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tv   CNN Newsroom Live  CNN  June 15, 2023 1:00am-2:00am PDT

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a warm welcome to our viewers in the united states and around the world. i'm max foster. bianca is off today. but just ahead -- >> it underscores the justice department's commitment to both independence and accountability. >> he is still looking for lawyers to represent him in this case here in the southern district of florida. we don't know how the boat capsized, but it was well over capacity. >> we cannot afford anymore losing lives in the sea. >> this is the area of ukraine where the heaviest fighting is currently taking place. and you can see what it has done to the villages. and the fighting is said to get even worse.
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live from london, this is "cnn newsroom" with max foster and bianca nobilo. >> it is thursday, june 15th, 9:00 a.m. in london, 4:00 a.m. on the u.s. east coast and we begin with a missed opportunity that some say might have kept donald trump hit with federal charges. the "washington post" reports that the former u.s. president rejected efforts by one of his attorneys to try to negotiate a settlement with the justice department. several sources say trump showed no interest in finding an exit ramp. however cnn spoke to sources who are casting doubt on whether there was any real opportunity to cut a deal since what was listed in the indictment predates when that lawyer joined trump's team. meanwhile the u.s. attorney general is defending his decision to appoint jack smith as special counsel to prosecute the documents case. >> as i said when i appointed
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mr. smith, i did so because it underscores the justice department's commitment to independence and accountability. mr. smith is a veteran career prosecutor. he has assembled a group of experienced and talented prosecutors and agents who share his commitment to integrity and the rule of law. >> the former president is pushing ahead with his fundraising defiant as ever and a spokesperson says the indictment has been through i can't difference for his campaign. kristen holmes explains.i can't difference for his campaign. kristen holmes explains. >> reporter: they say they have raised $7 million since the indictment on thursday, much of it coming from small donations, from digital fundraising, about 2.1 coming from the fundraiser he had tuesday night after he was arraigned in miami.
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this is significant because i spoke to a number of advisers and allies who weren't sure that he was going to be able to get the billing boost in fundraising after a second indictment. i've talked to a number of his allies today who say that this will carry help through the election. the indictment that is. and i spoke to a number of advisers who really laid out what they believe is a working playbook to help they will through the campaign with all these legal hurdles. the idea behind it is to essentially play this out in the court of public opinion, to change the narrative and that is what you saw when trump went to versailles, that was a planned trip. his team wanted that video out there. they knew there would be no cameras in the courtroom, that that would likely be the ol video that existed from that day. and afterwards when he called it election interference and a hoax, he is trying to spin his own narrative. i'm also told walt nauta will be by trump's side, that of course
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is his co-defendant, his body man, even though he was told by a judge not to communicate with trump about this case, nothing is going to change. that is according to an adviser. so as they roll out this campaign, walt nauta will continue to be by the former president's side at least for now. >> and another republican candidate is jumping into the race. miami mayor francis suarez has filed paperwork for run for u.s. president in 2024. he will be speaking at the ronald reagan library in the coming hours. he starts as a decidedunder dog in the primary with former prthd president a resident of palm beach and also ron desantis far ahead in opinion polls. and there will be talks about how and when ukraine can join nato.
