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tv   CNN News Central  CNN  May 2, 2023 6:00am-7:00am PDT

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♪ shelter in place, students on the campus of california's uc davis are told to stay indoors until further notice following a third stabbing incident near campus. the latest on the search for a suspect. on strike. more than 11,000 hollywood writers are taking to the picket line today. how long this could last and what it all means for the shows that you watch. debt limit showdown. house speaker kevin mccarthy will meet with president biden next week as the treasury secretary warns the u.s. could default on its debt as soon as june 1st. these stories right here on cnn "news central." ♪ this morning students and staff at the uc davis community
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are being asked to shelter in place because of a string of stabbings near campus. the latest one happened overnight just days after two other deadly stabbings. on thursday a 50-year-old man you see where that happened, the stabbing of david brow was found, he was found dead in central park about a half mile from campus. two days later and a mile and a half away you see there a uc davis student was stabbed to death at another park. police have made no arrests and at this point haven't named any suspects, either. cnn's nick watt is following the story for us. let's begin with this, is there any indication that these stabbings are somehow related? >> reporter: well, share ration the police are not confirming that, but they say that there are a number of similarities. they say these attacks were all brutal and that the suspect used a knife. obviously they are investigating whether there's a connection. they say that right now they can't find any connection between the victims. now, the latest attack, as you
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mentioned, monday night a woman said that she was stabbed through her tent in what police are calling a known transient camp, the latest we heard she is still in critical condition. state authorities, the fbi, the local police obviously trying to find the suspect. we just heard from the police that they have concluded their search after that stabbing monday night and did not find a suspect. security is up, patrols are up, this small laid back college town on edge. sara? >> it is such a laid back place. let me ask you if what you know now about some of these victims. >> reporter: well, the first person killed was david breaux, 50 years old killed on thursday, he was known according to the mayor as the compassion guy, a well-known figure in the downtown central park area. he was an activist. he would walk up to people and ask them for their thoughts on
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compassion, a much-moved figure. we are told the other victim murdered saturday night was a 20-year-old computer science student, six weeks away from graduation, who was stabbed in sycamore park, murdered on his way back from an undergraduate awards ceremony. his father said that the family, the father of kareem abu najim, he said we came here hoping for safety. the suspect described as 5'7", 5'8", 19 to 23 years old, light skin. no suspects have been named. the manhunt continues. davis and the community on edge. sara? >> thank you so much. our nick watt there with all of those details. as of this morning more than 11,000 tv and movie writers are on strike, halting multiple productions and possibly delaying new seasons of some of
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your favorite shows. there was no deal between the writers guild of america and the studios before a midnight deadline. the picket lines are expected this afternoon. at the heart of the negotiationes is compensation for streaming shows. writers are asking for better pay but studios claim this is a difficult economic climate for the entertainment industry. so late night shows they will see the most immediate hits, several hosts spoke out in solidarity with the union last night. jimmy fallon told one reporter how it will affect his show. >> if there is a strike do you go dark? >> if there is a strike, yeah, i think we will, yeah. i think we will go dark. whatever i can do to support the guild. i am actually in the writers guild as well, so, yeah, i couldn't do the show without them and i support my whole staff. >> cnn's vanessa yurkevich is outside the ed sullivan theater in new york where the late show is filmed. what are the holdups or what were the sticking points before the midnight deadline?
