tv CNN News Central CNN April 21, 2023 8:00am-9:00am PDT
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me, i can overdraft up to $200 fee free. join me today and sign up at chime .com. this is cnn. the world's news network. mm hmm. two or three men charged in connection with a white nationalist rally in charlottesville will soon be standing before a judge. cnn just got new photos of the men. we are live outside the court with the latest also nude, deeply disturbing. notes that he wrote that police found now helping investigators piece together. why he did it. and more than $15 million in gold has gone missing from the toronto airport. how and what police know so far. we're following these developing stories and many more coming in
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right here to cnn. new central. happening soon in charlottesville, two of these three men who carried tiki torches and march nearly six years ago at a white nationalist rally are scheduled to appear in court today. each has been indicted on a single felony charge of burning an object with the intent to intimidate. which carries a maximum penalty of five years in prison. 2017 rally ultimately led to violent clashes with counter protesters in 32 year old heather higher, lost her life. cnn's brian todd is in charlottesville. brian i understand there are some new developments, what's going on there? well john. the hearing is slightly delayed because there's another unrelated hearing going on in this court behind me, but in a few minutes we do expect this hearing to take place where two of the three defendants in
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this case are expected to appear to set the scene for our viewers. we have to kind of differentiate this. these defendants are charged in the case that's related to that friday evening rally on august 11th 2017. that is when a group of white nationalists and white supremacists marched on the campus of the university of virginia wielding torches menaced several people. on the campus that evening, and they are charged and we're going to go over the charges in a second. but that, of course, is different from what happened the day after that, that was the unite the right rally on that saturday of august 12th 2017 when there was so much violence in the streets here in charlottesville, another two events are related, of course, but they are separate in this case has only to do with the events on that. friday evening. we should point out now the charges involved. two of the three men charged are going to appear this hearing. there will zachary smith from texas and tyler bradley dykes from south carolina. for smith. this is a bond hearing for tyler bradley dykes. this is an initial court appearance. a third defendant named dallas medina is we
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believe not going to appear in court, at least for this hearing, but the three men are charged with burning an object with the intent to intimidate. also will zachary smith is charged with violating the statute. which makes it illegal to maliciously release a chemical irritants, such as tear gas that also relates to that torch march on that friday evening, and again, these people were again marching through the campus of the university of virginia that night wielding torches, chanting horrible, racist slogans. like quote. jews will not replace us and blood and soil, which is a reference. that was kind of a prelude to what happened the next day when there was so much pitched violence in the streets of charlottesville, actually, right near where i'm standing right now, and it was only about two blocks away from here when 32 year old heather heyer was struck by a vehicle that rammed into a crowd and killed several people hurt that day. and also we can tell you that this is kind of a continuation of a years long effort to bring some of these people to justice
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because just about a year and a half ago several several of the organizers of the unite the right march were successfully sued by some victims of the violence of that march for damages totaling about $26 million. john these are important moments in u. s history. brian todd, thank you for being there. sarah president joe biden is gearing up for reelection run in planning to make it official next week, sources telling cnn that biden could launch his campaign on tuesday with the video announcement, and it's not just a random date that was picked april 25th marks the four year anniversary. of biden entering the 2020 white house race. cnn's arlette size is joining us now from the white house. will there be something different? this is a video that that's going to come out. how will this be different from 2020? well sarah the will. he won't he? speculation certainly hasn't been different this time around, but it does appear that the waiting game may soon be over. president biden for months, has said that he intends to run for reelection. and it appears that
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the plan to actually roll that out are beginning to take shape . his team is eyeing next week as a possible launch date specifically looking at that tuesday, april 25th anniversary as a day that they could roll out a campaign style video. of course, his advisors caution. is often is with biden world that things in the timing could slide , but that april 25th date holds personal significance for president biden as it's the day he launched his campaign for years ago in 2019, when he was waging what he described a battle for the soul of the nation. advisors behind the scene have been working for quite some time trying to sketch out what the campaign apparatus may look like. and that all may be coming to fruition just next week, but they're certainly going to be a long road ahead. president biden as he seeks reelection. his approval rating overall is hovering in the low to mid forties. he also is has some skepticism within the democratic party about whether he should even be running. there was a new recent poll from the
