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to trial and is convicted, potentially life behind bars. just minutes after appearing in court on 37 counts trump wasted no time to jump back on the campaign trail to spread falsehoods about the charges against him. >> this is called election interference and yet another attempt to rig and steal a presidential elections. more importantly, it's a political persecution like something straight out of a fascist or communist nation. >> cnn's elena treen is just outside trump's golf club in new jersey where he made those untruthful statements. what can you tell us? >> right. good morning, sara. that's right. i am here just near where donald trump still is after his speech last night and holding a private fund-raiser and i do want to
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focus the fund-raising aspect of that event. donald trump and his team are viewing this indictment largely through the lens of his re-election campaign and they think that his charges -- or these charges at least in the short term will have a political boost, but also a fund-raising boost for his re-lex campaign, a after donald trump left his team fired off a campaign trail, i'm writing you this e-mail as i leave the courthouse as an innocent man by the corrupt biden -- donald trump is hoping to hold on to these wealthy donors that he had during his 2016 campaign, but some sources are telling my colleague, kristen holmes and i that there are some concerns that some of these wealthy donors could defect and we have seen some of
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these defections already from some of these donors and the worry is that if these indictments continue to mount they could see more of that, but i should also point out that donald trump's team maintains that he still get his best fund-raising from the small dollar donor, the same thing that we saw when he was president and that they do expect him to bring in a lot of money and want just from that event last night, but in the days immediately after following the announcement of that indictment, sara. >> we should also mention that yesterday, it turns out, today is donald trump's 77th birthday, as well. i understand that you have learned he was not in the mood to celebrate. appreciate you from bridgewater, new jersey. john? >> legally speaking, what is next for the indicted former president who did sit through the 50-minute session yesterday. cnn katelyn polantz watched it all from inside the courtroom and joins us now. so we know what he can and can't
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or should or shouldn't do, i should say. how difficult would it be for him to toe that line? >> great question, john. now donald trump is in the criminal justice system. he's been arrested and he has restrictions placed upon him so there's going to be a lot of attention paid to that going forward. i want to go over a couple of things in the near future. over the next two weeks walt nauta, his co-defendant has to enters a plea just like when donald trump stood up and pled not guilty. he has not done that. he will do that. that has to happen to kick off the case and after that prosecutors will be providing a list both to trump and his legal team as well as walt nauta and his lawyers with a list of people that they cannot discuss the details of the case with. people that could be potential witnesses and also they can't talk to one another about the details of this case and then there's also the path to trial, right? prosecutors will be turning over
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evidence to the criminal defense team so that they can get ready so they will get to see everything the justice department has collected to charge this case, take it through the grand jury, but that is a really significant thing that donald trump is now under a court order that he can't talk to people about this case, and also that his words publicly if he's talking about the case publicly or to law enforcement officials it can be used against him in the court of law, and even last night when he was at bedminster giving his speech he had said that he had every right to keep documents under the presidential records act. that's going to be a legal argument that his team is likely to make during this path to trial, but it's also something that could come up in the case if the justice department wants to use his own words saying yeah. he did know he had these documents. he says even after he's charged and in court and arrested they were his documents to keep. john? >> again, it could be used in a trial itself.
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he's got to watch what he says now politically because it will have a very real, legal impact. caitlin polantz, terrific having you. thank you very much. >> thank you, john. trump has pleaded, of course, not guilty to 37 federal charges alleging he broke to law by keeping and hiding federal documents by federal authorities while at mar-a-lago. here's what's next for the former president. the government is seeking a speedy trial, but a defendant can waive that right and ask for more time. if this does go to trial it could be months before it begins. that's because while federal law forces federal government to bring a case within 70 days that deadline, can of course, be extended and then the process known as discovery when prosecutors have turn over their evidence to the defendant. both sides will have to work out a timeline for that. there may be more court hearings to set deadlines and agreements
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for how the time line should be handled and how it files pre-trial motions and those motions could ask the judge, for example to simply dismiss the case or to keep certain evidence from being used at trial. it is unclear at this point if or when trump will be due back in court, but his co-defendant and his close aide, walt nauta, is set to be arraigned on june bet 27th. rahel? >> joining me now is robert zeldin, and dan horowitz, former assistant attorney for the new york district attorney's office. jack smith wants to seek a speedy trial, but we are talking about class niified documents, realistically, how quickly will this thing move? >> it's not going to move quickly, first of all, defense lawyering 101 and it doesn't matter whether your client is the former president of the
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united states, you want to slow things down. number one, number two, you're right. discovery will involve the disclosure of highly classified, highly confidential documents and the people who need to review those documents, the president's lawyers, his co-defendant's lawyers and ultimately a jury. they are all going to have to go through security clearances by the government to make sure that they are able to review those documents and that's going to take some time because these kinds of security clearances are of the highest nature. so this is going to add time on the clock. >> michael, i want to bring you into the conversation. of course, you have a defendant who is the former president, but if you are trying to figure out, this is coming amongst primary season, is this something the judge would take into consideration in terms of being accommodating for scheduling when the defendant is campaigning? >> well, that's a great question.
