tv CNN Newsroom CNN April 10, 2023 10:00am-11:01am PDT
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our customers don't do what they do for likes or followers. their path isn't for the casually curious. and that's what makes it matter the most when they find it. the exact thing that can change the world. some say it's what they were born to do... it's what they live to do... trinet serves small and medium sized businesses... so they can do more of what matters. benefits. payroll. compliance. trinet. people matter. after my car accident, benefits. payroll. compliance. wondnder whahatmy c cas. trinet. people matter. so i called the barnes firm. i'm rich barnes. youour cidedentase e woh than insurance offered? call the barnes firm now to find out. yoyou ght t beurprpris good morning, everyone we do begin with breaking news this morning. hello i'm abby phillip
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in washington, and we begin today with another deadly mass shooting this one at a bank in louisville, kentucky. police say four people are now dead and eight wounded. they say the shooter is also dead. and in a video recorded near the bank, you can hear the shots being fired as police begin arriving on the scene. the gunman began firing just as the bank was getting ready to open, and police say they believe he was a former employee. two officers were wounded in the exchange of gunfire, and one of them remains in critical condition. right now , a witness says that he spoke to an employee who was sheltering inside of the bank. she's at the bank at this building. their protocol is to get into the vault. me and her have had that conversation several times. hit the panic
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button. go to the vault. don't fight. don't do anything. lock yourself up hard and let it go. kentucky's governor, andy bashir arrived at the scene this morning, and he revealed that two of the people that were killed were close friends of his cnn's shimon per capita is following these developments. so shimon what is the latest that we are hearing about what transpired this morning, right? so right now we are told by authorities is that this gunman had some connection to the bank . whether it's a former employee or a current employee. it's not entirely clear. obviously right now, everything points to some kind of workplace or some kind of relationship that this individual had with the bank. and so authorities are trying to figure out what led up to this sort of that motivation. the key days into this hours into this days before what possibly happened that caused such vice such a violent act. we know this happened around 8 30 this
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morning before the bank was open for business and just three minutes, abby. that's how long it took the police to get there , and still, it was not enough time to save lives. however police saying this could have been far worse. take a listen. within three minutes of being dispatched. officers arrived on scene and encountered the suspect almost immediately still firing gun gunshots. officers exchanged gunshots with that suspect and ultimately, the suspect did die at the scene. we're trying to confirm if that suspect died of a self inflicted gunshot wound or was killed by officers at this time. and abby. two officers were also shot. one of those officers is in critical condition. there are several others that are at the hospital . and of course, just this trauma now left behind for this community. yet another community dealing with a mass shooting. we've also learned that the weapon here used according to sources was a 1 style weapon. of course, we're all now
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miliar with this style weapon as it seems to be a common theme here, the common weapon used in many of the mass shootings, but there's still a lot that we need to learn here. obviously about the shooter. the motivation what led up to this what people knew about what was going on in this individual's life. lots and lots of questions remain, shimon. thank you very much for that. and let's get more on the shooting with steve moore, who is a cnn law enforcement contributor and retired fbi supervisory special agent and also cheryl dorsey, a retired los angeles police department. sergeant so thank you both for being here. the police as you heard, shimon, say, remarkably fast arrived on the scene within three minutes, they still were not able to save the four lives that were taken here, steve more when you hear that, what? what does that? say to you about the lethality of the weapon. we know it was an ar 15. and just what law enforcement is dealing with
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with these kinds of incidents that are now becoming all too common. well law enforcement is dealing with the weapon that can that can overcome their body armor. most of the time, um it this also speaks to the fact that the shooter was was more than just well armed. he was well trained, um, doesn't matter how lethal the a r 15 is. if you don't know how to shoot it. the shooter obviously was practiced. um that's a big deal. and um it's just it's just becoming. i mean, a three minute response is tremendous. but one of the things we've learned is that you know that that's from the point of dispatch the shooter calls had to be made. so on average, one person dies per minute when an active shooter is on unchallenged. and sergeant dorsey. one of the things that