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associated press that found only 47% of democrats think he should run for reelection. now that number is a little bit higher than it was in january, but it does speak to some of the issues and concerns that people within his own party have, including surrounding the issue. issue of his age. he is 80 years old. he would be 82 inauguration if he is reelected now. that same poll also showed that 81% of democrats say they would probably support him. if he would run. those democrats would be critical to his reelection bid, as he would need to energize them heading into 2024 . but of course, the president would also need to win over some moderate republicans and independents, especially as he could potentially face a rematch with his former rival, former president. donald trump. so next week, all eyes will be on when, exactly and if that announcement will, in fact be made, of course, aids have cautioned that this timing could always slide. alright. alright, let's signs thank you so much for all of that for help. and sara. we are
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learning new details about the two lengthy notes left behind by the louisville bank shooter that seemed to reveal why he went to his job earlier this month and opened fire on his co workers. law enforcement sources said that one note was found in the gunman's home and another was found on him at the scene. on april 10th. the shooter killed five people and injured several others before being killed by police. cnn's omar jimenez is following the story and joins me now. so omar, what more do we know about these notes? and how much more do they tell us about perhaps his thinking at the time also to law enforcement sources are telling cnn that the shooter that multiple notes were found one of them was found on the body of the shooter after he was killed in the shootout with police and the notes show that at least part of his motivation was to show how easy it is in the united states for someone dealing with a serious mental illness to go and get an assault weapon, and this are 15 that was used was purchased legally, about a week before the shooting seven days or so, and it didn't take much he needed to sign an atf form basically go through an
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fbi records. check the show. he wasn't a convicted felon. then he was able to get this weapon and we know from the family that he had been dealing with some mental health issues, though they even say they never thought that things would get to where we have seen things get, too has this changed what officials are saying about an official motive ? i mean, we're now learning. perhaps he was just chilling as it is trying to make a point. but have officials said anything about an official motive yet these are all pieces that are zeroing in on that so police haven't come out and said all right, this is the reason however, all right, we have some clues from these notes. the family is also trying to test his body for cte, which we know can sometimes have symptoms of loss of control aggression, even though it's not just limited to ct, so they're looking at clues there and again also trying to piece together from some of the mental health issues that we know from his family. that he was dealing with prior to this fair to say more details here, but still a lot of questions. of course, jimenez. thank you, john. with us now is criminologist james denizli. he
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is the author of the violence project. how to stop a mass shooting epidemic. thanks so much for being with us. you've done so much work. on this subject. what is your research show about the correlation between mental health and mass shootings? yeah thanks for having me on the show to talk about this. we definitely seeing the life histories of mass shooters, and we studied them going all the way back to 1966 to the present day. that people who perpetrate my shootings are not mentally well, but that doesn't necessarily mean that they are mentally ill. and that's an important distinction . which is to say that there is often a lot going on in the lives of a mass shooter that overwhelms their usual coping mechanism is individuals who are in crisis, it can often be a suicidal crisis. and it's often observable because there is a change in behavior from baseline where people around that person recognize something's not quite right. but it doesn't
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necessarily mean they have a diagnosed mental illness and it also we have to avoid the stigma attached to the idea that mental illness is the primary driver of mass shooters. it's a much more complicated and messy picture than that. it just so people know up on the screen right now we have a graphic from your research, which shows nearly 70% psychosis has no role and then you see minor 11% 8% moderate role. so that is the research you found. i'm curious james about what the next mass shooter thinks. about the notes. being made public from the mass shooter in this bank killing. what do they see when these notes go public like this? you know, in our research, we see a common through line, which is that mass shooters often study other mass shooters because they're asking these questions about their lives. when you get to that point where a mass shooting is intended to be a final act, so if you get to that
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point where you're no longer care if you live or die, you're asking that question of why do i feel that way? you google it and you find out that there are other people who felt the same way you have, and you kind of go tumbling down the rabbit hole and get radicalized into this type of violence by being inspired by others that have done it, too. so what we often see is when mashing is leaving behind this trail of breadcrumbs . for some people, it becomes inspirational and that they can draw sort of copycat from this and follow suit in the footsteps. suppose other mass shooters too. that is chilling. when you think about one mass shooting, inspiring the next, and i think it does perhaps guide all of us and how we address them and what we do when we talk about them, um, suicide . i mean, clearly so many of these mass shooters go in, not just expecting to die, but maybe hoping to die. so how does that shape your research here? this
