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tv   CNN Newsroom Live  CNN  May 4, 2023 1:00am-2:00am PDT

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hello and a warm welcome to our viewers joining us around the world. i'm bianca nobilo. max foster is on assignment the rest of the week.
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just ahead -- >> russia is saying ukraine sent two drones to kill president vladimir putin. >> we don't attack putin or moscow. >> we're strongly committed to bringing inflation back down to the 2% goal. >> a growing chorus of voices urging the fed to pause with the rate hikes. >> this investigation is significant and also a reminder that they are not just looking into how the materials are handled but they are also closely examining whether anyone tried to get in the way of having all the evidence. live from london, this is "cnn newsroom" with max foster and bianca nobilo. >> it is thursday, may 4. and russia appears to be
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retaliating for a drone strike on the kremlin. ukraine denies it had anything to do with the attack which moscow calls an assassination attempt on president due con putin. two drones flew above the kremlin early wednesday but there is not evidence that ukraine because behind the attack. drones shot down over ukraine today have the words for the kremlin and moscow written on them. authorities in kyiv called the aerial assault the most intense so far this year. claire sebastian is joining us in london and nic robertson is live for us in eastern ukraine. you can tell us more about president zelenskyy's statements about this attack which happened in the kremlin an also whether or not these attacks that we've seen in the last 24 hours bear out the concerns that russia might be using it as a pretext for further escalation? >> reporter: that is clearly the concern and i think that is with a president zelenskyy was trying
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to get to when he spoke in helsinki where he was meeting with nordic partners just hours after the drone incident became widely known. he dismissed it. ukrainian officials say it was tricky of enemies. and president zelenskyy said we do not attack putin, do not attack moscow. >> we don't attack putin or moscow. we defend our citizens. we at the present time have enough weapon for these. that is why we don't use it anywhere. for us that is a deficit. we can't spend it. we didn't attack putin.
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>> reporter: how about russia respond? that is why perhaps some of the drones, 15 of them, fired at odesa, the southern air command saying that they shot down 12 of those drones, three others fueling on educational facilities. and as you said, the words were for moscow, for kremlin. so is that the kremlin's answer? city officials in kyiv saying it was the heaviest bombardment there that they had witnessed this year. but none hit the city. they were all taken down by defensive systems. there were parts of those missiles, it did land actually in kyiv, but none were able to get through the air defenses and hit their targets. but where it was the heaviest and devastating strike was in kherson in the south and east of the country and that according to ukrainian officials, 539 artillery strikes, that is a massive ratcheting up.
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82 of them at the train station there. president zelenskyy's office releasing devastate being images of the civilian casualties. 23 killed, 46 wounded, two of those children. and so kherson which is perhaps one of those places russia expects of ukraine potentially launching its counteroffensive, that came in with the heaviest bombardment and highest number of civilian casualties. response from the kremlin not clear. perhaps kherson preemptive of what they see as a coming ukrainian counter offensive. >> and severe impact on the battlefield because russia says it was ukrainian attack, it begs a lot of questions. i mean, is it a false flag operation, was a performative strike, is it possible to make
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an assessment at this stage? >> not really. all we know based on the videos that came out and some came from state run tv, that there were two drones. and we've analyzed the details, the people on the ground, the car, all kinds of things to ascertain that there were would drones 16 minutes apart from different directions. but what matters in russia is what they are saying. it looks like an attempt to stir up vengeful feelings to have justification for this war. and hardliners in the kremlin,
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the political elite calling directly for the as assassination of president zelenskyy. and we've seen uptick in rhetoric from the kremlin that will justify more surveillance at home. a so i think thoo critical to watch how this continues to impact public opinion in russia. >> and victory day i think is next tis. so anniversaries can be overstated, but you can understand the thinking behind trying to consolidate pmorale. clare, thank you so much. you know, there is increasing concern that another regional u.s. bank might be in financial trouble. shares of pacific western bank fell by more than 50% in after hours trading. this is after bloom bigger reported the bank is exploring strategic options including a
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sale or split. the bank says customers have stopped pulling out their money and unlike other banks that have recently failed, deposits are federally insured. and we're keeping a close eye on u.s. markets after this pac west report and the latest interest rate hike. here is where futures stand right now. things are looking positive at this stage. wall street coming off a down day triggered not so much by the rate hike but by the suggestion that the board is taking a wait and see approach to any future hi hikes. wall street doesn't like the uncertainty. this is the tenth time that they have raised the interest rate back to march of last year. the idea is cooling inflation by raising borrowing costs. and as the theory goes, that
