tv CNN Tonight CNN April 21, 2023 7:00pm-8:01pm PDT
7:00 pm
an influence with an audience as he says, an audience that, um, that embraces gun culture that may own the kind of weapons that people are talking about banning that they have a duty to not shy away from this conversation completely. um, and the trick is, can you actually get those artists who speak up without them being so fearful of the consequences that they kind of backed down and scatter? remember with the las vegas shooting when there was a big mass shooting? that was the country music? concert right? and it did not spark a movement out of that genre and from those artists, but nashville is their home. um many physically but also kind of spiritually and i actually since we spoke, that letter came out and i'm starting to wonder now, if there's being if a real movement and nascent movement is starting to kind of poke its head up, all right, thank you. all so much for giving up your friday nights to be here with us cnn tonight with erica hill filling in for alison. starts right now. hey, erica. hey, pamela. thank you.
7:01 pm
good evening, everyone. great to have you with us. i'm erica hill in tonight for alison camerata. welcome to cnn. tonight we have much more. on the biggest story of this night. the supreme court, of course, protecting access to a widely used abortion drug by freezing lower court rulings that restricted its usage. big victory for the biden administration. it is far from the end, though the ruling means the appeals process now will play out and it is almost guaranteed the case. will eventually land back before the justices. in the meantime, though, the fda approval of medford cristante stands as does current access plus turmoil in the nfl tonight, three players suspended indefinitely to others slapped with a six game ban. so what they do is the punishment fair. and it wouldn't be a friday night here without a news quiz. see, if you know more about what happened this week. they are distinguished panelists. here is my panel tonight. defense attorney mr maris. john avlon, our senior political analyst, former democratic congressman max rose jessica washington from the root and joining us republican
7:02 pm
strategist and pollster kristen soltis anderson. we do begin, though, this hour with cnn justice correspondent jessica schneider, so just take us through in terms of the court's ruling. what does it do? well, this is definitely a relief erica tonight for possible patients, doctors, drug manufacturers, the fda, the biden administration all we're worried about the potential fallout here. but in the end, the supreme court did step in tonight to protect full access to the abortion pill mifepristone while this appeals process plays out, so what does it mean? well, it means status quo for the administration of mifepristone. that means women can continue to take it up to 10 weeks pregnant, they can continue to receive it by mail and via telehealth visit. it's with their health care providers , and the generic version will still continue to be widely available. so this is actually exactly what the biden administration, the fda what they were asking for and pushing for. in fact, they warned that if those restrictions were imposed on the drug at this point, there would just be chaos
7:03 pm
and confusion. so now all of that has been avoided, and erica. the appeals process will start playing out in the fifth circuit court in new orleans' with briefs next week and then oral arguments in less than a month and may 17th so as that whole process begins to play out when we look at what we heard this evening from the supreme court, justices thomas and alito publicly dissenting on this ruling, what more did they say? so they were the only two justices who noted there just descents. but because of the way this order structured, we actually don't know exactly how the other seven justices voted. if there were other descents only that five justices were needed to grant this day, which , of course they got, but justice alito did write that four page dissent and in it, he makes some arguments, he says. you know, the supreme court has previously been criticized for granting these types of stays, you know, these holds on lower court decisions. so he's asking why fellow justices are you willing to grant a stay now in these circumstances, especially because he's arguing there would
7:04 pm
not be any harm in his words, if they let these restrictions go into effect. so he wrote this. at present applicants are not entitled to a stay because they have not shown that they are likely to suffer irreparable harm. in the interim, but what's really interesting here erica is that the fda made a big argument that there would be major harm if these restrictions went into effect, with women not being able to fully access the drug, the chaos, they said, in the way that the changes would be made to the way it was administered. but justice alito sort of disputing that that would actually happened, he said. at one point, the fda could just choose not to enforce those restrictions if they had taken effect. so really a big dissent from justice alito with four pages of writing. and that might have been what took a little bit long to get this final decision here. erica jessica appreciate it. thank you lots to discuss here with my panel, missy. i'm going to start with you. i saw you nodding a couple of points during jessica's last answer there you know is she is, she noted. i was struck when she said your justice league at one
7:05 pm
point, saying, well, the fda could just choose not to can just continuous status quo. i mean, really interesting. so first of all, that's the standard for any stay its likelihood of success on the underlying merits of the case and irreparable harm, and that's what someone has to show a party has to show that in order to get a stay the reason that he's saying that is because there's a huge question mark about whether or not a regulatory agency can actually be have something reversed by a court. so there's a whole school of arguments about the power of the federal agency and whether or not they're actually subject to that jurisdiction and whether a court could intervene and so that's where that comes in. but i agree with this decision. i'm not surprised that this is what happened. there would have been chaos just in the sense of well now, what does this mean for any other pharmaceutical? market can a court come in and say the fda doesn't have the right to approve and we can reverse it. if we don't agree. it would not have been good. it would have said a crazy precedent and it would have actually impacted. other regulatory agencies. certainly been one of the questions if that had happened,
7:06 pm
right, what would the fallout be? what fda approved medications would be next, john , you say this is the right decision. now we're going to watch this play out there for some time, which is appropriate because that's the process. the problem was that the process was completely overturned. ah by a judge, who seemed to be acting for ideological reasons unrelated to precedent or the process of expertise set up by the fda. um this is the problem with politicizing our courts. you get decisions like this that have meaningful impact on people's lives and can throw total. you know the people's lives into chaos. i don't know what lita saying about no harm is a bit of a head scratcher. but be that as it may, this is a sensible thing to do. it will go forward, but the president stems from the fundamental problem. of the politicization of our courts. interesting is that change. i would say in messaging that we have seen. it's been far more forceful from the biden administration. they have really put vice president harris out there on this over the last couple of weeks. how effective has she been as a messenger? and