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was a huge aha moment for us when we were doing the research looking at these life histories of the mass shooters. we even interviewed perpetrators of mass shooters who were incarcerated. we interviewed their families, friends and others. this is all documented in the book. and we found this overlap between suicide and homicide. a mass shooter intends for their shooting to be a final act, and it can, at times be driven by despair and suicidal ideation. the difference being that there's also a grievance there that you're trying to share with the world, so there's a lot of learning we can use from suicide prevention to be thinking about . how do we look for the warning signs where someone's on that pathway to violence? and how do we divert them off of it? it's a really on all of us to look out for the people in our lives who are struggling and to get them the help that they need not because they might be a mass shooter, but because that's just the right thing to do and doing it this way enables us to become
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part of the solution because the frustration is we're all waiting for congress to act and it never comes. but we also can have some skin in the game here and all be part of that solution by just taking care of one in each of them being nice, sometimes with suicide. the smallest intervention can make the biggest difference. and if you apply that to the potential mass shooters. maybe maybe you can make a difference there, too. as i said, james, densely your research on this is wonderful. thank you for the work you do and thank you for being with us today. ralph. and john sitcom growing calls for recalls more than a dozen state attorneys general plea for a federal recall of hyundai and kia vehicles, the security concern that is prompting the request coming up next plus prosecutors in new mexico expected to officially dropped involuntary manslaughter charges against actor alec baldwin. new details on the new facts that factored into the decision. also a monumental deadline day for the supreme court. the justices could drop a major decision on
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thinking. partnering to unlock new ideas to create new legacies to transform a company. industry economy generation because great envision working in lockstep puts you on the path to your full potential. old school grid . new world ideas. morgan stanley next time on the whole story, first electric flight climate warriors racing to unscrew the planet. you're part of the movement to basically build the oil industry and reverse godzilla. get mad and go kill that thing. the whole story with anderson cooper sunday at eight on cnn. welcome back and on our radar today, washington governor jay inslee just signed a bill formally eliminating the death penalty from state law spent on hold there since 2018 after the state supreme court ruled it was unconstitutional. a texas man who faces misdemeanor
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charges for his alleged role in the capital riot is now in more trouble after police standoff. court documents show that nathan powell, um is now facing new charges after he opened fire on law enforcement officers who went to his home last week for a welfare check. nobody was hurt, and palin was later arrested. and a coalition of 18 attorneys general are calling for a federal recall of millions of hyundai and kia vehicles because they lack anti theft devices. they say that the cars are too unsafe and too easy to steal. the car models were manufactured from 2011 and 2022 have seen an alarming increase in theft. so part of the problem is a viral tiktok challenge where people steal the vehicles using just a usb court. the car companies say that they have updated the technology on their news vehicles. sarah today prosecutors in new mexico are expected to officially dropped involuntary manslaughter charges against actor alec baldwin. sources tell cnn that may be due to modifications to the firing mechanism in the gun he was
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holding. this is what the gun looked like. it sort of matched the description of the one that was used baldwin, as we know, was charged earlier this year in the deadly shooting of cinematographer helena hutchins. joining me now lovely to have you defense and trial attorney misty merits. um i remember the whole conversation where mr baldwin kept saying i didn't fire the gun. i didn't fire the gun. the fbi report comes forward, saying actually, it had to be fired. and now we're hearing that there's something different. what is going on here ? yes, sarah. i'm so curious about when this modification was discovered and what investigation was done to get to this conclusion? because the prior district attorney now we have a special prosecutor hurts a sign. so look fresh eyes on the case, really in the speed lane to get to the preliminary hearing, which was scheduled for may 5th so in the course of that preparation, the special prosecutors have said they discovered this modification of the gun, which would make it almost impossible to move
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forward with these charges against baldwin. but when was that discovered because the d a. who is handling it before was adamant there was no way the gun could have gone off without the trigger being pulled so very starkly different narrative here and has a true impact on the case, as we can see from this surprising withdrawal of charges by prosecutor what was what is interesting, and i know that you have seen this as a person in this realm that oftentimes charge starts here and then it does fall, but to have it completely go away. for lack of better terms and the pun did the d a jump the gun on this one good pod. but yes, i think that in this particular case, it's surprising that the special prosecutors didn't say let's go to the preliminary hearing and let the judge make the determination about whether or not there is probable cause that means whatever they have was so conclusive that they couldn't move forward with the charges. remember prosecutors do have an ethical obligation. they're not out to get somebody or to win.