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the gathering also includes the meeting of the ukraine contact group which is focused on providing military aid to kyiv. salma abdelaziz is following the developments for us. and we'll get a summary of that later on. but it is about the current -- you know, what is happening on the ground but potentially about the fighter jets as well? >> i think there is a lot on the agenda as secretary of defense makes these opening remarks. i'm sure a lot of language that he will present his allies with is to be expected. we'll stand with kyiv for as long as it takes, nato is more united than of. of course finland has recently joined sweden has a bid in, ukraine looking to join. but this is taking place at a key time. president zelenskyy just in the last few days made clear that that counteroffensive is under way. we do see intense fighting along the front lines particularly to the south, the zaporizhzhia region and as well as bakhmut. and the point that we've heard
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jens stoltenberg, that the military aid that the nato defense ministers are providing is making a difference on the ground. but you have to remember these defense ministers are also under pressure, they have another meeting takes place tomorrow. and they need to prove when they go back home that those billions of dollars that ukraine is receiving is actually making a difference on the ground particularly if they are about to spend even more and provide things like fighter jets. >> and in terms of what is happening on the ground, how would you assess the latest situation, more of what you were telling us about yesterday? >> you have to remember we're talking very much modest gains. nato and ukraine are saying we've made progress, there is success on the ground. you did see an intensification of fighting particularly again along that access, the zaporizhzhia region to the south of the country. but there is an expectation that ukrainian forces need to break through russia's defensive positions. that means making a major gain
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and difference on the ground. whether that is cut off the land bridge to crimea, cut off supplies to russian forces, there needs to be a shift for the allies to know that they are making a difference. >> salma, thank you so much for that. we'll bring you the highlights from the statements coming up. los angeles mayor karen bass says about 14 migrants who arrived in the city on wednesday from texas will not be turned away but she had harsh words for the man who sent them, texas governor greg abbott accusing him as using the high sgrants as p migrants as pawns. and she said she is concerned for the well-being of the children in the group. >> governor abbott septent babi sent toddlers, sent school age children, middle schoolchildren, this is who was on this bus. and what we needed to make sure, and this is important, adults
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obviously react to situations in a different way. children need to have the most welcoming environment possible after they have been through everything that they have been through. >> governor abbott said that our border communities are on the frontlines of president biden's border crisis and texas will continue to provide the much needed relief until he steps up do his job and secure the border. greece says there is national mourning after a boat sunk with 78 confirm deaths so far. and the greek coast guard provided these aerial photos of the overcrowded vessel on tuesday. the boat believed to have been carrying 400 to 750 people. the coast guard says it most likely capsized because of a sudden shift this weight. a journalist from greece is
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joining me. when we see how many people were on board and the fact that we only know about 100 have been rescued, it paints a horrific picture. >> if really does. and we have no news of anymore being rescued. what we do know from the people that are housed here, where most of the survivors are, they say there were women and children on board as well and at the moment the only people who have been rescued have been men. we understand that there were people in some of the lower decks of the boat as well and that the ship capsized due to a shift of weight. this is emerging information from the local authorities now coming out. and they are saying that as time passes, also because of the great depth of where this incident took place, operations will become increasingly difficult and there is a very good chance that we'll never really know the number of those on board. what i can tell you is that the people who are here, who are
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slowly recovering, some remain in hospital, but most are here. and they are starting to ask about loved one, they are starting to ask about others on board. so a very tragic picture is emerging. we understand most of these people will be moved somewhat closer to athens later today. ngos are here providing assistance, and they are saying that this will be a better situation for them, that we'll have better help when they get to athens. and it is not clear what will happen to them next. and there is a chance some of these people coming from countries such as egypt and there were also pakistanis on board, that they may face deportation at some point. but for now, all the focus is on the actual investigation that is under way. >> linda, thank you so much for bringing us that .
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oh, man, never seen anything like that. >> the threat of severe weather today in the u.s., that is after more than 300 storm reports across the south wednesday including at least ten tornadoes, three of those in alabama, that is where this video was taken. the main threat today is large hail, damaging winds and even tornados in some states. at last report more than 120,000 homes and businesses were still without power across the southeast. thick plumes of noxious smoke from the wildfires in canada are once again compromising air quality for millions. the entire state of minnesota and almost all of wisconsin are currently under air quality
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alerts as the gray haze drifts south. smoke from more than 60 wildfires across ontario could be tdetected as far south as kentucky. conditions for the region should begin improving late this morning, but the poor air quality will linker through friday as it takes time for the smoke to dissipate. u.s. federal reserve is pausing its relentless interest rate hikes at least for now. jerome powell announced wednesday the fed is taking a break after ten consecutive rate increases but he also warned more rate hikes are coming and soon. >> we have to get inflation at 2% and we will. and we don't see that yet. so today's policy decision both to write down further rate hikes by the end of the year, but also to take -- to moderate somewhat the pace with which we're moving.