7:07 pm
you anticipate this is her role moving forward? well, it should be. and i think that she has been extraordinarily effective. of course, the bio administration has been searching for what exactly her role can and should be. and i have to say, you know, as a democrat. i'm very thankful that they finally put her in a role that she can succeed at. that's not a judgment of her capabilities. that's a judgment of them being strategic. previously, they said, well, you're going to go to space and then you're going to solve the border, and then they set her up to fail. now this is exactly where the democratic party needs a strong messenger, and she is that she has demonstrated that over and over again and this is the winning issue. for the democratic party, and it has to continue to hammer at home, beginning with the president's campaign. how has the conversation changed at this point? do you think yeah, because of just what we've seen over the last couple of weeks. i think this is definitely something that people are paying more and more attention to. i mean, after the follow over the
7:08 pm
weight and the dobbs decision, i mean, that changed everything right. but this again is kind of putting it back into the headlines. people are talking about the fact that this is a drug that has been approved by the fda for 23 years. it is the most effective regimen when combined with miles across, tell that we have in the united states to carry out self medicated abortions. and so i think people are really looking at this and they're saying it doesn't make any sense to try and get rid of myth, oppressed, own and kind of thinking about how ideological this war has become. kristin you were saying that this is a bit of a sigh of relief for republicans. why taking this out of the headlines and turning the temperature down the supreme court. making this ruling is in some ways, pushing back against this idea that the court is just a political arm of the republican party. it's made a statement to say, look, let's all take a breath and let's let the process play out. that's probably a good thing for questions about the legitimacy of the court, etcetera, but also the more this is in the headlines. the more political parallel i think republicans have faced if you think back to a supreme court ruling around
7:09 pm
something like gay marriage, when they decided the obergefell case. um, that was something that took a political hot button and it took it off the table. it said the supreme court made a ruling and no longer were republicans really getting asked the same kinds of questions as often about. well what do you define as marriage? etcetera in this case with the fall of roe versus wade, with its overturning the dobbs case, it put abortion back on the political agenda, and republicans, in my view have been pretty flatfooted in their messaging on this, every new headline about abortion is bringing or potential political peril to republicans. as long as they don't have their act together on this, so maybe out of the headlines for a little while, mr give us a sense. is there a timeline in terms of this appeals process? what are we looking at? so this particular cases expedited. we're going to hear those arguments on may 17th, so that's really quick. but that's just the beginning. there's other cases that are working their way up. and to the extent that different federal courts come out on the issue in different ways. well, that's a circuit
7:10 pm
split that brings the issue back to the supreme court. ultimately to make really novel decisions number one. the fda is power, whether or not the court can reverse it, whether or not states can actually limit the use after the fda has said what we think it's okay to dispense it this way. can states take that action? is there a federal preemption issue? there are so many novel legal issues that are coming out of the dobbs decision, especially in a world where we can get medication, and we do. unmasking medication through the mail conversation use so much, so i don't think we're even 1% to where we're going to be to get some clarity on these issues. but the first case we're going to know pretty soon where that lands on around may 17th. it's interesting to chris and to your point in terms of taking some of this out of the headlines because you know usually your words that you feel republicans have been sort of flat footed, and we've seen that just in the response, even lack of response to a number of questions. i think senator tim scott is a great example. there. it's not going to go away
7:11 pm
because we are going to see more activity in the courts and not just when we're talking about this appeal. well, certainly, and you're also going to see this play out in the republican primary. right now. you have this this really interesting dynamic where some candidates like florida governor ron desantis are kind of trying to outflank donald trump on the right on a host of things, abortion now being one of them and whether that's a smart strategy to try to peel off trump's most ardent supporters or whether that jeopardizes somebody like ron desantis is claimed to be a more electable candidate in the republican primary. i think that's a really interesting gamble and will new snow soon enough how that turns out? and as we're watching, it will be interesting, jessica, i think two and maybe you're starting to see this in your reporting. how that conversation will change. you talked about how effective you think kamala harris is as a messenger here. it will be interesting to see if democrats as a whole, not always their strong suit max to come with a united message to see if that changes. i think abortion has been something with. for the most part, democrats have had a pretty united message on and a
7:12 pm
pretty strong message. not all democrats, obviously, but most for the most part of had a pretty strong messaging on this, so i do think this is one of the strongest issues and we might will likely see that going into kind of the president. intial race as well that this is an issue they can come out on. they can be strong about and they don't have to kind of quibble around the edges, like republicans do on this issue because they know it's unpopular strongest. yeah, we'll be watching all of it. um, just ahead here. it's been a traumatic week when it comes to wrong place. wrong time shootings. we're talking about raising the wrong doorbell pulling into the wrong driveway, losing a basketball in the neighbor's yard. americans are living in fear that perhaps the next innocent mistake could lead to them getting shot. so what is happening in this country? why is violence? seeming the answer. and how do we calm things down? what is it about the first warmm breeze of the season that makes you feel lighter than air? no
7:13 pm
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 now for a limited tim noodles, part short hair. and part ninja. meet the new bissell. cross wave hydro steam. it's part vacuum mop steamer and ninja nemesis. this is a new breed of clean feel this rage in america. consumer cellular. we offer amazing five g coverage backed up by incredible customer service, but that wouldn't mean much without super low prices.