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they have to assess a case based on whether or not they believe the case can be proved beyond a reasonable doubt. in this case, if there was a modification, and alec baldwin was not aware of it , there really is not a case against him. and now to your point, sarah, whether or not the trigger was pulled. that's an issue because this modification could mean that it was a malfunction. the gun was less safe right from the jump without his knowledge, so i think that they made the right choice by dropping the charges under these circumstances, but keep in mind its without prejudice, so in an evolving investigation could lead to more change. and we just wanna make clear they haven't done it quite yet, but we are hearing that that is going to happen. and you know how this all works where there are investigations. i think a lot of people don't realize that the prosecuting offices have their own investigators. also looking at this and in this case is this sort of embarrassing to the d a . what's happened here has had a really rocky road. keep in mind . there was a gun enhancement
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charged. that was part of the initial charges. that law was not on the books at the time of the incident. so that was a really big faux pas there because that just shows you're not doing your due diligence as a district attorney. now we have these two special prosecutors coming in taking a look at this case and finding a different conclusion in the investigation, so i do think it's a mar-a-lago . but i'm also open to what does the investigation reveal, and i'm wondering if prosecutors asked for more time. to continue the investigation with respect to hannah gutierrez read who the charges have not. there's no indication that they're being dropped moving forward. yes they're still there and you said without prejudice, which means more people could be charged. they could go back. they've got to look to see what has happened here. especially with all this new information. that's come out. you are so great to have mr morris. thank you so much for coming on. thank you, sarah john. deadline day at the supreme court said to rule at possibly any moment on what will
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happen with an abortion pill. an american, has died in sudan in the middle of clashes that have claimed the lives of hundreds. we have the latest on an attempt at a ceasefire. what is it about the firirst warm breeze of the season that makes you f feel lighter than air? no matter where you are. when it crosses your path, you'll feel compelled to take to the road and see where it leads. the first step begins at the lincoln spring sales event going on no for a limited time was stuck. unresolved depression. symptoms were in my way i needed more r my antidepressant helps give it a lift to an antidepressant is clinically proven to help relieve overall depression symptoms better than an
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whether or not the high court will uphold an appeals court ruling that would severely restrict access to mythic kristen, cnn's senior supreme court analyst. jones joins us now, joan, what does this mean for the availability of the drug, potentially sure. good. good morning, sarah. you know right now the justices are just wrapping up the morning meeting and the weeks business, including this topic, certainly . and it is indeed you know the restrictions on the drug that would be an issue depending on how they rule. the drug is not going to disappear from the market immediately. this is a very preliminary stage and what the justices are being asked to do by the biden administration and the drug manufacturer, danko. is suspend or postpone the effect of lower court rulings that essentially put new restrictions on the available the availability of the drug, for example, when women could access it at 10 weeks of pregnancy, which is the situation today, if it would that would be rolled back to
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only up to seven weeks of pregnancy. would they have to could they obtain it? after consulting with a physician by mail or where they have to go in to pick it up? so there are a variety of restrictions that are actually kind of in this moment at stake, but let me just remind everyone where the court is. this is a court that just 10 months ago rolled back all of constitutional abortion rights nationwide in its ruling reversing roe v. wade nearly half century of reproductive rights, but as the justices did that they took pains to say that states individual states could still make abortion legal now the main way that women and pregnancies these days in the early stages. is through medication abortion. as opposed to sort of surgical abortions. so if increased restrictions are put on this drug, or, you know, down the road after the merits of the controversy or heard, even more restrictions are put on the drug, then what's on the table right now? it would really undercut what the supreme court
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said that this will be a state to state matter. so that's what we're looking at here. and just so people know that biden administration has asked that again that all it needs to do is suspend the effect of the lower court orders so the case could play out on its merits, and we'll see whether they just give us a yes or no to that. or if they themselves try to actually address the individual regulations, which frankly, the biden administration says, would just create massive chaos in the country. sarah all right, we'll wait and see joan biskupic. thank you so much for all that, john. alright. thanks, sarah. this morning. defense secretary lloyd austin is trying to reassure allies after several u. s classified documents were leaked online, many of which revealed details about military operations in ukraine. austin met with his counterparts from around the world at ramstein air base in germany to coordinate sending more aid to ukraine. in his opening remarks, he acknowledged the severity of the document leak. i take this issue
