tv CNN This Morning CNN June 14, 2023 3:00am-4:00am PDT
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we're glad you're with us on the day after the day, because yesterday was such a critical day in the history of this country. >> and why i'm happy now, god forbid you should be happy this early in the morning, explain what's next. >> that's exactly right. >> yesterday, very important, unprecedented history, what comes next equally as important. >> and the trial ahead and also fact checking what the former president said last night about all of it. it is wednesday, june 14. president trump was defined after pleading not guilty to all 37 federal charges of unclassified documents. at a speech the former president made several misleading claims even said, quote, he did everything right. >> during his historic arraignment, he did not address the court and instead sat hunched over, arms crossed, with a scowl on his face. >> special counsel jack smith was in the courtroom. "the new york times" reports it was the first time the two men had really been in the same room, encountered one another.
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they did not talk to one another. >> the judge ordered trump not to communicate with his longtime aide walt nauta. >> we are hearing from trump's republican rivals. former president mike pence told "the wall street journal" he cannot defend his old boss' alleged conduct. nikki haley, on the other hand, said she would be inclined to pardon if he was convicted. "cnn this morning" starts right now. donald trump wasted no time turning his historic arrest and arraignment on federal charges into a campaign fund-raiser watch. just hours after he pled not guilty to 37 felony counts in miami trump gave a speech to a crowd of political donors and supporters at his golf club in new jersey. his speech was full of misleading and false claims including this one.
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>> whatever documents a president decides to take with him, he has the right to do so. it's an absolute right this is the law. >> federal prosecutors say trump illegally kept classified documents at mar-a-lago and hid them from the fbi repeatedly including some of the nation's most sensitive military secrets and details about america's nuclear program. he allegedly showed them to people without security clearance, haphazardly stored them in places like a bathroom next to a toilet, with chandelier it is, though. we have team coverage across the spectrum. live out of bedminster, new jersey, we'll break down what comes next. josh campbell is here. cnn political correspondent sarah murray and others are standing by for analysis. we saw what happened in court. we saw what happened after court. what does this mean going
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forward? >> look, i think what we saw from donald trump after leaving the courthouse was this defiant tone, this insistence these were his documents, that he had every right to keep them. but, guys, he did not look happy to be showing up at that courthouse for his second indictment since leaving the white house. former president donald trump maintaining his innocence in the face of 37 federal charges related to his alleged mishandling of classified documents. >> i hadn't had a chance to go through all the boxes. it's a long, tedious job. it takes a long time. which i was prepared to do, but i have a very busy life. >> reporter: trump speaking before a crowd of supporters at his bedminster golf club, capping a historic day that included the first federal arraignment of a former president. >> we can't just deny what president trump did was wrong. i mean, it's clear as day wrong. >> and i don't care whether you are a trump supporter or a trump
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opposer, you have to take this seriously. >> reporter: trump surrendered at a federal courthouse tuesday afternoon in miami. his attorney telling the court on trump's behalf, we most certainly enter a plea of not guilty. in the courtroom trump sat with his arms crossed at a table flanked by his two lawyers. trump did not address the court. also seated at that table his aide and co-defendant walt nauta. nauta could not enter a plea because he did not have a florida lawyer present. of the 37 counts trump faces four are for obstruction but most for the willful retention of national defense information. >> threatening me with 400 years in prison for possessing my own presidential papers, which just about every other president has done, is one of the most outrageous and vicious legal theories ever put forward in an american court of law. >> reporter: the judge presiding over the arraignment did not impose any travel restrictions but told trump he could not speak to any of the potential
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witnesses in the case. trump's attorney objected insisting many of the people are people employed by the former president. the judge clarified trump could not speak about the facts of the case with any of the witnesses including nauta and asked prosecutors to provide a list of the witnesses in the case. also present in the courtroom special counsel jack smith. though he did not speak during the hearing. trump was greeted by a crowd as his motorcade left the courthouse. he made an unannounced stop at the famous cuban restaurant versailles in little havana. he entered with nauta by his side and spoke to religious leaders. after the indictment trump's former vice president, mike pence, spoke about the charges after previously urging the justice department not to indict the former president. >> and i have had the opportunity to read the indictment that was filed. i can't defend what's alleged.