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>> reporter: well, the sticking points that existed six weeks ago when these negotiations began are very much the sticking points that we are hearing today and we're getting a number on just how far apart these two sides are. the writers guild saying that they are asking for $429 million in compensation this year and they're saying that the offer from the studios is $86 million. so that's just showing how far apart these two sides are. i want to take you through what the studios say that they're offering the writers. they say that they're offering increased compensation, said they're increasing residuals for writers and say that they're able to move up on those offers. we are hearing that the sticking points are that the writers guild want more writers in the writers room and want commitments of employment from the studios which they say they may not need writers for certain durations. we're hearing of course from the
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writers who are saying the residuals for streaming still not where they need to be and they really want to get a commitment from the studios who regulate artificial intelligence. so still not on the same page here, it's day one, john, but looks like a bit more to go here. >> we just heard from jimmy fallon who noted he is a member of the writers guild and i think all if not almost all the late night hosts are members of the writers guild. so what are they saying in addition to jimmy fallon about this? >> reporter: yeah, seth meyers and stephen colbert who film behind me both members of the writers guild and they are standing in support of their writers. listen to both of them, both these late night hosts, they said something last night ahead of the announced strike in support of their writers. listen. >> i also think that the writers' demands are not unreasonable. i'm a member of the guild. i support collective bargaining. this nation owes so much to
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unions. they are the reason -- unions -- this is true -- union are the reason we have weekends and by extension why we have tgi fridays. >> no one is entitled to a job in show business but for those people who have a job in show business they are entitled to fair compensation, they are entitled to make a living. i think it's a very reasonable demand that is being set out by the guild and i support those demands. >> reporter: as you heard right there, the writers saying that there is simply not enough jobs right now to make a good living. that's because of the shift in the industry from broadcast to streaming. the studios saying, hey, we have had to make cost cutting measures, too, including layoffs, but we should expect a couple hundred, thousands maybe across the country of picketers taking to the lines a little later this afternoon. no one out here quite yet this morning, but this afternoon we
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should see those writers on strike. john? >> vanessa yurkevich outside the ed sullivan theater. thank you so much. some more context here, many writers say a lack of job opportunities combined with the low pay makes the current situation simply unsustainable. for media and tech companies a weak advertising market that has driven stocks down and has triggered deep cost cuts including layoffs. almost all writers say they are on board with this strike. last month 98% of the writers guild of america members voted in favor of t this is the first strike since 2007. that one cost roughly $2.1 billion it lasted 100 days. so as we noted late night tv will see the first impact, all those shows, jimmy kimmel live, tonight show starring jimmy fallon, "saturday night live" depend on writers with fresh material in realtime and they are going to go dark as you heard from jimmy fallon and we could soon see run runs. we also for better or worse are going to see more reality tv.
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"big brother" and "survivor" filled the gap of other shows. disney plus, hulu have tons of shows and movies readily available, they will be able to offer new content for quite some time. also new this morning after weeks of staring each other down and months since they have last communicated president biden and house speaker kevin mccarthy they have announce that had they are going to meet one week from today at the white house to talk about the debt ceiling. mccarthy just accepted the invitation and along with the other three top leaders in congress they will be joining as well. it comes with new urgency. treasury secretary janet yellen just put out a new analysis warning that the u.s. could default and run out of cash as of june 1st. cnn's christine romans is here with me on much more on this. yellen's warnings and raising the alarm have definitely kicked up a notch and gotten more urgent. she says it's now imperative that they get this done, this he
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do something asap. where do things stand? >> we've already hit the debt ceiling, all the tax receipts coming in that's being used to pay the bills and it's not enough. >> and it's coming in lower -- >> coming in lower than expected. >> right. >> the treasury is doing what it can, so-called extraordinary measures to move the money around until it hits the so-called x date which is now june 1st. we are sleep walking, congress is sleep walking toward a likely recession, a credit downgrade and the unraveling of the american economy and possibly the global financial system. you could see stocks plunge, interest rates spike, the cost of our debt would be even more expensive. if they don't get this resolved quickly, the united states can't pay all of its bills. as it picks and choose it is sends a message to the rest of the world that we are not credit worthy. american creddy worthiness is the basis of the entire financial system. you would see jobless rates spike, even a quick couple of days going over the lines would be a million jobs lost. goldman sachs says if we don't get this resolved a tenth of the