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we don't yet know is whether there was any kind of security or law enforcement presence at the scene of this bank. what we do know is that the gunmen apparently had a connection to the bank. perhaps he was a current or former employee in that kind of environment. um how does that complicate the response to an incident like this at a at a venue like this? i think many people would think banks are pretty well guarded, but but clearly this gunman was able to get through and caused several casualties here. one assumes that all banks have security on scene. not necessarily so and so, you know , we're it's very difficult to be proactive were reactionary in these kinds of instances. and so i'm just going to say this. we have to advocate for ourselves. it's nice to be nice. and i say that because i responded to a mass shooter incident on lapd, where the shooter went in the workplace with insider knowledge
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from cubicle to cubicle, and he said when he encountered one person, you know you were nice to me. i'm gonna let you live. so it's nice to be nice because you never know what someone is going through. you don't know what their, um proclivity towards violence might be in the workplace. they have insider knowledge. and so that two makes it very difficult to overcome. and so treat people kindly because you never know what it may come back and be helpful and saving your own life. well that is a very sobering, um, kind of assessment of the situation that people who are dealing with disgruntled colleagues could face being massacred potentially at their workplace, but steve moore, it does all of this raises some questions here. i mean, we are sitting here two weeks to the day since the covenant elementary school shooting and just a few minutes ago, president biden released a statement calling on congress to act on gun reform. a as someone in the law enforcement community . you just talked about these
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bullets that can pierce body armor. what do you think should be next to prevent these kinds of things from happening again? well if, by some magic wand we were able to just stop the manufacture and sale of a ar fifteens to civilians at this moment, you still have to deal with the fact that up as much as 100 million of them, um of 2 to 3 rifles that caliber rifles might be in civilian ownership in the united states right now. so what? we're going to see is a society that's more and more hardened, more and more, uh, you're not going to just walk into buildings anymore, and i think everybody all the viewers have seen this that you can't just walk into business places you have to be buzzed in, um 30 40 years ago. you didn't wear ieds around your neck. these lanyards, uh, we're going to have to. we're going to see this. because even if we acted
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today, decisively on our 15 type rifles. um you're not going to stop these shootings in the short term, so we have to do something to protect the people. in the meantime, sergeant dorsey i wonder if you could also weigh in on that. do you agree with that assessment that even if congress were to act today that wouldn't necessarily make things safer in the near term. the horse is out of the barn. i mean, there are so many people out there who are already armed. who shouldn't be, uh, ammunition is in their possession. and so, um, these red flag laws and reporting family members friends we always find out after the fact that there was a red flag, this person did say something. there was an indicator but those who knew this person intimately thought maybe it wasn't a big deal. or maybe they didn't mean it and they don't report it. it's imperative if you see something if you know something, you absolutely have to say something air on the caution of a friendly offending a friend or
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family member inconveniencing them. it would be better to have them talk to buy. local authorities have guns removed from them temporarily rather than have a loss of life to the magnitude that we saw today. and steve as your look as we are waiting for more information about what happened in this case. we need to know a lot more about this shooter and what was behind this, but does this kind of event? perhaps it was a workplace event from someone who might have worked at a place like a bank? does that surprise you in any way? what are you looking for? when it comes to the profile of who this shooter might be? well unfortunately, we're having a lot of data to go into our into our intelligence base right now, um, each shooting teaches us something more about what we're looking for is, cheryl said you you really need to start enforcing and enacting the red flag laws which will help us in the short
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term until the long term solution can can take effect. and so, yeah, i mean, you break it down into random shootings, uh, people just walking into malls, people walking into schools, and this is less random because it's a appears to be a workplace type violence shooting . i was kind of surprised that in a bank, you could have that level of casualty. um, because banks art. tend to be, uh, secured for the customers and for the employees. um it also speaks a little bit about the hazards of the law enforcement. responding as we saw in nashville, it was picture perfect textbook response to an active shooter, but what you didn't see is sometimes the person fires back accurately. in those first officers arriving take those rounds. and this this is just sobering moment. it's