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very seriously. and we will continue to work closely and respectfully with are deeply valued allies and partners. as i've discussed this issue with our allies and partners. i've been struck by your solidarity. and your commitment to reject efforts to divide us. and we will not let anything fracture our unity. so there's also a new information this morning on the u. s training of ukrainians to use abrams tanks, cnn's or lieberman joins us from the pentagon. what is this reporting ? how far along are they in the training or this entire process , moving much faster than was originally anticipated back when the us announced it would send abrams tanks to ukraine. the expectation was that this could play out over months or years because the u. s needed to acquire these tanks upgrade them to the more advanced someone a
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to get the training done and then send them in. that was a process that would have taken a very long time. but then the us made a decision to accelerate that whole process, sending a slightly older version of the tank, the m one, a one with some less sophisticated equipment, but the goal of that was to get the tanks in faster and now we're seeing just how quickly training on 31 m one abrams tanks set to begin in germany next month for 250 ukrainian soldiers that's troops that training will still take. 10 weeks, so it will still take some time. but we're talking about a period of weeks or a few months instead of months or longer than a year. so you see how fast this is moving and joint chiefs chairman general mark milley said. these aren't a silver bullet. one set of tanks , enough for a platoon won't simply changed everything for the ukrainians. but it is part of a broader effort we're seeing from the u. s and its allies to get in more advanced and more powerful equipment. german leopard, two tanks, uk challenger tanks, a refit and repair station will be set up for those leopard. two in poland. see you see this broad
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effort to try to get these systems in so they can make a difference on the battlefield. john getting those tanks in much , much more quickly or in then we were originally led to believe. thank you so much for your reporting for hell. and john now to sudan, where new this morning we have learned that the defense department is developing options for sudan and also watching the situation very closely. the defense secretary says that it has sent some forces nearby but did not reveal how many or exactly where. this is the devastating impact of the conflict is mounting for people who are caught between two warring factions and on this holy weekend of eat outfit or one man told cnn he was forced to skip prayers because he and his five children had to lie on the floor because they feared being hit by stray bullets. now, despite the two sides agreeing to a ceasefire for the holiday weekend, fierce fighting has continued. it comes as the world health organization more than 400. people have been killed so far, and we have just learned that a u. n staffer is among the dead after getting caught in the crossfire, many residents have been stuck in their homes for
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days without electricity, medicine, food water all running low around 70% of hospitals there are out of service because of the fighting. cnn's nima al bigger joins us now in emma, these heroic stories of citizens caught in the middle is just truly heartbreaking. what more can you tell us? that those who can are attempting to leave both khartoum and those who have access points to flee sudan are doing so 20,000 refugees fled into chad from sudan's western darfur region, taking enormous risks to try and leave behind everything that they know everything. that they have and one sudanese activists who sound bite. we want the audience to hear explains what goes through your head when you're trying to take that kind of a decision. take a listen raul. it's traumatic. it's surreal. it's scary. it's frightening is really frightening. because frightening in the sense that we
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don't know what's going to happen next. we don't know what steps we need to take. and if we can even take those steps do we vacate? do we move? do we go somewhere else do we move to another city? do we look to leave the country? we are receiving reports from inside hard, um, that some fleeing citizens have been stopped by armed men among them were told sudan's rapid support forces. there is a real fear for those who leave. if you stay in position, you are taking a huge risk if you are hurt while traveling hospitals have closed down some only 55 hospitals in the capital have shut down something like 12 12 of them were attacked. 15 are completely offline and there's a real concern that they will take some time to be brought back online every day for those trapped in this fighting. there is a constant calculation. is it safer to leave and risk dying on
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the way or is it safer to stay here and dying in my own home? risk everywhere you turn as you rightly pointed out there. nima, nima. you know one thing that's been a specially i think disturbing about this conflict. is it happening within khartoum ? you and i both have connections to sudan. i was actually born in khartoum. my parents spent years living there for people who perhaps have not been to that part of the world who have not been to sudan. help us understand what that city is like. straddles two niles. it's at the confluence of the two niles and of course i'm biased because it's my hometown. but i never feel like i'm home until i cross the meeting point of the two niles between, um and undermanned, which is the other side of the administrative capital, and i think you know there's a story that my mother told me when i called her earlier because today's he'd and i ran to check in on them their home in carton. and i asked normally, aid is such a time of festivity. and she said, you