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american economy just stops on the day that we don't have enough money to pay the bills. you would see benefits be halted. >> it's such an unforced error. this is what christine is laying out. this is an unforced error. >> absolutely. and we shouldn't even be here. it's only been in the last decade or so this has become a political football. there are even those who say we need to take this football completely off the table. this needs to be negotiated in the budget process and ballot box not when it's time to pay the bills. the practical conversation for the american people is that a $31.4 trillion debt limit has already been reached, we are walking toward the brink and the markets and the global economy could actually react even before we get there. one wonders if it will take some sort of adverse really big market crash, for example, for congress to wake up. >> so far the market has been kind of crossing their fingers. >> has been saying that the risk of a default is not zero and it should be, it should always be
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zero, not zero but rising every day. >> so adding to the picture the fed is meeting tomorrow. >> that's right. >> what's going to happen? >> we're expecting fed will hike and halt, maybe 25 basis points and stay there. it's been a year of interest rates increases that would be the tenth if the fed raises interest rates going from near 0% to all the way up to 5%. that's the pressure on the banking system. the hope is that it slows the economy. the irony is that you could be looking at a slowing economy at the very same time the credit problem, the debt ceiling drama throws the economy into a recession and undoes all of the careful work that the policymakers have tried to do. >> you've been warning that this could come at such a terrible time. >> terrible time. >> 2011 this is worse than it could look like. >> absolutely. >> good to see you. thank you. sara? coming up on cnn "news central" where is mass murder suspect francisco oropesa? law enforcement is still on the
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hunt for oropesa accused of killing five of his neighbors in texas. this morning cnn has uncovered disturbing details about his previous bouts with the law. plus an arkansas judge orders hunter biden to release personal financial information as part of a paternity lawsuit he's facing. the order is breathing new life into house republican efforts to get ahold of those same records. and later we have new information on that blinding dust storm in illinois which led to a deadly pileup on a major stretch of highway there. a live report straight ahead. stay with us. enu. just buy any footlong in the app, and get one free. everyone loves free stuff chuck.k. can wewe get peyton a footlong? get it before it's gone. on the subway app. because your lives are forever entwined... ♪ i'm falling in love with you over and over again ♪ love entwined. shop the mother's y sale to get 30% off almo everything. only at kay.
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♪ ♪ a bunch of dead guys made up work, way back when. ♪ ♪ it's our turn now we'll make it up again. ♪ ♪ we'll build freelance teams with more agility. ♪ ♪ the old way of working is deader than me. ♪ ♪ we'll scale up, and we'll scale down ♪ ♪ before you're six feet underground. ♪ ♪ yes, this is how, this is how we work now. ♪ on our radar this morning, an american climber has died while trying to reach the summit of mt. everest. expedition organizers say jonathan sugarman started to feel unwell and passed away. he was a retired physician from seattle. the tourism department tells cnn bad weather is hindering efforts
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to airlift his body out. sugerman is the fourth person to die on mt. everest this year. there is a new poll out showing 73% of likely republican primary voters would consider backing donald trump in 2024 and a majority say he is their top choice right now. the new data comes from cbs news. it found that fewer than 20% of likely republican voters are currently even considering any of the other seven candidates, included in the survey. you will remember yesterday we showed you this incredible video of a caring being tossed around like a toy. we are now hearing from the man in that car who lived through the wild ordeal sharing what it looked like from inside. >> [ bleep ]. >> when the car started to flip i do remember kind of like a
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flash of seeing the air bag go off and the glass break, but then, you know, we were back upright and i was just sitting there with my hands on the wheel and it seemed to happen basically instantaneously. >> this is so wild. he had his dog in the car with him at the time. both are thankfully okay. almost incredibly, sara. >> wow, that was nuts. this morning the remains of two missing teenagers are believed to be among seven bodies found on a rural oklahoma property. the property was the home of convicted sex offender jesse mcfadden. investigators say he is also believed to be among the dead. he was under investigation in connection with the disappearance of 14-year-old ivy webster and 16-year-old brittany brewer. cnn's lucy kafanov is following this story for us. lucy, have officials conclusively identified the remains of these two teenagers and anyone else?
