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intelligence appears in court, all while there are new details revealed in his case, including jack teixeira's arsenal of weapons and his alleged effort to cover his tracks. we'll take you live outside the courthouse for the very latest. >> and the parents of the louisville bank shooter are speaking out, and they have a message for the victims' families. they say, we're so sorry. ahead, what more we're hearing from the last time they saw their son. >> shocked and disgusted. those are the words from americans who feel abandoned by the u.s. government and left to navigate the complicated and dangerous situation in sudan. secretary of state antony blinken just responded to that cnn reporting. we are following these major developing stories and many more all coming in right here to cnn news central.
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right now, the air national guardsmen accused of leaking highly classified intelligence documents is facing a federal judge. prosecutors are arguing that 21-year-old jack teixeira is still posing a grave threat to national security and should remain in custody ahead of his trial. in a late-night court filing, prosecutors allege that teixeira may still have access to hundreds of classified documents, and that his online search history was, quote, what appears to be a deliberate effort to disseminate this country's secrets. they also claim that teixeira is a major flight risk and an attractive candidate to foreign governments. let's go to cnn's jason carroll, who's outside the courthouse live in worcester, massachusetts. jason, take us inside the courtroom. what's happening now? >> well, that detention hearing, boras, is well underway. first up on the stand was jack
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teixeira's father. as you know, he has been present during many of the court proceedings leading up to this. the judge at one point asked him, if, by chance, if he ends up ruling that teixeira be let out on bail in his custody, he said, do you understand your responsibility? and he said, i believe i do. the judge went on to say it was reported that after the proceeding, you called out to your son and you said, "i love you," the judge then again said, if you understand that he if he broke conditions of his release, that you would have the responsibility of turning him in. he said, yes, your honor. boris, as you know, the defense has argued in part that the -- that when he shared this information on discord, they are arguing that he didn't mean for it to go across the internet, it was just meant to be shared, this classified information with just this group that he was talking to on discord. and just a few moments ago, the judge said this. the judge said, someone under the age of 30 has no idea that if they put something on the
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internet that would end up anywhere in this world, seriously? the defense said, i don't know the exact circumstances. the judge followed up and said, but the circumstances of this event are that he had no idea that it would go beyond this little circle of people on the server. that is like someone arguing, i pulled the trigger, but i had no intent to kill him. one of the more dramatic moments in court, as this detention hearing is still underway. the prosecution, of course, arguing that he is a flight risk and that he could be a risk to himself and others in the community. the prosecution saying at one point, he's no longer a small child sitting at a big desk with big computers. he's also not the person that he described himself to be, and in a letter to a police officer when he was seeking a firearm. in terms of what he was referring to was back in march of 2018, when he tried to get a
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permit for a firearm, but he was denied by police after police found out that he was suspended from high school due to some of the comments that he had made. boris? >> and jason, we're learning that prosecutors believe that he may have access to more documents. what are they saying about that? >> right, the prosecution says that teixeira had access to understand of classified documents, not kodozens, but hundreds. and they believe if he's released on bail, that he could somehow still get access to those documents, which is another reason why, boris, they say that he should remain behind bars. >> some important details, and especially that exchange with the judge, really telling as to where things are in the courtroom. jason carroll from worcester, massachusetts. thank you so much. brianna? >> a lot to discuss here. we have democratic congresswoman abigail spanberger of virginia
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with us. she is on the house intel committee. thank you so much for being with us. i wanted to ask you, because we now know that the government accountability office, they really put
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>> and certainly at this moment, everyone across capitol hill, but particularly members of the intelligence committee are focused on exactly how this happened, what went wrong, how this individual had a security clearance in the first place. and then how there were no red flags triggered every time that he was accessing information that he should not have been a accessing. >> you're saying these should have been lessons learned. do you think that if congress had better heeded what they had known for some time to be a vulnerability here, something like this could have been prevented? >> well, i'm a former cia officer. i had a security clearance, everything i touched in my old job before coming to congress was classified. and what i know to be true from my experience there was a lengthy security clearance process was a very strict
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enforcement of need-to-know was a very clear parameters around how you handle, print, touch documents of various different classification levels. so here we're seeing, you know, questions related to inconsistencies between areas, be it in different intelligence agencies or in consistencies in how someone is moving from a cleared position, you know, receiving a clearance, into a position where they're utilizing or not utilizing that clearance. so really across the board, there needs to be a full review of what's happening within the individual agencies to make sure that we are seeing, basically adherence to the highest level. we should see lessons learned in utilizing the strengths that some agencies are employing to avoid these sorts of leaks. but certainly, congress in its oversight role must continue to ask really probing, aggressive questions about how it is possible that this happened.