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incredibly dangerous for law enforcement as well. and there is one officer who we know at this moment is in critical condition. but thank you both for your expertise. sergeant dorsey and steve moore for that conversation. and right now, the biden ministrations is gearing up for a fight on a different matter after federal judge in texas suspended, the fda is two decades old approval of the popular abortion, drug oppressed own. the justice department now says it is quickly appealing that ruling and it would impact tens of millions of women if it is upheld, now banning the drug , even in states where abortion is legal is what is potentially on the horizon here. it is also important to note that the drug preston isn't just used for abortion. women also use it to safely manage miscarriages, and the judge's ruling could essentially banned that option for them as well. so some democrats, including new york's congresswoman, alexandria,
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cossio, cortez, are calling on the administration to simply ignore the trump appointed judges ruling. the white house has pushed back on that idea. but just this morning, a republican lawmaker south carolina's nancy mace, says that she actually agrees with her democratic colleague watch that moment. this is an fda approved drug i support the usage of fda approved drugs. even if we might disagree. it's not up to us to decide as legislators or even you know, as the court system that whether or not this is the right drugs use or not number one, so i agree with ignoring it at this point. and joining us now is former federal prosecutor jennifer rogers and also margaret talent, the senior contributor for axios. jennifer i want to start there the administration they came out yesterday and actually kind of walked back the health and human services secretary's comments, saying everything was on the table and buy everything he
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meant, including ignoring this ruling. so what do you think? i mean, is there a legal basis for ignoring this ruling? or is there a possibility as some have raised that it could set a dangerous precedent. well, i think the biden administration needs to work within our system and not ignore the ruling. i mean, i don't think we want the chaos of a presidential administration, just ignoring rulings from judges. we had that happen effectively after the 2020 election when the former president lost 60 plus lawsuits ignored that precedent effectively and we had january six, so i don't think they should ignore the ruling. but there are things both within the judiciary and outside that they can do in order to try to get this this drug back in the hands of doctors to use it for patients that needed and i think that's what they should be focused on doing. and to your point. i mean, this is just the beginning of the legal process here. there's still an appellate process that needs to play out as well. and we have to see how that will go. and it could all
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go all the way to the supreme court. so margaret, i do wonder what do you does it surprise you. first of all to hear nancy mace, kind of frontline battleground lawmaker taking a position that actually is. more aggressive, more aggressive than even the white house is willing to take right now. i think abby nancy mace has been a pretty interesting political figure. we kind of saw her segue from her hanging on to support of the former president when she thought she needed to, uh, in her re election campaign last year to this position, thinks she knows her district and she is if you are an abortion rights supporter, um like this is the position that makes sense for you to, i think take in terms of your brand, but here's the reality after the dobbs ruling last year, i think in the states where abortion rights shrank surgical abortion rights what all the advocates said was will try to create a patchwork by
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making medication available. you know, through the mail, and what this ruling doesn't really flips it on its head. not only would make it very difficult if this stood impossible to get, uh, the medication for that kind of vacation abortion in those states, but in states where abortion is uh, very legal and highly protected right right now , so that's what's complicated about this. it's also what makes the judge's ruling pretty vulnerable on appeal, maybe even before the supreme court, so i think if it is on a collision course with the supreme court. may never actually get that far and biden and his administration do have these other options to slow. walk it to challenge it. they don't have to outright. ignore it when you look at it as a political issue, though, a lot of republicans really concerned not just nancy mace, a lot of republicans really concerned about what this does because it is those medication abortions. in particular, they're so popular with the american public , even if he doesn't intend to do that. having the right to do
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it is widely supported. yeah, i mean, as a political matter that becomes a huge issue, jennifer. we're just getting some information in to cnn. in these last few moments, we're learning that the justice department is actually now seeking clarification from the federal judge on how exactly the fda should comply with this ruling, partly because now we have conflicting. we have conflicting rulings. we have that judge in texas, a judge in washington it seems like they are not sure what to do next. so what do you make? make of that. well it suggests that they don't intend to ignore the ruling, which i think is the right call, you know? listen their immediate interest is in extending the stay. judge kaczmarek gave them a seven day stay, which expires midnight friday night. they need to make sure that they have a state for this so that medford past ron isn't pulled from the shelves while this litigation is playing out, so that's going to be their main goal, so they may ask him for an additional stay. they've asked if the circuit first day if they need to go to
