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tv   CNN Newsroom Live  CNN  June 9, 2023 1:00am-2:00am PDT

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or may become pregnant. put uc in check and keep it there, with rinvoq. ask your gastro about rinvoq. and learn how abbvie could help you save. welcome to all of you joining us in the united states
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and around the world. just ahead on scnn newsroom -- >> former president trump was indicted thursday night in the special counsel investigation into the allegeds mishandling of classified documents. >> it is kind of scary out here. >> the orange begins to di disperse, there is a bit of wind in the atmosphere to try to push this around and not make it so conce concentrated. >> i'm fortunate to enjoy a close relationship with president biden and we just happen to have seen each other quite a lot. that is not always the case with busy leaders. it also friday, june 9, 4:00 a.m. here in atlanta and in washington, d.c. where the u.s. j justice department indicted
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former president trump. trump faces seven counts including violations of the espionage act, conspiracy, obstruction and making false statements related to the alleged mishandling of classified documents after he left the white house. fbi agents seized about 100 documents. prosecutors claim documents were likely concealed or removed from his storage room as part of the effort to on strobstruct the investigation. trump says he is summoned to appear tuesday at 3:00 p.m. here he is. >> it is called election interference. they are trying to destroy a reputation so they can win an election. that is just as bad as doing any of the other things that have been done over the last number of years. i'm an innocent man, i did nothing wrong. i'm innocent and we'll prove that very soundly and hopefully
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very quickly. >> a person who spoke with trump thursday night tells cnn the former president and his team are j jacked up and ready for fight back. >> reporter: donald trump and his team were expecting an indictment imminently, however they were still surprised when it actually came down. i've talked to a number of sources close to the former president who said that they met with lawyers, they heard about the summon, they have not indic. right now trump and his team are coming up with a plan to respond to it. we saw a short video, but they are looking at a larger plan of what this looks like, will he have to appear in miami, will he give remarks in miami, will it come back to bedminster. we know donald trump this weekend has two campaign events, one in north carolina and one in
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georgia and i'm told that that is not going to change. he is still going to appear at those events. one of the things that we heard when he had the manhattan indictment was that nothing was going to change and that is still the same messaging that we're getting now. of course it is still early. this indictment is still new. there is a lot that can happen. but right now, they are planning on going forward with his 2024 campaign and you are likely to hear from the former president talking about how he believes that this is election interference. and i've talked to a number of people who say that they will be pushing that narrative. we do know that trump's team has been calling his allies on the hill shoring him up, making sure that they will get out there on the airwaves and defend him. so something to be watching for closely. again, so much is still unknown even to the former president and his team. all they know is this is unprecedented and they are still working through what exactly the next several days will look
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like. >> for more, i'll bring in a criminal defense attorney and former prosecutor. and she is joining me now live from new york. thanks for being here with us. so donald trump no stranger to the inside of a courtroom, but this federal indictment, how serious could the charges be and what jeopardy does donald trump potential face? >> we're in unchartered waters. this federal indictment is for joke. we're not talking about the new york criminal charges, we're talking about the federal government now coming after you and coming after you with at least seven charges. as of now we don't exactly know what the charges are, however we do have an idea having to deal with the violation of the espionage act, with obstruction of justice, possibly making false statements, having to deal with concealment and destruction of documents. penalties are anywhere from 3 to
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10 or even 0 20 years. and to be disqualified from ever holding office is also in jeopardy. >> and trump's advocates and allies say there has been capricious, that it is flimsy. how strong does evidence need to be for an indictment to be handed down? >> when we're talking about an indictment, we're talking about grand jury presentation. that is what the department did, the federal government did. they presented a case to civilians and based on that evidence that was presented to them and the law presented to them, they voted for indictment. and in those types of cases having to deal with a grand jury, it is probable cause to believe that crime was committed and that donald trump is the person that committed the crime. of course it is completely different than presenting the case at a jury trial where you have to prove the case beyond a reasonable doubt. it is still too early to tell,
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however, we did get some insight as to what the evidence -- what evidence actually exists and we got a that when the probable cause affidavit was unsealed a year ago. we got to know some of the evidence that does exist. >> you talk about a jury trial here. could donald trump still make a deal with prosecutors here? >> of course he could make a deal, but highly unlikely. we're talking about donald trump here, the man who leaves it all out in the media because for him it is more important what the public thinks as's opposed to this is a wake-up call, you are now facing jail time. we are talking about a criminal case having to deal with the federal government. so in terms of it may be possible and actually almost certain that he can be campaigning next year in 2024 and still have various cases lingering. we know that the new york case, that the new york district attorney's office, that case is
