tv Erin Burnett Out Front CNN March 27, 2023 4:00pm-5:00pm PDT
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until midnight tonight encouraged residents to fill up using the tap, just in case there's nothing about the water you're buying at the store that is better than the water that you can get from your tap today. now, the city says tests show the water will remain safe until at least tuesday afternoon at 3 30. the confusion, leaving philadelphians prioritizing caution while waiting for clarity on their water is getting signal. chances down there. you just gotta take care of your family. you gotta be sure. now what? we're expecting our next step date from the city tomorrow morning to determine if the water will be safe to drink past tuesday afternoon, and officials told us today that the conditions in the river concerning the containment and the contamination should be over by thursday. wolf danny friedman , thank you very much. erin burnett outfront starts right now. outfront next breaking news , police say the nashville shooter aubrey hale, and resentment about having to go to
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the private christian school 28 year old shooter killed six people, including 39 year old this is one angry mother interrupts live television demanding answers and that mother is outfront tonight, plus another witness appears before the trump grand jury. david pecker. and publisher of the national enquirer on the hush money payments to stormy daniels is michael cohen is on standby to return to the witness stand. going to attorney is outfront and how tiktok is keeping much needed ammunition from ukraine. let's go, outfront. good evening. i'm erin burnett outfront. tonight we begin with breaking news chilling details emerging tonight about a possible motive after a mass shooting at a private christian elementary school, the nashville police chief, saying the killer who identified as transgender resented having gone to that school. there is some belief that there was some resentment for having to go to that school. don't have all the details to that just yet, and that's why this incident occurred. now the
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shooter, according to police is 28 year old audrey hale. in all , six people were killed, including the head of school, katherine kunz, also to other teachers, mike hill and cynthia peak, died today and 39 year old children alan dick house, william kenny and halle scruggs. names of nine year olds who woke up this morning and went to school for another day with their friends recess not fearing for their safety, and now their futures gone cut by a heavily armed former student, and what police are now calling a targeted attack and, according to officials, the shooter actually had drawn maps, extensive maps of both the school and done surveillance. we have a manifesto. we have some writings that were going over that pertain to this day. the actual incident. we have a map drawn out of how this was all
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going to take place. there's right now theory of that that we may be able to talk about later, but it's not confirmed and so we'll put that out as soon as we can. alright we're gonna put that out as soon as they can. they do say that while it was targeted that hair was randomly shooting people in the school and we'll see if we learn more about that the individuals and whether they were specifically targeted or not. and the anger and frustration in nashville already boiling over. in fact, a survivor of the 2022 4th of july mass shooting in highland park, illinois, was in nashville for a family vacation. she heard gunshots and after a press conference outside the school jumped in interrupting live newscasts across the country who are taking that press conference live. here's part of what she said. i'm from highland park, illinois. my son and i survived a mass shooting over the summer . i am in tennessee on a family vacation with my son visiting my sister in law. i have been
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lobbying in dc since we survived a mass shooting in july, i have met with over 130 lawmakers. how is this still happening? how are our children still dying and why are we failing them? in a moment, i'm going to speak to ashby about that anger, anger that so many americans are feeling but first i want to go live to diane gallagher and dianne. what else are you learning about the shooter? so erin, the shooter was a 28 year old former student of the school . we are told who identified as transgender, and police say that they were very familiar with what they were doing. we talked about maps also surveillance of the school. they noted that the shooter was armed with two a ar style rifles to aerosol weapons , a rifle and a pistol as well as the handgun. and several rounds of ammunition. they say that the shooter was ready for police confrontation. tragedy at another american school, three
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children and three adults, staff members shot and killed at the covenant school in nashville, tennessee. in what police are calling a targeted attack by a heavily armed 28 year old former student, nine year olds. who were killed. evelyn. dick house. william kenny. halle scruggs. three adults. mike hill. a custodian age 61. cynthia peak. to my understanding of substitute teacher age 61. and catherine coots. age 60 police say the suspect was audrey hale , who identifies as transgender in the nashville area residents who they say is a former student of the private christian school, located at covenant presbyterian church, which serves preschool through sixth grade. a car near the scene helped identify hail, and police say they are currently going over writings left behind by the shooter.