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will slow spending and keep prices from rising. matt egan has the details. >> reporter: the war on inflation goes on. this marks the tenth rate strike. but the fed did drop hints, significant hints, about a pause in this inflation fighting campaign. maybe. this rate hike was a unanimous decision but also a controversial one because it comes just days after the second largest bank failure in american history and they were caused in part by fed's spike in interest rates, by lifting rates even higher this week, some experts warn that the fed is basically pouring gasoline on the fire. setting the stage for a credit crunch and perhaps a recession. the fed is signaling that the inflation fight could be nearing
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an end. officials removed a key line from the statement that previously indicated more rate hikes are likely coming. jerome powell described it as a meaningful change and he left the door open for a pause. but he also said no decision was made at this week's meeting to pause at the next meeting in june. so what does it mean for consumers? there is just no relief coming yet from crushing borrowing costs. mortgage rates have jumped nearly three percentage points since the if i had started raising rates last month. typical car loan rates are at 13 year highs and it has never been more expensive to carry credit card debt. and even if the fed does pause rates soon, powell indicated today that they are in into rush to cut rates i didn't tell.
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the -- rates yet. the question is how much it will hurt the economy. and no one and not even the fed knows the answer to that. back to you. no sign of progress between president biden and congressional republicans at resolving the debt limit crisis. but the white house is warning of disastrous consequences if the federal government defaults on its debt. there could be loss of 8 million american jobs. and janet yellen says that the government could run out of money as soon as june 1. a spuspect is in custody after a shooting at a atlanta medical facility that left one woman dead and four injured. the one killed is 38-year-old amy cynthia who worked at the u.s. centers for disease control and prevention. and dale patterson who came to the medical facility seeking treatment on wednesday allegedly
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became enraged and opened fire with a handgun. authorities say he fled on foot and stole a vehicle nearby. police finally tracked him down in an atlanta suburb. >> one operate saw a 911 call come in, literally said i think this is going to be him. we prioritized thoo call on the radio and we had some officers both undercover and uniformed officers i believe if i have my facts correct that an undercover officer was the one that originally saw and can fronted t confronted the individual and was able to have backup from uniform officers that took him into custody without incident. >> gary tuchman has more. >> reporter: for nearly eight hours he was on the loose, but dion patterson is now under arrest. he was captured here in the
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suburbs about 11 miles northwest of where the shootings took place. right here at a gated community, a condominium, we saw police cars speeding down the street and entering inside. we thought maybe it was just a ten. we had heard all day that the belief was that he was in the suburban cobb county. 15 minutes after police entered, they confirmed that patterson had been captured. we talked to neighbors inside this community. as we said, people have been saying all day, authorities, that it was possible that he was here in cobb county. cameras picked up the license plate on a car that he allegedly car jacked and it indicated that the car that he then abandoned was only two blocks away. so police were searching the whole area. and according to the women that we just talked to, they told us they heard dogs barking and they weren't stopping and it was very unusual because they knew the
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man might be here, one one said we have a pool and gazebo area, it is possible he is there, the police entered. the next thing the ladies tell us, the police yelled get on the ground and they realized that this man had been caught. and now he is in custody. this is gary tuchman, cnn, georgia. >> the shooting has rei go nighted discussion on gun violence in the u.s. one georgia senator had a message for his fellow lawmakers. here is what senator warnock had to say. >> i have two small children and their schools were on lockdown responding to this tragedy. they are there. i'm here. hoping and praying that they are safe. but the truth is none of us is
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safe. as a pastor, i'm praying for those who are affected by the tragedy, but i hasten to say that thoughts and prayers are not enough. and in fact, in fact, it is a contradiction to say that you are thinking and praying and then do nothing. it is to make a mockery of prayer. >> israel says it has killed two gunmen behind a deadly attack on a british israeli mother and her two daughters in the west bank. third militant accused of aiding the gunman was killed as well. benjamin netanyahu had condemned the attack on the mother and her girls whose funeral was reportedly attended by thousands. elliott gotkine is joining us from jerusalem. obviously the killing of lucy and her daughters captured the world he'd attention. and now we're hearing just the
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early information about this raid that appears to have unfolded earlier this morning. >> reporter:. it took place about 3 1/2 hours a ago. and we got word from the ministry of health saying that three palestinian men had been killed and they were later identified by the israeli security forces as the two gunmen responsible for killing lucy and her daughter in that attack on their vehicle as they were traveling to the north for a family vacation. and then in addition to that, another militant operative who was with them. the security forces said that they were part of the hamas military group and hamas admitted as much hailing the two gunmen as heros of the jordan valley operation. now, i received an audio
