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tv   CNN News Central  CNN  June 2, 2023 8:00am-9:01am PDT

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break news. former vice president mike pence cleared in the justice department investigation handling of classified documents. the new details this hour.
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big moves in arizona cutting off building permits so they don't have to cut off the water and far-reaching effort to make sure that everyone in arizona has enough. and new research in breast cancer, and researchers fiending new results of clinical research. this is cnn "news central." the important big development this hour, the us j tis department has officially closed its investigation into vice president mike pence and his handling of classified documents. this is when an attorney for mike pence found about a dozen documents marked classified in mike pence's possession. evan perez and katelyn polantz is with us.
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i am going to you first, kate. >> well, it is clear that the justice department is not bringing any criminal charges related to the discovery of classified records or records with the classified markings with them in the possession of former vice president mike pence. what happened to start this investigation, buzz that back in january, a lawyer had gone to pence's home in indianapolis to make sure that he had no records after he left the vice presidency. they found a dozen of documents there with classified markings on them, and called federal government and got them back into the hands of the fbi. after that, there were fbi searches of both mike pence's home in indiana to make sure there were no others, and they recovered one, and then a search of the office in washington, d.c., but then, fast forward a couple of months and not is a
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very long time when those searches took place in february of this year, mike pence's team did receive a letter from the justice department saying they had conducted the potential handling of classified information, and based on that investigation, no criminal charges will be sought. i wanted to dial back to what mike pence suggested at the time they suggested in the investigation is crucial here. this is what he said in an interview that he had found near his home. >> while i was not aware that the documents were in our personal residences, let me be clear, those classified documents should not have been in my personal residence. let me be clear that mistakes were made and i take full responsibility. >> so the team is hearing that the advisers are quite pleased, but they are not surprised by
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the justice department deciding to end this investigation, and bringing no charges against mike pence or anyone else in his case, because it shows how much of a contrast of how he responded to this situation compared to donald trump, the former president who he served under who also has his own classified document case. >> and now to evan perez with this. and now, evan, with this letter, does it remove the prospect of the special prospect counsel for mike pence? >> yes, and that is the key issue for the pence team, because they are certainly planning to announce his run for the presidency next week or the coming days, and you know, the thing that had been hanging over this in the investigation as caitlyn pointed out since january, and given the standard
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that merrick garland had established last fall when he found the documents in mar-a-lago last fall, and then the current one in president biden, and the question hanging over all of that is whether there was a special counsel of looking into mike pence's documents, and with this letter sent just yesterday, it is clear that mike pence can do that, and this is closed. these are routine investigations, kate, and they happen quite often, because they find documents, and that i have to bring them forward and the fbi does a review to make sure no damage from the way that documents were stored and they move on. obviously, everything is different because of the trump situation, and the fact that there is a long drawn-out investigation given his lack of cooperation, and obstruction according to the justice department. >> evan perez, thank you.