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these are serious allegations and the handling of classified materials, as i learned in my years as vice president and my years on the foreign affairs committee, is a serious matter that bears upon the national security of the united states. >> reporter: now, look, it's not like we're seeing this tidal wave of republicans turn on trump. we've heard a number of prominent voices still defending the former president but in the last 24 hours we have heard from more people who are backing off their unequivocal support and raising concerns when it comes to this indictment. >> thank you for that. stay with us. we'll check back in just a minute. >> i do want to turn to our expert. everyone has questions about what comes next. you saw nauta and the actual process here. so i will turn to the person who actually knows and tells me these things, whether she likes me emailing or texting her or not, what does happen next now that we've had the initial arraignment? >> so i'm the voice in your head? you've acknowledged it? >> the good one. it's helpful. >> i appreciate that. what is next, everyone, it's
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important to think about, the number one thing that's next is walt nauta's arraignment. it might feel like deja vu because we were supposed to have that portion happen yesterday, but he does not have local counsel. he actually has representation but not local counsel. the co-defendant on the conspiracy and obstruction related defenses. his attorney fees are paid for by the save america pac but he will be back in court on june 27th. trump should not appear with him at that point in time. what's next is discovery. the doj normally would have about 14 days to turn over everything, to say here is what you have in preparation for a fair trial, obviously, to have both exculpatory information available and everything else but this will be massaged a great deal because, of course, you have delays possible due to classified documents. you have to get security clearance to see the documents at issue here. it doesn't say anything about what will 4happen eventually fo
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a jury to look at those documents. summation probably happened already, talking about the grand jury. but now time to figure out what you have and when you can give it. this will be a very big determinant in terms of when the next trial date will be. >> when trump's attorneys and prosecutors start to engage in this, what will they engage in next? what will they argue and wrestle over? >> the pretrial motions, poppy. figuring out what is going to happen in defense of are we going to dismiss or try to exclude evidence? you can bet your bottom dollar that evan corcoran's notes and audio tape that formed the part of the indictment that suggests, look, here is what was said to me, an audio recording contemporaneously, discussions about wanting to shield documents, discussions about the plucking motion that took place in that point in time. that will be the part of the pretrial motions. it's not unheard of to have these motions. it's quite standard to talk about what's going to come in.
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what will be excluded. we're talking about a jury, of course, the court of public opinion. we'll probably hear more than a court of law, jury will do. the schedule is a big question mark. they have a lot of time against them, if you're the prosecution. we don't have a set schedule in terms of a trial date, most importantly, of course. the speedy trial says within 70 days. that puts you about august, around the time that this will likely not happen, but the reason there's a question these are co-defendants and unless one is arraigned, unless both are arraigned, you don't have a chance to set a full schedule. >> laura, can you come hang out? >> can i bring my matcha latte? >> i want to start, shelby -- our panel is back with us. thanks for being here. i want to start with what we were laying out. she did a great run-through yesterday of how complicated the
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potential legal schedule when you put it over the top of the political schedule. what's your sense of how this actually plays out? i know other campaigns are looking at that fact right now. >> not only are they looking at it now, but they've been looking at it for months. we've known these investigations are ongoing and from essentially the start of this 2024 season campaigns have been telling me privately, well, just wait until all of these investigations ramp up. how is he possibly going to be able to defend himself while also running a campaign schedule? it's a full-time job. and his team is not concerned about it. i think we saw last night their plan is to essentially merge the two and use these investigations and these indictments as kind of fodder for his run and turn these events into campaign events. >> interesting. >> the prosecution has 21 days of being able to try this case. it's not like the e. jean
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carroll lawsuit where he can say i'm not showing up. >> he has to go. >> he has to be there for about 21 days off the campaign trail f. you're the other rnc hopefuls you're maybe going, oh, good, there's someone off the campaign trail. if you're him, you're thinking, do i delay or do i put myself in the primary context? if you're doj you're thinking, am i going to be perceived with interfering with an election cycle if i have 21 days of the presumptive front-runner off the trail. >> and that's the argument president trump made last night saying this is election interference. >> and i suspect that we are going to hear from his attorneys in court talking about the scheduling issue, one, he has a right to prepare for trial but, two, he's running for president of the united states and he needs to have time to do that. we'll see how a judge takes that. judge aileen cannon may take it more recentively than another judge wood. it's interesting to hear him make this when he is under investigation for interfering in an election in the peaceful transfer of power.