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we've also determine there were maps drawn other school in detail of surveillance entry points, etcetera. we know and believe that entry was gained through shooting through one of the doors is how they actually got into the school calls started coming in at 10 13 am the officers had engaged the shooter by 10 27, and she was deceased. metro nashville police say there is video from the school and the shooting happened on an upper level in the lobby area, not a classroom teacher, texting her daughter from inside the school. she said she was hiding in the closet and that they were shooting all over and that they had potentially tried to get into her room. president joe biden weighing in this afternoon on the 129th mass shooting of this year, according to data from the gun violence archive, we have to do more to stop gun violence. it's ripping our communities apart, ripping a
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soulless nation, very sovereign nation. and we have to do more to protect our school so they aren't turned into prisons. now police say that they are focusing on hale's writings at this point, also noting erin that it appears at one point the shooter wanted to target another location, but determined that there was perhaps too much security and did not. we do know, according to police that there was no school resource officer at this school. of course, it is a small private christian school in a church. they say that they are going to be going over that video from the school and maybe releasing some of it as early as tonight, erin. all right. thank you very much. diane gallagher reporting on the very latest as we know it, obviously developing story. we know we're going to hear more from law enforcement. they say on a possible motive here in these coming hours, outfront now bob mendez. he has nashville council member at large. and councilman. i appreciate your time. and of course, i'm sorry to be speaking to you under such
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horrific circumstances. the police chief has just said that the shooter had in his words, some resentment at having previously attended this small christian school. the covenant school. what more do you know? are you able to share with us about this horrific incident? well this has been moving so quickly today that i don't have anything more to share than what the police chief has said. you know, rumors started going around town pretty quickly after the shooting that it was a former student. um, and it looks like it's turned out that way. i'm sure we'll learn more in coming days about what the specific complaint was about the school of course, councilman you do know people involved. i know it's a tight knit community, you know, one of the teachers at the school. can you tell us anything about what? your friend experience today? well all the information is that it was just
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horrifying. um you know, as unfortunately we hear in all these things that happened nationally, you know, parents aren't immediately reunited with their children. i think it took some three hours 3.5 hours from one story i heard from parents to know that their child was okay. um even after they knew that some of the child's classmates had been killed. hmm just that waiting and that no one can imagine. no one can imagine that call, though it continues to happen across this country. we do know, councilman that the police say and we just we're hearing from the police chief a moment ago, but that the shooter had to our style weapons and a handgun and that two of those had been obtained legally. we're also told at this point that there is no known history of mental illness again. we do know this is a former student, and that's pretty much all we know, uh other than the fact that the person identified as transgender. do you think that they're from what you understand in the chain of events today,
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anything that could have been done to prevent it? ah i mean, i we get better gun laws in tennessee and in america in america, you know tennessee, unfortunately, has some of the loosest gun laws in america and we're not allowed in city government, um, have more restrictive measures even though it would make more sense in in our cities. um you know, absence actually having leadership at the state and federal level care enough to pass? um common sense gun laws. it's hard to see how this could have been stopped. alright well, i appreciate your time, councilman. thank you very much. no problem. thank you for having me on appreciate it. well, as i said, i'm very sad about the circumstances that we even have to talk. but as you just heard of survivor of the highland park shooting, speaking out in anger at one of the press conferences about just that, that anger the whore that another mass shooting has,
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unfortunately, completely predictably in the united states taking place and here's a bit more of what ashby beasley said. aren't you guys tired of covering this? aren't you guys tired of being here and having to cover all of these mass shootings? i'm from hyde park, illinois. i have been lobbying in dc since we survived a mass shooting in july. i have met with over 130 lawmakers. how is this still happening? how are our children still dying. and why are we failing them? gun violence is the number one killer of children and teams. nashville beasley is with me now . i mean ashby. um you know you you came out today and just spoke with your passion. your frustration your heart what you did there was seen across the country in that moment. barack obama actually just tweeted out the video that we just saw of you. just in the past 20 moment minutes. he just tweeted that out as well. and he wrote with that we are failing our children