7:14 pm
you already know we're up to half as much as the largest carriers, but now for a limited time we're offering new customers $10 off every new line. aarp members can save even more. switch to consumer cellular now and get unlimited talk and text with a flexible data plans, starting at only $20 a month for a limited time. get $10 off line. my mental health was much better, but i struggled with uncontrollable movements called td dyskinesia td can be caused by some mental health meds unlikely to improve without treatment. i felt like my movements were in the spotlight. reza is a prescription medicine to treat adults with tv movements in grecia is different . it's the simple once daily treatment proven to reduce td. that's number one prescribed people taking it can stay on their current dose of most mental health mets 80 mg, has proven to reduce td movements in seven out of 10 people. don't take ingress a if you're allergic to any of its ingredients may cause serious side effects, including sleepiness, don't drive, operate
7:15 pm
heavy machinery or do other dangerous activities until you know how ingress affects you. other serious side effects include potential heart rhythm problems and abnormal movements. that's nice. people focus more on me. ask your doctor about number one, prescribed once daily in grecia. learn how you can pay as little as $0 at ingress a .com free fly, we believe in more more comfort, more freedom, more versatility. more adventures with family and friends shop now at free fly apparel dot com i was born here from here, and i'm never leaving here. i'm a new york hotel. yeah i'm tall 563 ft and two inches. i'm on top of the world. i'm looking for someone who needs a weekend in the city who likes being in the middle of it all. you hungry? i know a place and a few others nearby, the city that never sleeps. but hey, if you
7:16 pm
need a last minute spot i've got you covered less link up at hotels .com. more vibrant flowers. step one. feed them with miracle gro, shake and feed. that's it. miracle gro, you need to know to grow. this week. it feels like we have been covering shootings on a nonstop loop. all of these victims, all young people, they were just really in the wrong place at the wrong time. easy access to guns that part of the problem. the louisville bank shooter left notes, claiming that he wanted to show just how easy it is in america for someone dealing with a serious mental health issue to go out and buy an assault weapon back now with my panel and joining us for a professional tennis player, patrick mcenroe, good to have all of you with us . this is part of the conversation that i had with my kids this week. a couple of teenagers as we're looking at
7:17 pm
this, and the question was why is the answer to reach for a gun? where are we at in this country is at a level of fear. so your fear full stop here, lack of trust and an abundance of weapons that you know aren't simply, you know, hunting rifles . you know, one of these studies that just came out said during the pandemic, americans bought 60 million new guns and it was predominantly people who own firearms previously, but you did that because of a feeling of fear, and it wasn't just rising crime. it was this sort of raw sense that i need to defend myself. but when the shootings that we're gonna covering this week um are people who have a hair trigger because they sense a threat when there is objectively, in many cases when it's you know, there's no evident threat, and that's about lack of trust and fear combined with easy access to guns. so how do you then look at the fear? because the fear goes both ways. right so then there's the fear of any time i go to get in the wrong car in the parking lot.
7:18 pm
i've done that. who hasn't done that driven up the wrong driveway? then do i have to worry that i'm going to get shot. it's a vicious cycle. i wish it was a simple that it's just fear and i think that plays a part. but if it's much more than its culture in the united states of america today we were there. there's so many different communities with this strong culture of gun ownership and self reliance. but that often translates in moments of heightened emotion or heightened fear to the use of a gun for violence. you know that we are the only nation in the world with this level of this problem , and so you kind of separate everything out. it's a policy issue that allows for this pervasiveness of guns, and that's what has to be addressed head on what is so disappointed that after each and every one of these events, there's a conversation. there's a debate. there's marches, and then they nibble at the edges, talking about a red flag law, saying that shouldn't be a question that someone that's mentally ill can get access to get off. that
7:19 pm
shouldn't even be a question, but we should have things like universal background checks. we should get at the core root of the problem here, which is that we have hundreds of millions of guns on our streets of 400 million to be exact, which is more than people and the fact of the matter is that we've lost it. i mean, we've totally lost our minds. and even even now, i mean, don't you all when you go if you're in your car, and you know you, you someone cuts you off, and it used to be like, you know, i'd honk at them or i say you 80. i don't even like consider doing that. now it's true. even consider doing that because i'm like, you know what someone just could just pull out a gun falling into the whole armed society is a polite society argument, but well, the more guns you just keep buying more guns, so everyone is just, you know, getting more armed because they're trying to protect themselves. so they think that this is going to somehow alleviate the problem when obviously it's just making it considerably worse. we talk about what the discussions are right after every shooting. i've covered far too many mass
