tv CNN News Central CNN May 11, 2023 6:00am-7:01am PDT
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instant replay. let's go. >> claims about the 2020 election last night in real time. as we mentioned earlier -- did you just spill your coffee? >> i did. >> instant replay. >> as somebody who's not usually at a desk, i was like how do i play this? >> i mean, the -- impressive work. i'll give you that. don't spill me, you know my replacement coffee i was given. also towels here as well. >> your pants? >> they have dried to a level. we didn't have any standing segments so doing great. thriving on a thursday. >> it's been a great week. we have one show left but before we go, one more look at our morning moment. >> as we mentioned earlier, did you just spill your coffee? >> i spilled my coffee.
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>> what are you going to do tomorrow? >> can't top that. >> you can. bring it. >> see you tomorrow. >> cnn "news central" is now. that music. ♪ new reaction this morning after the town hall with former president trump. what democrats and republicans are saying and how this might shift the race for 2024 in surprising directions. key economic data just into cnn showing inflation is cooling. weekly jobless claims have ticked up to the highest levels since october 2021. title 42 ends today so what happens next as thousands of migrants are said to be waiting just across the southern border. we're following these stories and more. this is cnn "news central."
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okay. so what now? this morning we are getting fresh reaction to former president donald trump and his appearance on a cnn town hall last night. president biden wrote, quote, it's simple folks, do you want four more years of that? a super pac backing florida governor ron desantis put out a statement called it, quote, an hour of nonsense that proved trump is stuck in the past after 76 years trump still doesn't know where he stands on important conservative issues like supporting life and the second amendment. how does that, they wrote, make america great again? so by the past, they might have been referring to this. which is also simply not true. >> most people understand what happened. that was a rigged election and it's a shame we had to go through it. >> so cnn's jeff zeleny was working before, during, and after the town hall.
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jeff, i know your phone has been burning up. i want to focus on the now. what moments are you hearing are having an impact as we move forward? >> john, there was so much backward looking talk from the former president, but it is the forward looking conversations that actually could shape policy right now. first and foremost among that is the debt ceiling debate. as we've been talking all week long there is negotiations. ing on right now, or there should be, between the white house and congressional leaders. but when you look at what the former president said he would do on the debt ceiling, essentially telegraphing a message to house republicans that could be problematic. he said this, if they don't give you massive cuts you're going to have to do a default. so that certainly is an implicit message to house republicans and perhaps speaker mccarthy as they are deep in negotiations here. what effect will that have on the debate to come?
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that is yet to be scene. but that is one thing republicans i'm talking to today are a little bit concerned about, what the fallout from that is. also classified documents when you listened to how kaitlan collins questioned the former president on those classified documents taken to mar-a-lago. the former president gave some revealing answers from there. he said, i took the documents, i'm allowed to. but he also did not say he didn't show them to other people. that is exactly what the special counsel, jack smith, has been looking into. across washington today from capitol hill to the white house and at the special counsel's office you can bet they are looking and parsing the former president's words because his answers last night on a variety of topics were about the campaign but also could affect legislation and perhapsan even the investigations that he's still very much a part of. >> could have a direct impact on policy and legal matters starting right now. jeff zeleny, thanks for being
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with us this morning. kate? there was a lot there last night. fact checking required in real time and afterward on some of the many falsehoods you have heard from donald trump before. sunland, let's focus on three areas, the border wall, the 2020 election and the trump tax cuts. first last night donald trump claimed he had finished the border wall, building hundreds of miles of wall, what have are you found? >> his claim is not true. the numbers show here that the border wall had not been finished as he claimed last night. the u.s. customs border protection put out a report on the status of the wall, that was two days after trump left office and in that report they say that 458 miles of the wall had been completed under trump but 280 more miles had been identified for wall construction.