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both by a federal prosecutor jack smith -- >> georgia. >> the district attorney of georgia. >> whether you're a campaign staff or the secret service plotting out an entire election season based on when you might have to spirit your protectee to his next court date, which is something we haven't seen. >> a lot of democrats think because of law enforcement involvement in a campaign is why donald trump won in 2016 to begin with. glad everything is so circular and makes kind of sense. the schedule, and what sara is talking about the other investigations, also ties into yesterday because there were actual law enforcement officials from fulton county that were physically there, which is where the next potential indictment could come. why were they there? what does that tell you. >> when you think about all the major security events in the united states that law enforcement has to prepare for, skurpt at super bowls and presidential inaugurations and the like, there's a playbook on the shelf. here is how we'll run security at this event. there is no playbook how to
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protect a former president who is now going to all these court hearings and now, as you mentioned, potentially could be charged in fulton county. law enforcement in fulton county sent officers to new york when the former president was there facing an indictment. they sent officials yesterday to miami. their goal was to try to see how do these crowds work and how does law enforcement prepare. they're building their own playbook. it's interesting because anyone who has worked at protests know it's like an ecosystem. you try to identify who is the leader of the group and it's not uncommon for law enforcement to make contact to have a line of communication. law enforcement did a good job quickly identifying potential moments of tension, there are lessons to be learned for sure. one incident of the guy in the halloween costume, the jail suit, who stopped the motorcade by jumping in front of it. >> don't do that, by the way. it's a really bad idea. >> he didn't have a good night likely spending the night in
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jail. that's all the information fulton county is trying to identify. how do we run the event to ensure it's secure if, indeed, the former president faces charges where they are. >> can we talk about what trump said last night? i can imagine if he has to be in court 21 days, court ends at 5:00, so you go right out of there and you do what you did last night, right? and what he said that i thought was striking is this. >> if the communists get away with this, it won't stop with me. they will not hesitate to ramp up their persecution of christians,pro- life activists, parents attending school board meetings and even future republican candidates. >> a whole lot of people, christians, pro-life activists, any parent attending school board meetings, similar playbook. this isn't about me, it's about you. >> again this is trump's playbook. we heard it with the past indictment. we've heard it for every investigation trump has ever been at the center of, and the reason is because, a, it allows
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him to kind of bemoan about these investigations and claim that they are unfair and politically motivated but, b, he needs a reason to get people to care, and he already has huge control over the republican base. and so by framing it as, yes, this is happening to me, but here is how it's going to affect you is his version of an effective way to kind of twist the story into a campaign message. >> it's bizarre, though. the idea of who among us hasn't had this. this is not a traffic stop or somebody who maybe didn't know there was a speed trap. i'm not looking at you for a reason, phil. >> you know phil never speeds, don't you? >> there are other people at the table, laura. >> i'll look this way instead, the former fbi agent -- but who among us, this is somebody in a unique position.