7:20 pm
shootings and you think about that conversation. i remember being in sandy hook and afterwards the conversation with this could never happen again. we're talking about first graders. look at you. you look at everything that has happened since. what is amazing that we have numbers to when it comes to children. so gun deaths among us children increased 50% between 2019 and 2021. if children. are not going to spur action. jessica is there anything that you've seen that will? i think that's what really scares me. you know, we have seen these, you know, mash rooms of children but then also, most of these gun deaths of children are happening in homes with unlocked with weapons that are unlocked and available for children to access and potentially hurt themselves with which is actually we're seeing most of the gun deaths among children. i think that's what really scares me. it's just that we keep having these situations where children are dying on a, you know, on a very right er basis and we haven't done anything. and so i'd love to tell you right now, i think you know this is going to happen
7:21 pm
one more time, and we're going to do something, but that just hasn't been the reality that i've witnessed. no look, it breaks your heart. and it makes you sick. but after sandy hook, of course, there was 90% support across partisan lines for closing background checks, you know, increasing background check closing the gun show loophole and the nra lobbied against it. and nothing happened now we had some action in congress and red flag laws, not nothing right. it's step in the right direction. but the fundamental problem remains that onion headline that they are every time after every mass shooting. there's nothing we can do, says nation that's the only one in the world where this happens. it's interesting to bring that up. and also not only that onion headline, which is honestly so important, but the fact that there have been some in incremental there has been some incremental movement, and i even think back to the settlement that sandy hook some of the sandy hook families had when it came to the way these rifles were being advertise and who they were being marketed to. that's an important step. absolutely an important step. but at this point we can't imagine the united states senate
7:22 pm
passing something like an assault weapon ban that in a manner that's filibuster proof has to get to over 60 votes or more. we can't imagine a senate right now, and it's current composition, passing universal background checks, and what's striking here is that this is not something that can be solved with local policy. the vast majority. take new york city, for instance, the vast majority of gun instances in new york city involved weapons that originated from out of state. it's called the iron pipeline flows from states with extraordinarily lax gun laws. there's even this little tiny bill called the t heart amendment, which denies local law enforcement from getting access to gun crime. trace data , so the nypd can't even know that about the criminal gun dealers who are selling massive amounts of weapons to straw purchasers. the entire federal code in relation to gun violence and weapons sales is built in
7:23 pm
support of the gun lobby, not public safety. that's not sobering. i don't know what it is. we're going to leave this discussion. now we do have much more to talk about the nfl players caught betting on games the consequences there now facing that's next. sunday night . we're tryingng something a a little different story. our world'd's best journalists dig deeper into the stories. they can't ignore the whole story with anderson cooper sunday at eight on cnn. is this a call to five ever heard? but yes, it is. by killing themselves. they ensured. their immortality. it's a god. i mean, it's the cult of cults. heaven's gate sunday 10 on cnn. there. and how are you? i didn't know. in need of love
7:24 pm
dreams get our stand up making any change that is calling, uh, beautiful. £30 on noon. wait i'm tom use psychology to lose weight. mindful aspect made me feel more conscious about what i was eating and why i was eating it. it's actually working and make it last with noon. wait a good feeling to shake it out. i'm going harder than before. let me run around the whole world from the bottom to the top of it and knock it out. i'm the talk of the town. i know you're feeling it now. move to the south. keep it going. keep it going. good
7:25 pm
good, good feeling transitions under control. worry professionals, customizing install systems. do you think featuring google nest products for any kind of home? so you have no worries brought to you by a d. t sometimes, one thing leads to another thing. then all of a sudden, it's on with roman . you can take care of erectile dysfunction discreetly. so whenever the moment happens, you're ready. roman ready? the first time your sales reached 100 k with go. daddy was also the first time your profits left you speechless. at the counter or on the go save 20% with the lowest transaction fees and keep more of what you make. start saving today and go daddy .com. good morning, everyone we do begin with breaking news. joining us now are two lawmakers from different sides of the aisle live in ukraine, sanjay gupta when i was his age, we had to be inside to watch live sports.