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the wall had been constructed in if locations barriers previously did not exist. >> on the 2020 election, john and jeff zeleny were talking about it just before us. donald trump has not changed his position at all in denying the results. even after court challenges against the election results were tossed out by trump appointed judges after the election. what did you see -- we have one of the many ways he said it in last night in his claims from last night. what do you find here? >> this is a huge one and one he kept repeating. this is not true. there is no evidence that the 2020 election was rigged or stolen. and trump's own campaign and senior officials found no evidence for his claims of widespread fraud either. biden earned more than 7 million more votes than trump did and
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won more electoral votes than trump did. >> the tax cuts he was able to pass that with republicans in congress. he said they created the best economy in history and i picked up on the biggest tax cuts in the history of our country. >> that's right. this term "big" is wrong. trump is referring to the tax cuts and job act of 2017 that he passed where there were numerous changes made to the tax code but in at least two analyzes they found it was not the largest. they found that since 1968 three other tax cut bills have been bigger, including former president ronald reagan's 1981 package, that was something that trump referenced on stage and claimed his package cut more than. >> thank you for that sunlen. in over 14 hours a pandemic era policy that allowed u.s.
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officials to quickly expel migrants for the last three years will come to an end. title 42 has been used nearly 3 million times to send people back. but with the expiration, the mayor of one border town told cnn he can't see a light at the end of the tunnel. another mayor told us his city is preparing as if a hurricane is coming. agents in three regions along the border have been apprehending more than 2,000 migrants a day. as of yesterday more than 26,000 migrants were already in custody. the biden administration is sending personnel from homeland security and the defense department. nick valencia is in brownsville, texas for us this morning. i know you've been talking to officials and those people trying to make a better life here in this country, the migrants. >> reporter: that's right. the scene is more active than it was in the previous days we've
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been here. we noticed the uptick in activity, the immigration buses that come and drop off people here after they're released on humanitarian parol. it got more crowded yesterday. one of the migrants has been on the streets since yesterday. pedro. you're here from venezuela? >> yes. >> what are you running from? from the dictatorship and the crisis. what's the crisis in venezuela? humanitarian crisis there. it's just a horrible dictatorship. you're here because you're waiting for your wife. you've been separated? how many days have you been separated? five days counting today. [ speaking non-english ] >> reporter: you have no information about her, but you
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guys crossed together? [ speaking non-english ] >> reporter: the majority of the people here are waiting for loved ones as well that they've been separated from. [ speaking non-english ] >> reporter: he said yes, they passed through an open field and that's where they were processed. everyone here waiting for family. [ speaking non-english ] >> reporter: were you aware of title 42 and they were going to open the border from the pandemic? that's why you came? [ speaking non-english ] >> reporter: thank you. [ speaking non-english ] >> reporter: pedro represents a lot of the stories here of migrants we're hearing on the streets. so many officials told us they are ready for what's coming next. only time will tell if they're
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right. >> interesting to note he was well aware of title 42 coming down. that's what a lot of people are worried about, it's going to cause the same surge. nick valencia thank you so much. then the question is, what happens next? when title 42 officially ends tonight, the policy of the united states government essentially returns to what it was pre-2020 which is the decades old section of the u.s. code that lays the ground rules for processing migrants it's called title 8. the federal government is required to give asylum seekers an opportunity to make their case, that is called a credible fear interview. a chance for people to explain why they left their country and face persecution if sent back. if customs officials do not see enough there or the migrant doesn't request asylum, they can be put into expedited removal proceedings and expedited back to their countries. people from certain countries