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along with the video of you. we all saw and heard your anger and frustration. what made you decide that you needed to go there at that moment and speak out like that today? you know, i was in town to visit my sister in law, and i had made a plan to have lunch with a girlfriend who i met through the gdp space that gun violence prevention space. she's introduced to me by a mother who lost her son and has a law called ethan slot. but she's trying to pass and the friend's name is shanda brooks. she lost her son in a mass shooting in the waffle house in antioxidant and anti ock. tennessee five years ago. um he was with her other son and we were about to have lunch when she called me and she was very upset, telling me that her son her living son was on lockdown at his school because there was a mass shooting at another school right down the street. and my heart broke and i this is
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where we're at. we have children living through multiple mass shooting incidences. what are we doing? no you were you're there today and a i know you're you know, you have been in highland park right in the summer. so when you hear the gunshot, i mean, at what point did you realize in your own life, right that this is happening to me. i am hearing this happen again. uh, right now. i mean, to be honest, you know, after our shooting, i didn't know very much about about gun laws or any of these things that happened, but with the other officer with the councilman said earlier is absolutely true. 77% of mass shooters obtained their lead their weapons legally buy. these guns is air 15. they can walk into a store. um sometimes there's no background check. you only have to be 18 years old to buy one of these weapons. and it's the access to guns that is killing us. it's the access the
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easy access to firearms that is causing this and like, he said. we're not going to see any change until our lawmakers step up and pass gun safety legislation. and asked me what do you even say? as you think about this, and you have been indefatigably fighting, right? you said you talked to hundreds of lawmakers. you've now dedicated yourself to this. and yet now there are six families right? there are parents of 39 year olds whose children died today. um you know you and i speak as as mothers. um what do you even say to those families who are going through this tragedy, which everybody. unfortunately new would happen somewhere at some point because it continually does in this country. 50% of americans have either experienced gun violence or know someone who has experienced violence. it's only a matter of time until everyone in this country is having this experience, and i would say two families going through this that they are not alone that there are, um there are other families
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who have been through this who hold them close. sandy and lolly lonnie phillips from survivors and powered help families who are going through these tragedies. and unfortunately that's where we're at. we have to take care of each other survive. everyone to take care of each other. all right. well, thank you so very much. ashby i appreciate your taking the time to come and talk to us and for everyone that you that you went out and did that today and forced the whole country to see you. it's important and thank you. you for having me. the next david pecker of the national inquirer publisher who actually helped broker the deal behind the hush money payments to stormy daniels in front of the trump grand jury today. michael cohen's attorney, lanny davis, is my guest next, and it's one of europe's biggest ammunition manufacturers and its supplies to ukraine. well tonight it's work. its ability to produce ammo is being hindered by tiktok. and we're going to tell you why. and the skier who is accusing actress gwyneth paltrow
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david pecker, the former chief of the national enquirer and a longtime personal friend of trump's, was seen leaving the grand jury building this afternoon. after spending an hour and a half there. now, keep in mind. it was pecker who helped broker the hush money deal between daniels and trump's former lawyer, michael cohen. back in 2016. according to court papers from cohen's federal trial. pecker message cohen on an encrypted phone apps, saying, quote we have to coordinate something on the matter. attorney one is calling you about or it could look awfully bad for everyone. two days later , cohen transferred the $130,000 to stormy daniels attorney now packer, of course, had a history of cooperating with trump to catch and kill stories that could damage trump something that cohen even discussed with trump in this recording from 2016. i need to open up a company for the transfer of all of that info regarding our friend david and i spoke to alan about it when it comes time for
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the financing, which will be what financing paying your song? no, no, no, no, no. our friend david refers to david pecker. pecker was granted immunity in the federal investigation in return for his grand jury testimony. it is unclear tonight why it was brought before the grand jury for a second time and what he told them but again, we can tell you is he was there for about 90 minutes. michael cohen's attorney, lanny davis, is with me tonight. and lenny. thanks very much for being with me. i guess. let's just start with what we know happened today. 90 minutes of david pecker with that grand jury, do you have any knowledge about why he was in front of that grand jury? for a second time or what ? he told them. no i don't just what's been publicly reported. which is mr pecker corroborates what the federal prosecutors said about donald trump. remember it was the federal prosecutors who worked for donald trump's administration, who said that he instructed michael cohen to pay the hush money which was illegal in which he went to jail for so david