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most of us have never had a security clearance. most of us would never have access to classified documents. to be able to declassify or otherwise or have the presidential records act be applicable to us. it's always an odd thing to try to have this be the relatability factor. >> i mean, to some degree, he's right. if you are any of those groups you mentioned and you are taking classified documents out of a skiff and putting them in your bathroom and refusing to give them back to the fbi and then not addressing the subpoena, this, too, could be you. it is a fair assessment. why are you smiling? >> the control room wants us to get to break. coming up -- it says you're supposed to read. coming up, a closer look at trump's efforts to rake in campaign donations in the wake of these charges. could this be the tipping point for other presidential gop hopefuls? stay with us.
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i have had the opportunity to read the indictment that was filed. i can't defend what's alleged. these are serious allegations and the handling of classified materials, as i learned in my years as vice president and my years on the foreign affairs committee, is a very serious matter that bears upon the national security of the united states. >> that is former vice president mike pence saying that he cannot
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defend these allegations and the indictment against donald trump over his handling of classified documents. but at the same time in the same breath really saying he does believe this case is politically motivated. back with us our experts. looking, sara -- i think i was in the minority, i was surprised mike pence even went that far in saying i can't defend it, but then he sort of hedges it by saying i think it's political. >> yeah, i mean, i think in some ways it was surprising mike pence didn't keep his powder a little bit dry ahead of time. what did you think was going to be in this indictment? we knew already that they took a whole lot of stuff when they searched mar-a-lago. we knew that they took over 100 documents of classified markings. there's been great reporting by cnn and by others about donald trump talking to people potentially even showing people these classified documents, so i don't know what mike pence thought he was going to find in this indictment. it seems clear now he's read it. oh, this is bad. >> shelby, you made a good point this is kind of how he's tried
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to find a lane, the constitution, respect for the constitution, the candidate that holds that up to some degree, this sort of tracks like that. >> given what he did on january 6th. >> it very much lines up with that idea of things. we heard nikki haley weigh in saying that she -- over the course of the day made clear it was problematic, all trying to get a sense where is the primary moving in terms of how republicans respond. >> i think they would love not to respond, quite frankly. given that they will have to respond, mike pence is, i would say, going to be the baseline of kind of separating himself from saying that trump is innocent and this is a witch-hunt, but also saying that it's politicized and that's kind of the safe bet for a lot of these candidates because so much of the republican base believes that the doj and the fbi are
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politicized so they get points there and then they kind of get points in terms of keeping their credibility by admitting these are really serious charges and maybe we shouldn't jump to immediately pardoning them like they promised to. >> he lives in a glass house. he had classified documents. i know there can be discussions about to what extent they were there, his knowledge of it in the new home, if they were sealed and these different issues. he's not going to necessarily throw the most convincing and persuasive stone in that instance, so he's cautious as well. biden still lives in a bit of a class house, albeit a white house at this point in time. there are things can you say and expose yourself to these things. this is the head of the executive branch. the idea of the presidential records act, which we played at the top of the hour, there is no grace period for turning over documents.
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when the clock strikes 12:00 p.m. for the inauguration, that's it. you're supposed to in your lame duck period do all that you could to get the documents returned. that's patently false. the nara has come out repeatedly to say, hey, this has been a frequent question. no, you do not have this grace period. you must turn it over. it's defense-related information. >> your point about the strategy is something you're talking to law enforcement and the justice department, it's not flipping a switch when it relates to the attacks on them, it's not like if donald trump loses, he goes away. we respect law enforcement and these institutions. the theme seems to be if you're going to pick off trump votes, okay, he did something bad. maybe there's a spectrum there of how forceful they're going to be but they will say but the justice department was politicized, but the fbi needs to be reform. they try to have it both ways. it's interesting for people in law enforcement. they don't think these attacks will end anytime soon because this is a political strategy.