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can be deported to mexico also. here's the difference from title 42. if you're sent back under title 8 authority you're subject to a multi-year ban from the u.s. >> title 8 of the united states code, our traditional immigration authorities, actually deliver a consequence. because when someone is removed, when someone does not qualify from relieve and is removed from the united states they face an at least five-year bar from admission into the united states. so the consequence is going to be more severe. >> now, other side of this. if an immigration official sees credible evidence for an asylum claim, that can trigger the often years long process of then trying to prove it in an immigration court. those folks can stay in the united states during that process, either in a long-term detention facility or released into the community with a commitment to check in and
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attend all court hearings. keep in mind, a majority of asylum claims that make it to court, they're eventually denied and there's already a backlog of 2 million pending cases in courts. so a new surge is guaranteed to create a fresh bottleneck. john. >> in addition, migrants released into the u.s. could be part of a new program called family expedited removal management which is aimed at tracking migrants through the asylum process and perhaps their deportation. one requirement is wearing a gps ankle monitor. p prisc priscilla alvarez is at the white house. the countdown is on, this process is one small part of it. what is the administration saying today? >> reporter: john, i've been talking to white house officials and administration officials for three years now have about when this moment was going to come
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and it is here today and the administration is rolling out measures to try to manage the flow including the one from migrant families, they're a vulnerable population, usually the most difficult to deal with for that reason. so now the administration is rolling out a measure, it's part of the alternative to detention. so not detaining them but adding a gps ankle monitor and home confinement for the i.c.e. officials to track them and hold them accountable to release conditions. all of this after screening and vetting at the border. there was a pilot last year to do this and at the time the home curfew was dusk till dawn. this is for some of the migrant families that cross and go to four cities which the administration has not yet disclosed. all of this is part of an effort by the administration to try to management the migrants
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processed into the united states if they are seeking asylum or as they're going through their deportation process. what it looks like today and after midnight, it's not only the number of people crossing but going through the process you heard kate explain there. officials told me under title 42 you were looking at processing of 30 minutes, title 8 which is what we've used for decades. that's an hour and a half if not more and what does that mean dealing with a crush of people at the border. all of that poses a challenge to the biden administration and which is what the white house is catching closely and what president biden conceded while there are preparations how effective they are and how quickly they can be effective remains to be scene. we'll hear from the homeland secretary again today who is likely to underscore the point that it is challenging days and weeks ahead. >> thank you very much. a huge logistical challenge. sara? he was the last person to
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see natalie halloway alive before she disappeared 18 years ago now he's extradited to the u.s. on charges he tried to extort thousands of dollars from her mother. and hundreds of rockets fired from israel as palestinians say hundreds of civilians are dead. and being able to buy birth control pills as easily as allergy medicine? how soon that could happen just ahead. love entwined. shop the mother's day sale to get 30% off almost everything. only at kay.
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summer. so what looks like a blanket of snow. this is aurora, colorado, this is piles of hail. people saw hail 2 inches in diameter. the threat continues for parts of the central and southern plains, more than 30 million people under alert for severe weather today. backpacks are banned in two michigan school districts, in grand rapid it came after officials found a loaded handgun in a third grader's bag. that's the fourth gun the district has confiscated this year. schools in flint banned backpacks as of may 3rd, citing a nationwide increase in threatening behavior and weapons being brought to school. new inflation numbers this morning, a key member of price changes at the wholesale level eased to 2.3% for the 12 months
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ending in april. that was below economists' expec expectations. matt eagan has the numbers for us. why are these numbers significant to any consumer out there? >> it's more evidence that inflation is cooling off. we have evidence of that two days in a row, yesterday con su consumer prices today wholesale prices. the number has come down traumatic cli, miles from the peak of 11% last year. we have had 10 straight months of cooling prices on an annual level. .2% has been bouncing around but come down dramatically from last year. this is more evidence combined with yesterday's report that the fed's inflation fighting medicine is working. inflation has not been cured but it has gotten better. >> lower than where we came from. >> absolutely. >> there was some numbers out for jobless claims.