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pecker is publicly been at least reported as corroborating what the federal prosecutors charge mr trump with. they didn't prosecute him because he was president. but it was the same crime they sent michael cohen to prison for and they said it was a danger to democracy. what michael cohen did so it's not a petty little crime, and i think that's what would be corroborated by mr pecker, according to public reports. alright and i want to ask you more about that specifically, in a moment. i also want to ask you about when you were in the grand jury room yourself. you were there with michael cohen, your client. and after he testified, as you well know, of course, his one time lawyer, robert costello, came in to testify at the request of trump's lawyers, to apparently chip away at cohen's credibility right to debunk things that he had claimed, and then when people there didn't appear to be a movement for a number of days, right, no indictment, and then today the grand jury hears from david pecker, so we continue to hear from people and now they have adjourned and again, as far as we know, did not take a vote to indict trump or not. lenny
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why do you think we have not seen a vote on indictment yet? well first of all, mr costello can be dismissed with one sentence. if you read the emails that have been published, where he was trying to secure michael cohen as his client in order to keep them in the tent, and my client, mr giuliani is a friend of mine and his client sends you his regards. this was all an effort publicly reported that mr costello was part of had nothing to do with anything other than they requested the trump lawyers they had the right to request that he testify but had nothing. no impact on anything regarding the string of events. instead of lead to these delays. i have no idea. i was not in the grand jury room, by the way, not allowed to be erin, but i was in the room next door, and during the breaks, michael and i would talk about it. he thought it went very well. but these, uh, prosecutors, i have to tell you haven't been in all the interviews are very careful, very meticulous, and i'm sure they want to be very careful on this particular matter before. there's a vote for indictment.
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absolutely there is a vote. sure right, right. and as we know, before there is or if there is now, as you keep saying you know, this case seems to hang on the district attorney proving that trump paid this hush money payments for the benefit is campaign and didn't properly reported at the time, right? the crime is not that he paid hush money payments or paid off a porn star. the crime would be election right to influence the election. so i want to ask you specifically and explicitly about john edwards, who beat charges of breaking campaign finance laws. his was an elaborate scheme right. two of his donors paid a million dollars in secret payments and that was used to hide a mistress and a and a child. and edwards says those payments were to shield his family from humiliation and that they were not campaign contributions. and he won. as you know, lanny and trump's lawyer is now saying this he made this with personal funds to prevent something coming out force but embarrassing to himself as families, young son lenny. why is this case different than the
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john edwards case? well, first of all, i am familiar with the giant neighborhoods case. the top prosecutor in the justice department and i rolled prints from my white house stays with president clinton. the defense lawyer, abby lowell, who represented john edwards, so let me tell you what the law is there in there's been misstated, even by my old friend joe tacopina, who i've worked with not on this matter. i wish him well, but i don't wish his client will the law says any political motivation. it can be 1% not primary political motivation, so a jury is going to have to decide. do they believe donald trump waiting until the very end in october with two weeks left in the election? suddenly deciding? okay it's time, michael. you pay the money, but i don't want to be connected with it, but i'll reimburse you and that's the word that the prosecutors in new york said reimbursed or reimburse you afterwards for the $130,000. will the jury believe donald trump that he had no idea that it would influence the
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election that it was only about melania? we'll have to let a jury decide that i respect the jury system. in the edwards case , the jury did not believe there was any political motivation. he had a dying wife who was dying of cancer, and when john edwards testified, he said, had no thought about the election. he was only concerned about his dying wife and the jury believed that the jury does here. so i understand. i understand the point you're making um, but what i'm trying to understand what you say 1% would be enough. okay it's how to unscramble the egg. if someone is in a is running for office, right, and therefore something they did becomes relevant to someone who wants to extort them for money. maybe if they weren't running for office, it wouldn't be as relevant but it is and so that person ends up paying hush money payment to prevent humiliation to their family humiliation that only came about because they happen to be running for political office. it gets a lot more confusing than just this sort of 1% 50% or breaking it down that way. of course, i agree with you, aaron. that's what juries are about. i'm predicting when