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slated for trial in march. the question will be which case will go first. is it going to be this case coming out of florida, is it going to be the new york case, or is it going to be possibly the case coming out of georgia. we just don't know at this point. they have to make a strategic decision. >> still so much up in the air. appreciate your analysis. republican house speaker kevin mccarthy is defending trump tweeting today is indeed a dark day for the united states of america. it is unconscionable for a president to indict the leading candidate imposing him. we have to point out biden did not indict trump. others are reacting. saying the radical far left will stop at nothing to prop up the catastrophic presidency. marco rubio tweeted there is no limit to what these people will do to protect their power even
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if it means ripping our country apart. california democrat adam schiff says for four years trump acted like he was above the law but he should be treated like any other law breaker and today he has been. and republican presidential candidates are reacting. ron desantis claims the prosecutors are overly zealous and the law is being applied unevenly. and others spoke out before the news of the indictment. >> these are self inflicted wounds. >> it is very dangerous to feel like the department of justice is being weaponized against anyone in this country. >> i would hope that it would meet the very high threshold for the unprecedented action. >> a quick programming note, anderson cooper will host a republican presidential town hall with adchris christie mond
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right here on cnn. and meanwhile, trump is still being investigated over the january 6 attacks and efforts to overturn the presidential election results. a source familiar with that probe says newt gingrich testified before a period grand jury on thursday. he allegedly communicated with terrorism about tv ads. that panel also said gingrich was involved in the effort to install fake electors in battleground states that trump lost. sources tell cnn that federal prosecutors are also investigating efforts by conservative operatives in wyoming to infiltrate the democratic national committee ahead of the 2020 presidential election. we're hearing subpoenas have been sent to a republican donor and former british intelligence official and former head of the
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right wing group and looking into whether any campaign finance laws were violated. air quality levels are slowly improving across the northeast and midwest as smoke from canadian wildfires begins to dissipate. there are now roughly 50 million people under air qualitying a letters. and the situation is expected to continue to improveoff over the weekend. philadelphia is moving classes to remote learning and any graduation ceremonies indoors. the city's air quality currently considered unhealthy, among the many major cities grappling with smoking conditions typically only seen on the west coast. chad myers has been looking at why the smoke is so dangerous and to illustrate the point, he ran a little experiment. have a look. >> so much smoke in the eastern part of the united states irks eas, eastern canada from fires.
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we still have the smoke from british columbia and alberta. and this is a pm 2.5 teedetecto this tells us how many particles are in the air. and in the studio, there is five. outside it said 70. so 70 parts in the air outside. it is better to be inside if you are looking at five compared to 70 and that is why they say please go indoors or of course wear a mask. but watch what happens to this, this is my own personal 2.5 detector. i'm going to light a match, i'll put it out, and i'll blow a little bit of smoke. just a little bit from one match. and watch what happens to the numbers here. from 100 to 300 and higher, it probably ends up somewhere 999 if it pegs all the way out. but this is the stuff that you are breathing in, this fine, fine particles that are in the
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air. so let's get to it, where is the air quality bad. well, still bad all up and down i-95 in the eastern part. the populated corridor of the united states. also still bad up in toronto, even a little bit across parts of montreal. and that is the area where the smoke is coming from, where the fires are still burning out of control. here is what the computer model thinks the smoke will look like about 5:00 in the morning. very heavy smoke from windsor, sault st. marie, back into buff l -- buffalo, erie, back towards washington, d.c. watch the orange as i move it into the evening. the orange begins to disperse a little bit. there is a bit of wind in the atmosphere tomorrow to try to push it around and not make it so concentrated. by saturday afternoon most of the northeast is cleared out, but still quite a bit of smoke across parts of ohio and
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pennsylvania. and another thing that will help us get rid of this is some rain. we need the rain over the fires obviously, but we also could use the rain across the areas that have seen so much 1340eksmoke i air. but something that will play a big help is the wind. the wind will push it into the atlantic and away from the united states and eastern canada. here is how much rainfall we could get, half inch to an inch in some spots especially over those fires, that will definitely be helpful for the firefighters. and then the wind and wind direction, coming from the south, bringing in dier dryer cleaner air, and pushing it away by it looks like tuesday this should all be a bad memory. but there are still fires and smoke, so it may be a long term issue for the eastern part of canada and northeastern u.s. the man allegedly linked to the disappearance of natalieee holloway is set to be arraigned for extortion.