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can you give us an idea what that means? >> like any medicine, the inflation fighting medicine has side effects. in this case it is layoffs. so 264,000 initial jobless claims in the last week. this is a proxy for layoffs. this is actually the highest level since october of 2021. this is evidence that layoffs are picking up in this economy. we have to remember, though, this is coming off of historic lows. the unemployment rate, 3.4% that's tied for a half century low. but we are hearing about more layoffs in tech, in media, in finance. this, though, would have to come up a lot higher to really alarm economists. i talked to mark zandy from moody's he said anything around 260 is consistent with a healthy job market. the number to watch, 350, if it got to there, that's where you start to worry about a recession. we're not there yet. >> it's a lot of people looking
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for jobs right now, new folks out there. thank you so much. appreciate it. >> thanks, sara. a new twist this morning in a tragic case in this country. the extradition process begins today for one of the last people to see american natalee holloway alive before she disappeared. joran van der sloot is being temporarily extradited to the united states from peru according to a family statement obtained by cnn. peru had previously agreed to extradite him after he finished serving a murder sentence there. jean has covered this case for so long. how does this work, jean? what does this mean for the investigation here in the united states? >> reporter: there's such a history to this and there are current federal charges against joran van der sloot for extortion and wire fraud. and he then, though, has been serving this sentence in peru for murder, but they promised when i was in peru for cnn and when he was arrested and when
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his legal proceedings were going on, they promised they would extradite him and they fulfilled that promise. it is under the extradition treaty but it started in 2005 when beth holloway's daughter, natalee holloway went to aruba for their senior party. joran van der sloot in his own words said he was the last person to see her. he was arrested, questioned, released, he was never charged. they had no answers. in 2010, there was a $250,000 reward from the holloway family saying we want answers where our daughter is. hoe heard about that. he went to an associate of the family and said i will tell you how she died, where she's buried, but i want the $250,000. in working with the fbi, the associate went to aruba met with joran van der sloot and he said,
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i was the last one with her, we got in an argument, she didn't want me to leave, i pushed her down, she hit her head on the rock and died. i hid her body and my father helped me and buried her underneath a house, they went in the car, found the house, he said she's in the funoundation. he got $25,000 cash down payment for that. went back home, the associate did and then joran van der sloot sent an email, it was a lie, nothing was right, i lied to you. then he took the $25,000 to lima, peru, went to a casino, started gambling, met somebody by the name of stephanie flores, went to her apartment and within hours she was dead. he was sentenced to murder and he's been there since 2010 when he was arrested. >> jean, this is this new
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chapter in the saga you have to feel for the family here. thank you for your reporting. >> you do. >> absolutely. so the public health emergency over covid-19 officially ends today. what that means for covid testing, treatments, and vaccines. and we are just minutes away from the opening bell on wall street where market futures have been relatively flat. today, as we head into the start of the trading day today. investors still weighting the new inflation data, the nasdaq and s&p 500 rose yesterday after data showed inflation cooling to the slowest pace in two years. still hanging over all of this, the debt ceiling. janet yellen offered this reminder to lawmakers, allowing a default is, quote, unthinkable.
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just before midnight tonight, title 42, the covid era policy that basically allowed near instant expulsion of migrants crossing the border is set to expire. the border protection agency is preparing as a surge of migrants arrives at the southern border, many people have been there for quite some time. more than 26,000 people are in custody at this moment. kate?
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this morning there are growing calls for the resignation of george sorantos d growing unease after he pleaded not guilty to 14 federal charges yesterday, including misusing campaign funds, lying about his personal filings official filings. he was released on a $500,000 bond. the judge ordered him to surrender his passport and he needs permission to travel outside of new york or d.c. brynn gingras is following this and joins us now. george santos, he's taken into custody, appears before the judge, comes out and is not staying quiet amid these charges he is facing. >> yeah, that's right, kate. it's my understanding his attorneys were saying don't say too much but you saw the media scrum descend on him as he left the doors and made his way to
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the microphones, clearly wanting to defend himself. take a listen. >> this is the beginning of the ability for me to address and defend myself. we have an indictment. we have the information that the government wants to come after me on. and i'm going to comply. i've been complying throughout this entire process. i have no desire not to comply at this point. they've been gracious in there, now i'm going to have to go and fight to defend myself. the reality is, is, it's a witch hunt. >> and you can see right there he was drawing a tag line from former president donald trump, this is an investigation that happened quickly. in fact, the nassau county d district attorney spoke after he spoke saying how she started an investigation into this last year and the feds came to her saying we should work together because we might be able to bring stronger charges. it was a quick investigation but if you look at the details of