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and certainly in a few years since, we've seen prior since disclosures. >> and what kind of changes? you were in the intelligence community, they take some pretty serious cautions, things like poly polygraph. do you think there should be random polygraphs or audits or something like that that are needed for these lower-level folks who have access to intel? >> and this is an example where there are differences across agencies. we had regular polygraphs. and that's not something that's part of the process in other agencies. reflecting on how valuable that is as a tool, that's going to be important. is it something that should be employed across the board, or within the actual systems themselves. what type of technological capabilities exist or upgrades need to be implemented so when someone like this man who had no need to be accessing the information, the files, the documents he was accessing,
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where were -- why were there not pings going off each time? was his supervisor being al alerted? were people in the counterintelligence shop alerted that he was accessing information. certainly the standards that are kept in some agencies, we need to make sure that certainly across the board, where there are strong protocols, let's have other agencies learn and make sure that we're kind of raising the minimum standard and certainly continue ing that . >> or were not occurring, this activity is not coming across someone's desk is a really
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worr worrisome desk. >> he had a history of violent and racist remarks that goes to your point of suitability. what else needs to be done to keep radicalized people out of the military or remove them from the military? >> it's an important effort. i don't serve on the armed services committee, but certainly, the armed services committee has had significant and important hearings, noting the fact that we know that extremist organizations are interested in recruiting those with military experience. making sure that people are aware that they might be a target is an incredibly important preventative measure. this is no negative reflection on military members, this is a reflection on the activities of extremist groups and who they --
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>> last hour, secretary of state antony blinken announced the u.s. is working on a new system to get those u.s. nationals there back home.
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cnn's kylie atwood is at the state department. kylie, there's a math problem here, estimated 16,000 u.s. citizens in sudan, many of them dual nationals. is the actual plan here to give all of them the option to come out of the country or a portion of them? >> well, listen, what the secretary of state talked about was the need for a sustained process to be stood up to help get those americans out of the country who want to leave. you referenced 16,000. that is a number that the state department has shared with congress
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congress. earlier this week sustained access. for the conditions that we see now are maintained, by which i mean, on the one hand, yes, cease-fire, however imperfect, but also, ongoing violence, confrontation between the two rival military groups. >> and the other thing that he talked about is that the u.s. believes that they have the best sustained capability to get these americans out is through overland routes. of course, americans are watching as other countries are flying flights into the country to help evacuate their citizens on those flights. and they feel frustrated that the u.s. government isn't doing that for them. >> listen, echos of afghanistan, so you have awareness and you've
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been speaking to americans there, what's the situation for them as they try to get out? what are their options? >> well, listen, it's a really harrowing discussion, talking to these folks who have family members, american citizens, who are trying to get out of the country, we spoke to one woman earlier today, moona dowd. she talked about her parents taking a 12-hour bus ride out of khartoum to port sudan. at one point, her father was pulled off the bus, he was held up at gunpoint by one of the warrinwar ing factions in the country right now. he finally made it to the port, but they haven't received any government support since they got there. the frustrating for them is that they were told by the state department, they say, that they needed to find their own way to get out of khartoum and to get to places where they can get out of the country. but when they get to those places like port sudan or like the border with egypt, they're not actually finding u.s. government resources who are helping them to get to a safer place. jim? >> a lot of steps to getting out
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safely and get home safely. kylie atwood, thanks so much. boris? >> the parents of the louisville bank shooter is speaking out for the first time. hear about what they have to say about their son's mental health and to the families of victims. and as president biden ramps up his re-election bid, his administration is announcing new measures to contain an issue that could have major implications for 2024. we're talking about immigration. we'll break that down plan, straight ahead.
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>> nbc news saying that they wish they could take back what their son, connor, did. >> we are so sorry, we are heartbroken. we wish we could undo it, but we know we can't. he did this to innocent
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individuals. there was no provocation, no justification, no rationalization, at all. >> what scares you about doing an interview like this? >> we have a concern about inadvertently being disrespectful to the families. our heart is just shattered for them and what they're going through. >> cnn's omar jiminez is with us now. omar, the sturgeon s
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what any, you know, reasonable parents would have done, but connor in his darkest hour needed us to be exceptional. not reasonable and i guess if we can send a message to people that you, when you're faced with this, you may have to have exceptional means, maybe that can help open their eyes to this.