7:26 pm
but with xfinity, we get the fastest mobile service and can stream down the street or around the block! hey, can you be less sister, more car? all right, let's get this over with. switch to xfinity mobile and get the best price for 2 lines of unlimited. just $30 a line per month. i should get paid more for this. you get paid when you win. from xfinity. home of the 10g network. of arthritis, back aches and sore muscles. absolutely free text f
7:27 pm
e t +2321321. ben wedeman in severe eastern ukraine. cnn. the nfl, announcing the suspension of five players for gambling, three of them suspended indefinitely for gambling on nfl games in the 22 season that came through playing in but nfl games . two others were suspended for the first six regular games for other gambling policy violations , the nfl saying in a statement . the gambling policy, which is annually reviewed with all nfl personnel, including players. prohibits anyone in the nfl from engaging in any form of gambling in any club or league facility or venue, including the practice facility review uncovered no evidence indicating any inside information was used or than any game was compromised in any way back now, with our panel, i'm going to go to the athletes on the mr mcenroe feeling you knew
7:28 pm
you were going to be at first, if you would bet on that you would have won a smile on your face. i saw this and i thought well, yeah. i mean, if you know the rules, of course, you know what's going to happen is there is there a surprise at all that it is happening? no there's not a surprise, although these players obviously going to pay a hefty price, but let me let me give you all a little bit of a history lesson here. okay baseball, of course, was the american pastime. and then in this, you know 50 sixties as television started to take over in sports, the nfl got in front of that. so by the early seventies, the nfl became the biggest sport in america, and it's only continued in the last 50 years has gotten bigger and bigger and bigger, and one of the main reasons it's as big as it is. today is gambling nailed it gambling. okay but so the so they meet in the nfl, like all sports, they have to protect the
7:29 pm
integrity of the actual game that you as a fan or watching when you're watching it every sunday now, pretty much every day of the week. you can watch the nfl, um so they have to come down extremely hard on these players. even the two players. that we're betting on something else. betting is like, become the new american pastime. to me. i mean, betting is everywhere. whether it's in sports, whether it's casinos. i mean you name it betting his. i mean, i consider like an epidemic because it's just insane. how much people bet and how big the industry itself is and the nfl is playing right along into it. and it's one of the reasons why it's to be a myth that it is so when you look at this, max, you said arena, you're gonna bet on this panel. we made them laugh bedroom. gotcha one. so when we look at betting overall, then you look at how much happens with football. where does this end up? does the nfl have to change any of these regulations because again, they were betting on the
7:30 pm
games. they were playing it. they weren't trying to throw the game. this is the stupidest policy. and of course, this is near and dear to my heart because my uncle oh, pete rose paid a very significant uh, price for this. i'm just kidding, for a second. yeah so that all of us for a second, i almost had you, but but this is beyond idiotic and they didn't bet on the game. they're playing right? they didn't bet against themselves or anything to that effect. and this notion that betting is something new. it's also patently absurd. it's just only recently become legalized, and i'll tell you let's do it even more because that produces amazing tax revenue for our schools. amazing tax review for infrastructure, and i'll certainly doing that in a second any day older, second middle class taxes players better. what
7:31 pm
do you want planet are you can't allow the players to just bet on anything. they want all drug olympics. lexi tournament. i know which players are a little bit dinged up a little bit injured so i could just know you can't let that happen. indignation at sports insider trading. who cares? paris just can you ask him? sorry. didn't better. they do. they were at a facility essentially their own facility, and they were betting on something else. you know, likely from their phone, you know, placing bets. we think that's a serious, just serious. serious yes. so it's not a serious have to lay down the law the nfl because they have to get the attention of the players because if anything ever did happen, where they were betting on their own team or for the other team. for example, the nfl i would imagine, you know they may be used to headlines that are perhaps not favorable to the league and how things are handled. however you don't want another one coming back on you right? which is why you do have
7:32 pm
to crack down on this. but there's a concern too about is there too much gambling in general? yes and it also, according to this one, max max rose is sort of. you know all drug olympics scenario where players should be betting on their own teams is like a glide path ahead. well but but look, you know the standard he mentioned pete rose. that's the standard that makes sense to folks you know, or works that it's the it's the black sox scandal. you know, betting on a game you're playing in your team is playing it or throwing a game. that's the bright line. um, betting in the nfl. okay fine, indefinite suspension, but two guys who were just betting from from a practice facility. i mean, apparently something else that that that is not within the realm of common sense. it seems to me yeah, it also feels there's something weird about it when you have the nfl promoting gambling to the extent that they are, and then they're fueling this massive industry. and then you have two players. who for kind of what it sounds like they're sitting in the facility. there are gambling on their phone. they shouldn't have been
7:33 pm
doing it. they weren't doing anything related to the game. i'm not saying that they shouldn't face any kind of consequences. but i can understand why it might feel somewhat like there's a little bit of hypocrisy almost going on. it is interesting, too. when you look at when you talk about the advertising, i mean, it is everywhere during every game. and so it is hard to ignore, especially with a lot of these online, these online sites and apps on which you can gamble it fuels so much of their funding. it's totally it's totally out of control. okay, but if there are there are positives to it because, like you said, it's a huge revenue driver for the sport. and for all these, betty that the entire betting industry and jessica is 100% right. the hypocrisy is there but as a player as an ex professional player, you have to just play by those rules. you can't be that dumb. i understand it's not that big of a deal. they were betting don't be doing it from the facility. pretty simple. i'm with you if you know the rules
7:34 pm
and very little picture your life, stupid rules are meant to be broken. but i will say this, though the if the nfl we're able to move with this sense of purpose and urgency around the racial discrimination suits against them right now. they'd be in a much better place as an organization. but no. suddenly they know how to move so swiftly and so quickly what a couple of players making $30 bet on a game that they're not even involved in. it's ridiculous. i would say that's a pretty good $300.35 parlay, by the way. okay so we're gonna leave the parleys behind because we have. we have much, much bigger purse here that we're talking about 15 million people, all of it gone in a flash ish, the very real heist that seems like it is straight out of a movie. you're gonna want to hear about this one next.