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statem statement in which they say that they were delighted to hear that the trerrorists were eliminated and that it was done in a way that did not endanger israeli soldiers. and that we settled the account with the murderers. adding as is often with the case, it doesn't matter where you try to hide, we will find you. and defense minister also saying that as he promised, israel defense establishment will reach any terrorist that harms our citizens. and of course tensions between israel and the palestinians remain high right now. we just saw the other day that following the death of a member of islamic jihad former spokesman on a hunger strike, exchange of rockets and israel
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retaliation. but all quiet for now there. >> elliott, thank you. outrage in new york after a homeless man is put into a deadly chokehold by a fellow subway rider. how the authorities are responding. plus serbia is reeling from a horrific school shooting reportedly committed by a 13-year-old. we'll go live to belgrade. and prosecutors for the special counsel are looking into the trump organization's handling of the mar-a-lago surveillance footage. more on that next. he snores like an angry rhino you've never heard an angry rhino baby i hear one every night. every night. okay. i'll work on that. save $500 on our new nexext gen sleep number smart beds. plus, special financing. only at sleep number.. (dr. aaronon king) if you have diabetes, getting on dexcom is the sininge most important thing you can do. it eliminates painful finger sticks,
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(music throughout) get the royal treatment. join the millions playing royal match today. download now. suspected gunman in rural texas has been charged with five counts of murder. he is accused of shooting and killing five including a 9-year-old at his neighbor's house on a friday after they asked him to stop firing his gun so close to their house. the suspect's long time partner is now facing a felg ony charges
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she helped him evade police for days. serbia is trying to come to grips with a horrific mass shooting. a rare occurrence in the country. police say it was committed by a 13-year-old boy who shot and killed nine people in his elementary school in belgrade on wednesday. officials say that the suspect showed no remorse and his motive is under investigation. his parents were also arrested. serbia's president is pushing for changes to the law to hold young criminal suspects in cases like this accountable. for more, let's go to fred pleitgen. i wonder how the country is feeling especially when there is this law in place that says someone can't be held until the age of 14 especially when it seems that this attack was heavily premeditated. >> reporter: and of course also very much pre-planned as well. and this nation is absolutely
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devastated and very much sad and in mourning. and you can see that where one of the sfwlans entrances here o school, the sea of flowers, a lot of people lighting candles. and if you look at at the media here in serbia, but see the people who are coming out to the school, many of them in tears. you can see how devastated this nation is. and i think it has to do with the fact that this is something that is absolutely until precedenced here in this country. one of the things that people keep saying, they normally only hear about things like this from the united states. so this is definitely absolutely not something that happens here despite the fact begin other t than -- gun otherwnership is hi here. but the anger is about the way that it seemed to be pre-planned and because he is only 13, he is
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not actually criminally liable for it. that is leading to a lot of discussion. that is mixing also with that thinker and the sorrow that the nation is feeling. here is what we're learning -- horror inside a school classroom, a scene all-too familiar in the u.s., but this is serbia's capital belgrade, this is the deadliest mass shooting in the country in over a decade. moments after arriving at the elementary school, a 13-year-old student took out his father's gun and shot the security guard before turning it on pupils according to officials. >> translator: there was one girl at her desk, another at the piano piano. he took their lives and then went into the history classroom and immediately shot the teacher and students there from the door. >> reporter: the boy shot the female history teacher as terrified students hid under
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their desks. she was rushed to hospital along with six injured children according to cnn affiliate n-1. the hospital's director detailed severe brain injuries an gunshot wunds t s wouns to the legs. the perpetrator was arrested in the schoolyard and led out in handcuffs after he called the police himself and told them what he did. >> translator: i asked where is my kid says one father describing the moment when he realized she was in the history class. when he found her, she was in shock. the crime had been planned for over a month. the teen had drawn the sketch of an attack that looked like something from a video grade or a mhorror movie according to th police chief. they say it came out of nowhere. >> we only heard about this in
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news from the yumd abunited states. >> reporter: and these parents are lucky, their children made it out alive. but the nation is in mournling and questions are asked over how this could happen. and that continues today. i want to show that you right now as we were in that tv report, a whole school class has come here to pay their respects. and that is really something that we've been seeing all morning, that the nation is so devastated that schoolteachers are coming here bringing their entire classes to obviously show ol d solidarity and also their sorrow as well. there is a big discussion about when children -- or when teens should be held criminally responsible for acts like this. and the president of the country came out last night and he called for the age to be decreased from 14 to 12. that obviously is too late for this case here and certainly doesn't do very much to console the people.