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>> reporter: they have not, sara. the sheriff did say that the other family members related that -- some of the victims were other family members related to one family but he did not release the names. here is what we know so far, oklahoma highway patrol pushed a missing persons alert for 14-year-old ivy webster and 16-year-old brittany brewer monday afternoon, they were last seen in henrietta about 90 miles east of oklahoma city possibly with 39 jesse mcfadden who is also included in that alert. he had been convicted of sexual assault, he is listed on the oklahoma sexual offender registry. we understand that law enforcement arrived to the property with a search around around 3:00 p.m. local yesterday, they searched the property, they found the seven bodies not in the residence but on the property. authorities did not provide details regarding how long the bodies had been there. they did say there is no suspect at large they are looking for and there is no threat to the community. there was a separate missing persons alert posted by the
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sheriff's office on facebook regarding 14-year-old ivy webster which revealed she went with a friend on saturday to that area. she was supposed to return home by 5:00 p.m. on sunday but contact had not been made with her. our affiliate did speak to ivy's brother and the father of brittany brewer. take a listen. >> i'm just lost. i still -- it hasn't sunk in yet, i still think she's going to walk up right behind me or walk up next to me. it still hasn't sunken in that she's gone. >> they're taking it really tough and hard. words can't describe. >> a lot of crying. really sad. i mean, only daughter in a house full of boys. obviously my mom is super upset. horrible. truly tragic, especially because we have known this family for like two years now. >> reporter: so much grief in that community. sara, another grim twist, just hours before authorities discovered these bodies mcfadden was actually set to stand trial on charges of solicitation of a minor according to court
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records. he was scheduled to appear in court at 9:00 a.m. on monday, he failed to show up the records say, a bench warrant for failure to appear was issued. the court date stemmed from charges filed in 2017 when mcfadden was accused of using a cellphone to exchange nude photos and videos with an underaged girl while serving time for a 2003 rape conviction, this is according to kaki. ive's parents telling them they were shocked to hear of mcfadden's pass. >> lucy kafanov live for us from denver. this morning border patrol officers are on the look outfor the gunman believed to have killed five of her neighbors. that suspect francisco oropesa is still at large. he is considered armed and dangerous. more than 250 law enforcement officers are involved in the manhunt and an $80,000 reward is being offered for any information. cnn's ed lavandera joins us from
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cleveland, texas, outside the suspect's home. ed, are police, law enforcement, telling us there are any developments? >> reporter: they were very tight lipped yesterday. they had spoken on saturday and sunday and the days immediately after the shooting that took place at this home outside of cleveland, texas, but yesterday they were very quiet. it was sunday afternoon that they offered that $80,000 reward. we did see some movement at the suspect's house, which is just right back over here. there was an fbi agent that was inside the home and also looking through various cars on the property but fbi officials wouldn't explain exactly what was going on. they simply said that they are following all possible leads at this point. we've also noticed that in the area around this neighborhood large poster-sized pictures of this suspect have been put up. i think all of this kind of speaks to the uncertainty of what investigators are dealing with right now. on sunday afternoon fbi
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officials said that they had no leads, but, you know this, $80,000 reward we know has generated calls of possible sightings in a nearby county there were multiple called in sightings of what people thought might have been the suspect. those didn't pan out. so this reward is generating calls, but it has not led to any real leads that would pinpoint exactly where francisco oropesa is. as you mentioned off the top there, john, this warning along the border since oropesa is a mexican national, obviously law enforcement believes there is a possibility he may be trying to get back to mexico, but at this point as investigators have said, this suspect could be anywhere, john. >> ed lavandera in cleveland, texas, ed, keep us posted. this is a manhunt that's lasted four days already, kate, and now going. >> exactly right. there's also this story in south carolina, just heart break that go we need to bring to you. a bride was killed on friday just hours after she and her
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husband exchanged vows. samantha miller and aric hutchinson were literally just leaving their wedding reception when this happened. an alleged drunk driver hit the golf cart that the newlyweds were riding in. according to court records the driver was arrested and charged and it is this woman, this 25-year-old woman who is behind the wheel. they say her vehicle was going 65 in a 25 mile an hour zone. obviously more than twice the speed limit when she hit the golf cart. the cart was thrown more than 100 yards, rolled multiple times. the groom and two other people were badly injured. his mother shared this heart breaking detail as he was -- as he is still in the hospital saying that they handed -- that she was handed aric's wedding ring in a plastic bag at the hospital five hours after sam had placed it on his finger. here is what sam's sister told nbc this morning. >> from the moment she woke up that day until she left the
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venue she told aric on the golf cart that she wanted this day to last forever. he told us that at the hospital today when we saw him. >> the suspect is now charged with reckless homicide and felony dui. sara? cnn's on the ground in illinois where a dust storm turned deadly this weekend blinding drivers on a major interstate and triggering a huge pileup. at least six people have been killed. the challenge for crews working around the clock on the ground, that's coming up next. and we are just minutes away from the opening bell on wall street, futures pointing slightly lower this morning. investors looking forward to the start of the fed's may policy meeting. a decision on interest rates is expected tomorrow. markets ended the day slightly lower on monday with eyes on the banking sector following the failure of first republic bank.