7:35 pm
they need d a loan back fast unt . scotts tururf builder rapid grass grass two times faster industry. the loan, given you a stronger lawns mill that freedom a field a rapid grass today, it's guaranteed feed it long. feed it.hil swift here this is flex superglue. just one single drop. virtually welded itself to the surface and can easily lift over thr s get the new flicks superglue because it works readable hornet sweeping the nation. are you picking this up? country by swarm the all new dodge hornet. reinventing our network smarter, more efficient routes so you can deliver more value to your customers. fast, reliable, perfectly orchestrated. united states postal service, i got a call
7:36 pm
from some scammer who had the nerve to ask for my medicare number. that was not born yesterday. when someone asked for my medicare number text. i know it was a scam. nice catch and your mother knew it wasn't a real email. mom don't share my medical number with strangers if you get a call text or email asking for your medicare or personal information down medicare dot gov slash fraud, liberty mutual customizes your car insurance. so you only pay for what you need. with the money we saved. we tried electric unicycles got it. doggy paddle. only pay for what you need the liberty liberty. when you're the leader is asked to clean up and restoration. how do you make like it never even happened happen. fire it up, randy. being prepared for
7:37 pm
anything. whatever comes your way, there's a program that serve pro like it never even happened. take over security positions stand by director guy ritchie, taliban or everywhere you good, good. i owe that man my life covenant are playing in theaters from tried and true to try something new. so many ways to save life ready wallet happy that's 3 65 by whole foods market can't make this up 2023 2017 to find little brown. 2017 to find little brown. they're dealing with potential. ♪♪ alex! mateo, hey how's business? great. you know that loan has really worked wonders.
7:38 pm
that's what u.s. bank is for. and you're growing in california? -yup, socal, norcal... -monterey? -all day. -a branch in ventura? that's for sure-ah. atms in fresno? fres-yes. encinitas? yes, indeed-us. anaheim? big time. more guacamole? i'm on a roll-ay. how about you? i'm just visiting. u.s. bank. ranked #1 in customer satisfaction with retail banking in california by j.d. power. taken so much stress off me. krystal flash for 30 days. lutely risk free call or visit crystal flush .com now cnn news
7:39 pm
central monday at nine eastern. your favorite story of the night. we're pulling out notes for it over there more than $15 million worth of gold bars and other valuables disappeared, vanished from a holding facility at toronto's airport on monday. police still trying to figure out what happened who's the mastermind behind the heist, and it had a soul thinking it sounds a little bit like a movie, doesn't it? the 3000 block of las vegas boulevard. otherwise known as the bellagio, the mirage and the mgm grand. together. there are three of the most profitable casinos in las vegas. is the vault at the bellagio, located below the strip beneath 200 ft of solid earth that safeguards every dime that passes through each of the three casinos above it. we're going to rob it. smash and grab job, huh? slightly more complicated than that. a little
7:40 pm
ocean's 11 on a friday who doesn't love that panel of detectives in training here to try to crack the case. so here's the deal if let's say george clooney not available. we tried to get him enough. didn't take my call cleaning not available. who were you calling in to plan your heist? you get to go first on this one ladies first. mm i don't know if i have a good heist planner. i wasn't prepared . i don't know. uh gosh. yeah, i'm gonna have to toss this one around anyone have any good george clooney's around. obviously, robert de niro, jimmy and goodfellas in the lift. hands are heights. that's the movie clip. we should have played stanza henry hill, man. okay so brad pitt i'm going brad pitt. i could get behind that choice. i'm okay with that one serious when you look at this, so it disappears, right? there's this massive container. it is gone. toronto airport is huge, just to put it in sort of
7:41 pm
canadian terms. our producers found that beat toronto pearson airport is equivalent to 12,500 hockey arenas that great big space right? things are coming in. people know things are coming in, it disappears. inside job? no without a doubt without a doubt. i mean, when you see that toronto airport worker rolling up in a ferrari we know who you know, but really, this is a great it's a great payday for somebody. i'm amazed though . it was a canadian that pulled it off. i mean, they're they're so they're so polite, very polite. yeah, no, it's obviously a canadian airport worker almost as big okay as the great canadian maple syrup. 11 2012 right. it was about $20 million worth of about 3000 tons of the best maple syrup around and this one gold. that's what that is. liquid gold is measuring up to
7:42 pm
that it is measuring up to that , but i find remarkable is even if you walk off with these gold bars or whatever. i keep waiting for the gold the balloons, even though it's not a pirate heist. how are you getting rid of those? is this like stolen art? clearly i don't do a lot of major heights stolen art that it's just a black market thing, and you want to show it to your people when they come over to your house. you can't really can you sell it traceable? is it? i'm nervous about showing too much like you to be very aware. you know about that you are, i think very clearly you could melt it. yeah do do do something to that effect. i mean, we obviously have a hustle that we have. you know, you're the one who praising the guy for a good at payday, but they didn't bet on football. otherwise you get upset that way. we believe we beat that one down. alright i find it very interesting, though, on a somewhat serious note. that all the canadian authorities are like, uh, we can't tell you we're not sure
7:43 pm
where it came from. what type of point what airline was carrying? it all sounds very sketchy. very fishy to me. this actually could be a movie. i think it could be right. and is there video? where is the video? why don't we know it? they didn't really want to talk about it. full stop, really did not want to be addressing it. that is not like he told me if anyone believes this wasn't an inside job, you know, tell me epstein committed suicide as well. i mean, this is this is this is just this is just great , but we're almost at 11. but no , you know, in all seriousness, come on. i mean, this was so clearly an inside job. and often , though, what i would say in cases like this which involved massive institutional failure. mhm you're going to see the news cycle very quickly, or they make an effort to have the news cycle. move on very, very quickly. so i would expect that that we won't hear much of this until the movie comes out. podcast people on it like i don't know some of those like, yeah, it's not the true crime.