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joran van der sloot arrived in alabama and taken to a jail in birmingham now holloway's hometown. ryan young has the details. >> reporter: joran van der sloot touches down on u.s. soil thursday after being temporarily transferred from a prison in peru. surrounded by federal agents, he was loaded into a car in birmingham, the home state of natalee holloway. seen here shortly after arriving at the jail where he will remain for the tduration of his trial. he was indicted in 2010 on charges of extortion and wire fraud related to an alleged plot to sell information to holloway's family. >> i want him to tell the truth. he knows exactly what happened, he knows what, where, when, who, why and how. he knows the answers. >> reporter: peru agreed to the temporary transfer to face charges in the u.s. under the condition that he must return to
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peru to finish his 28 year prison sentence he is serving there for the 2010 murder of stephanie flores. he seems to be smiling. earlier vehicle shows van der sloot taken out of his sell at a maximum security prison in peru, in preparation for his transfer to the u.s. he wore a multicolored fleece coat. after going through the required health check, he was driven 20 hours to another facility where he spent several days before federal agents picked him up before the trip to the u.s. holloway, the alabama teen, was last seen with van der sloot and two others 18 years ago while on a senior trip with friends on the dutch island of aruba. her mother saying in a statement she's been waiting decades for this day. now almost exactly 18 years
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later, her perpetrator, joran van der sloot, has been extradited to birmingham to answer for his crimes. at 11:00 he will have his first court appearance. a lot of questions about whether or not he is in a cell by himself, how that will work out and how long before we figure out the next court date. ryan young, cnn. coming up, the perils of rescuing flood victims in the middle of a combat zone with russian shelling all around. plus british prime minister rishi sunak sits down with kaitlan collins for an exclusive interview on a number of pressing topics including his relationship with president biden. plus have a look, these are live pictures of a memorial for several young children in france who were brutally stabbed. we'll have an update. has no idea she's sitting on a goldmine. well she doesn't know that t if she owns a life
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devastating floodwaters unleashed last tuesday by a one dam in southern ukraine have finally begun to recede. a local official says the water
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level dropped overnight by rough wil roughly 8 inches. and russians never let up with the shelling . president zelenskyy surveyed the destruction for himself on thursday and said crews were working nonstop to reach as many stranded people as possible. salma abdelaziz has been following all of this. and what is the latest on the ongoing rescue efforts? >> those evacuations are ongoing. authorities say they have been working nonstop to pull vulnerable families from that zone, from that flood zone. but they say they have limited resources and most importantly most concerningly they are
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facing russian shelling even as they try to pull families out of these areas. one ukrainian official saying that even the evacuation points, points where families are suppose to meet to get help are being shelled. still so far over 2300 people have been evacuated. about 120 of them are children. but ukrainian officials want to see many more towns downstream from the dam cleared as well as civilians. and then there is just the wider consequences here. you will remember that the dam sits right on the frontlines, right on the dnipro river. ukraine and russia have been trading accusations as to who is to blame for this disaster, but president zelenskyy in his nightly address minced no words. he accuses russian troops of intentionally causing the dam's collapse as part of their
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battlefield strategy. >> translator: this man made disaster at the hydroelectricity plant is not a natural disaster or a manifestation of the climate crisis. the disaster is putin, what he personally orders to do. >> the list of consequences for this disaster just goes on and on. of course beyond the immediate needs of the families downstream from the dam who have now seen their homes, their towns flooded. you also have the concern for access to clean drinking water, potentially tens of thousands of people including families in russian occupied crimea could lose access to clean water because of this disaster. you have the concern around land mines, this is a frontline area, there were land mines planted in that area. ukrainian officials saying those land mines have shifted. so another area of potential concern north of the dam, you have the zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant, it used the
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reservoir to cool its nuclear reactors. so yet another potential concern. and then you have to remember again this is a battlefield, this is the frontline. so this makes it ever more difficult to cross the river and reclaim the russian occupied regions on the other side. and all of this of course playing out in an active warzone. >> thanks so much, salma abdelaziz. the office of the french president says he will travel to a town in the alps to visit the victims of a horrible stabbing attack, two toddlers and four adults were stabbed. and what you are seeing, these are live pictures from where the assault happened. people have been laying down flowers and creating a memorial. the suspect is a syrian asylum seeker who is in custody. melissa bell has the report. >> reporter: it was a particularly brutal and frenzied
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attack carried out on the edges of the town, a tourist spot in the alps. a 31-year-old we now know according to french sources who had sought asylum in sweden, prosecutors speaking after his arrest that he had been given asylum in sweden in 2013, and it was denied in france. beyond that, we know not much more about his motives. anti-terror investigators have not been seized of the case. the question as to why he went on the rampage. and it is their ages, particularly young, preschool children, that have really added to the concern, to the anxiety, to the shock of a country as it watched these images unfold and emerge. here is what the french prime minister had to say --
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>> translator: i think as parents we can only imagine the shock. i was able to talk to the people who intervened to save the children. i can assure you it is very shocking. there is a lot of emotion. >> reporter: the tragedy all the more shocking here in france for the fact that these are extremely rare occurrences where children are deliberately attacked. you have to go back to 2012 and that trerror wave to find anything similar. a country still very much under the shock. melissa bell, cnn, paris. still ahead here, donald trump is in legal hot water, first ever u.s. president indicted on federal charges. and it has been a pretty good week on wall street and investors hope to keep it that way. we'll look at what the major markets have been doing overnight.