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>> and big new job numbers out this morning. and employers added 339,000 numbers, and i can't say it, because it is so big, and that is way more than the 190,000 jobs that had been expected. the unemployment rate ticked up to 3.7% higher than it was at 3.4%, but still near historic lows. and we go to athrcatherine van , and this number just jumped off of the screen when it was posted. >> it is confusing, because month after month, we find these numbers of 13 of 14 months stronger than wall street economists, and people paid to get this right is higher than expected. i think it is a few things. one, immigrants are back, and
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earlier in the pandemic, we had a huge dropoff in the immigrant labor force, because it was harder to get into the country, and a lot of that has normalized and foreign-born workers are filling the jobs, and women are back. and in fact, women are more than back. early in the recession, there was a talk of the she-session because women were losing their jobs because of the type of work they were doing, because they had care giving responsibilities while schools were shutdown, and now women in the labor force is in all-time high. so women were not permanently shutdown in terms of the pandemic, buack stronger than before. >> it seems that pundits are on a recession watch for months and
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months and months, and for an economy adding jobs, it is not something that you will see for a country headed into the depths of a recession? >> yes, and the general public when they say we are in a recession, they mean something feels bad somewhere in the economy, and like inflation, and inflation is not coinciding with recession. partly, economists had been waiting for goodeaux and waiting for the recession that is going to happen, and it never happens. so it is to cooldown, and take us into the recession, but it does not happen. again, we don't understand why, and maybe it is going to happen,
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and the business cycle is a cycle for a reason. it cycles up and down, and the a puzzle is why we haven't had a recession yet even though a lot of people had to be calling for it given the interest rate increases, and this is because we don't have a great precedent to go off of, and it is a weird economy, and again, you other strange things happening, like changes in immigration, the rise of work from home which may be bringing more people in from the recession, and i don't want to celebrate prematurely. >> and so, the debt ceiling also being settled, will this be a impact? >> the size of the budget cuts are minuscule comparative to the
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rhetoric to them. and this is going to be a slight fiscal drag to the economy, and that means that it is going to be some economic effect very little, and the main thing is that we avoided default, and that is going to avoid default. >> and from going over the cliff -- >> i mean, jumping off of the cliff was a better anol ji. >> avoiding a self-induced and se self-inflicted disaster. in texas, police say he confessed to two murders and could be connected to ten more. the new details we are learning. phoenix is making a big move. halting all construction to halt the bleed on the water supply.
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and also, the settlement of the movie set lawsuits on the movie "rust." as long as you c can make an impact, why stop?
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giveaway for a chance to win $10,000. the u.s. army is designated one of the largest military installations in the world, and as of this morning, fort bragg is fort liberty and a branch-wise push to change the names that held confederate leaders. had been named after general
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braxton bragg. today, there is a move to b the student loan program relief and block that program. and biden is planning to veto that bill. and now, a man in the texas was arrested after a five-day manhunt, and now, we will play what austin authorities told us what he told them. >> he said he is prepared to
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kill again and he is looking forward to it. >> and now, ed lavandera back to it. and tell us more what you are picking up now. >> it is breathtaking story that is starting to unravel system of the details. what the investigator is there alluding to, he was found with a zip ties and duct tape and more, and when an investigator with the austin police department received a phone call, and the first words on the line is i'm raul mesa and i believe you are looking for me, and in a 14 minute phone call, mesa goes on the outline how he was involved in a murder of a man who was 80 years old and murder inned the austin area, and then another murder dating back to 2019, and
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woman who lived next to mesa jr., and her name was gloria lofton, 66 years old. all of this is disturbing details emerging in this arrest warrant affidavit. the investigators say that the circumstances and the details o believe that mesa jr. could have been involved in, and they are looking into that as well, and he has a long criminal history and back in 1982, he is convicted of murdering an eight-year girl in the austin area where he has been in prison, and he said that when he was released in prison in 2016 the last time, he started to murder shortly after that release, kate. >> it is remarkable confession, and to see all of these details coming out. thank you, ed. stay on top of it.