7:44 pm
exactly those are little dark, but like the kind of true crime adjacent like a scam goddess like something like that. i want one of those podcasters to get really into it, like the documentary can come after, but we need to get one of the podcast you on it. i'm on it do it is going to be a movie and, you know, i think canadian mob movies are underrepresented. yeah it was a real opportunity here. are there. do you have a top 10 list? gonna go zero. alright none. maybe it was the opening scene and i don't know, remaking. i just want to know who decided to put all these particular goods into one container i agree. like to find out. you know i space mine out, especially when i'm traveling. i mean, what if you lose one container there goes your 15 million double scam unless it's double scam. what if it was insured, and then someone stole it from themselves? we don't know. i hate crime, so we shouldn't be making me have sadly, we are out of time. keep your ideas flowing because
7:45 pm
jessica has a podcast coming up and she's working on a script. there's a little twist in the movie. stay with us. we'll be right back . what is it about the first warm breeze of the season that makes you 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 now for a lited time when you've chemical peels, bleaching creams , plasma trying to get rid of it . i've tried everything introducing loosely face rx
7:46 pm
prescription skincare delivered straight to your door. the spot cream is 10 times more potent than over the counter and prescription alternatives so you'll finally see a difference . my skin looks amazing, amazing , loyal customer forever for yourself at musically .com/ t. v i wouldn't have chronic kidney disease. there are places you'd like to be. like here. and here. and here. not so much here. if you've been diagnosed with chronic kidney disease for cigarette deuces, the risk of kidney failure which can lead to dialysis. farcical can cause serious side effects, including dehydration, urinary tract or genital yeast infections in women and men and low blood sugar. ketoacidosis is a serious side effect that may lead to death a rare life threatening bacterial infection in the skin of the perineum could occur. stop taking far sega and call your doctor right away if you
7:47 pm
have symptoms of this bacterial infection and allergic reaction or ketoacidosis, and don't take it if you are on dialysis. put yourself in the driver's seat. make an appointment to ask your doctor for farcical for chronic kidney disease. if you can't afford your medication, astrazeneca may be able to help. scope squeezed a one liter mouthwash bottle fits in the palm of your hand. add water control the squeeze control the strength. twice or even three times and find a zone all your own. wow anywhere. new mouthwash concentrate, scope squeeze. lindsey vonn and ever since i retired from skiing had trouble falling asleep and staying asleep, you know, insomnia. before he found qv. vic and fda approved insomnia medication for
7:48 pm
adults. you would not believe the things i used to think about when i couldn't sleep a lance, i need you to sign this business contract all 114 pages. lindsay it's workout time, man. we're in the middle of something here. it's called physical fitness. just a couple of dozen more questions. lindsey forget to pack your phone charger for tomorrow morning's flight. it's plugged in right over there. lindsey helps you get more sleep and when taken every night sleep continued to improve over time. that's why i take cuba vic nightly words differently than medication you may have taken in the past to target one of the biological causes of insomnia. overactive wake signals. do not take you if you have narcolepsy . don't drink alcohol while taking cue, vivid or drive or operate heavy machinery until you feel fully alert, cause temporary inability to move or talk or hallucinations while falling asleep or waking up cause sleepiness during the day
7:49 pm
to doing activities while not fully awake that you don't remember the next day like walking, driving and making or eating food. worsening depression, including suicidal thoughts may occur. most common side effects are headaches and sleepiness, civic ask your doctor if it's right for you. eva is about to learn her fear of missing out leads to overeating. totally eat stuff to not miss out. and that's just a bit of psychology. evil learned from noon wait, sign up now at noon .com. president biden wants environmental justice to be the mission of the entire u. s government announcing a new executive order today, creating an office of environmental justice and requiring every federal agency take into account how pollution impacts the health of all people with an emphasis on disadvantaged communities. we will include communities that have been denied basic security , basic dignity that comes from
7:50 pm
clean air, having clean air, clean water, clean energy jobs and environmental justice. we vowed to take action, the most ambitious climate, environmental justice agenda in american history, and that's exactly what we did. joining me now is cnn's chief climate correspondent. bill were so this is one idea bill. obviously, to tackle the impacts of climate change. you found a lot of other ideas really innovative approaches to in your words, unscrew the planet, which is the focus of yours of your reporting this sunday night on the whole story. i'm fascinated by this idea, and i love the title. thank you. yeah it was sort of the future is screwed if you listen to the evidence and the and the predictions and i wonder how many people does it take unscrewed planet and it turns out eight billion of us in every very various different ways, but i wanted to talk to the real dreamers. the thomas edison's who are out there with the boldest ideas. and i met a guy who made a fortune in software and then said, you know what?