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welcome back. i'm kim brunhuber. if you are just joining us, let me bring you up-to-date with our top story. the u.s. justice department made an unprecedented move indict being former president trump on thursday. he faces seven counts including an espionage act charge, conspiracy, obstruction and making false statements. it is all related to his alleged mishandling of classified documents after he left the white house. fbi seized about 100 documents
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marked as classified when they searched his estate last august. he was at bedminster when he was informed of the indictment. >> reporter: former president trump was unditedindicted. sources tell cnn that this is really a stunning development in the classified documents case. it is the first time that current or former president has faced federal charges. trump has been charged we're told with accept counts in the indictment and one of those counts is a conspiracy charge a source tells cnn. the special counsel has been investigating donald trump's handling of classified documents ever since some of the classified documents were found in his possession at his mar-a-lago resort in florida. now, the former president wrote on truth social thursday evening that he is expected to appear at a federal courthouse in miami tuesday at 3:00 p.m.
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we're told here at bedminster he is huddling with some of his aides and feeling emboldened by the news, that is his first reaction. he is thinking that potentially this could have a political boost for his re-election campaign. but other advisers of his say there are concerns and reservations about how this could affect donald trump long term. special counsel jack smith was appointed by attorney general merrick garland seven months ago to look into this case once they learned that there were still classified documents in donald trump's possession and also once it was clear that he was running for re-election again. for more, i'm joined by douglas brinkley who is historian. he is joining me from sydney. so thank you for being with us. when it comes to donald trump's legal troubles, we're always talking about how unpresident
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dented all of the developments are. but i wanted your reaction to this new first. >> well, look, everybody is trying to figure out why in the world donald trump kept all these documents. was he just being arrogant when he left the white house and said screw the federal government, i'm going to play footsie games with these documents. what was his motive for not returning this. the justice department day after day was saying these don't belong to you, please return, and he wouldn't do it. so i think one of the mysteries as it unfolds in the coming weeks and months, what did trump do with these documents, did he show them to anybody else. was he using it as a bargaining chip in some way to help trump's international holdings with countries. that is not -- we want know. tut we'll learn a lot more when the court unseals the documents
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and we see an ex-president in deep legal trouble. >> yeah, so many people beganlingbeganle i grappling with what it means. one question many are asking, if trump were convicted under federal charges, could he still run for office. there has been some sort of historic precedent here. take us through that. >> well, yes, look, donald trump is going to fund raise off this indictment and there will probably be some of his supporters in miami that are trying to own this, they are trying to own the story, get ahead of it if you are touchdown. we've had in american history a candidate running, socialist party leader who went to skjail and campaigning from prison. so things are possible. former leader of panama was convicted and put in prison in
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florida. so trump is playing a lot of bravado with all of this and i think what he will try to sell the public on is i'm not just an ex-president, i a am probably the frontrunner, certainly frontrunner for the gop, and joe biden is trying to put me in jail. that is what trump -- the narrative trump will spin. while truth of the matter is the law is the law. and an ex-president is just that, an ex. just an american citizen facing the justice system like anybody else. there is no special privilege for donald trump except he will have a security apparatus, secret service and others surrounding him when he appears in the courtroom on tuesday. >> i want to unpack that bit more. that is certainly the argument many republicans are making as they are ral him. even one of his opponents for the gop nominaesident and the py
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was viewed, that they are somehow sacred? >> richard nixon got in a lot of trouble with watergate and he used to say if you are president, you are not accountable to the law. well, nixon was wrong. yet gerald ford pardoned nixon. so we never had an indictment fever that we're seeing right now, that is what makes this so unique. we're hearing republicans, some, running for president saying if you elect me, i will then pardon donald trump even if he gets busted. but i think the real story here is the clock. donald trump's lawyers will kick this story down the road as far as they can. the strategy of trump is to win. once he's president, these
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charges can be dropped, he will find himself in free light and sunshine. so it is a game running against -- the november 2024 election. >> absolutely, the clock is ticking as you said. to quote donald trump said, it was a dark day for america. how big of a test is this for the nation here do you think? >> i think there is some trump fatigue. a lot of people are getting tired of hearing about it. these are not the only indictments. there are more to do when you look at what happened in georgia. but this is a lot more significant than stormy daniels and hush money. this is trump versus really the justice department. and it is quite serious. he may be in over his head here. we just don't know how much information has been