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john? >> three more people missing following the collapse of the apartment building in iowa, and it is appearing what appears to be a void between the facade and the interior there. the repair work had begun days before this collapse. cnn has been following this, and adrienne broaddus is joining us. >> they are working on the time line and the police chief is saying that they are moving from rescue to recovery and there is a specialized team from across the state of iowa to help. there are three people still missing, including ryan
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hitchcock who say they may not ever see ryan walk from that building again, and the other person missing is daniel preen or daniel colvin, and we have heard from his family. just days before this collapse, the repairs were under way at the building, and i asked the city's mayor if he had any regrets knowing what he knows now. this is what he said. >> do i have regrets about this tragedy and people potentially losing their lives? hell, yeah. do i think about this every moment? hell, yeah, any tragedy of any sort. particularly to this city that i am in, and believe me, this is on me. >> so, the mayor there is taking
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responsibility as the documents have been released regarding that building. >> thank you, adrienne broaddus, keep us posted. a research drug that is already on the market that is showing that it could significantly reduce the risk of breast cancer returning. and why millions of americans are not taking the medications as prescribed. a new w report from the cdc. we have the new report ahead. . feeling sluggish or weighed down? could be a sign that your digestive system
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new this morning, a few moments ago, we found that the justice department is not going to bring any charges against former vice president pence in the investigation into his handling of classified documents. back in january, cnn was the first to report that an attorney for pence found a dozen documents marked classified at his home in indiana, and this is coming days before he is announce his presidential campaign. bill cosby is facing a new sexual assault case that dates back to 1960s. a former swimsuit model is accusing him of drugging her and
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abusing her. she says it happened in 1969. camilla is following this, and what isis victoria valentina saying about this? >> she says it is time for accountability. she says that he raped her in 1969. now, she is able to move forward with this lawsuit, because of a new law here in california that allows these lawsuits to go forward that other wise would have been barred by an expired stattute of limitations. she said that she ran into him at a cafe, and she had lost a child, and was grieving, and she
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said that he offered her some pills, and she felt dizzy and nauseous, and wanted to go home, and she said that when they went to his office that is where she was raped, and she is saying that what she is saying here, the trauma he inflicted upon me is affects my children and grandchildren, and by speaking my truth, it is going to show the survivors who have yet to show their voices that hope and healing are possible. now, bill cosby has denied all of the allegations and through his publicist, he has released a statement saying is this. victoria valentina has skirted from town to town promoting her alleged allegations against mr. cosby to anyone who would give her a platform without any proof or facts.
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so, again, he is denying all of these allegations, but something interesting in this case is that victoria valentino spoke to the washington post and she said that she was essentially inspired or that this gave her a boost of confidence when she looked at e. jean carroll in the case against donald trump, and her winning the case is affirmation, we are doing the right thing. so she is saying that she is going to be moving forward with the lawsuit, because she believes that she sgoing to be getting accountability at the end of this while bill cosby again is denying all of this. >> very interesting. thank you for filling it out for us camilla. and now one of the cities in the west is saying no to growth. in phoenix, they are going to grant no more building permits. the groundwater has been
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disappearing due to climate-driven drought. bill weir is with us, and how is this going to work and maybe more importantly, what does this portend to other cities out west? >> well, john, i will tell you that every water manager in the west is looking at this math, and the population growth and population drought here, and this is a seminole moment there, because for generation, you could pump the water out of the water, and you would not reach a shortfall, but it is going to be reached within the next few centuries, and you build a home out there in the desert, you have to have the water to supply the water, and once they did the
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math, they realized it is time to stop building. here is katie hobbs. >> that why required by law, we will pause approvals of assured water determinations relying on pumping groundwater, and assuring that we don't rely on future deficit. >> this could mark the beginning of the end of sprawl, and seeing building of phoenix upward and they want to know that there is plenty of water for other permits that are already permitted, and also, the colorado river is going to agriculture, and a lot of it is feed for cattle. right now, the government is paying them not to grow, and that can't go on for long, and so there is a new attitude when
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it comes to mega drought, and in terms of the whip flash floods and until the infrastructure is there to capture it in long ranges of drought. >> thank you, bill weir. the cdc is saying that millions of americans are not taking their drugs as prescribed, because of how much they cost. elizabeth cohen joining us. this is important conversation, because talking about how much people are doing this as it is coming out in the report. what are the numbers showing? >> kate, what the cdc found is that more than 9 million americans have been rationing their prescription drugs, and in other words not taking it as prescribed and taking less to make it last longer because of