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>> here is the way the u.s. markets are poised to react when the opening bell rings on wall street in a few hours from now. they are all down after the fed's announcement, they had a wobbling wednesday afternoon. and matt egan explains the reasoning behind the fed's decision. >> reporter: this is a pause, not a finality. at least that is the message from the federal reserve. the fed deciding unanimously to keep interest rates steady, that is a significant shift after ten straight meetings where they raised interest rates. and yet the fed is making clear that they are not ready to declare victory over inflation at least not yet. fed officials are penciling in another two quarter point interest rate hikes this year. fed chair jerome powell called out the fact that core inflation which excludes food and energy, that has not cooled off enough. and he opened the door to
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another rate hike at next month's meeting calling the july meeting a, quote, live meeting. so what does it all mean? for consumers, it is certainly good news that the fed is taking a breather here with rate hikes because we've seen borrowing costs spike for mortgages and credit cards and car loans. and so there is some relief there at least for now. the pause also means that the fed thinks that their inflation fighting medicine is working, that the economy doesn't need these monster interest rate hikes every single meeting just to get inflation back down. one very important point that powell stressed again and again during the press conference is that these rate hikes, they hit the economy not immediately, but with a lag. it is kind of like if you take antibiotics, you might not feel the impact right away, but it doesn't mean the medicine is not working, it is just taking some time. and so all along the risk here
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was that the fed was moving interest rates so fast, so much higher, that they were going to overdo it and cause a recession. so that is why powell says that they are moving slower now to look around and see what the impact is in the economy. so again, it doesn't mean that the fed is done raising interest rates. it doesn't mean the war on inflation is over, but it is just moving in a more deliberate phase. back to you. and here in london house of commons privileges committee in the u skchlt k has found boris knowingly misled parliament. they just released their report on partygate. j johnson says he can't break any rules during the pandemic lockdown. the report says if he had still
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been a member of parliament, they would have recommended that he be suspended for 90 days. boris johnson has called this a kangaroo court effectively. so we'll wait to hear what he says about that. but the crucial thing here is that he doesn't just mislead parliament, he lied to parliament which is absolutely breaking all the parliamentary rules. he'll have his own view on that. still ahead -- >> we had to evacuate to this shelter because apparently the guys fear that there could be aviation bombs coming this fairly soon. >> we'll take you to the frontlines in ukraine's fight for freedom. that is next. plus a former u.s. marine as been indicted in connection with a subway chokehold death in new york. and later barry henson's incredible journey from driving an uber to driving at the u.s.
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"wall street journal" has obtained remarkable video showing what appears to be a
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russian soldier surrendering to an ukrainian drone. you can see the russian soldier running and dodging. a commander says the russian threw his weapon aside, raised his hands and said he wouldn't fight. the drone dropped a note telling him to follow if he wanted to surrender. "wall street journal" interviewed thesoldier. we haven't seen the raw video. russian forces are putting out a fierce fight in the early stages of the counteroffensive. ukrainian officials say they are taking both offensive and defensive positions as russia uses shells, airstrikes and mines to try to stop their progress. ukraine says that its troops are advancing slowly but surely in the east and in the south. fred pleitgen has some report from the frontlines. >> reporter: ukrainian forces laying into russian troops holed
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up in southern ukraine. this video shows what was the russians final stand here the brigade says, but putin's army continues to put up stiff resistance a drone pilot tells me. they are good grunts, he says, sometimes it is difficult to knock them out of those positions. but the ukrainians have been making significant gains here after launching large scale offensive operations across southern ukraine. heavy combat now nearly constant. this is the area of ukraine where the heaviest fighting is currently taking place and you can see what it has done to a lot of the buildings and cities and villages around the area. and that fighting is set to get even worse. we're with the 68th yeager brigade, soldiers confident and grateful for u.s. supply vehicles saying it is not only the firepower but also the protection that matters. a lot of times it saved my life, he says, it saves our lives
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every day from shrapnel, shelling and bullets. but some vehicles have already been lost apartments the russians it in-to fire back with frequent artillery about a ranls and also uses jets to try to hit ukr ukrainian forward positions. we had to take cover as a plane dropped bombs nearby . not the only time we had to scramble. we've had to evacuate to this shelter because the guys fear that there could be aviation bombs coming in fairly soon. you can see the situation here is still very kinetic, a lot of shelling still going on.