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>> we have some great reporting by the team here at cnn and jeremy diamond the biden white house strategy of silence. >> would you comment on the arrest the former president, sir? >> no. >> that's about all you're going to get. you would know. you are the chief white house correspondent. are they going to be able to stick to this? >> sara and i were talking about this. the first lady actually weighed in last night, and not in a specific way about the legal side of things, you will not hear about the president talk about this at all. jeremy at an east room event shouting out and trying to get that -- because it's important to know, yes, we know he's not going to talk about it. that's their strategy. sometimes the president doesn't necessarily want to follow what his team thinks. this underscores the seriousness with which he views this issue and also the ability to grasp
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they understand that any connection, any element that could be pointed to as i was involved in this or i appointed my attorney general to do this, is massively problematic to the public perception. democrats think, just like republicans, should be attacking on the substance of this politically. the president and his team say absolutely not. >> we'll see if the people around him and surrogates do the same thing, though, as the election gets further along. first on cnn, our crew forced to duck for cover on the front lines of ukraine's counter offensive as the fight against russia intensifies. we'll take you live to zaporizhzhia next. onalized plan ♪ to guide you through a changing world. ♪ i brought in ensure mamax protein with 30g of protein. those who tried me felt more energy in just two weeks. uh... here i'll take tha -everyone: woo hoo! ensure max proin with 30 grams of protein, one gram of sugar.
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terms of what's happening on the ground, you're actually there. >> reporter: you're right. there is a big information war playing out. on the front lines what we did see the ukrainians are trying to push forward. they say they have enough gear to do that but it is very tough going for them because the russians are fighting whack in a fierce way not only blanketing with artillery but with jets as well. here is what we witnessed. ukrainian forces firing at russian troops holed up in south ukraine. this video shows the russians making a final stand here. much of the area near the front lines deeply scarred by combat. this is the area where the heaviest fighting is taking place, and you can see what it's done to a lot of the buildings in the cities and villages around this area, and that fighting is set to get even worse. we're with the 68th brigade
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which has been making important gains here. the soldiers confident and grateful for u.s. supply gear. a lot of the times it saved my life, he says. it saves our life every day from shrapnel, shelling and bullets. the russians continue to fire back, constant artillery shelling and even air strikes too close for comfort as our crew had to duck for cover. >> reporter: still, the deputy brigade commander says they are just getting started. our counter attack will definitely be successful, he says. we believe in victory.
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we are moving forward towards our goal. we are advancing. on this part of the frontline, the ukrainians believe they have the gear, the manpower and the determines to advance far into russian-held territory. as you can see some pretty tough battles. that was one small area of a very long frontline. one of the things phil said is correct, the opening stages of the you trainian counter offensive. we do see them making those gains. those gains are certainly significant but there still is a long way to go, guys. >> a long way to go. stunning advisuals, fred. details on the fund-raiser held immediately after leaving court coming up next. the biden administration, as we were talking about, remaining silent on trump's indictment. inside their strategy on this ahead.