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but the discussion is going on where at the same time you have the sadness and of course the anger that something like this could have happened. >> fred pleitgen, thank you so much. great to have you on the ground there. thank you so much. new york city subway rider dies after a fellow passenger put him in a chokehold. what led to the incident and how the city is responding. and a racist text message seems to be what pushed fox news to oust tucker carlsons but it was far from the first time that the popular show host had embraced white nationalism. details next. let it pull you past the doubt. past the paiain, and past your limits. no matter what, we go on. biofreeze
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welcome back. if you are just joining us, let me bring you up-to-date with our top stories. the u.s. federal reserve has increased interest rates a quarter point, that is its tenth since last spring and moves rates to their highest level in 15 years. is this amid instability in the banking sector. and israel says it killed two gunman behind an attack on a mother and her two daughters. the third militant was killed as well in a raid early thursday in the west bank city. and cnn now learning that special counsel jack smith is investigating the handling of surveillance footage from mar-a-lago following a subpoena last year. that we're told has prompted a new round of grand jury subpoenas. sources also say that two long time trump organization executives are set to appear before the grand jury in the hours ahead.
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all this is while we're learning that the special counsel says some of the former vice president's testimony last week. caitlin katelyn polantz has mor. >> reporter: jack smith working for the justice department investigating donald trump has been busy in recent weeks. just last week he was personally sitting into witness some of the testimony of former vice president mike pence at a grand jury looking at donald trump and the aftermath of the 2020 location for possible federal crimes. that is not a typical thing. there are many prosecutors that work for smith that are in and out of the grand jury almost daily. and smith was in the room for some of the pence testimony to witness it himself. just underlining how serious of an investigation, how substantial a witness the former
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vice president was bringing him in under court order under subpoena to testify to that grand jury. potentially about his former boss donald trump. and smith like i said has been very, very busy. he is busy in the coming days. we're learning not just related to the january 6 inquiry is he bringing in many, many witnesses, he is also having major allies of donald trump, people from the trump organization at its high levels handling security, the chief operating officer, set to testify to the federal grand jury in washington on thursday. and those men are father and son, they are the people that would be responsible for the handling of surveillance tapes by the trump organization and they are of interest right now. we know because the justice department, jack smith and his investigators, they are questioning them and others about the handling of
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surveillance footage that the justice department wanted to obtain last year. it ultimately was turned over and showed employees of donald trump moving boxes in mar-a-lago out of a storage room. but now the handling of that surveillance tape itself when it was requested by the justice department has become an area of inquiry into a possible obstruction case related to smith and his many inquiries on that side. katelyn polantz, cnn, washington. more witnesses are set to take the stand in the hours ahead in the civil battery and defamation trial against donald trump. the former president's attorney confirmed wednesday that trump's legal time will not put on a defense case and will not call a previously called witness. trump is being sued by e. jean carroll who is accusing him of sexual assault. he denies the allegations. the judge plans to charge the
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jury to begin deliberations on tuesday. manhattan district attorney is investigating an incident where a man died after being put into a chokehold by another rider. and this video could be disturbing to watch. witnesses say a 30-year-old man jordan neely was acting hostile on a train monday. and a fellow passenger put him in a chokehold. neely lost consciousness and died a short time later at the hospital. a source says that neely was homeless. protestors took to the subway wednesday night chanting black lives matter and homeless matter. [ chanting ] cnn has not been able to independently confirm what happened leading up to this incident. we also don't know how long neely was restrained or if he was armed. but the medical examiner is now ruling his death a homicide.