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still the deputy brigade commander says his soldiers are just getting started. our counterattack will definitely be successful, he says. we believe in victory, we are moving towards our goal, we are advancing. on this part of the frontline, ukrainians believe they have the gear, manpower and determination to advance far. fred pleitgen, cnn, ukraine. the u.s. as sent fighter jets to the middle east to push back. fighter pilots are increasingly conducting unsafe maneuvers in the region including a russian attempt to dogfight planes. they say it runs the risk of escalation or miscalculation. u.s. military set to open a formal investigation into a deadly drone strike in syria after reports it killed civilian
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and not its intended target. the launch of the more formal inquiry is the clearest sign that the central command may have botched the drone strike. there is growing relief inside the pentagon that the man was a former with no signs of terrorism. he was a 56-year-old out grazing his sheep when he was killed. and the top dip low matt is heading to beijing for a long delayed trip to smooth over rocky relations.low matt is heading to beijing for a long delayed trip to smooth over rocky relations. and kristie lu stout is live this hour in hong kong with details. such a sensitive trip. how will they play it? >> reporter: yeah, and expectations are low for a breakthrough, but wednesday the u.s. and china both confirmed that secretary of state antony blinken will visit china this weekend. his trip was originally scheduled for february, but that
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was postponed due to the spy balloon incident. this will be the first visit by a u.s. secretary of state since 2019. first visit in five years. and senior state department official says that blinken is expected it reiterate a call for peace and stability in the taiwan strait and he was very cautious about the possibility of a breakthrough. this is what we heard from assistant secretary of state for east asian pacific affairs saying we're not going to beijing with the intent of having some sort of a break through or transformation. we're coming with a realistic confident approach and senincer desire to manage it in a responsible way. and he added blinken is expected to raise the issue of the three wrongfully detained u.s. citizens in china and also to call for appropriate high level military to military communications. earlier the u.s. secretary of
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state had this phone call with china's foreign minister on wednesday, and he urged the u.s. to respect china's core concerns including taiwan. and according to a foreign ministry readout of the call, the foreign minister said that the u.s. should respect china's position on the taiwan question, stop interfering in china's internal affairs and stop undermining sovereign security and in the name of competition. and this continudiplomatic rift there and it is deepening. but u.s. officials are hoping that this upcoming visit will pave the way for more bilateral meetings. back to you. and back to our breaking news, the house of commons privileges committee, a committee in the uk parliament, has found that former prime minister boris johnson knowingly misled parliament.