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the juries hear the evidence of a discussion about the female vote. being at risk because of the stormy daniels matter coming right after access hollywood, i'm convinced that jurors will not believe donald trump's explanation that he was worried about melania. but if the juries are not convinced of that the political motivation was totally lacking zero. then donald trump will be acquitted and let me remind everyone donald trump is innocent after the indictment until a jury right to be guilty , so presumption of innocence still rewards anybody beyond a reasonable doubt that jury is going to have to decide when donald trump says i had no political motivation is he to be believed? one final point, lenny stormy, daniels first told her account in touch magazine in 2011. associated press reported that michael cohen sent an email to the general counsel. they're threatening them that trump would pursue legal action if it was printed in the washington post reported that cohen tried to stop the story by threatening
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stormy daniels agent. here's what we know that story was never printed in 2011. he wasn't a candidate. then he was willing to go to the ends of the earth to not have it. come out. does that hurt your case? it depends on whether a jury is going to believe donald trump, then the 2016 election. he waited until the last two weeks, even though he knew about the threat and whether the evidence shows that some of the reasons were political. and let me just mention about michael cohen, michael cohen in front of the country and the world on television said i'm ashamed of what i did. now i'm going to tell truth to power from my family and for my country. so whatever donald trump thinks about attacking michael's credibility, michael didn't take the fifth amendment. as mr trump did, he went into a grand jury cooperated with congressional committees. but most importantly , erin in my philosophy when somebody owns wrongdoing and says, i apologize. as elijah cummings, who ran that hearing said to me, i believe in
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redemption. michael collins credibility surrounded by documents. this case is about documents, not just michael. i think his testimony will be credible. alright well, lenny, i appreciate your time. thank you very much. a lanny davis with me. and of course, now elie honig joins me. our senior legal analyst, former assistant u. s attorney for the southern district of new york. what do you make of the way he sees it. very interesting interview. so first of all, mr davis is correct when he says that the motives here can be mixed. it's enough for a prosecutor to show that he had multiple motives. as long as one of them was political. you can also have a family or a humiliation type motive, but he is not correct when he says 1% is enough. the law says that the political motive has to be some substantial part of it. they don't put a number on it. 1% is not going to hack it. the other problem for the prosecution here is that mr davis client, michael cohen in 2018 said to the fcc federal election commission so punishable by perjury. these payments were entirely unrelated to the election entirely unrelated to the campaign and
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therefore totally legal. now the comeback will be while he was lying for trump then and as mr davis just said, he's come clean. now that'll be up to a jury. well, it's certainly will. and of course, as you and out. he wasn't prosecuted for that lie bringing up the issue of yes, for some lies not for others, and there is discretion. prosecution alright. thank you very much. ellie and next russia, leveling a new and sobering warning at the united states while tiktok is now reportedly getting in the way of ukraine getting much needed ammunition, and we're going to explain exactly why republicans just speaking out to our manu raju tonight, slamming trump for defending the january 6th insurrectionists, and we're going to tell you what they just told manu. pretty remarkable statements. okay everyone. our mission is complete, balancnced nutrition together, w we provide nutrients to support immune, muscle bone and heart health, 25 vitamins and minerals and ensure complete with 30 g of protein.
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original heaven's gate sunday at 10 on cnn. tonight desperate for weapons, ukraine is pounding the table for more weapons and ammunition. and tonight we can tell you that one of europe's largest ammunition manufacturers and weapons provider ukraine says it cannot expand its biggest factory in central norway because of tiktok, the ammo manufacturers ceo tells the financial times that the company was told that a data center where tiktok is reportedly the main customer is using all the surplus energy in the region so they don't have enough energy to make more ammo for ukraine, the ceo, adding quote we're concerned because we see our future growth is challenged by the storage of cat videos. and the cost of those cat videos lives on the ground in ukraine in ukraine, at the highest levels of government and on the front line, there has been a desperation for more ammunition. standing chelsom. unfortunately we have recently experienced the lack of artillery shells, a lack
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of ammunition. we can feel it ammunition because we're running out of the ammunition of the of the soviet types. ivan watson is out front with the report that you will see here first detailing the tremendous losses that russia is facing tonight. specifically the mercenary armor, the wagner group in baku. not a moment of peace in bomb moot. ukrainian forces say they remain entrenched in the center of the city, with wagner mercenaries attacking from three directions. high rise buildings defended by ukrainian unit pummeled by russian artillery and rockets. from the air. new ukrainian drone footage shows breathtaking destruction smoke rises from the rubble, the ground littered with debris and the bodies of fallen soldiers. wagner group is thought to have lost thousands of fighters in