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the supreme court because the fifth circuit and judge kaczmarek don't extend than they'll do that. that's their primary goal, but i think that's right. if there is a conflict between two judges, you do need to know what to do. you don't want to have the fda. i think out of compliance with a federal judge's order, so i think they're doing the right thing here. aggressively appeal work outside the digital judicial system where necessary to try to make this problem gets fixed. it should get fixed at the fifth circuit, but i'm not sure that it will. so i think they're doing the right thing. and margaret. um the republicans are seem to be pretty quiet about this by and large. what do you expect, politically? um as we go forward here now, i think we seem to be in a new phase of this fight. now where i think perhaps the activists wing of the republican party is pushing forward and the ones who are on the ballot seemed to be saying. hold on. we don't know how this is going to play out. what do you think? the current leader of the republican party is former
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president donald j. trump and you'd see him out there, um, banging the drums. the celebration of this ruling, even though it is a ruling by one of his judges, someone who's very aligned with the movement, the anti abortion movement. look at this polling from ipsos and cnn has its own polling also is earlier this year, two thirds of americans support access two medication abortions. that's half of republicans. it's two thirds of independence, and it's more than eight and 10 democrats that tells you why this is volatile. it is the version of abortion, the more americans are comfortable with. take a pill early on and the ability to claw back for one judge to claw back a 23 year old, um, policy that allows this this medication. and to claw back in a way that impacts. um uh, handle safe handling of miscarriages as well as abortion. that is, that is something that many republicans are concerned may go too far in the public eye as well as
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legally so i think that's why you're not hearing a lot of talk about it right now. and this is just the beginning, both on the legal front and on the political front, jennifer rogers and margaret, calif. thank you both very much. and still ahead for us new questions about who exactly leaked classified information and u. s intelligence documents. what we know about the contents and how some key american allies are now making changes because of that leak. plus the dalai lama has apologized after a disturbing new video surfaced showing him kissing a child on the lips. the explanation. we are now getting from his office and could at least one of the black lawmakers expelled in the tennessee state house. be right back in the seat that he lost just a few days ago. we'll tell you when we come back. you need to deliver new apps f fast using the services u want inn the clouds of your choice with flexible multi cloud services that enable digital innovation and enterprise
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the documents they began appearing online weeks ago, but they weren't discovered immediately. these documents contain a lot of sensitive intelligence, including ukrainian troop numbers and weaknesses as they gear up for a major counter offensive against russia. but other documents reveal how the u. s has been eavesdropping on both its adversaries and its allies, including israel and south korea . cnn's oren liebermann is over at the pentagon for us or so what do we know about the investigation so far? and what is the pentagon saying today? about at this point. we don't know too much about the criminal investigation, led by the department of justice, other than the defense department referred this matter to doj when they learned of this leak, so it's the department of justice that will look at the criminal aspects of this who leaked it. how was it leaked when and what was the purpose behind this? that's the criminal part of this. the defense department, meanwhile, has been doing its own review, along with the inter agency to figure out how best to shore of this sort of very
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sensitive. highly classified information to make sure it doesn't continue leaking. cnn has reviewed 53 pages that were leaked, but it still remains very possible that there are other documents out there that have been leaked and simply haven't been discovered or that could be leaked in the future. so that's part of what the defense department is doing to try to lock in on this and make sure that this specific leak doesn't continues. defense secretary lloyd austin was briefed on this last week on april 6th. and, according to the pentagon, he remains deeply involved with senior pentagon leaders about how to make sure this doesn't happen. then again . meanwhile, the pentagon has also been in touch with other allies and partners because of the damage this has caused and for that, let's look at what's in these documents. part of it is about the war in ukraine with detailed assessments of battlefield updates as well as ukraine's military capabilities and its air defenses. it is worth noting that some of this is a bit dated. the documents are dated from late february to early march. but this sort of information, especially at this level of granularity is still very important and very frankly , very critical to somebody like