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>> the dad also said that he's afraid whatever they come with up, as a cause, still won't make this make sense, brianna? >> it was interesting to hear those sturgeons say, omar, that loved ones of the victims have actually reached out to them. >> that's right, nbc is reporting that a couple of the families of the victims have reached out to the sturgeons, offering in some ways support, saying they are praying for you, too. that they were essentially astonished at the generosity and kindness, of course, in the midst of their loved ones being killed by their son. and those names is tommy eliot, joshua barrett, james tutt, julianna eckworth, those were the five that were killed. and highlighting the complicating nature of this for the shooter's family, the dad as part of that interview said, when he first found out that shots were fired at the old national bank, he went from hoping his son was okay to at one point hoping his son killed
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himself so that other people wouldn't get hurt. brianna? >> so many lives shattered, as we see here. families shattered because of this. omar, thank you for the report. jim? >> well, on to another shattered life. the massachusetts man accused of killing and dismembering his own wife is now back in court, as prosecutors reveal another potential motive i in that case. and in florida, it appears to be snow on the ground. actually, it's hail.l. wicked weatherer once again slamming majoror parts of the country. who stands to be impacted. that's coming up. overactive bladder, or oab, can change your world. like going hiking, just to hike to the bathroom. reaching for the bar, just to reach for pads.
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now to our top stories. the suspect involved in the leak of highly classified pentagon
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documents disappeared in federal court. prosecutors just provided new photo evidence that they say shows the 21-year-old air national guardsmen jack teixeira took documents that, quote, far exceed what has been reported and that releasing him could pose a grave threat to national security. they also say he had a history of making extremely violent threats, nbincluding wanting to make a minivan into a, quote, assassination van. and, quote, feeling abandoned. that's what some americans stranded in sudan are saying as the situation there grows more dire. during a press conference at the suspect earlier today, secretary of state tony blinken said the u.s. is working to develop a, quote, sustained process that would allow americans to leave sudan oaf land, likely to port sudan on the red sea, but with no food, no water, with the dangerous conditions, many americans are being forced to make life-or-death decision among violent fighting between the country's rival military
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groups. jim? >> just days after president biden announced his re-election bid, his administration set to face one of its greatest political vulnerabilities, a surge of migrants at the u.s./mexico border. on may 11th, two weeks from today, the covid-era restriction known as 32 will expire. two homeland security officials say the number of migrants has already begun to climb in recent weeks, reaching 7,000 encounters between migrants and law enforcement a day. cnn's priscilla alvarez joins us now. priscilla, listen, the administration has been preparing for this for some time. they got some help from the courts, extending title 42. the first question is, no more extensions, i assume, and then, two, where do administration plans stand? >> well, to your point, jim, this is something that has been caught up in litigation. and multiple times we've been in a position where we thought this authority was going to end.
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right now, it is full steam ahead of it ending on may 11th, when the coronavirus public health emergency ends. we should know with this ending is something that started in march of 2020. we go back to decades-old protocols. those are protocols that we have been using for a long time. but what happens is we're using them at a time of unprecedented mass migration in the western hemisphere. and that's really the challenge that the administration is facing. in addition to smugglers who spread misinformation. take a listen to what homeland security secretary alejandro mayorka said just this morning on this issue. >> we do expect that encounters at our southern border will increase, as smugglers are seeking to take advantage of this change and are already hard at work, spreading disinformation that the border will be open after that. high encounters will place a strain on our entire system, including our dedicated and heroic workforce and our
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communities. the smuggler's propaganda is false. let me be clear. our border is not open and will not be open after may 11th. >> now, a senior u.s. customs and border protection agent tells me several thousands are already in mexico. what the administration is doing, a number of things. they're opening regional processing centers so migrants can apply to come to the u.s. and come lawfully. they are also setting up capacity for those who cross to try to process them, setting up a new asylum rule, to try to largely bar migrants who have transited through other countries from seeking asylum in the united states. some of these measures, jill, they're controversial, even among biden's allies, but it's a measure they have to take to try to stem the flow of migration and manage a situation that