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the battle for bach moot a city that's become a test of strength for both sides. the ukrainians claim to have stabilized the situation and say there's even been a slight fall in the number of russian attacks. commander of ukrainian ground force this is alexander serve ski back in the city himself, saying the most intense phase of the battle for mahmoud is underway. the enemy is suffering significant losses but continues to conduct offensive actions. that's not how wagner boss you're getting pretty georgian sees it. he was inbox muthana dawn patrol with his fighters. cnn geolocation this video showing wagner control in southern neighborhoods. one fighter says the ukrainians are less than 200 m away and that every building is a fortress as they walked through the wreckage. precaution says he wants to learn how wagner can do things better and faster. hundreds of miles away
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in southern russia, row upon row of what appeared to be freshly dug graves. this is a wagner cemetery in krasnodar, super sobbing woman says the graves are all from late last year and early this year of wagner fighters of all ages. there's a constant stream of funerals here, but despite heavy losses on the battlefield the russians still have immense firepower used daily against ukrainian towns and cities. ukrainian officials say a pair of missiles struck slovyansk early monday, killing at least two people and injuring dozens more. but ukraine also strikes deep behind the front lines. a mysterious explosion in the russian occupied city of milito po and in the russian occupied city of media people what russian state media describes as an assassination attempt monday, blowing up the car of the russian appointed police chief
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from ukrainian controlled territory. the city's mayor in exile called it a ukrainian resistance attack carried out barely a week after russian president ademir putin made a show of visiting mary opal. a city moscow captured and now claims for itself. mhm. now erin over the ukrainian capital late at night, there were air raid sirens and explosions. a spokesperson for ukraine's air force says that russia fired shahid iranian made drones at the city and that the air defense succeeded in shooting down some of these, the spokesman said. during the air raid sirens stay indoors because the pieces of those projectiles can still be very dangerous when they rained down, and there was one residential neighborhood that took some kind of a blast. emergency crews were on the scene, they put out fires. the mayor of kiev says there were no casualties. this is a reminder
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of the kind of weapons that russia fires that ukrainian cities and towns every day. eric thank you very much. i've been reporting live from ukraine tonight, and i want to go now to retired air force colonel cedric leighton and colonel leighton, you know, amazing to watch the report there from ivan precaution brandishing a weapon visiting back mood, you know, again, claiming the city is going to fall and the mercenary group will be the victors. but you saw ivan show this newly obtained video that he had all those freshly dug graves as far as the eye could see. uh at a cemetery for the wagner fighters that even have been buried right? many of them, of course, have not ever left the battlefield even as corpses and it shows this steep cost here for precaution. yeah it sure does and end it's one of the key components here, too. i think wagner's so far failed. efforts to try to capture bomb mood. it's pretty extraordinary when you think at least seven months worth of fighting, and they
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haven't been able to capture a burned out town that you know they basically surrounded on three sides, so it showed the ukrainian resistance effort has been extraordinary. but of course it is truly a meat grind. both sides have described it. yes, it has, and there have been credible losses on both sides. now this comes colonel as i was talking about that report from the financial times, which i thought was pretty pretty extraordinary connection of stories right there, saying that a major european ammunition manufacturer, which provides weapons to ukraine, is unable to expand its biggest factory and provide what ukraine needs the most right now. ammo because of tiktok right. the tiktok has a data center in the region. using up all the surplus energy, so there's not enough for the ammo plant to expand and, and i mean, this is incredible, right? the specificity of that story. and yet we're seeing this across the board manufacturers have been unable to keep up with the demand in ukraine, even the u. s army's acquisitions chief told cnn recently that they just have
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not been able to even right now the us has been able to meet demand, but they want to go faster and they're just not able to do it. how serious is the ammo shortage in ukraine? it's extremely serious, so just to put it in perspective, erin right now the ukrainian firing somewhere around 6000 rounds per day of you know your regular ammo. 1 55 millimeter 1 52 millimeters shells at the u. s production per month right now is around 14,000 to 15,000 shells. so in two days time, you can basically run out of the daily or monthly production that the us puts out, so that's something without any major ramp up. that's going to cause major problem for the ukrainians. you know the math. the math shows it. colonel thank you very much . i always appreciate your time. perspective. thanks. you better learn. and next, we have some new reporting just in on republicans breaking with trump after he praised the january 6th of rioters decision credible.