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it depends on the judge. the judge controls this case and if it' if it's aileen cannon can set a calendar and push it to completion as soon as possible with what dan said which is correct also. if she wants to she is stretch it out and as they get closer and closer to election, she can say we can hold this over until after the election and the judge controls the calendar and that determines how the case will proceed and what the strategies of the prosecution's team and the defense team will be. >> michael, to that end, the judge aileen cannon as some have pointed out, she should recuse h herself because of the past coming under scrutiny. if i were judge cannon i would voluntarily recuse myself. i don't think she needs this.
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if i were her i'd want nothing to do with this case, but if she decides she wants to take it and redeem herself, if you will, i don't think there are legal grounds to recuse her. i know people think there are, but i'm not one who agrees with that. >> dan, i want to bring you in. do you agree with that? some have made the counter argument saying she may be the best person to try this case because of those past decisionses she will be on her best behavior and if trump is convicted under a trump appointee it gives an era of credibility to the process. >> i think that's right and for someone who is a young judge who has to be thinking about her reputation because she'll be presumably on the bench for a long time. federal judge ships are a lifetime appointment. she's got to be thinking about how the public is going to view her and what kind of confidence the public is going to have in the justice system, but i do agree with michael that legally there are no grounds for her to recuse herself. one interesting thing that
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happened in the new york case yesterday is that there was a decision by an ethics advisory panel for judges and they found that judge per mersean in the new york case will not recuse himself. that will give cover to all those people who say judge cannon does not need to recuse her, but i agree with michael. she does not need to recuse herself. >> walt nauta and his former aide now co-defendant, they plan to work together. they plan to continue to travel together in light of that ruling yesterday that they cannot talk about the case directly. i mean, how much more challenging does this now become? >> it becomes challenging, but let's pull back. this is a criminal case and when you have more than one defendant in the case that happens all of the time. you have people who work together in a company who have been charged in a white collar case. judges typically give an order saying if you work together you can talk about baseball. you can talk about the weather. you can talk about your job, but
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you cannot talk about this case. this does raise some complications, though, for how do you enforce this rule? what's going to happen when you have a defendant like donald trump who loves to talk. he loves to talk publicly he almost can't help himself talking and is he going to talk about conversations he had with nauta? and what will judge cannon do? that's a more pressing question of what will happen. >> that question about what would the judge do if, in fact, they don't comply with this order. what are your thoughts? >> well, one thing to be clear, they can't speak to each other directly. they can speak to each other through lawyers. so they can have a joint defense agreement that allows them to share legal strategy. this all tells you that trump's first order of business is get a lawyer. he does not have good trial lawyers on his case yet. once he gets them then they and
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nauta, once he gets a lawyer can begin to figure out how they're going to communicate with one another without violating the judge's order and still be able to move forward with a joint defense strategy. >> yeah. as we know, walt nauta expected back in a courtroom june 27th for his arraignment. so much to watch. michael zeldin and dan horowitz, thanks for the time. john. >> key data shows inflation is cooling and what new numbers means for the fed's rate hike decision which comes very shortly and then taking back part of its territory. where the ukrainian military is making advances this morning. a turn in the fatal -- in the fatal shooting on the "rust" set. new allegations against the weapons supervisor and the condition prosecutors say she was in when she loaded a live round into a prop gun. or car sh. reliability, safety, owner satisfaction, and road-test evaluations... and the results are in.