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russia who would be interested in learning whatever they can from these documents that come from the highest levels of the pentagon. it's also damaging from another perspective that you mentioned and that is it shows us spying, not only on russia, for example, its adversary but also the intel us has gathering on countries like israel and south korea, some of its closest allies. israel for its part, is essentially dismissed this and said this wasn't too serious or damaging turns to the relationship, but south korea had a different sort of reaction, saying they were looking for an explanation from the us so you get a sense there. abby of how critical this is first for the u. s to get a handle on it and make sure it doesn't happen again, but also for the us to smooth over the relationships with all these countries. yeah absolutely. and that's probably going to be something that's going to be ongoing for some time. oren liebermann at the pentagon, thank you very much, and let's get a sense of the fallout from this document that we were just discussing. joining us. now is cedric leighton. he's a retired u. s. air force colonel and a cnn military analyst. so colonel leighton, when you look at the
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scope of a leak, like this in the midst of an ongoing, very hot war between ukraine and russia, what is the most concerning to you about what might have been revealed happy. i think the big thing here is the fact that you know we're in a hot war like you mentioned. you know, the ukraine warriors, one in which the us is providing a lot of sport to the ukrainians . nato countries are doing the same kind of thing. uh and it really boils down to the sensitivity of the operations involved. in some ways i would compare it to the snowden leak, not in terms of volume. the southern lake was much more voluminous but types of information that this week deals with that it becomes a really important piece of this because it is so sensitive and it deals not only with adversaries like russia, but also close allies like japan, like south korea and israel, and on that front, i mean the at the spying of the us
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on others, including our allies . should anybody be be particularly surprised that that is happening? do you think that there will be real consequences ? not just what they're saying publicly, but consequences behind the scenes. about that information being revealed. i think, particularly in the case of the south koreans, they might be less willing to share information with us and that's going to be critical because we depend a lot on south korean intelligence to watch north korea, for example, and there could be fallout in that particular area, and it could very much weaken our ability to have first warning of, let's say a missile launch from north korea or something like that. so these things become important in ways that we don't always connect immediately, and it could, i think, have a major impact that relationship. and the documents seemed to be seemed to have been printed. they were crumpled up and photographed another location. how surprising is you that are is it to you that these
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sensitive documents could have been basically walked out of a secure location, perhaps walked out of the pentagon itself. yeah that was my first suspicion when i heard of this, and i heard the manner in which these documents appeared, like you said, crumpled up paper that you know, probably had been in somebody's coat pocket or pants pocket and then spread out to be photographed. so it looks to me like this is an inside job. somebody who may have worked at the pentagon may have worked at some other federal facility that gets this type of intelligence briefing from the joint staff at the pentagon. all of these factors you know, would lead me to believe that it is somebody who, perhaps for political reasons, or just because they were disgruntled employee decided to do this. it was pretty easy for them to do this. the system is based on a lot of trust. but these kinds of actions may very well limit that kind of trust. yeah especially after you mentioned edward snowden. they have been so many high profile leaks like this.
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it's surprising to see it continuing to happen. colonel cedric leighton, thank you very much. and coming up. next the dalai lama is now apologizing after an exchange with a young boy that many are calling disturbing more on what happened next. t m mobile. your business wiwill save over 1000 bucks. wht are you going to do with it? i could use a new sign. with t mobile for business save more than 1000. bucks versus verizon and with our price lock guarantee will never raise your rate plan ever. tina used to worry about bad breath now. swishyime, their breath mouthwash for 12 hours, fresh breath and it's non burning. unlike our outfit, which is fire try their breath mouthwash. it's a better mouthwash advisor giving you incomplete advice. creative planning. we provide all the expertise all the advice you need all in house, ensuring every aspect of your wealth works harder together. you're
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month contact homeserve before there's a problem. call 1 803 to 40163 or visit homeserve .com. melanie's nana in washington, and this is cnn. closed captioning brought to you by invent help. call 1 807 100020 invention idea but don't know what to do. next call invent help today they can help you get started with your idea. call now. 807 100020. the dalai lama has now apologized after videos
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surfaced of an incident involving the tibetan spiritual leader and a young boy. it shows the buddhist monk kissing the boy on the lips and then asking the child to quote suck his tongue. now this happened back in february at an event in india and cnn's vivica sued is in new delhi for us what is the latest on this very disturbing incident? indeed a disturbing incident, abby, and there's been complete outrage in social media over the behavior and the interaction that the 14th dalai lama had with that minor boy in february. now it's taken six weeks for the delay lama to issue an apology which came earlier today local time india, where he said he regretted the incident. i want to read a bit from that a statement where he's apologized because a few bits of it really stand out to me, and i'll tell you why. firstly, he goes on to say that he wishes to apologize to the boy and his