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former president trump went from court yesterday to a popular cuban restaurant in miami, back to new jersey where he held a private fund-raiser. we are waiting to find out how much money the trump campaign brought in from that. near trump's golf club in new jersey, a campaign stump speech. you're learning the mood of trump's team behind the scenes. not as happy as what was portrayed last night? is that right? >> reporter: that is right, poppy. i think the trump that you saw last night and also the trump you saw after his arraignment when he went to that restaurant, the versailles restaurant in miami, is the donald trump he wants you to see, the defiant donald trump. behind the scenes the mood is different. i've spoken with a number of allies and advisers over the past several days and they tell me there is real concern about
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the legal implications. evan perez was in the courtroom yesterday and noted he appeared glum, let his attorneys do the talking for him and had his arms crossed over him for long periods of time. he's angry and has admitted he does not want this stain on his record. i covered him when he went through his impeachment trials, he didn't want to be impeached either. he doesn't want this to be his legacy. though you're seeing donald trump use the bravado in his speech, surrounding himself with the most sympathetic supporters and allies during the speech last night, that's what he's using to try to give and portray to the public that he is defiant and is ready to fight back against these charges. i do know that privately it's not what he's putting out there. >> it's so interesting because we don't have cameras in the courtroom for this and we won't probably for the trial, and so
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all we see is what he presents outside of it. alayna, thank you very much. >> the president and his allies have been ramping up their attacks against the fbi and last night no different. >> the other picture so vile, angry and kucorrupt, the photo staged by the fbi and those that raided mar-a-lago. they were putting documents all over the floor. remember that famous picture? all over that say confidential, presidential, said all sorts of things, and it was supposed to be there like it was that way when they raided it. they put them there, took the picture and released it illegally to the press. >> you made a really interesting point during the break, hopefully you don't mind me talking about now that we're live on television, but what the current president is doing, not
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talking about these things, not weighing in, making clear to the team they're not to weigh in either. contrast that with what we've seen from the former president repeatedly but especially last night and what president biden is doing is what used to be doing as the norm. is that a fair assessment? >> under the trump era, that was one of the norms that was shattered, the independence. it started with this campaign where he was talking about the fbi should lock up his political opponent which was a talking point but throughout his administration he was trying to bring doj close or slamming them, but you go back and look at history, the norm has been the white house keeps distance for two very important reasons, first, you don't want it to look like you as the president are meddling in an investigation trying to go after your allies but, two, if you find yourself under investigation or your administration, for example, history lesson every president since nixon other than barack obama had someone senior under investigation by the fbi f. that person is cleared, you don't want the thinking to be, well,
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you were meddling in that. that's why that distance has been there. for biden to say, no, i'm not going to comment on what the doj is doing is not new. that's how it used to be done. >> the word meddling sticks in my mind, the perception that the photographs that were seen potentially in the indictment suggests him referencing in that way probably trying to appeal to people, wait, i've seen photographs of documents all over the floor before and, wait, this is the fbi that's doing this. you're conflating the two things to suggest that what you're seeing in this very picture the audience is looking at now might be in line with it. these photographs are a part of the indictment, photographs taken by his own team not by members of the fbi. >> can you explain, though -- >> sure. >> you're dead on in what he's trying to do is conflate. what he's referring to is from the search warrant in response to a suit that he filed. there was a picture included where the fbi had laid out what they had recovered, which is
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different from what was in the indictment he was arraigned on yesterday which were pictures from cell phones of -- you are covering this every day as well -- am i on the right track here? >> what we saw in earlier court documents after mar-a-lago was searched the fbi lays out some of the documents they found, they're taking photos to document the results of their search, and donald trump was very upset by that. they make it look like i'm just throwing documents all over the floor -- >> we didn't leak it. it was in response to a suit he filed. >> in a court filing. then it turns out, we learned from this indictment and the pictures his aides are taking, the way the fbi meticulously laid the documents out frankly not that far from the boxes of documents just all over the floor in a storage unit at mar-a-lago. in a storage room. >> or bathroom. >> or stage. >> that's a really good point, the conflation. >> all right, guys. thank you very much. stick with us.
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in the 8:00 a.m. hour one of donald trump's fiercest critics adam schiff will join us. what's his reaction to the indictment? but up next, autopsy results show olympian tori bowie died of childbirth complications. this troubling trend in health care next. ♪ sir paul mccartney asking for help from artificial intelligence. what this means for new beatles music and how he's coming together with ai so you can hear john lennon's voice. very good tease. don't just connect your bubusiness. (dock worker) right t on time. (vo) make it even smarter. we call this enterprise intelligence. beach defense®, from neutrogena® more protection. more sun. more joy. the suncare brand used most by dermatologists for themselves and their families.
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may. those complications may include, quote, respiratory distress and eclampsia. joining us is an ob/gyn. it's good to have you, doctor. i'm joined at the table by someone about to go through childbirth, someone who has gone through it, somebody who has been in the room for four, and you look at what happened to her, and we'll talk about this big picture for everyone at these different stages. so young, so healthy, so active and yet this happens. >> i do want to reassure people that pregnancy is generally a very safe experience, but we do have an incidence of preecp pre-ec pre-eclampsia, maybe she didn't know she had pre-eclampsia and suffered a negative side effect as a result.