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accumulated, we won't know at least until tuesday just the full breadth of the charges here. and that is -- but it does seem like at this juncture nobody is understanding trump's motive. that might work in trump's favor. whether you love trump or dislike him, they call him teflon don. he seems to have these multiple lives that he is able to survive. his whole life has been a dance between what is ethical and unethical, legal, illegal. and in his view i'm leading the republican party and i'm on my way to getting reelected so screw the justice department. it is very unsettling for the american people, but we've been living in the age of trump for a while and this seems to be just another act. the question is when will his act run dry. >> appreciate your insights on this, douglas brinkley, thank
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you so much. the new trading day gets under way in the u.s. in just over five hours. so here is where futures stand right now. as you see, everything is in the red there. and in the negative territory. meanwhile european markets also a lot of red. and here is a look at how markets across asia faired today. they ended positive. investors will be looking to keep alive the gains of the past week. the dow closed up 168 points yesterday and has risen more than 600 points. s&p officially closed with its highest level this year. just ahead, british prime minister rishi sunak sits down for an exclusive interview with kaitlan collins. we'll hear what he says about being the youngest major world leader and his relationship with president biden.
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the war in ukraine was top of mind for president biden and british prime minister rishi sunak on thursday during his first visit to the white house. the president hailed the relationship between their two countries and thanked him for his partnership on ukraine. rishi sunak sat down for an interview with kaitlan collins. >> at 43, you are the youngest leader in the g7. at 80, president biden is the oldest. how does that change -- how do those generational -- are there generational differences i guess i should say in the way that each of you lead? >> i'm really fortunate to enjoy a close relationship with president biden. we just happen have seen each other quite a lot.
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circumstances have meant, just having had this job six months, but we've seen each other multiple times and i think that allows us for us to build a close relationship. >> are there differences in how you lead because of the age difference? >> hard for me to say commenting on the outside, but i find president biden's experience is incredibly helpful particularly on issues like china. i think that there are few leaders anywhere who have spent as much time talking to president xi as president biden has. at a time where china poses the particular challenge it does, i think we're lucky to have president biden's perspective on xi. i found that particularly valuable to me. and the relationship he and i have is delivering real benefits for our people in america and the uk. and personally it is very enjoyable. we were fortunate to welcome the first lady to the uk for the
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coronation verily. and the relationship between our countries is very strong. >> can i ask you about one issue you're facing at home, your government is refusing to hand over the text messages of one of your predecessors, boris johnson, to a committee that is investigating how the pandemic was handled. do you not believe that the british public has a right to see those messages? >> i have to be careful what i say because it is subject to a legal proceeding. but we established an inquiry to learn the lessons from covid. i think that is really important that we do that so we can be better prepared next time one of these things happen. and the government has cooperated in a spirit of candor and transparency. it has actually already handed over 55,000 documents to the inquiry. and so there is no question that we believe that the right thing to do is cooperate and provide that information. there is a specific issue about text messages that are not to do
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with covid and whether it is reasonable for those to be handed over, things to do with people's private lives. and i think on that specific point that is subject of a legal proceeding and i can't say much more than that. but people should know that we remain committed to the important work that the inquiry is doing because it is right to learn the lessons from government and that is why the government has handed over 55,000 documents already and i think the rigor of the process i'm not sure exists anywhere else in the world as far as i know. it is a very rigorous and transparent process. >> and we were talking about being able to look at a leader's text messages. and what you often hear from president biden on the world stage, he says america is back making a clear reference to former president trump who is the frontrunner for the republican nomination. if he does succeed and you are working alongside him, what do you envision a trump/sunak
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relationship will look like? >> the great thing about the uk andis u.s. is the strength of t partner ship we've endured for decades. and that is because the values between our two countries are so aligned that we see the world instinctively in the same way, our two countries have stood together all the major times of crisis, we've shed blood together, we've fought for peace together. and those bonds are incredibly strong. the relationship between our countries is rooted in our people. and i was talking earlier about john winthrop and his famous speech about building a city on the hill. he sfers used that phrase in my hometown and i think that speaks to those links between our people. but we can't gedwell on history. we have an incredible history, but we need to make sure the relationship is relevant for now dealing with the particular opportunities and challenges
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that we face today. and that is why the declaration president biden and i announced today, that closer partnership is so important. it is the first type of agreement like that that either of us have reached. and it speaks to making sure that we are ready for the future. and that is what i'm excited about. our values ren dare enduring an has delivered incredible benefits for the two countries and for the world. and i think that will always be the case. >> thank you for your time. still ahead, an overtime thriller in the stanley cup finals between the panthers and golden knights. we'll have those details and more coming up.