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know, people are still trying to find ways calling each other they're seeking to celebrate. and then that cartoon wow. i'm so glad you shared that story. nima wonderful to know that people are still trying to resume celebrations. even in the midst of the horror that we're all witnessing number. thank you. thank you for your reporting. thank you, mubarak. this morning, a new climate report revealing alarming trends , a warming planet and rising sea levels. now, scientists warn, we must pull billions of tons of carbon dioxide from the air. cnn's chief climate correspondent, bill we're is here. kind of a headline bill. trillion ton godzilla in the sky , but i met some amazing people ready to fight it with everything from kelp plantations to artificial whale poop, john that coming up. when you're the leader, disaster cleanup and
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restoration. how do y you make like it? never even happened happen. fire it up, randy. being prepared for anything. whatever comes your way. there's a program that serve pro like it never even happened. good, good feeling to shake it out. i'm going harder than befe. let me run around the whole world from the bottom to the top of it and knock it out of the you're feeling it now. come on and move to the center. keep it going. keep it going. got a good good, good feeling transitions under control. you inspired the lexus
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with us to earn more profits and find a new audience for your published book produced an audiobook. we handle narration, production and digital distribution 38559. so before the break you heard about kelp plantations and well poop, and you might reasonably wondering why well, new this morning. an annual report from the un's climate agency has found that the last year smashed a series of climate records from rising sea levels too fast melting glaciers, scientists now say we must pull billions of tons of carbon dioxide from the air over the next 25 years. the problem is, there are multiple ways to do this. most are in the development stages. in sunday's whole story hosted by anderson cooper, cnn chief climate correspondent, bill weir takes a look at some of the proposed solutions, including one focused on farm waste. you're part of the movement to basically build the oil industry and reverse.
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that's right. after making a killing in software and becoming frustrated with carbon offsets. peter reinhart helped found charm so this over here is the is the paralyzing startup that scoops up the organic waste usually left to rot and farm fields heats it into biochar, which improves soil health and bio oil, which he injects down into old oil. wells how much have you injected to date sequestered about 5450 tons of co two equivalent that is a drop in the bucket compared to the 50 billion tons a year that we're admitting as a as a civilization. confirming peters claim independently as tough because carbon removal verification is also brand new. but if he's right, teeny drop in the bucket would be about half of all the carbon ever removed. no offense. this is awesome, but it's a couple of containers in a
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parking lot in san francisco, and we were in iceland and saw what's there and that's it and the whole world. should i be depressed by that, or or you could view it as an opportunity , i guess removal business. cnn's chief climate correspondent. bill weir is with me now and bill. one of the reasons you and your reporting inspires me is because you do focus on actual solutions here. things that can be done this project john we spent the last year i went out looking for hope and ideas, and there are so many ways there are so many feasible ways for life as we know it could be. we know that there's some pain coming that's baked in, but between his idea to pump this bio oil back in oil, the one thing that this this hour i took away from it's just the scale of the problem. a trillion tons of carbon that's train cars that's men in hard hats and shipping ports devoted to this building the oil industry in reverse and someone to do it with machines like peter's someone to use artificial whale poo to bring back fish stocks
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and create healthier oceans, which draw down carbon well themselves or carbon. capturing machines, someone to use kelp buoys that capture and gobble. they grow up two ft a day and then sink to the ocean bottom. there's lots of ways to supercharge mother nature's natural carbon removal systems. and a lot of people will get rich doing it. i mean, this is a trillion dollar industry. we're not talking about. that's okay. absolutely it's as it should be. and the thing is there's conservationists. i think an environmentalist, so we should preserve as much wilderness and that has to be part of it. but we also have to build stuff. we have to build a cleaner future and that is going to create an entirely new economy. for literally everything you see in your life. there's a more efficient, less carbon intensive way to do that. some of the solutions that you talked about and we'll be talking about sunday night feel very, very big and also a little distant from you and me necessarily, like i'm not going to the ocean and dropping synthetic whale poop, but for the people watching the show, you know what? what are