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>> as i was reading about this i thought i don't know what e-eclampsia is. >> pre-eclampsia is an increase in your blood pressure and most of the time is well managed. eclampsia is a subset of that, 1% to 2%, hallmarked by extreme increases in blood pressure and seizure that can lead to loss of consciousness, respiratory depression. if the blood pressures are very high even stroke and in this case death. >> i was in the husband in the relationship and wasn't having to think through this in an acute manner but, also, we had great doctors, we had great care. we were regularly being checked,
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blood pressure, scans, that is not necessarily the norm. i think people would be stunned to realize how little that is the norm in our country when you look at maternal mortality which is stunning particularly in terms of how it has grown over the course of the last three or four years. why? the wealthiest country in the world, why? >> we need to re-assess our priorities. women these days are having babies at an older age, using ivf more, african american women have higher rates of infant mortality and all of these things combined are leading to our rates of maternal mortality being three to more times of their white counterparts. despite the technology education, access, addressing racism in medicine and society which does impact our health care and the delivery specifically to black women is something we need to prioritize.
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>> obviously i'm sitting at the table as a black woman and have had two children. after my first child, i almost died. i was hemorrhaging. i'll save the details. had to have multiple transfusions. and this is me going into it believing that, one, i'm an educated woman, relatively speaking was a woman of means compared to some, and the idea of being my own champion was always on my mind because i was hearing the stories about the bedside manner of some doctors not taking the woman a black woman feels seriously. i remember that chart on the wall with smiley faces. tell me your pain. and i was like it's not an emoji, i'll tell you that right now. going through a c-section, how can people be their own champion in those rooms? i'm not a doctor. i was scared like anyone else.
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i desperately wanted my child to be happy. what do you recommend for people? >> for any person considering pregnancy to start preparing for pregnancy before you get pregnant and that's with the preconception visit where you meet with your ob/gyn or primary care doctor before you even get pregnant. once you get pregnant it is imperative that you find and create a team of people that you trust, people that you know hear you and people that respect your wishes as you go through this process. i think it's important to be flexible. pregnancy can change at the drop of a hat like your experience with a hemorrhage. being with a team that knows, loves and respects you is paramount in safe outcomes. >> as a currently pregnant person, this story has stuck with me. it is worth case scenario, another thing to be worried
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about, though i appreciate you saying that, it still is rare. i wonder in cases like this if people -- if it's the quality of the health care, people not appreciating what a physically taxing process you are going through here and how frequently you do need to be checking in with your medical professionals. >> as working women we downplay the struggle and physicality. it is important you know the warning signs of preeclampsia. report to your physician so they can be addressed as well and properly manage for safer outcomes. >> thank you so much, doctor, shining a light on all of this. >> thank you for having me. >> of course. former president trump claiming he had, quote, every
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in the nearly 234 years of the american presidency -- >> the very first time that a former president of the united states has been arrested and arraigned. >> the first ever to face years in prison if convicted. >> the people in charge of this country do not love america. >> we need to be straightforward about this and not play political games. >> it's political persecution
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like something straight out of a fascist or communist nation. >> he knew the significant information and he intended to use it for his own benefit. if half of what we've seen is true it's almost indefensible. >> these are serious allegations. >> we can't just deny what president trump was wrong. it's clear as day wrong. >> this is trump in true form. he says one thing to supporters and another thing privately. >> national security issues shouldn't be partisan. >> we have to take this seriously. >> had he not lied through his lawyers he wouldn't be in this situation. >> i do not feel comfortable with a convicted felon in the white house. good morning, everyone. we are so glad you are with us on quite a morning after a day that made history, the first time a former president has ever been arraigned on federal charges.
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