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mayorkas described as going to be challenging. as we usually say, it is congress that ultimately have to pass reforms to solve this. >> yeah, listen, that's the one thing that's not happening. any bipartisan negotiation to change the laws, which would impact some of these things, including how you handle focuses if they seek out or have their cases heard. priscilla alvarez, she knows it. she's been covering it for some time. boris? new information now revealed in court in the case of missing wife and mother ana walshe. her husband appeared before a massachusetts judge just a short time ago, pleading not guilty to new charges, including murder. prosecutors believe that brian walshe killed, dismembered, and zpo disposed of his wife's remains. she disappeared almost four months ago. jean casarez has been following this story for us. and jean, the prosecution laid out a lot of new evidence that we hadn't heard before. what did they bring to the forefront? >> brand-new, boris. it was about the issue of bail,
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because the prosecutor really wanted to s eed to show that he danger to the community. so they put on so many new things that we haven't heard, especially immediately proceeding the time of ana w walshe's disappearance. early on in december of 2022, the prosecutor said that brian walshe believed his wife was having an affair with someone. and then, in december '26, so right after christmas, that is when under the direction of brian walshe, prosecutors say that his mother hired a private investigator to surveil his wife, ana walsh. december 28th, ana walshe, who worked in washington, d.c., but came back on the weekends to be with her family, prosecutors allege that she had dinner with a friend and said she was going to leave her husband and was going to take the children with her and bring them permanently
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to washington, d.c. on december 30th, she flew back to massachusetts to spend the holiday with the family, went to an exercise class on the 31st, had her nails done, and on december 31st, they had a family friend come over to dinner on new year's eve and he left at 1:30 in the morning. that was the last time that anyone other than her family saw her alive, 1:30 in the morning. then after that, many things started to happen. on january 1st, prosecutors say he traveled to dumpsters. i think we can show everybody some of the things that they found in those dumpsters, because he went to lowe's, he went to home depot, he went to a grocery store, and in the dumpsters, we found out that there were many things, there was a tyvek suit, cleaning supplies including jugs of ammonia, 24 pounds of baking
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soed. and right here, a hatchet, a hacksaw, and cutting shears. and that goes along with google searches that he had done the middle of the night on new year's day, right after new year's eve. i think we've got some screens of some of those google searches that were done on his oldest child's ipad, we found. not on his phone, but some of those google searches have to do with how long before a body starts to smell, talking about the best way to dismember a body. so many. now, the defense said today, first of all, that the family, there was no discord in the family, at all. he has pleaded guilty. and that the google searches were problematic, but he also searched about family vacations for them all. so this does not mean that they believe that the prosecution has proven their case beyond a reasonable doubt. >> that sounds like the prosecution has a mountain of evidence and the defense has their work cut out for them. jean casarez, thank you so much
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nar for that update. >> that's one disturbing case. the u.s. slaps new sanctions on russia following the arrest of the u.s. reporter evan gershkovich. we'll have the latest on his detainment and any hope of d getting him out. plus, he's been accepted by more than 170 colleges and universities. so where does this 16-year-old plan to go? these stories and more when cnn news central returns. ♪ what will you do? will you make something better? create something new? our dell technologies advisors can provide you with the tools and expertise you need to bring out the innovator in you. (woman) what would the ideal weight loss program look like? no hunger, no cravings, no isolation, more energy, lasting results, and easy.
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your to-do list can be... a lot. ♪ [ buttons clicking ] that's why progressive makes it easy to save with a commercial auto quote online, so you can take on all your other to-dos. already did. see if you could save at progressivecommercial.com. it doesn't really look like spring, but this is florida in april. it's a hailstorm that's sweeping through the south and take a look at this. hail hammering parked cars.
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not something you would typically want to see in the sunshine state. and it wasn't just florida. this is texas. i'm going to show it to you in a second. it's probably not the best time for a swim in your pool. meantime, i want you to take a look at wisconsin. this is a before and after shot of some of the extreme flooding we're seeing along the mississippi river, where voluntary evacuations are already underway for a lot of riverside towns. let's get an update now from cnn's meteorologist, chad myers, who's live for us in the cnn weather center. chad, a lot of activity, all over the map. >> yeah, i mean, the hail coming out of texas was unbelievable yesterday. we had 4 inches around, almost the size of a grapefruit falling out of the sky at terminal velocity of over 100 miles an hour. and florida, the big hail there. over the past 24 hours, have really been something. a couple of tornadoes, but it's the wind and hail that we saw yesterday, not as much today. we are not in that kind of situation. look at this hail.