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and started botox® sooner. so, ask your doctor if botox® is right for you. learn how abbvie could help you save on botox®. we planned well for retirement, but i wish we had more cash. you think those two have any idea? that they can sell their life insurance policy for cash? so they're basically sitting on a goldmine? i don't think they have a clue. that's crazy! well, not everyone knows coventry's helped thousands of people sell their policies for cash. even term policies. i
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florida panthers beat golden knights in overtime to take game three. the franchisee first ever victory in the finals. panthers are 7-0 in overtime in the playoffs this year. the game was tied at two and panthers scored the winner in front of a packed home crowd. vegas golden knights still lead the series 2-1. game four is saturday in
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florida. and game four of the nba finals is tonight with the miami heat looking to level the series against the nuggets who are up 2-1. nuggets are coming off an historic performance from jokic in game three. he and jamal murray became the first teammates to both drop triple doubles in the finals. have a look here, these are live pictures in hawaii where the alert level for the kilauea volcano has been lowered from a warning to a watch. eruptions are confined to the crater. the observatory says there was a 6 meter rise of new lava on the crater floor but that level has now decreased by 2 meters. eruptions are 1k3expected to
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continue. and stories in the spotlight this hour -- ♪ nominees for this year's b.e.t. awards have been announced, beyonce for album of the year and drake leading with seven nominations including best male hip hop artist and album of the year. the awards show is set up to celebrate black beentertainers. the awards ceremony airs sunday june 25th. and some california love for the late rapper tupac shakur. wednesday he was honored with a star on the hollywood walk of fame, this is more than 25 years after he was shot and killed in las vegas. his sister accepted the honor on behalf of her brother. los angeles city council also declared june 7 as tupac shakur day. the rapper died at the age of 25 in 1996.
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two extremely rare precious stones were sold at auction on thursday. a pink diamond weighing almost 11 carats was auctioned for $34.8 million. it was cut from a rough diamond discovered just four years ago. and the largest ever ruby also sold for $34.8 million. it was discovered less than a year ago in mozambique. before we go, fans of hong kong's giant floating rubber duck sculpture will soon be seeing double. le ait announced that it is coming back to hong kong tomorrow. and double ducks will float in victoria harbor for two weeks. the sculpture conceived in 2001, it first appeared in france six years later before traveling to sydney sydney. thanks for joining me.
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"cnn this morning" is next right here. my most important kitchen tool? my brain. so i choose neuriva plus. unlike some others, neuriva plus is a multitaskerr supporting 6 key indicators of brain health.h. to help keep me shararp. neuriva: think bigger.
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with heart disease risk factors have an increased risk of serious heart-related events or death with jak inhibitors. it's time to get out in front of eczema. ask your doctor about once daily cibinqo. when you find your reason to go on, let it pull you past the doubt. past the pain, and past your limits. no matter what, we go on. biofreeze 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...
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and we'd have a better view. do you need mulch? what, we have a ton of mulch. when i was his age, we had to be inside to watch live sports. but with xfinity, a literal ton. we get the fastest mobile service and can stream down the street or around the block. hey, can you be less sister, more car? all right, let's get this over with. save hundreds a year over t-mobile, at&t and verizon with the best price for two lines of unlimited. i should get paid more for this. you get paid when you win. from xfinity. home of the 10g network. sgm, good morning, we're gl you're w

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