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more than 11,000 members of the writers guild of america they are now on strike. their first since 2007. there was no deal before a midnight deadline. the studios claim they were willing to improve on their offer, however, it would not meet some of the union's demands. the strike could halt the production of several television shows and could possibly delay the start of new seasons as well. kate? six people are dead this morning and dozens more recovering after a dust storm triggered a huge pileup involving more than 70 vehicles. this all happened in illinois on i-55 near springfield. the dust blinded drivers almost instantaneously and the images coming out afterward, just look at this. you not only have mangled cars but you have piles and piles of semi-trailers, you have vehicles and looks like also cargo catching fire in the midst of all of this. cnn's adrienne broaddus is on the scene for us. how it looks today. adrienne, a different scene today as crews were clearly working around the clock to clear the scene, but what more are you learning about what happened here?
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>> reporter: well, kate, i will start with the crews who worked overnight and through the morning to get this stretch of interstate 55 back open. i am going to move out of the frame of the lens so you can see what is left behind. to the right on the southbound lanes you can see where the road is charred. when those more than 70 vehicles crashed, some of them caught fire and first responders who were handling this scene said that was one of the most difficult tasks, going to each individual car to make sure nobody was inside. even if they weren't involved in the crash. and it was especially difficult when the two trucks were on fire. now, to answer your question in regards to what caused this, you see how windy it is today. the wind gusts were at least 45 miles per hour. that excessive wind picked up soil, dirt from neighboring
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farmland as well as debris and created those blinding conditions for drivers. six people were killed, at least 37 others were sent to the hospital with injuries ranging from minor to life-threatening. the youngest victim according to members of law enforcement was a 2-year-old. the oldest an 80-year-old. kate? >> adrienne, thank you for the up update. the video was terrifying. sara? the u.s. is tracking another mysterious balloon. this one was spotted flying over parts of hawaii, but the defense department says it's not a threat and they won't be shooting this one down. you may remember the military shot down a suspected chinese spy balloon off the carolina coast earlier this year. cnn's natasha bertrand is joining us from the pentagon. why is the u.s. confident that this balloon is not a threat in any way? >> well, a couple reasons, sara. the first is that this balloon does not appear to have been
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maneuverable so it doesn't appear that it was being maneuvered by any foreign government or external actor. it also according to our sources was not emitting any signal. so that means it was not being used likely for intelligence gathering tore surveillance purposes. that chinese spy balloon was emitting signals when flying over the united states suggesting it was being used for spying. in addition to this the balloon that the u.s. military observed flying over parts of hawaii did not transit over any sensitive government sites or any critical defense department infrastructure. just to remind viewers the chinese spy balloon that was shot down earlier this year it did hover over sensitive military sites. the contrast there really suggested to u.s. officials that this was not necessarily a balloon that posed any kind of national security threat. the balloon also according to the defense department did not pose a risk to civil aviation. it was flying at around 36,000 feet, but they say they did not determine it was posing a risk
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to aircraft at that height. so bottom line here is that this is a very different situation than what they observed with the chinese spy balloon but we have to recall that just earlier this year the u.s. military did shoot down three other unidentified objects. they reserve the right to do so in this case as well. no indication that they will. we should note this balloon is out of hawaiian air space and out of u.s. territorial waters how the defense department is still tracking it with the faa. >> i'm curious whose balloon it is. thank you so much. a major setback for president biden's son hunter who will have to answer more questions about his investments in art sales as part of a paternity case. a concerning new study reveals the amount of toxic chemicals being released from our homes and workplaces from every day consumer products. ream (in a whisper) can we even afford this house? maybe jacob can finally get a job.