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some of the things that we should be thinking about? one of the characters i made is bertrand piccard, the man who flew around the world in a balloon for the first time and then in a solar airplane, and he has this foundation where he found 1400 different money making. planet healing businesses. there's so many ways to look forward just in your life. if you decide maybe i could find a better poop bag for my dog and my whale that's biodegradable and support a company who's trying to do it a better way and take some plastic out of weight stream. those little decisions add up. it's like piranhas. if one bites you , it doesn't matter if 1500 come at you at the same time, and that is the metaphor. they used to talk about this problem. we can bite it from every angle in our lives in ways that we don't have to suffer as a result. salt. ah but much cleaner, smarter way because the technology is there. bill weir. thank you very much as always open our eyes to great things you can catch builds full report in the whole story this sunday eight p.m. eastern. this is a new weekly program hosted by anderson cooper. one whole story one whole hour. sarah coming up
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more than 15 million bucks in gold and other valuables vanished from a toronto airport . details on what police know and what they're not sharing next. from big cities to small towns and on mamain streets acrs thee us, you'u'll find pnc bank helping businesses both large and small communities and the people who live and work there grow and thrive. we're proud to call these places home to their where we put down roots and we're together. we work to help move everyone's financial goals forward. pnc bank. you need new replacement windows, bu you're just not sure if they're in the budget this year, right? brian gary he with ted coons from renewable anderson, and he's here to talk about how to make
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couldn't believe the attention to detail. they even did my laundry. i love home a blow, and i think you will do i'm dr sanjay gupta. and this is cnn. high value heist in canada has officially stumped this morning and air cargo container with more than $15 million worth of gold and other valuables inside was stolen from a toronto airport. cnn's tom foreman is following the details for us,
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tom you're a smart guy, how did this happen? well it was it was . it was a crime. sarah what? this plane. this plane landed on a monday evening. it landed monday evening. this container that was about five ft by five. ft and it contained yeah. $15 million in u. s 20 million canadian in gold and other things that were considered valuable here. this thing gets moved to a cargo holding facility. now, authorities have said there are three big cargo facilities at this airport, and this is a big airport. big airport. the canadians themselves, describe it in a very canadian way as 12,500 hockey arenas big gives you an idea of how big it was. it was moved to one of these holding facilities, and then it just vanished by illegal means. that's what they described as vanished by illegal means. it contained a high value shipment. we know that there was a lot of gold in there. we don't know what else might be in there. we know that canada is also the third largest gold producing nation in the world. but they've
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been looking for this. they don't know if it will professional job. they don't know if it was done by just an opportunist. they don't know. but the gold has gone missing, and so far they've given no indication that they know where it is whether or not they have video of it happening, whether they have any good leads. i do think that when you steal $15 million you, you lose your amateur status. you're you're automatically think so? yes you're automatically professional. at that point, you know, gold is considered an inflation hedge. so maybe maybe these things. maybe these thieves were just trying to be an economist. economist doing this. is that what you're suggesting that an economist said, let me go knock off the airport here. i don't think that's i don't think that's very likely. i will say this, though worth bearing in mind. 1953 they had a gold heist from this very airport, one of the biggest crimes of its time. never solved. because economists are crafty economists know how economists are very crafty economist that i report on is
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like emailing me at this moment . do not throw us under the bus . so tom foreman brings this this canadian thing, but you were just showing me about something in philadelphia. my suspicion is that this might be a trend because in philly, the great state of philly great city of philly, where i'm from thieves got away with $200,000 worth of dimes from like an unattended trailer. so this this idea of sort of sealing metals. again at a time of high inflation medals, gold, our inflation hedges, so there's something here alright, inflation hedges. i'm obsessed with the dimes like what do you do with 200,000? dimes meltem or something? how do you spend those? nobody wants to in the old days. it's true, right? thank you so much for joining us. this is cnn news. central inside politics is up next to be with you guys today. thank you so much for coming right now. what's t this severe regard collection at americica's best, wow, amazing styles and
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to 7600 or visit coventry direct .com good morning, everyone we do begin with breaking news this morning. 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. hello and welcome to inside politics. i'm john king in washington. thank you. sharing your day with us. biden harris 2024 is ready to launch the official re election announcement will come in a video likely early next week. even many democrats are lukewarm about this, but team biden is betting again that republicans are about to remind voters why they chose biden back in 2020.
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