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family as well as his many friends across the world for the hurt his words may have caused. the statement also reads. his holiness often teases people he meets in an innocent and playful way, even in public and before cameras. he regrets the incident . now if you go through that video, which i have already said , has been extremely disturbing for people to watch. this is young boy who goes up to the elements is, can i get a hug? but the lalama calls him onstage, invites him on stage and says, give me a hug and a kiss, and he takes a kiss from the boy on the cheek and a hug. moments later, he asks for the boy to kiss him on the mouth, and the boy obliges the reluctantly if you actually gauge his body language, and then seconds later, the llama asks him to suck his tongue. now if you again go back to the apology issued by the llama, the two phrases like i said, stand out for me. one is for the heard his words may have caused clearly more than the words abby . it's the action of the dalai lama that needs to be
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questioning and it has been by critics across india, and secondly, where they talk about him, often teasing people he meets in an innocent and playful way. clearly it was more than that, and that's why people are so upset with the tibetans. ritual leader who has millions of followers from which there's so many who are currently upset with his behavior. abby. i don't know how many other ways to describe it. other than very, very disturbing. vivica sued. thank you very much for all of that. and still to come for us to tennessee lawmakers. expulsion from the statehouse may not last very long, he could end up right back in the capital today. we're live in nashville coming up. i'm'm joey. i'm anit. and this is our real ring story. one time when i was out of town, my husband joy collapsed. i got notified right away and got him to help you needed ring helped save my life learned moret
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morning, everyone we do begin with breaking news this morning. last week, republicans kicked two black democrats out of the tennessee state legislature. but those are the targets of that historic political playback may have the last word, justin jones and justin pearson were both stripped of their seats for taking part in the gun reform protests on the house floor. but the process to get them back in those seats is already underway . and for jones, it could even happen as early as today. cnn's isabelle rose alice is in nashville. so it is about walk us through what could happen tonight for justin jones. hey abby, even before the special metro council meeting, we're going to see a lot of movement outside of the city hall right here with nashville. ian's organizing a rally in support of jones getting his job back. and then after the city council
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meeting, we're going to see the march toward the state capital. we just got a hold of the agenda right here for the special meeting and you can see it's a single item right here, so it should be short. and sweet. i do want to introduce friday, o'connell council member district 19. he's going to walk us through a little bit of this procedure. let's start with just the length of this meeting. we are hoping it is extremely brief . there's really one thing to do here that is to get representative jones nominated as an interim appointment now that he has been officially expelled. and then we have to certify the minutes of having done that. but there are some procedural steps we've got to take to get there. right and walk us through that because the appointment actually getting to the vote to appoint him really hinges on a different vote, and that has to do with the rule. that's right. so this is considered now a vacant seat. and if you look thursday night within minutes of the expulsion vote, statehouse page for district 52 had no photograph had no representatives, so they
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moved very quickly to make it clear that representative jones was no longer a member of the body. now it's a vacancy that it falls to us to consider it. ordinarily if the vice mayor had not moved swiftly and decisively , this would be a process that plays out across several weeks. tonight is a special called meeting, so there's notice we have to establish a quorum, which takes 27 members of ar 40 member body and then we're going to have to suspend the rules to move more quickly than that ordinary. they can see filling that takes two objections can break that entire process. we're waiting to see if any of our colleagues are going to object to that. objection you can't suspend the rule. and what does that mean? if you will be back on the regular her schedule. it would be weeks from now before we could take up that voter four weeks before you can nominate jones. if you're successful tonight, and that rule does get suspended. jones is appointed. what is the importance of that the importance of that is the general assembly is still in session. in fact, they will, i think, gavilan tonight at five pm central and we'd love to have him back there to be able to
