here, too. there are already significantly significantly heightened tensions between the us and iran , so all of this is only expected to exacerbate all of that, and one key piece of information that we don't know yet from the u. s side is how many casualties resulted from that u. s airstrikes. so again, these are developments that we will be keeping on top of this today and just to try to get a sense of what additional information we might get about these developments. john the president answers questions. they will be his first comments in public on this matter. watching them very closely. mj lee. thank you, as always. ukrainian officials say deadly new russian airstrikes targeted civilians overnight. at least two people were killed in the northern region. three others
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were kwhen a russian missile hit the eastern donetsk region. also this morning. we are learning heart breaking new details about russian operation. taking ukrainian children now. just days ago, the international criminal court issued arrest warrants for vladimir putin and his deputy for forcibly deporting children. cnn's david mckenzie and his team travel close to the front lines to investigate what happened, david, thanks for being with us. tell us what you found. well, john the criminal court warrant . the kremlin called that outrageous and acceptable, but we traveled to kazan, a city frequently under russian artillery strikes and found an extraordinary story of caregivers trying to save their kids. approaching the southern front line in kherson. in the liberated city. many have fled. it's deceptively quiet. until the relentless terror. the often
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indiscriminate, almost daily russian shelling. we've come to investigate a very deliberate horror of the russian occupation , so the children who stayed here were under five years old. mostly this orphanage had more than 40 children here. elena was a nurse here for 17 years. not a single child is left open. i feel emptiness, emptiness. everything is just stopped. she says. the children had everything. they were so happy. the children were happy. now it's just silence and small reminders of them. their names still on each locker, children's home is now a crime scene. brelo warned us to collect their clothes, says elena, the russians and collaborators called in the evening and said
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to prepare the children for the morning busses arrived at eight. the heartbreaking scenes captured for russian propaganda shared on a russian mps telegram channel. the bewildered children taken from their beloved nurses in october, transported to russian occupied crimea or russia itself, say ukrainian investigators, but instead of hiding this alleged war crime russians advertised it. children will be taken to safe conditions in crimea, he says. i'll definitely go and visit. investigators said was part of a premeditated russian mission to take ukrainian children even targeted hospitals. there was a lot of pressure by the russians to take these children, weren't you afraid, watching? it was scary. very very scary. so much pressure says all appeal alaska twice a day they demanded. we show them lists of the kids to take to russia. poland a team
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came up with an extraordinary deception. the head orphans in the icuorged medical assessments, saying healthy children were severely sick. even faked an emergency ventilation, she says. we understood that the russians and collaborators would not forgive us, she says. we knew there would be serious retribution. we understood this, but they took the risks and managed to save children. and a critical care nurse took it a step further. tatiana says she fell in love with one of the orphan children. she worked desperately to keep the child of the list. adopting kira. nice to meet you. we met them at home and ukrainian mom with her treasured ukrainian child, kira. kira is almost ready to walk. what does she mean to you? kira nada. she means everything to me, says
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tatiana. just don't even know to be honest, i can't imagine my life without kira. this awful war has given her a precious gift. nurses and the doctors. john managed to save a handful of children from those alleged abductions. well i mean their alleged, but you see the video of russians taking the children very openly there, and the prosecutor says this was i agree . gis crime they said, constitutes a war. crime investigations are ongoing. i must say here in ukraine, the investigators are working on this case and other cases like that, whether there will ever be any justice in this matter or whether they will find those kids and get them back to ukraine. at least while this war goes on, i have to say that the chances are very difficult. but they did try their best, and
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they managed to save at least a few children. john what love in what defiance all at once there and just imagine. an operation, a country being proud of an operation to take children. david mckenzie. thank you so much stunning report there. could actress gwyneth paltrow take the stand today, the latest on the trial over a collision on the slopes. that's next. tonight on cnn, primetime. jasoson sudeikis joins jake tapper emmyy award winning showw is back fora new season as he talks one on one about the show's focus on mental health and the recent visit to the white house cnn primetime tonight at nine. i'm joey anita. and this is our real ring story. one time when i was out of town, my husband joy collapsed. got notified right away and got him to help you needed ring helped save my life more at ring dot com if you