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go betty! ♪ let's be more than our allergies! zeize the day. with zyrtec. >> a live look at the markets right now after new data shows a key inflation gauge once again fell sharply in may. the producer price index showing wholesale inflation cooled once again, this time hitting below a pre-pandemic average at 1.1%. the new data coming out out ahead of another key decision we're expecting from the fed on interest rates. luckily to break it all down we have cnn chief business
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correspondent christine romans. christine, more good news, good news, dare i say? >> this behind you was a normal number. when we have just a normal number and it's big news it shows you just how this inflation problem has been just gripping the public for the past year or so. so 1.1% and that's pre-pandemic levels and this is producer price index. this is factory-level inflation so that should sift down the road into consumer inflation and we had a decent consumer number and this ppi if you look at the line chart and we have clearly peaked and in the summer it was 9.1% for the cpi and almost 12% for ppi and that is remarkable and the ppi and cpi numbers that clearly show you that the fed's massive tightening in the economy is starting to cool the inflation story a little bit. >> you really see it there because that is just before the mid-2020. you see what happens when the
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economy went to hell in a hand basket for lack of a better word. speaking of a little bit of worry. >> yeah. >> do you think the fed as they'll come out today around 2:00 will decide, hey, we don't need to raise interest rates anymore? >> again, the fed not doing anything will be the big story because the fed has been raising interest rates one after the other for ten months now to try to cool down the economy and cool down that inflation. we expect a big chunk of the market participants, excuse me, easy for me to say, 95% the market is showing think that there will be no rate hike and the question is what do they do next month? do they continue this pause or do they continue to jack up interest rates? you're seeing strength in the housing market and the job market is strong and there are other parts that they need to make sure it doesn't happen again. >> for borrowers, that's annoying. borrowers have paid more and more and more every single rate
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meeting and they won't this time. >> christine romans, we'll wait and see. thank you very much, john. this morning ukraine is claiming to have gained partial success as its counteroffensive has entered its early ij staes. ukrain ukrainian troops say they've made advances in bakhmut and in the zaporizhzhia region right here. there is significant fighting on the ground in villages in and around this southern occupied territory. with us now retired u.s. air force colonel and cnn military analyst colonel blaton. let me push you on the south here because this is where the most interesting story is. you can see just make out on this map a little bit of yellow here and here where the ukrainians have started to take back a sliver of this territory that's been held by the russians for more than a year. why do you think this appears to be the focus right now of the counteroffensive? >> well, john, i think one of
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the key things about this is that they're going for the sea of ossoff and if they can make their way down to the sea of ossoff that will cut it down from the donbas region and russian-occupied crimea. once they do that the ukrainians will not only have the path to the sea of ossoff, but they would have broken off a large hold that they've had since february 2022 in this area and that means a significant and at least tactical victory if they can achieve it. >> you're talking about getting down to here, the sea of ossoff. they have a fairly long way to go. insofar as we know, and we don't know a lot right now, how would you describe the nature of the fighting? is this full-on infantly lines going after each other or is it more of a probing operation
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right now? >> right now it seems to be more of a probing operation. there are parts where the fighting is really intense, but what you're dealing with is a reconnaissance in force, plus probing operations. that would indicate to me that the ukrainians are trying to assess the weaknesses of the russian lines and where they find them and they're exploiting them and the russians are fighting back in certain areas. for example around the village, they are reportedly using helicopters to go after ukrainians in that area, but their ability to actually prosecute that is, i think, questionable at this point, but on the ukrainian side, what they have to worry about is increased russian defenses as they go further south in those particular areas. >> both acknowledge that there are losses in the counteroffensive and certainly the russians in their defensive
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operations and these are leopard tanks that have been provided to ukraine. some expect that they have lost some of these in the process. if ukraine loses this, can they get resupplied in time? >> the in time part will be abe bit of a question. theoretically, yes. the problem, john, that they're going to have is to make sure that those supply chains actually work for them. there are sufficient number of leopard tanks that need to be resupplied and they need to be combat ready and operationally ready for the ukrainians to use them right away and it can be done and the germans and others will have to step up to the plate to make that happen. >> as we talk about the counter offensive and trying to get tote sea of ossoff, if they don't get there by the end of the summer what do you think that means? >> it will put the ukrainians in a weakened position in that sense in terms of what happens
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next and how much territory they actually get to control, but i think the ukrainians will, at the very least, have sense a big message that they are capable not only of defending their territory and the russians have occupied and no matter how this turns out it is in ukraine's favor to regain some of the territory that they have. colonel cedric leighton, thank you so much. rahel? >> just hours after he was facing charges. vowing to block president biden's judicial nominations indefinitely. we'll be right back. buy one footlong, get one 50% off in the subway app today. now ththat's a dl worth celebrating. man, what are you doing?! get it before it''s gone on the subway app. ♪