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with only days left until a trump era immigration policy expires the texas border city of el paso is now under a state of emergency. they are preparing for a surge, tens of thousands of migrants in mexico are hoping to make their way across the border as soon as title 42 is lifted. the pandemic era policy as you will remember made it easier for the government to quickly expel mike grants. the policy is set to expire on may 11th. cnn's rosa flores is in el paso for us and is covering all of this. the mayor said that they needed time to get housing ready for all of this, but what are you seeing there?
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>> reporter: kate, there are hundreds of migrants here on the streets of el paso, i'm going to walk around the block just to show you the magnitude, but let's pan over here to the side and then we're going to walk around the block. you will see that there are hundreds of migrants that are sleeping on the streets here of el paso. let's walk, walk with me as i tell you the story here because you will see that there are lines here for everything. for water, for food and, like you said, el paso is in a state of emergency right now. officials are very concerned about public safety, about shelter as you can see and also about transportation because there's only a limited amount of seats to exit the city of el paso and that creates a bottleneck. that's why the city of el paso issued a disaster declaration to make sure they can ease up some of those resources. you can see we just made the turn here, take a look behind me and you will see there is an
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entire block that is just packed with migrants. all of these migrants are sleeping on the street hoar. i can tell you, kate, from talking to the priest from this church, he said he has never seen anything like this. saying that this is a crisis. now, process this with me because title 42 allows immigration agents to swiftly return certain migrants back to mexico. so the obvious question is why are we seeing so many migrants right now if title 42 is in place? well, here is what we know from talking to migrants, officials on both sides of the border and community leaders on both sides of the border they say that at least in four northern mexican cities there are nearly 40,000 migrants waiting for the lifting of title 42, which is scheduled for may 1st -- for may 11th, excuse me, but they are getting impatient. from talking to some of the migrants here some of them they say they have grown impatient and they decided to cross the border. now, here is the key, some of them crossed by turning themselves into border authorities, others decided to
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enter the country illegally which takes me to my final point, kate. that's the other reason why it's difficult for the city of el paso and city of el paso officials because the fema money that they get to help migrants is for those migrants that have been processed by immigration authorities. because that's what fema moneys allow them to do. a lot of these individuals here if they enter the country illegally the city just can't help them. kate? >> what you described very well and in vivid detail is what a mess is on their hands at the border and at the feet of the federal government right now. thank you so much, rosa. john? thanks, kate. this morning president biden's son hunter biden likely regrouping after suffering a setback in court. an arkansas judge ruled that biden must answer more questions about his investments in art sales saying, quote, this cryptic hide the ball game isn't going to cut it when we get to
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trial. so that decision comes as part of a paternity case which has now morphed into a battle over hunter biden's overseas business dealings, his laptop and other financial issues. with us now is a criminal defense attorney and former federal prosecutor. again, this is a paternity suit in arkansas that was reopened at hunter biden's request because he wanted to pay a lower amount in child support. so was that an unforced error? >> i think it absolutely was. hunter brought this about himself and essentially now his finances are really open for scrutiny on all fronts by this judge in this child support case. that being said the implications of this very state-specific child support issue are very widespread for obvious political reasons, but it's all because he reopened the case, absolutely. >> they had to know that this could happen, yes? >> of course i think they knew, maybe they have a defense, maybe they are not concerned, maybe
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they believe that it's justifiable to reduce the amount based on financial circumstances, but that being said there is so much information that's going to be put out there as a result of this request by him. >> including a deposition scheduled for june. how significant is that and how much could happen before then? >> well, there's going to be ongoing discovery in the case and if the case proceeds as scheduled there's going to be depositions, it's going to get into basically any and all financial dealings that hunter biden has been involved with, which obviously coincidentally or otherwise are the subject of many other inquiries. the overlap of this is quite shocking, including the fact that he brought this on himself. but the deposition is going to be able to get into pretty much any and all financial dealings that hunter has been involved with whatsoever. >> talk to me about that intersection. if there is a deposition in this case and discovery if this all goes forward, how much of that play there? there is a congressional investigation, republicans in congress trying to big dig into hunter biden and there is this federal doj investigation,