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this is part of -- this is sitting in the passenger seat of a car. this is how large the hail was falling out of the sky yesterday, even closing the school district, because there was so much damage to their schools, with the hail and the wind and the rain and the roof damage and window damage, as well. so here's where we are right now. did have a tornado warning not that long ago for panama city. that was a waterspout moving onshore. now we're down to just a severe thunderstorm warning, not seeing the rotation. here's where we are expecting to see more in the way of severe weather today. not the ramp-up that we saw yesterday, but it will certainly be around. you need to pay attention today, keep the radio on. pets, people, and property. you need to watch out for that. that's the real problem. that's the problem we see when people are not paying attention to what a hailstorm or what a wind event can do out there. here's where the rain will be over the next couple of days here across the deep south. we'll take the rain, but we certainly do not need the severe weather with this. boris? >> yeah, chad, as you were saying, people, pets, and
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property. i got a look at this video of hail knocking into the pool. and you see a poor cow running in the background getting pelted. not a great day there. chad myers, thank you so much. >> boris, hold on. we contacted the owners and the cow was just fine. so that is a disturbing video, a disturbing video for a kid growing up in nebraska, that was a very disturbing sight to see, but we did contact them and everything was just fine with that cow. >> thrilled to hear our bovine friends are okay. chad myers, thank you. now to some of the other headlines we're watching this hour. major headlines are demanding the release of wall street reporter evan gershkovich, now detained in russia for four weeks. today "the journal," "the washington post," and "new york times" are running full-page ads calling for russian authorities to let him go. the letter says in part, this, as editors and publishers of some of america's largest news
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organi organizations, we are united in calling for his immediate release. reporting is not a crime. let's hope those words are heard. and nepal is issuing a record number of permits to climb mt. everest. this is amid continuing concerns about dangerous overcrowding at the summit. most climbers attempt to ascend the peak in may when temperatures are warmer and the jet stream has moved away from the mountain. but boy, it could still be dangerous. and as your child sweats out college admissions, a new orleans 16-year-old has gotten more than 170 different acceptance letters. >> i definitely have a very supportive group of people behind me. they were all instrumental in getting me through this journey. i'm very excited. this is something that i'm very
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happy that i was able to accomplish. it feels really good. >> he also brought in more than d million worth of scholarship offers from those schools. he plans to get a bachelor's agree in computer sciences and going on to law school. a lot of work ahead of him, brianna. >> amazing stuff. we have an animal story right up boris' alley. this panda is now in the diplomatic spotlight. back in chun after her home country demanded her return to the u.s. this is actually pretty serious, though. ahead, why this is only highlighting the tense relationship between these two nations.
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yaya the giant panda is now back home in china after spending 20 years at the memphis zoo. chinese state media says that she landed in shanghai earlier today. cnn's selena wang supplies how she's become a symbol of the deteriorating relations between the u.s. and china. >> reporter: yaya the panda has left memphis, tennessee. she's headed back to china in a fedex truck and then flight. for many in the country t, yaya couldn't come home soon enough. she arrived as an emblem of a growing u.s./china friendship, but recent videos showing the once fluffy panda now looking skinny with scraggly fur has sparked outrage in china. many chinese people and some animal advocates accusing the zoo of mistreatment.
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v videos on chinese social media claiming the pandas are being abused quickly went viral against the backdrop of growing anti-american sentiment. the rumors often fanned by state propaganda. and meanwhile, chinese social media users are praising these viral videos of this panda in russia claiming videos of the active and playful panda are prove russia is taking excellent care of the chinese bear. state tv saying the pandas are helping the russia, china relationship. chinese and american scientists launched a joint investigation concluding that yaya has a genetic fur and skin condition that does not impact her quality of life and has received excellent care, but that message is not getting through. outside the panda exhibit at the beijing zoo, i asked people if they've heard of yaya the panda. this man says, yes, she's abused in america. an 11-year-old boy tells me i
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heard the u.s. is treating the panda poorly. this man says isn't russia taking good care of pandas? pandas are happy over there, not like in the u.s. and this man with his granddaughter tells me pandas in russia are very happy. why? russians and chinese are friends, at least russia is not sanctioning china. >> reporter: yaya will soon settle in this beijing zoo. china has long used its pandas as a diplomatic tool. they are on loan to 20 countries. the united states has not received one since yaya and lola 20 years ago. these pandas are usually loaned on these ten-year leases and they cost a million dollars annually. the memphis zoo had already planned to send yaya and lola back to beijing in the spring because their lease is expiring. lola died of heart disease two months ago. it led to an explosion of
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accusations about yaya treatment too. the message featured on billboards from new york city to major cities across china. in 1972 during u.s. president richard nixon's historic trip to china, his wife visited pandas in beijing. >> on behalf of the people of the united states, i am pleased to be here and accept the precious gift. >> reporter: months later, china sent a pair of pandas to the national zoo in washington, d.c. now decades later, this panda's return from the u.s. to china symbolic, not of growing friendship but growing animosity between two global super powers. selina wang, cnn, beijing. >> i didn't know you could lease a panda. our thanks to selina wang for that report. it's been an emotional return to the spotlight for brittney griner. her message to fans and the media at her first press
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the suspected pentagon leaker in court just moments ago, what investigators found inside his bedroom that convinced them that his release from jail would be a grave threat, they say, to national security. they argued in court today jack teixeira was a, quote,

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