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♪ for the first time more than two decades bud light is no longer the top selling beer in the u.s. modelo especial was the top seller last month. it is facing backlash from right-wing media for a transgender influencer and it's away from domestic brews. parents in one california town are sounding off after the local school board rejected a
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state-backed social studies curriculum and fired the district's superintendent in the process. >> the audience will be cleared. that's your first point. >> that was the reaction after temecula valley school board voted to fire the superintendent jody mcclay even as parents and supporters chanted her name. this came after the board rejected the curriculum over the discussion of gay rights activist harvey milk. the curriculum does not include harvey milk directly, but refers to him in a supplemental resource for teachers. this just in, the faa has finalized new rules to beef up cockpit security on new planes and new airliners will soon be required to have a second barrier between the secondary barrier rule will apply to manufacturers starting in december of 2025 and the barrier
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looked like a gate in the hardened door will be locked into place when the cockpit door was opened during flight. rahel? >> john, thank you. >> now to a tit for tat on capitol hill. some republicans outraged over trump's arrest and arraignment are now vowing to retaliate against the justice department and we have brand-new reaction from capitol hill. cnn chief congressional correspondent manu raju is there. what are you hearing? >> yeah. we're hearing a republican party that is divided over the former president and about the allegations that were in this indictment. fi initially right off the bat, some of them rushing to his defense because congress was not in session. over the last couple of days there have been more members expressing some concern about the allegations and about the mishandling of classified records and the obstruction of the investigation and making misstatements to prosecutors. i just caught up with one of
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donald trump's closest allies, that's senator lindsay graham of south carolina, he, though is defending the former president saying it will have little impact on the election and the indictment and also warning about a major blowback if donald trump is indicted in future cases including the federal probe into january 6th. >> it seems to be selective prosecution. president trump has every right to defend himself. politically it probably makes him stronger in the primary. if the special counsel indicts donald trump for anything related to january 6th that will be considered a major outrage by republicans because you could convict any republican of anything in washington, d.c., and i fear that's where this is going as sort of an insurance policy. >> i do have concerns about all of the news about misuse of classified information. i happen to be on the senate intelligence committee, and i get classified briefings on a regular basis, and what they did
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was unacceptable. >> so senator cornyn equating what happened in the case involving hillary clinton to what happened with donald trump there, and that's the defense we're hearing from republicans even though there are a different sets of circumstances and facts and some of donald trump's defenders trying to use the legislative process to pay back the biden administration of sorts. one of them, senator j.d. vance announcing that he'd place a hold on all justice department nominees who are not part of the marshal service, but u.s. attorneys and the like until the justice department changes its approach the prosecution going forward. any individual senator can hold up the process and u.s. attorneys, in particular, are tip b typically confirmed very quickly and otherwise it can be a much more time-consuming process and that's what vance is aiming to do as republicans in the house and trying to undercut it by
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using the funding process on capitol hill, and even though some republicans are not in line, some are lining up behind donald trump and trying to defend him as this case unfolds. >> manu raju, thank you. sara? >> thanks , rahel. >> just hours after pleading not guilty to the 37 counts against him, he was in bedminster. his goal there to spew a barrage of false and misleading claims and no one can do a fact check better than our daniel dale and we are lucky to have you here now. all right. so where should we start? let's see, let's -- the presidential records act. let's start there. this is what donald trump said about that act. >> under the presidential records act which is civil, not criminal, i had every right to have these documents. according to the presidential
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records act which was a big deal, i was supposed to negotiate with nara which is exactly what i was doing until mar-a-lago was raided. >> daniel dale i am going to guess that you read -- you actually read the presidential records act. does it say that? >> it says neither of the two things former president trump claimed there it says. so let's go one by one. he said under the presidential records act i had every right to have those documents. it's absolutely not true. you can read the key part 15 seconds online. the moment the president leaves office, records from his administration belong to the federal government and belong to the national archives and there is nothing in there that says a former president can take classified documents to his club, residence in florida. this was passed after the richard nixon watergate debacle
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and passed for the very purpose that former presidents cannot take sensitive documents with them. the second claim was that the presidential records act says he was supposed to negotiate with the archives with the documents. also false. there is no provision in that law for negotiation. it simply says the moment the president leaves office those documents belong to the public and to the federal government. >> and it says in there automatically, this isn't something that you negotiate. it uses the word automatically, correct? >> yeah. there's no -- so trump keeps saying, i was supposed to talk and i was supposed to deal and supposed to negotiate. that's not at all true and these records belong to the government and any discussions are supposed to take place before the president leaves office. after ward, you leave and you leave the documents behind. >> all right. so on his attack against the biden administration. he made claims about biden's handling of documents which were found he had possession of.