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active paltrow could possibly take the stand today in the trial over a ski collision at a utah resort back in 2016 76 year old terry sanderson says she crashed into him, leaving him with serious injuries. paltrow is countersuing claiming he skied into her cnn's chloe molasses here. chloe you've been watching this trial. what have we learned so far? i mean, forgive me. i've been waiting to say this. it's a, he said. ski said. oh, oh, you know why i love sitting next to you because you have such good one liners, so i love it. so this has been seven years in the making this ski collision that took place in deer valley, a very upscale place to ski in park city, utah, and he says that she barreled into him, causing him to break four ribs to have a myriad of brain issues and cognitive issues. we heard his daughter testify yesterday, saying that her father's processing speed
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appeared to have changed and that she would find him being almost reclusive. and that this was a guy that she called ago er and a doer and somebody that was just very much involved in the family. now, gwyneth paltrow. although we are expecting to potentially hear from her later this afternoon court has just begun. moments ago, she says. he barreled into me and that due to like utah ski laws if i'm downhill, which i was and he scooped skied into me, it's his fault. but again, no cameras. we have eyewitnesses from both sides that say totally different things. so this is going to be up to those jurors to decide who seems more believable. yesterday, we also heard from a neuropsychologist who did terry sanderson saying that he did have some issues and that these were real things. but then he was cross examined bgwynet paltrow is lawyer who said, but could it have been caused by something else? and she said maybe so again. gwyneth paltrow . seven years later,
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countersuing for just a dollar on the principle that she wants to say it's not about the money for her. it's just $300,000, which just obviously that's a lot of money. but for her a multimillionaire. it's not so obviously she's doing this on principle. john what is the expectation? will she testify? she will. and so she's on the list. i have spoken to gwyneth paltrow is team who has confirmed yes, she's going to testify. we just don't know if they're going to get to her today because they are going to be talking to terry sanderson, who's going to speak out for the first time and testify today, so that's what we're waiting for to hear from him. i mean, we really will hear from both people in this case and televised. anybody can sit and watch it today. it's just gonna come down to who the jury believes more. you have to believe they're going to listen to both of them. say okay, you skied into him or he skied into you. and that's that's what it's going to be lost. thank you very much. the proposed rule could make it easier for you to break free from those subscriptions that you don't want any more details ahead. could they do
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thinking the way it should be. china the number one most loved thinking up. i'm mj lee at the white house, and this is cnn. new this morning. the federal government could soon make it easier for americans to cancel those free trials in subscriptions that some companies make it difficult to cut off. cnn business reporter nathaniel myerson is here with me with this, i really think welcome news. very welcome news . so we anybody who's tried to cancel a gym membership or cell phone bill can tell you about
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the horror stories they've had to jump through with companies and how difficult they make it for us to for us to cancel those subscriptions. but the ftc now wants to step in to make it easier for you to cancel subscriptions and find businesses if they don't comply with some of these regulations. they're they're the ftc's proposing finding businesses up to $50,000 a day if they if they go through these different hoops and create these different tactics, and we're seeing this right now because there's been a boom and subscriptions, subscriptions are growing at about 18% a year, you can get a subscription for pet food. t just about everything. i mean, what are the measures they're going to take to make it harder for these companies to do it to us? well i think it's going to. it's going to rely a lot on customers filing complaints to the ftc, but the proposal is going to make it easier once customers filed those complaints for the ftc to crack down in other companies trying to get you news like anyone who's tried
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to call a help line. the last few months. i have they barely exist anymore. it seems they barely exist anymore, and they certainly don't want you to call them on the phone. you especially john berman. they don't want to hear you on the phone. so more companies, uh, frontier airlines breeze. book raisi the reservation platform. you won't be able to find those phone numbers. they're just pushing you online. they want you to use chatbots or social mediama one day we'll just have to ask chat g b t to change our flight reservation just opened the door and shout out loud and hope someone is going to be there willing to help me. nathaniel myerson. great to see you. thank you so much appreciate it. again we are waiting to hear from president biden on this breakout of hostilities in syria overnight, much more on that ahead. thanks for joining me today. i'm john berman at this hour with kate baldwin starts right after a
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live today and in the future entire family of furniture at home .com. ted lasso. jason sudeikis joins jake tapper cnn primetime tonight at nine. closed captioning brought to you by meso book .com. we proudly help veterans with mesothelioma. call for a free book 1 808 220400 or go to meso book .com. thank you for being here. i'm kate baldwin. at this hour. we are standing by to see president biden. he's about to meet one on one with canadian prime minister justin trudeau. you're looking at pictures there in ottawa. we're going to bring you that when it begins, and there is also other major news that is
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