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money. not surprisingly, this is much more of an occurrence among people who are uninsured and looking at the folks who are uninsured, about 23% have rationed drug, and this a huge health problem for people who are supposed to take the dosage that you are to give, a thb is a huge money problem, because if you don't take the drugs that you are supposed to take, and this is a system that the whole system gets sicker, and we all end up paying for it. >> good way of putting it, the whole system is sicker. so as far as the ones who are uninsured, who else is likely to be rationing the medications? >> yes, clear statistics about this, and when the cdc analyzed the survey ed black people, and interestingly women and people with disabilities are more
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likely to ration prescriptions than other people. >> there a lot there to dig through, and why, and the motivations of, and what needs to be done to have folks so they don't feed a need to do so. >> we talked about this earlier in the show, but i wanted to get your take. the new drug therapy that could help in the fight against breast cancer, and this new drug on the market, and what are physicians saying about it? >> well, the drug that is on the market, and it is breast cancer in the later stage, and would it work earlier stages, and what they found is that it is a large clinical trial, and when they gave the drug to people if they were still alive three years later, it was 90%, and if they did not, the rate is 87%, and you might not say that is not a
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big difference, but when you are talking about the huge number of people in the united states who get breast cancer, that is is a big different, and we are talking about the difference of making it to three years, and not making it to three years. it is not a cure, but there is excitement around the surroundings. >> sounds like. john? officials are working to find human remains found in bags at the bottom of a steep ravine. we have new developments ahead. i your c car insurance, e so you only y pay for what you need. with the money we saved, we thought we'd try electric unicyclcles. whoa! careful, babe! saving was definitely easier. hey babe, i think i got it! it's actually... whooooa! ok, show-off! help! oh! only pay for what you need. ♪ liberty. liberty. liberty. liberty. ♪
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watchdog group about treating money apps. it seems that we all use these, so what is the warning, brian? >> well, john, the gist of it is that these are not banks. you should not think of the apps like venmo or cash apps like waw banks, and the government is warning this, because there is an uptick in the way that users are sending the payments to one another through the internet, and particularly in the pandemic when you could not interact with businesses in person. so we are seeing this trend which is leading the government to investigate these fintech companies, and determining if they are safe for users. looking at how they get here,
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and the saying in this report when moving it to a app. unlike a traditional account that is fdic insured, if venmo were to go belly-up, the money is not necessarily fdic insured. so there are, you know, potential caveats here where they may offer conditional pass-through insurance or something like that, but the overall point that the government is making here, that the protections of so, those are not going to come with the same conditions when it comes to these apps. it is not about necessarily the payments that you make that are
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necessarily insecure, but what the government is saying is that if you decide to keep the money the apps, you are potentially putting yourself at greater risk. john? >> so is a way to protect yourself as simple as not keeping a lot of cash in the apps, and transferring it there when you want it? >> right. as you soon as you receive a payment in one of the apps, you are moving it to one of the linked bank accounts and store it there if that is connected to the venmo accounts, and make sure it is fdic accounts. >> it turns out that fdic insured is huge. >> i feel silly not thinking about this before, and it is interesting what brian is saying. >> it never occurred to me that if you leave it in there, and these companies are going belly-up, you not insured.
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>> i thought, wow. turning to this, and it is a very disturbing story that we are finding, and following up. police are finding bodies at the bottom of the a ravine, and the police are investigating if these are linked to the employees missing from the call center. they were reported missing from may 7th to 27th, and they were reported missing from guadalajara. >> well, the authorities are continuing to remove bags from the bottom of this ravine. family members were noticing that the phones went offline all of the same day, and no sign of them as they began asking the officials to find out where they have gone. the disappearances are all too common in mexico, and sometimes they are found, but these were
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just basically found that there about 45 bag of body parts in the ravine, and some of them are matching the bodies of those call center bodies, and while they are making the match to conclude that they are of the matching of the people in the bottom of the ravine are these people who how people who go to work at a call center can go to work, and then the thousands of bodies not ever found, and so i. this high profile case, is
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hopefully going to force the investigation, and this has shocked people who are getting increasingly more used to the advice. >> have you picked up anything why the violence would be directed towards the employees of a call center? >> yes, it the reason is that it appears that law enand this could be from these people calling up from a cell phone or a call center being used as a front to call money to steal from them. so the police are trying to bring some people to justice, because all too often as
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horrific as these people are taking place, and the officials know that people are going to be looking for them. and now, there are pressure for military secretary lloyd austin to meet with his chinese counterpart. forecasters are expected to remain offshore even as some communities in florida to board up their windows and doors. prince harry is to testify in a phone hacking trial. he is seeking is damages from a british newspaper that they spied on him. he and others are suing is
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"mirror newspaper" for hacking into their personal lives. the newspaper is saying that the claims are made too late. and a settlement on the movieset of "rust" and what alec baldwin and the family of halyna b ha hutch ison have agreed to. and we have a new spelling champ. ...a "chow downday... "take a big bite" day... "perfectly delicious" day... because your clearchoice day - ...a "ve my new teeth" day.