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let's take a listen. >> joe biden had troves of classified documents from his time as vice president and even as a senator which was completely and totally illegal. biden sent 1,150 boxes to the university of delaware making the search very, very difficult for anybody, and he refuses to give them up and he refuses to let people even look at them. >> i know your answer, but what is the truth about those 1850 boxes, those 1850 boxes? >> again, there's a bunch of dishonesty here. what trump doesn't say is these 1850 boxes are boxes from president biden's 36-year career in the united states senate and they are boxes that he legally and properly donated to the university of delaware, his alma mater in 2012. what trump never says, sara, is that senators, unlike presidents
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own their own records and can do what they want with them. if you're a senator you can take the records your office created and maintained and throw them in the trash and give them to passersby in the street or light them on fire and there was nothing wrong with the donation by the former senator and now president biden. the second thing is he won't let anyone look at the boxes at the university of delaware. that is also false. our paula reed reported in february that the fbi conducted two searches in february with biden's consent and there was no initial sign that anything in those boxes was classify period. >> daniel dale, always so good to see you laying it out and those are the facts, as they say. john? >> two university students and a man in his 60s killed in a violent spree and we have new information on the attack and the father of the four children rescued after more than a month in the jungle speaking to cnn. what he said about their survival ahead. j.p. morgan wealth management knows it's easy
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>> welcome back. police in the uk are formally identifying three people killed in the attack in notting ham. two students, barn abbey webber and grace kumar were found stabbed to death. ian coats was later found dead after he was attacked and had his man stolen. a 39-year-old man remains in custody after being arrested on suspicion of murder. >> investigators are investigating a deadly shooting at a training center after a teenage cadet allegedly opened fire on numbers of his own unit.
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this happened during a live fire exercise and the cadet was arrested and the motive is still unclear. a cyclone barrels through western india and officials are pleading with those who did not evacuate to just stay home. they're expected to make landfall in the india-pakistan border tomorrow. john? >> the four children rescued after spending a month alone in the colombian jungle are recuperating in the hospital. they have been drawing pictures of their ordeal. they drew a dog ask lnd labeled wilson. wilson is a special rescue dog and they believe the dog found the children, but now he is missing, the dog is and dozens of soldiers are searching for him. cnn was also able to speak with the father of the children directly. he called their survival a miracle. cnn's stefano is live from
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bogota. what are you hearing this morning? >> this morning we are hearing, john, that more than 17 commandos are still in the jungle to look for wilson, the k-9 unit that has gone missing before the children were safely rescued. however, i think it's worth listening directly from the father of the four children, he's the biological father of the two youngest and the stepfather of the two oldest children. it was great to speak with him yesterday at length. we sat down and sort of went through his experience. he told us that they were flying out on a black hawk helicopter from the heart of the jungle with thunderbolts and lightning because it's the middle of the rainy season down in the amazon right now and so they really got out from the skin of their neck, but also he made a very interesting reflection when i told him that these were some of the most incredible stories i've reported in my career. here's what he answered me.