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new york officials say they won't be able to keep up with an expected flood of migrants coming to the city. two more buses with migrants arrived on best sent by texas governor abbott. but the number of border crossings are expected to sky rocket after title 42 expires next tuesday. and new york's mayor says that will be a major problem. >> governor abbott is reckless in his behavior by playing politics with human beings. he has done this since april of last year. and it has cost new yorkers since april of last year to july, it has cost us almost a billion dollars. high gro might h migrants are not the issue. it is what it is costing statistic. it is predicted to cost us $4.3 billion as we cycle out of the
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pandemic, this is a major financial crisis to our city. >> when the restrictions expire, the city is expected to see up to 1,000 migrants per day. 50,000 have already arrived since last spring. new york has converted 120 hotels to accommodate them. ufrs r.s. regulators have approved a vaccine for rsv. the drug made by gsk is designed to be begin as a single shot to adults 60 and older, it still requires approval from an advisory committee from the cdc but could be available later on this year. rsv is often associated with babies and young children but can also be dangerous for seniors. in the u.s. an estimated 159,000 adults 65 and older are hospitalized each year with the virus. and up to 13,000 people die as a result of their infection. from italy to brazil, police
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across the globe team up for coordinated raids targeting one of the world's richest organized crime group. details from the bust coming up next.
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we moved out of the city so our little sophie could appreciate nature. but then he got us t-mobile home internet. i was just trying to improve our signal, so some of the trees had to go. i might've taken it a step too far. (chainsaw revs) (tree crashes) (chainsaw continues) (daughter screams) let's pretend for a second that you didn't let down your entire family. what would that reality look like? well i guess i would've gotten us xfinity... and we'd have a better view. do you need mulch? what, we have a ton of mulch.
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we told you yesterday about a year's long investigation into dark web drug trafficking in which the u.s. and other countries arrested nearly 300 people across three continents. now european authorities are celebrating what they are calling the largest ever coordinated hit on italian organized crime. the eu law enforcement agency says 132 members of the crime syndicate were arrested on thursday in synchronized raids. and the group has a monopoly on drug trafficking across europe. abrupt firing of tucker carlson took many by surprise but nowly revealed text messages that he sent to a producer in
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the hours after the january 6 insurrection give a minute of what may have driven fox to ax its biggest store. tom foreman has more. >> reporter: in the wake of the january 6 insurrection, one incident caught the eye of then top fox news host tucker carlson. a group of trump guys surrounded an antifa kid and started pounding him. jumping a guy like that is dishonorable, not how white men fight. that text to a producer was reda redacted in court documents but shared from the dominion lawsuit against fox. and carlson would later reject the notion of racism. >> no evidence that white supremacists were responsible for what happened on january 6. that is a lie. >> reporter: but critics have long argued his rise to power was propelled by embracing whites nationalist ideas. for example, dismissing the black lives matter movements as
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a tool primarily for shaming whites. >> small group of highly aggressive emotionally charged activists took over our cal chc culture and forced the country to obey their will. >> reporter: saying that immigrants will make the country poorer, dirtier and more divided. >> the gra"the great replacemen? >> reporter: and suggesting that they want to push aside white voters. >> it will change our country completely and forever. >> over the years he has trafficked in anti-immigration rhetoric, he has promoted the white national list great replacement theaory. aunt it and it shouldn't be a surprise. >> reporter: and for comedians, it all made carlson an easy target even as he denied understanding the accusations. >> white nationalism, let's be literal for a minute, what is that exactly? >> reporter: i don't even know
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what it means and i won't go down that rabbit hole. >> reporter: and he routinely argued for change that he said would help minority communities and dismissed the idea of arising white nationalist movement. >> this is a hoax like the russia hoax. >> reporter: what he might think about all of this now, we don't know. neither carlson nor fox responded to cnn's request for any further comment about these latest revelations from the court documents. tom foreman, cnn, washington. another big american retailer is pulling out of downtown san francisco. nordstrom blamed locust foot traffic and the changing, quote, dynamics of the area that hasn't recovered since the pandemic and has been in the spotlight for crime. both of the downtown locations will close in the summer when their lease expires. numerous other brands have also said that they will pull out of
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the area. san francisco standard has tracked 20 major store closures since 2020. u.s. federal trade commission is accusing meta of improperly sharing user data with third parties and failing to protect children. the commission says that this violates a $5 billion privacy settlement amend is proposing changes including barring them from making money collected off younger users and expanding limitations on using facial technology. meta says that they will fight it. and now counting down to the coronation of king charles. we'll ask if it is still relevant in modern day britain.