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manu raju has at its next. plus the man suing actress gwyneth paltrow takes to the stand to describe the moment, he says the two violently collided. time slip in a alrighty up. get this paint looking good dog. how do you do all this stuff? baby shoes made from all walks of life living with diates. lucerne a protein smart has your number with 30 g of ptein scientifically designed with carb steady to help you manage your blood, sugar and more protein to keep you moving with diabetes loose. erna live every moment. booking .com i'm going to somewhere where beach house a treehouse. honestly, i don't care. find the perfect vacation rental for you booking .com looking dot yeah, people living with hiv keep being you and ask
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don't wait. scan the code now and ask about the bosley guaranteed. good morning, everyone we do begin with breaking news this morning. tonight republicans slamming trump just speaking to our manu raju, and they're condemning this moment. during his first campaign rally over the weekend , he played a song that was performed by the j six prison choir. choir of men who are in
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prison for participating in the january 6th riot. i just frankly don't understand this retrospective. look when it comes to running for president. or any other office. people don't want you to relitigate all your grievances in the past in the past. more people won't hear about it. the future brighter. scott jennings is outfront, former senior advisory mitch mcconnell and former democratic congressman mander jones. okay thanks to both. so scott, i know that you would agree with cornyn and foon, but nonetheless the fact that they came out right away and said, this is a little bit of a break with republican tradition these days. how significant is it? well, most republicans, i think who are an elected office know what cornyn said, is true relitigating the past but especially relitigating , january 6th and trying to turn it into something that it wasn't
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is not a winning formula. nor is it actually right for the country. it's one thing to analyze this through the lens of well, we can't win if we do this but but they try to rewrite history on this when we all saw with our own eyes is even worse. so i think i think most republicans deep down no. if trump's entire campaign is singing songs and turning january six into a broadway musical. it's wrong and we're going to lose and neither is good outcome for the republican party. alright so and you're loud and clear about it. i do think it's a sort of extraordinary mind there. what we that they were willing to say that to modern i know obviously soon, you know, he's been willing to say things in the past, but you know the sort of let's just avoid it, not talk about it. that's not what they did right and cornyn coming out. that is a change. at least in this moment from what we see sometimes say it is certainly a change from what we see from the majority of republicans in congress, but i don't want to give too much credit to people for doing something as modest as saying, hey, this is really wrong. we should not be celebrating what happened or rewriting the history of what
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happened on january 6th, which you know as someone who lived through that and who felt, you know, fear for his life in that moment, i mean, i can tell you that it's not anything like what the choir was singing about no and i and it's you know, in a sense, it's kind of you think. oh, my gosh, it's one of those things. how can anyone even laugh at it? even as you think this is, this is really happening. so scott, here's the thing, though cnn went to that rally and waco and spoke to some voters, and obviously, if you're gonna go to that rally, you're pro trump. but but you know they were there, and here's what they said. they've been going after him. since the beginning, they haven't stopped and they're not gonna stop and this is where we have to stand up and fight to in 100% if they do that, he'll be issuing. it doesn't change a thing about his integrity and everything else. and they're talking about, you know, potential indictments. so you know, what do you take away from that, though? i mean, that is his base that is a republican primary voter. what? what what has been true remains true. there is a chunk of the republican party that wants
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donald trump and they are not going to be moved off that position. the question is, how much is it? i think it's less than 50. maybe it's 40. maybe it's 35, but they're not going to be moved by an indictment by alvin bragg. or frankly, any other indictment? the only question is, can someone consolidate the rest of the party that doesn't want to go down that road, but that group right there that shows up and stands in line for hours and hours at a trump rally. they're not going to be persuaded by some prosecutor new york city alright and mander. here's here's one thing i want to ask you, though. in this context, you know you've got trump and facing desantis and other than the field, but desantis, obviously the top polling one other than trump. president biden's troubling headline today, a new poll shows a 25% of democrats want him to run for a second term 25. 44% want him to step aside. but then it was like, okay, who's next? and the only person other than kamala harris to getting double digits she got 13% was other. okay, that's not good. it's not ideal , but when you see polling that pits donald trump against