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>> translator: the story is like a legend for us, indigenous the story is. for example, the son is a god, and you can't say you have seen it, but this is not a story. this truly happened. >> this is, i think, what will remain with me of these incredible coverage that i've had over the last few days and that four children were able to survive alone in the thick of the amazon rain forest for more than 30 days, for 40 days, actually, before they were finally safely rescued and that is just beyond remarkable, john. >> but how? i mean, the question remains how were they able to survive for so long? >> yes. it's interesting that you ask me that, john, because for weeks we have talked about ancestral knowledge and how the indigenous people live almost with the
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forest. these are kids who are 13 -- the oldest of them, leslie, who is the true heroine. she moved around with her younger siblings for more than 20 kilometers and that's over ten miles in the thick of the jungle to try to be found, to try being rescued and only when they were able to -- when they were too tired to walk and they were finally staying in the same place is when the units were finally able to find them, but still, you can see these are not your average children. these are remarkably resilient kids, john. >> yes, they are, to say the least. stefano pozzebo, thank you for your reporting on this. >> investigators investigating the fatal shooting on the set of "rust" are accusing hannah
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gutierrez-reed of drinking heavily and shaking marijuana while filming and what her attorney is telling cnn. that's next and -- >> not and. could get even bette? me, i knknew. maybe you should host a commercial then.n. sure, okay. susubway series just keeps gettiting better.
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hallen that hutchins. what lena hutchins. hall len
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♪ prosecutors revealing some of their evidence in the aftermath of the "rust" movie set shooting. prosecutors said in a new court filing the armor hannah gutierrez-reed was likely hung over when he put a live bullet into the prop gun when alec baldwin was holding that done
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firing a round killing halyna hutchins. and also to testify that gutierrez-reed was drinking alcohol during filming. at this point, we expect to hear from hannah gutierrez-reed's attorney. what are you hearing? >> well, first of all, sarah, this filing came out on friday. and this is the leadup for the prosecution to bring this to trial. as we know in april, criminal charges were temporarily dismissed against alec baldwin. they dismissed the involuntary manslaughter charges. hannah gutierrez-reed still has the manslaughter charges. and her attorney telling, quote, the prosecution has so mishandled the case and the case is so weak that they have now chosen to resort to character assassination to taint the jury pool. and also saying they reserve the
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right to bring charges back against alec baldwin. and there say hearing on august 8th. so, we would expect that announcement would be made around that time if not before. >> do you have any indication what those charges might look like, if they go forward and recharge alec baldwin for something? >> good question. so back in april when the prosecution came out and they said they had decided to temporarily dismiss the criminal charges against alec baldwin, they cited new evidence that they had obtained that had to do with the gun, the long colt .45 that somehow fired off a live round. the question is how did a live round get to the set in the first place. we know that potentially hannah gutierrez-reed might have been hung over, potentially smoking marijuana. but how did that live round get to the set. they have said to the prosecution that the gun and broken seal has been sent to a
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gun expert for further testing. so if they feel that the gun did not have any modifications that would have made it fire a round, then perhaps they would bring charges back against alec baldwin. remember, alec baldwin has told cnn that he didn't pull the trigger. >> right. >> and when the gun was handed to him, it was said to be a cold gun. still, so many questions and as cnn's josh campbell has said, how did live rounds get to the set? will we find that out? and could charges be brought against anybody else is the big question when this goes to trial. >> a lot of back and forth, con ch chloe melos, thank you for the details. and i know you have a big afternoon. >> the fed, the second day of two-day meeting, we may see the fed hike stop. what goes up, must come down, inflation coming down.
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>> i love the nerdiness of us all. we're all excited. >> be safe while you're watching that. thank you all for joining us, this is "cnn news central," "inside politics" is up nextxt. ♪ ♪ ♪ plus $1,500 purchase allowance on a 2023 xt5 and xt6 when you finance through cadillac financial. not that into saving, are you? -whoa, dude... -money. cuz... cuz you paid too much for those glasses. next time, go to america's best where two pairs and a free, quality eye exam start at just $79.95. book an exam today at amerisbest.com. ♪
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today on "inside politics" donald trump defies legal

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