7:51 pm
i'm going to tackle this problem and started a company called charming. i gotta look, it's sort of like a glimpse inside the model a factory at the beginning of a whole new trillion dollar industry. take a listen you're part of the movement to basically build the oil industry and reverse. that's right. after making a killing in software and becoming frustrated with carbon offsets. peter reinhart helped found charm 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 and 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 emitting as a as a civilization. confirming peters claim independently is tough because carbon removal verification is
7:52 pm
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 but it's a couple of containers in a 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 can view it as an opportunity, i guess removal business. yeah what are we going to lose you as our chief climate? i don't. i'm not smart enough. not smart enough, but i met a lot of brilliant people from the labs of m i t and caltech who are in this space you're competing, um , getting billions of new investments. the big sort of tech companies have a billion dollar fund that pays companies like him to lock this carbon away. sometimes you've heard of carbon offsets. if you fly a lot well, i'll protect the forest lot of times. you don't know if that forest is not going to burn or if it wasn't gonna be cut down anyway. and so these kinds
7:53 pm
of ideas are verifiable. we know exactly how much he's pumping back down into the ground. that's his argument. if you can get the cost down, and we're going to pay for it as a society, that's sort of the next step. but i also talked to folks who want to spray sunscreen in the sky high in the stratosphere. to try to cool and mimic the shading power of volcanoes and bias a few years to keep like the worst tipping points from happening. that's where we are in this conversation. it is fascinating , and i will say i love that you're finding people who are doing all the work because it gives me a little bit. hope me to absolutely, you know, action is the best remedy for eco anxiety. we were capable. we just need to be put in the right direction. yeah, the work a little bit. and you know if you start that side hustle, you just let us know. okay, i'll let you know. you tune in for a new episode of the whole story with anderson cooper. it airs this sunday. eight p.m. on cnn, a monumental decision from the supreme court tonight affects women and girls across the country. everything you need to know about this decision when it comes to abortion medication
7:54 pm
that is next. how to grow more vibranant flowers. step one. fed them with miracle gro, shake and feed. that's it. miracle gro, you needo know to grow like to speak to customers want to speak to a customeservice reprentative? i'm sorry. i didn't get that tentative. try again. i'm sorry. funny come here. you need a hug. there you go. you also need consumer self talk to a real person every time as nice as you much nicer. well. almost get the exact same coverage as the nation's leading carriers and 100% us based customer support starting at $20 consumer cellular, finally lose £80 and keep it off with gallo is amazing. i've been maintaining the weight is gone, and it's never coming back with polo. i'm not only kept off the
7:55 pm
weight but i'm happier, healthier and i have a new lease on life is the only thing that will let you lose weight and keep it off loses £138 of nine months. i did goal is a lifestyle change and you make the change and it stays off. mm. hmm. hmm love is bigger than ever. three rows. subaru ascent , dog tested dog approved love. it's what makes subaru subaru mosquitoes are just all over the okay. wow. hey i said get a pro did get a problem in pro. i got
7:56 pm
you. mosquitoes don't call any pro call the organ pro the best in pests. sometimes you're so busy taking care of everyone else. you don't do enough for yourself or your mouth, but eventually it will remind you when it does. aspen dental is here for you. we offer the custom dental treatments. you need all under one roof right nearby, so we can bring more life to your smile and more smile to your life affordably. new patients without insurance can get a free, complete, examine x rays and 20% off treatment plans and dental anything to make you smile. schedule your appointment today. jalisco has always been at the forefront of mexico's national culture, every iconic image you know about mexico comes from this state. on oil fingers in the oil that is next level mexican cooking. i'll tell you that life is good with video. that life is good with video. wow oh, my god. i could eat
7:57 pm
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. or the indoor enthusiast. check
7:58 pm
in at puma dot co. is is cnn. the world's news network. 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. hi, everyone. thanks for joining us this hour on the night, the supreme court has protected access to a widely used abortion drug by freezing lower court rulings that place restrictions on medication abortion. it's important to note this is not the end here. so what does it mean? well, it means the appeals process still has to play out. it's almost guaranteed, though, that the case will land back before the justices in the meantime, however. it also means that the fda approval of the drug medford , kristen remains in place. my panel is here, but first i do want to check in with cnn justice correspondent jessica
7:59 pm
schneider as well as senior medical correspondent elizabeth cohen. good to see both of you tonight. so jessica, first of all, take us through this ruling, and what the decision actually means tonight, erica. this means that full access to the upper stone will remain as you mentioned those that that appeals process plays out. so what that means practically women can continue to take this up to 10 weeks pregnant, they can continue to receive it by mail. they can also get it prescribed via telehealth visits with their health care providers. and also the generic version. it's going to remain available. so this is exactly what the biden administration was asking for. they wanted this stay in effect, so these restrictions didn't take effect , and they warned that if there were restrictions imposed on the drug at this point, they said, there would be confusion and chaos really. now all of that has been avoided, and this appeals process will play out in a priest speedy fashion in the fifth circuit. we've got briefs due next week and then arguments in less than a month on may 17th erica watching for that on the legal side when it comes to the
8:00 pm
drug itself, elizabeth there's also been a lot of questions about the fda authority to make science based decisions about medication going forward. you know, their approval is still there tonight. but what are the concerns about that process and the fda authority moving forward? right the concern erica is that it would undo the way that it has been for many, many decades, which really makes sense. the fda are scientists, and they consult within themselves and with outside scientists when a company says, hey, i want to market this pill . it's the fda. it's the scientists who get to make that decision looking at all the evidence spending months sometimes years, and it's not supposed to work that one judge says. now i don't trust all those scientists. i want things done my way so is that decision if the texas judge decision had been allowed to stand, there's or if it is allowed to stand in the future. there is real concern. the pharmaceutical companies are going to say wait a second. why should we be
145 Views
Uploaded by TV Archive on
![](http://athena.archive.org/0.gif?kind=track_js&track_js_case=control&cache_bust=1364323675)