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participate in the roll call and be seated again. one of the reasons that matters is they're still considering legislation. we've got a vacancy here in nashville and one in memphis. if there are any close votes are folks lack representation right now, and what's your gut saying which way this will go? coming through the weekend. i will tell you i don't think any of our colleagues have seen this much correspondence on a single issue. i have a couple of colleagues. we're still keeping an eye on to see if they are potentially going to object. my hope is that they will look at the will of voters. both industries 52 but also across the city and county do the right thing. and if they want to vote no, they're able to do that, but hold their objections to the process. this seems less of a matter of if john's will be sent back to his job, but rather a matter of when i think that's correct difficulty, obviously is going to be that weeks from now . they may have all gone home because they don't meet you around like the metro council does friday. thank you so much for time. i appreciate it. and abby. one other quick note. we're told by the vice mayor jim shulman, that the person nominating jones will be delish a porterfield, who actually ran
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against jones for that district of 52 seats and lost to him during a primary election. now she will be nominating out for him to get that seat back as an interim successor. abby. all right. isabel rizal is good to have that council member there for that live interview and critical information about what will happen tonight. thank you very much. and just ahead tonight we'll hear why texas governor greg abbott is trying to pardon a man convicted of murder before he is even sentenced. you're doing business in a an app driven multi cloloud world. that's why you choose vm ware with flexible m multi cloud services that enable d digital innovation and enterprise control helps you keep your cloud options open. long hair were easy. evyone would do it as well as true green. does it true green online tools, help ensure your custom treatment works to deliver a greener, healthier law guaranteed. it's
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written a book, paige publishing can help you through the process. we cut through the confusion of the publishing world to make it easy for you call 805 630741. we do have a quick update for you right now on our top story, the hospital that is treating patients from the bank shooting in louisville , kentucky, now says they are treating or they have treated nine people that is one more than it was previously reported . now we're told that three have already been just discharged, and police say that four people are dead and the shooter was also killed. they believe that he was a former employee. now. two officers were wounded in an exchange of gunfire with that gunman will keep you updated on that story as the day develops, but now on to another story in texas, where an army sergeant was convicted of murder last week and now before he's even sentenced, the governor is putting him on the fast track. for a pardon. on friday, daniel
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perry was found guilty of murdering a man at a 2020 black lives matter protests and republican governor greg abbott has now ordered an expedited investigation into a potential pardon. the d. a who prosecuted the case calls the move deeply troubling. cnn's ed lavandera is reporting for us. guilty of the offensive murders. austin jury convicted daniel perry on friday for the murder of garrett foster. the army sergeant broke down after hearing the verdict. perry shot and killed foster during a black lives matter protest in the summer of 2020. after the trial, foster's family expressed their relief. we're happy with the verdict. we are very sorry for his family as well. just there's no winners in this. and just glad it's over. but this case is far from over the very next day. texas governor greg abbott tweeted his vow to pardon perry as quickly as possible and argued texas has
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one of the strongest standard ground laws of self defense that cannot be nullified by a jury or a progressive district attorney. in the weeks after the murder of george floyd. black lives matter. protests erupted all over the country. garrett foster joined the protests in austin. you got it out tonight. don't let us march in the streets anymore, so i gotta practice some. some of our right. daniel perry was a rideshare driver and had just dropped off a customer near a blm protest on the downtown streets. prosecutors said perry ran a red light to turn into the crowd. this is where accounts differ at the time. some witnesses say perry deliberately instigated the altercation. the driver intentionally and aggressively accelerated their vehicle into a crowd of people that is extremely clear, the lead investigator testified. that video showed perry did not accelerate but slowed down.
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perry says garrett foster was carrying an assault style rifle , which he was legally allowed to do and pointed the gun at him. very fired his handgun several times at foster killing him. perry's lawyers call it self defense. but in the trial, prosecutors pointed to texts and social media post daniel perry made that summer that suggested perry was looking for a fight. in one, perry wrote. he might kill a few people on my way to work. they are rioting outside my apartment complex. someone wrote back. can you legally do so? perry responded if they attack me or try to pull me out of my car, then yes. the texas jury didn't buy this self defense argument and issued a guilty verdict on the murder charge. perry's lawyer says they're disappointed and will appeal. thanks to cnn's ed lavandera for that report, and that does it for me here in the cnn newsroom, but please don't go anywhere. we've got much more
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