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ron desantis or donald trump, excuse me, okay, but joe biden against trying desantis or drove biden against donald trump. you see, these people come home right or the sitting president. he's got a tremendous record to run on. i think a better record than any president in modern history. this is someone who rescued our economy from the worst. catch how poverty in half who kept the cost of prescription drugs for our seniors on medicare, and so he's got a lot to run on, and i think these things are going to be popular when he reminds people of all that he's done a lot of which will have kicked in by then, in november, 2024 paws and thank you both very much and next. the man suing gwyneth paltrow after the two collided at a ski resort finally testifies. this is such an odd trial details what he says happened when the two collided. plus the death toll rising after violent storms and tornadoes tore through mississippi, and the threat is not over. the majority of my patients with sensitivity. i see irritated gums and weak enamel sensodyne, sensitivity gum and enamel
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of feeling good video because every invented myself. have done . i had to make it happen myself didn't have. for the life you're making. i'm eva longoria and i'm following my mayan ancestry to the yucatan. you don't understand how excited i am to finally eat fish on a beach in the yucatan. yes the flavor of the region. longoria searching for mexico sunday at nine. tonight a blood curdling scream and then a boom. that's what the man suing actress gwyneth paltrow says happened when she slammed into him in a ski slope. paltrow describing a very different version of events, saying he plowed into her veronica miracle is outfront. actress and businesswoman gwyneth paltrow back in court today for a civil trial as the
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man suing her over 2016 skiing accident, took the stand something i've never heard of the ski resort and that was a blood curdling scream. it was like somebody was out of control and gunny hit a tree and was going to die. sanderson insists paltrow skied into him on a beginner ski slope at a utah ski resort, causing him severe brain damage and other injuries. but paltrow vehemently denies this. she's countersuing sanderson and claims he crashed into her. i said, you skied directly into my effing back. i apologize for my bad language. i'm like living another life now i can't ski anymore. i was told that if i did, and had another crash that i could wind up full time. full time in a nursing home. animations produced by paltrow's legal team were shown to the court to illustrate where paltrow family ski instructor
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erik christiansen alleged the parties were on the slope that day. christiansen who was with paltrow's children at the time of the accident, testified about what he heard and saw the first he was apologizing then he also just made a statement about. she just appeared in front of me. christians also denied sanderson's accusation that he and paltrow skied away without offering any assistance to sanderson time. i'm removing skis and getting ready to help them up. i'm asking, are you okay? he was affirmative. he said yes. last week, paltrow described the crash in an entirely different way, even recalling she had first thought she was being sexually assaulted. i was skiing and two skis came between my skis, forcing my legs apart. and then there was a body pressing against me. and there was a very strange grunting noise. i thought. am i is this a practical joke? is someone like
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doing something perverted? paltrow's husband and two kids were supposed to take the stand today, but this trial is running behind. in fact, the defense says they may not have time to get to paltrow's family and get them on the stand. erin alright , veronica. thank you very much surprising. we have to continue to follow that and coming up on a c. 3 60 senator chris murphy. he's been fighting for gun reform laws since the sandy hook shooting, he will join anderson to talk about the nashville shooting today. that's at eight o'clock. and next, the death toll rising after a string of deadly tornadoes. it's mississippi. i can't believe this is how w you kids talk to your friends. this is talking. did you have a nicee day? look t the size of these butterfly shrimp. enormous for shrimp. what she's talking. we'll be here. so you can be there.
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if you found a good deal because good deal found you. mm hmm. liberty mutual customizes your car insurance. so you only pay for what you need. with the money we saved. we tried to electrocute icicles. i got it, okay. doggy paddle. only pay for what you need already. liberty liberty out here. you're a landowner, gardner. landscaper. and a hunter. that's why you need versatile, durable cambodia equipment. good morning, everyone we do begin with breaking news. joining us now are two lawmakers from different sides of the aisle also live in ukraine. dr. sanjay gupta
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a mississippi father and his one year old daughter have died as another round of deadly storms royals the southeast, ethan herndon and his daughter riley, killed after a tornado struck their home. 20 million people are now under severe storm threats as the conditions have already led to 22 deaths throughout the region, the city of rolling fork, mississippi was virtually flattened after enduring wind gusts in tornadoes up to 170 miles an hour. you can see these before and after satellite images to get a sense of how deep and widespread damage runs. the storms are expected to work their way east tonight. thanks so much for joining us. i'll be back again at nine tonight and a c 3 60 begins now. good evening. i want to start with the video clip that says far too much about being a kid today. these are young children, single file holding hands. they're being taken not on a field trip to see the dinosaurs but out of harm's way from the scene of a school
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