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this morning, a new mexico judge has approved a settlement agreement in a wrongful death
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lawsuit against alec baldwin. cinemat cinematographer hylana hutchison was shot. the director was also shot and injured. hutchins' family sued baldwin. chloe is here with some of the details of this civil settlement. what have you learned? >> first of all, this has been a long time coming and this was filed by matthew hutchins, the widower of halyna, shortly after she was killed on the set when that prop gun that alec baldwin was holding fired that live round, and we still don't know how live rounds got to the set. so, he files this and it has been officially signed off by a judge who writes, in part, and we have some of that for you, "this is a fair, appropriate settlement," especially because this settlement also includes a minor. so, the money is not just going to matthew hutchins. it's also going to their 11-year-old son, andros. the financial details are
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private, confidential, but we know that the son is going to be getting settlements that will happen when he's 18 and again when he is 22 years old. and as for where this money is coming from, john, it's coming from the proceeds for whatever the movie "rust" makes and insurance money, because that movie, it's still going to come out. people will be able to see it, whether it's in theaters, on streaming, they don't know yet. >> this is the final judge signoff on this, but it really does seem as if this has been in the works for some time, as i've learned from your reporting. >> it has been in the works for a while, and it was always contingent -- this could have all fallen apart. this was contingent on alec baldwin being cleared of criminal charges, which he has, temporarily, the d.a. still has an opportunity to refile charges, so there is this criminal trial still looming. hannah gutierrez, the armorer, still faces charges. perhaps if he had gotten criminal charges and they never
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had chance to finish the movie, this would have fallen apart. it's sort of fallen perfectly into place from a financial perspective. so, i mean, the fact that the judge is now signing off on this and they've just completed the film a couple weeks ago, it's all interesting timing. >> with the family of halyna hutchins involved. >> yes, he's the executive producer. >> chloe melas, thank you so much. we have a champion, friends. a 14-year-old from largo, florida, is this year's national spelling bee champion. dev shaw spelled the word to win the $50,000 prize. he described the win as surreal. he spoke to cnn earlier today. he says part of his strategy was to study the roots of words. >> it's pretty important, because it could be used as a back-up plan too, because when you're on stage, the nerves do get to you, even though if
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spellers don't show it t nerves do get to us, and pressure does get to us, so if you forget a word, you can put it back together like a back-up plan. >> if you're a genius like he is, you can definitely do that. john's still trying to pronounce it. >> the "p" is silent, i think. >> oh, man. 231 elementary and middle school students. >> couldn't it be another letter if it's silent? >> which one would you add? >> any. >> this gets to something. it's spelling adjacent. i don't do spelling. you definitely do spelling, but i like to look up fancy words with my girls. >> you know how to party. >> we look up fancy words for things and i have come across one that is so appropriate for the two of us. it is called -- the word is ultracrepedarian. >> what does it mean? i'm terrified. >> one who is presumptuous and
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offers advice beyond their sphere of knowledge. translation, someone who talks about a bunch of stuff they know nothing about. you're welcome, america. >> all right. thank you very much. that is all for "cnn news central." inside politics is up next. >> thanks for joining us, everybody. we did it. safety radarar detector: watch for traffic. and our most advanced safety system evever. ♪ like ours is spoiling their dogs. good, real food is simple. it looks like food, it smells like food, it's what dogs are supposed to be eating. for every single meal of their life. it's amazing to me how many people write in about their dogs changing for the better. the farmer's dog is just our way to help people take care of them. ♪
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-- captions by vitac -- www.vitac.com

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