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it is just two days until the coronation of king charles. the ceremony will be britain's first in seven decades. so is there still broad support for the monarchy? we look at modern day britain. >> revelers welcome the coronation. >> reporter: the longest interlude between two coronations in british history.
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decades of change raising questions about the relevance of the monarchy today. 1953 was full of post war joy and excitement about a new young queen. despite waves of migration, britain t in 919 nifts was overwhelmingly white and christian and divided. [']three of the four great offices of state including the prime minister offer minority backgrounds. 20% of the population today are in fr ethnic minority backgrounds too and rising. many from countries subject to exploitation in the form of british empire. >> the monarchy has to find a respectful and humble place without pretending that it doesn't have all of its privilege, all of its history and all of its baggage. >> reporter: and britain still
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stratified in the 1950s. modern britain is in many ways allergic to the idea of inherited privilege. but a recent poll commissioned by the bbc suggests that king charles might have a problem appealing to young peel. 38% of whom said that they would support an elected head of state. and the difference might be a problem too. 78% said that they weren't interested in the royal family. >> i think it is time to rethink and i know a lot of people loved queen elizabeth and i don't think that that same fondness is there for king charles. >> reporter: the monarch since the 16th scentury is also head f the church. with the nonchristian faith rising each year, and multifaith leaders playing a role in the
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coronation for the first time. and king charles who says he is a defender of all faiths was honored here at the largest mosque ahead of the coronation. and so could this be an opportunity for all the communities in britain to come together? >> with islam, we're told part of your faith is lauded to a nation and we know coronation is a history of this nation. and so we respect that history. >> reporter: coronation is a litmus test to how king charles will be received by 2023 britain and whether enthusiasm, a apathy or opposition will shape his reign. be sure to join max foster, christiane amanpour and anderson cooper for special live coverage of the coronation of king charles iii this saturday may 6, starting at 10:00 a.m. in london, 5:00 a.m. in new york. now to the nba playoffs. just one dame on the schedule. philadelphia at boston.
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and the celtics have evened up the series thanks to a 25 point performance from jaylen brown. brogdon added 23 points off the bench and the game was never really that close. newly crowned mvp joel embiid was back on the court for the first time since april 20th. he scored 15 points and blocked five shots. on the ice the hurricanes are off to a rousing start in the stanley cup series against the devils. jarvis scored the second of two goals in the lopsided first period. and final score was carolina 5, new jersey 1. and in las vegas, the golden knights took game one from the oilers.
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first official trailer for the long awaited second installment in the june franchise debuted on wednesday. >> where you see sand, imagine water. if you dive in, you can't reach the bottom. >> you dive in. >> yes. it is called swimming. >> i don't believe you. >> the movie is based on the iconic novel that follows the characters as they are caught in the middle of a galactic revelation. part two is an epic war movie and much more action packed. warner brothers and cnn share the same parent company. dune part two will premiere in theaters on november 3. and police officers are trained to help people in need. but when a frantic driver approached a deputy sunday in a panic, it wasn't the average day
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on the job. >> are you pregnant? she is ready to go, she's ready to go. >> she's coming! sfwh she's coming. she's coming, she's coming. >> there we go, i got a baby. >> don't pull. i got her. >> there you go! i told you i didn't want to deliver a baby! oh, pretty little girl. >> that is a beautiful sound. that is a beautiful sound, mama. that is a beautiful sound. look at your baby, look at your pretty little girl! the deputy helped deliver the baby in the front seat of her car on the side of the highway. and it turns out both mom and officer are kind of old hats at this. this was her sixth baby and
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good thursday morning. i'm christine romans. we begin with what could be retaliation for dron

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