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indictment, they have text messages they say to prove this. they have his own documentation as evan perez pointed out yesterday. some of it is just public filings. so in that news conference it'll be interesting to see. he said he will defend himself to see what evidence he has, he didn't give a clue as to what that is. another thing he was asked in that news conference two to three times is why should anyone believe you? because we know his checkered past of all the falsehoods that have come out around him and he really didn't answer that other than to say he's going to defend himself to that point. so we'll see. there are people calling for his resignation, if he is, as the process plays out and he is proven guilty he doesn't necessarily have to be removed from his seat. we'll see, again, how this plays out and what evidence he does bring to defend himself. >> which he at least publically said yesterday that is what he is going to do. show evidence to prove himself
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innocent. we'll see. good to see you, thank you. the u.s. is officially ending the covid-19 public health emergency today. just before midnight it will officially expire along with several pandemic-related measures. so what changes will you see? no more free covid testing for most of us. most patients will have to share the cost with their insurance companies. certain treatments which have been covered by medicare and medicaid enrollees will have an out of pocket cost. vaccines however will continue to be free for people with insurance and for those without insurance pfizer and moderna say the vaccine commercial price will be between 82 and $130 per dose. dr. tom engels by is from dr. johnson hopkins bloomberg school of public health with us this morning to sort through all the changes. i want to start with this. there was a lot of consternation
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as we look back because hindsight is 2020 when it comes to some of the measures taken by the cdc, we were told you can wear any mask and then that changed over time. was there damage done by the cdc during this whole pandemic era? >> good morning, sarah thanks for having me. looking back over the last few years we see while cdc has been a national treasure and has gotten us through many, many outbreaks, epidemics, and is the envy of public health agencies around the world, cdc didn't have all that it needed to be able to respond to covid. and so, it exposed some of the challenges cdc has in gathering data quickly from around the country. it exposed the fact that cdc doesn't have enough operational people in the field or connections at times for state
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and local officials so i think cdc has been thinking through and planning a lot of changes since last summer, the director deserves a lot of credit for that, but they need the authority from congress to be able to respond to covid-like events in the future. >> i think warren buffett said it takes 20 years to build your reputation and five minutes to destroy it. so it's hard to get trust back from those who have trouble trusting government agencies as a whole. what are some of the ideas you have that you think will help the cdc going forward and rebuilding that trust? >> i think the first thing is demonstration of competence and continued one step in front of the other and responding to outbreaks. the country has relied on cdc, doctors and nurses look to cdc for scientific advice when new diseases arise. just doing that job well is
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going to be important. i think they have changed their practices a lot since covid as they began to respond to monk monkeypox, for example. i think they need more rapid hiring authorities from congress, the ability to contract with the private sector more quickly. some things they can only get through new legislation so they'll do what they can internally and have started to change this large organization over the last ten months but they need help from congress to do it as efficiently as possible to get the budget they need. their budget is divided into 160 lines which cannot be moved one to the other. imagine trying to move your budget around to respond to crisis in a private business, they can't do that. congress can fix that. i hope they do. >> you are about to testify to a house subcommittee on energy and commerce and health. can you tell us what you want to
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say to them? >> sure. i think i'd say what i just said to you here. i think cdc has already taken a lot of initiative since last summer and through now and is trying to make the changes they can. changing the way they speak to the public, changing their websites, interactions with state and locals. so they have observed what's happened, have reflected and are trying to move in the right direction. but what i think congress can do is to make those changes permanent, bring things to cdc they haven't been able to do before, like budget flexibility. the ability to gather data from around the country. last summer when we had monkeypox in june, because cdc doesn't have authority from congress to gather data from the states, it took them three months to get data agreements with all the states and all of us want to know that day, how many monkeypox cases are there, where are they? they can't do that without congress' help. >> thank you for joining us and
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♪ music playing upstairs ♪ we'll be here. ♪ so you can be there. everything from vitamin a to vitamin zs delivered in 1 hour. israel launched air strikes against targets in gaza again today, the islamic jihad said the head of the missile unit was killed. palestine militants have retaliated reportedly firing more than 100 rockets towards
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israel. and more developments in pakistan we need to tell you about the supreme court has ordered the release of the former prime minister. he's been detained since he was arrested on tuesday on corruption charges, charges he denies. his arrest has sparked violent protests across the country. nearly 200 people were arrested in demonstrations that resulted in widespread damage. in malaysia a surprise for local police when they found two brothers, 6 and 3 years old, behind the wheel of a car following a late night crash. they were alone in the car, their parents still at home, the father was asleep. the 6-year-old made it about a mile and a half before losing control of the car and crashing into a lamp post. look at this little guy. no one was seriously hurt, thankfully, this is why i'm able to have the face. police say the boys took the car because they apparently wanted to head to the store to buy a toy car.