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criminal, which is still going on. >> the family court filings are going to be somewhat sealed for the most part but there can be subpoenas that are issued and a lot of this information will come out and a lot of these investigators will very interested in some of the disclosures that are made in the family court case not only for what they reveal but whether they are consistent with the other information that they have already on him from the laptop and from other sources. so the consistency is really going to be a problem for him if there's any sort of mismatch between prior disclosed information to the family court and other information that other investigators have, for instance. >> all has to line up. so we read in the intro here what the judge said, the cryptic hide the ball game, accusing hunter biden and his legal team there. what does that all mean? he basically said you have redacted too much in the documents we asked for. >> sure. so there has already been some disclosures in the case that have been sturpturned oej and t journal felt that hunter biden's
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team redacted too much information that would have been relevant and felt that it was prolonging and delaying the process when, again, he was the one who brought this action in the first place. so she was not pleased with that. and wanted to make sure that all the parties no he that it's going to be very specifically enforced that they disclose everything that needs to get this matter resolved and that's just the child support piece of things, of course, but the far reaching implications are very obvious here. >> thank you so much katie cherkasky. ahead on cnn "news central" a new report suggesting our homes and office spaces with filled with harmful toxins that are making us sick. a live report next. e very first influencer in your life... mom! this is how mom shines. find the perfect mother's day gift... ...at zales. the diamond store. 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.
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toxic and potentially harmful fumes could be circulating in the air inside of your home and right now, and where researchers have found 5,000 harmful volatile harmful compounds were being emitted in state of california alone in 2020, and in all kinds of things that we have in our home like
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shampoos and lotions and cleaning products. we have our reporter to join us to help to us understand what these compounds are doing to our bodies. >> yeah, sara, the chemicals that we are talking about are doing with asthma, hormones and cancer and chemicals like formaldehyde or methyl chloride and these chemicals were part of the study based out of california where they did find that in 2020 more than 5,000 tons were released from consumer products that we use everyday. this is in the state of california. these are the products that as you have mentioned like household cleaning supplies and paint removers and even certain shampoos and body lotions, and this is a new data that is going to add to the understanding of
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the chemicals that we have used everyday and how they can impact our health. >> what exactly can we use about this, because we use the shampoo and the soap and the cleaning supplies in our homes. >> in california, they have prop 65 which is where the businesses required to warn consumer when they are exposed to chemicals that can cause cancer or birth defects, but some experts say that we can do more. this is what linda burnbalm, the former director of the national institute of environmental health sciences calls a wake-up call. and she says we don't recommend radon regulations, but yet, people s spend 90% of their tim indoors and especially babies and children and the elderly, and we can do things to protect
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ourselves from the exposure, and so it is going to be interesting, sara, to see where the conversation heads in the future as we are thinking about the volatile chemicals that are used in the day-to-day products. >> thank you, jacqueline howard, for that. kate. >> and now, the shelter in order has been lifted as the police e looking for a suspectt in a string of stabbing attacks including one near campus. and now why the order has en lifted to stay in place. and now a father and son have been swept away by rip currents in florida and we will tell you how they were rescue and saved and it is all caught on tape. we will be right back. their own heal thcare decisions. the freedom for our children to be safe from gun violence. the freedom to vote and have your vote counted. for seniors to live with dignity. and to give every american the freedom that comes with a fair shot at building a good life.
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