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>> i have two sons, of course they did. makes sense to me. a potential major development in ukraine. the united kingdom has confirmed it is supplying ukraine with multiple storm shadow cruise missiles. this equipment gives ukrainian forces a new, longer range strike capability in advance of a counteroffensive against russian forces. it comes as ukraine's military said the troops have conducted what they call effective counter attacks in the bakhmut area. officials say troops have been pushed back as much as two kilometers. nick paton walsh is the in the zaporizhzhia region. they've been asking for missiles for some time, it seems they are getting it. what difference can this make? >> reporter: they've been asking
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the u.s. to supply the attack ems but the uk storm shadows have 150 mile range. which brings the crimean peninsula, and possibly part of russia's border areas although it's clear they will not be striking inside russian territory proper. it does potentially allow ukraine to be more targeting of key russian military infrastructure in those occupied areas. i wonder if the announcement is coming out to be clear it's a uk donation allowing them to have the greater range so there's no confusion if the u.s. secretly supplied extra capability. it does change the precision and depth that ukraine can exercise into occupied areas but also important to point out we've seen drones attacking some of the areas in the past weeks, too. so a sign the united kingdom wants to be the first supplying
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ukraine. does that put greater pressure on the united states to add to the inventory? we'll wait and see. but it puts emphasis on when the counteroffensive may begin. we're hearing from russia's mercenary head that his forces are losing grounds in parts of bakhmut having to withdraw into the city center. he goes on, after days of railing against the mismanagement of the war against the kremlin top brass warning this could lead ukraine to push through and make a decisive strike inside occupied areas on top of that to head of this cou counteroffensive former president trump's comments refusing to say if he wants ukraine to win the war here, so that's going to make it how western support isn't guaranteed forever. >> something is happening in
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bakhmut we're getting more and more reports from that area. sarah. a man who survived being shot nine times by sheriff's deputies in south carolina is now suing. the man claims the deputies were reckless in theieir actions and what he wants to see now. and ththis is how mom shines. at zales, the diamond store. if you don't stain your deck, it's like the previous owner is still hanging around. so today let's stain, with behr, the #1 rated stain. and make your deckyours. behr. exclusively at the home depot. do you struggle with occasional nerve aches in your hands or feet? try nervive nerve relief from the world's number one nerve care company. nervive contains ala to relieve nerve aches, and b-complex vitamins to fortify healthy nerves. try nervive. and, try nervive pain relieving roll-on.
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new this morning, for children with allergies, a patch for children with peanut allergies with an estimated 1.8 million children in the united states have what is a common and often quite dangerous condition. cnn's dr. elizabeth cohen with more on this, as we know that peanut allergies are more and more common. this is coming from the clinical trial, and what can you tell us about this patch? >> kate, this is a clinical trial that is published in the "new england journal of medicine" and they gave children
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who are allergic to peanuts a patch, and each patch had 1/1,000th of a peanut equivalency, and what we found out that is toddlers from ages 1 through 3 could eat about one to four peanuts safely, and you might think that is not much, but if one peanut could kill a child, and now they could eat it, and they ate it accidentally, and that could safe their life. it is not on the market yet, but there is an oral version of this on the market. and the thinking is that the patch, pluses and minus, but more convenient for the children, kate. >> yes, and we are showing the images provided from the company of the patch and what it would mean or look like on the children's back, and it is a kind of fascinating thought that it could be heading in this
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direction, and the idea of protecting against the accidental ingestion is what it could be a really important, and how comforting that is for the family of kids who have a severe allergy to peanuts, and in this trial of the bad reactions to the patch itself? >> these children, kate, are so allergic to peanuts that they had a reaction to 0.0001 of a peanut. so four of them had a reaction and they were treatable to get the epinepherine shots and mild to moderate and nobody died, but still, it is showing you how allergic these children are. >> absolutely, and how important it is to work with the doctors as the trial continues and continues along the way, but how important it is for parents to have a solution, and safe one. good to see you. john. >> fired for being overweight,
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