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the panel just issued its long awaited report on partygate. and scott mclean has -- 30,000 words. it is so comprehensive and you've had 28 minutes to read it. >> and so what i'll give you is not even close to comprehensive, but i've had a chance to sdim through some of it. it is 108 pages long. and parent to know that the committee was made up of seven people, four were conservative, two labours and one scottish national party. and the conclusion is that boreis are jboris johnson should be suspended for 90 days papd. last week he resigned in anticipation of this report. >> and people were talking longer. >> and now we have something that is 90 days. and this report goes in to excruciating detail into what
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precisely took place, what boris johnson said about it, and what the reality actually was. and so they looked at six gatherings in particular, five were thank you parties or leaving dos as they say, leaving drinks for colleagues moving on to greener pastures. and one was boris johnson's birthday which he concedes himself that was in violation of the rules. but he says look, at the time that he made the statement in the house of commons, december 8, he genuinely believe this had to be true when he said that i have been repeatedly assured since these allegations emerged that there were no -- there was no party and no covid rules were broken and that is what i have been repeatedlies assured. so this was december 2021. the committee found that, look, you ought to have known what the rules were and you ought to have known that there were serious questions about -- >> is the suggestion that he didn't receive that advice? >> yeah, so the report -- again,
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just going through it, but from what i've seen, it says that this was given by political media advisers, not official civil servants who were in position to know specifically what the rules actually were. and i just want to read you thises passage think a, it says came to the view that some of mr. johnson's denials and explanations were so disingenuous that they were by their very nature deliberate attempts to mislead the committee and the house while others demonstrated deliberation because of the frequency with which he closed his mind to the truth. >> and we have sound from boris johnson. whether or not he misled parliament is one thing, but they say he lied, which is the most damning part of this. but let's hear what he had to say about all of this. >> i have been repeatedly assured since these allegations
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emerged that there was no party and that no covid rules were broken. and that is what i have been repeatedly assured. >> so as you say, we have to read the report properly, but that is what we believe to be when he lied to parliament. what has he said since then? >> he put out a very long more than 1,000 word statement on friday denouncing the committee's work as biased from the get-go. and now he says this, i'll read you a few lines, he says the committee now says that i deliberately misled the house and when i spoke i was consciously concealing from the house my knowledge of illicit events. this is rubbish, it is a lie. in order to reach this deranged committee, the committee is obliged to say a series of things that are patently absurd or contradicted by the facts. so boris johnson not taking it lying down. and last week in his statement
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he very much hinted that he was stepping back from politics for now. but hinting that there may be a comeback story here. and surely the diehard boris johnson loyalists may also ginned up by all this. >> and notable that -- i think i heard one on british radio today. they are not piling out like they normally do. >> boris johnson may have plenty of support in the base of the conservative party, the rank and file membership, but what is clear is that he does not have anywhere close to the support of his own colleagues and mps in the house of commons. >> scott, enjoy reading the rest of it. coming up, reaction from jordan neely's family after the marine veteran who held him in a fatal chokehold on a new york city subway is indicted. plus support for donald trump remains rock solid in the granite state despite his arrest in the mar-a-lago documents case. >> what is your reaction to
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seeing that trump allegedly did this? >> well, right there with hunter biden. that don't mean nothing because i don't trust the doj. i do not trust the fbi. unlike some others, neuriva plus is a multitasasker supporting 6 key indicators of brain healtlth. to help keep me shsharp. neuriva: think bigger.
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if you are just joining us, let me bring you up-to-date with our top stories. a report has found that boris johnson misled parliament about his parties during the covid-19 rockefeller center. and the federal reserve won't raise rates this month, but jerome powell says they are still committed to bring down inflation to the desired 2% so
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future rate hikes are still likely. and donald trump's indictment in the mar-a-lago documents case doesn't seem to be cutting in to support. omar jimenez has reaction. >> it is not fair. i'm all about being fair. >> reporter: in this republican part of new hampshire, a 37 count indictment doesn't change much for some trump supporters. >> this is from the indictment. >> yep, trump told the individuals that the plan was highly confidential and secret, trump said as president i could have classified it and now i can't. but this is still a secret. what is your reaction to seeing that trump allegedly did this? >> well, it is right there with hunter biden. that don't mean nothing because i don't trust the doj, i don't trust the fbi. i hate to say it. but y'all need to come out with more info. >> so anything in here doesn't
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matter to you some. >> i will listen to it. i will not make a decision on any of it until i've heard a lot more. >> reporter: lee haines is not alone. many of trump supporters we spoke to pointed to a lengthy investigation into hunter biden's finances which remains ongoing, to hillary clinton being cleared of acting with criminal intent back in 2016, and what was described as a careless handling of classified information on the private email server, to these trump backers, it is all evidence of a double standard being applied now. >> it is look here but don't look here. i wish they would stop. like it is just too much. >> even in this there are pictures of the boxes stacked up and even spilled on the ground. that doesn't bother you? >> everything you see -- can't believe everything that you see. i don't know. i'm skeptical. they told us russia collusion was real for how many years and it proved through the mueller
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report that it wasn't. so how can i believe that at face value too. >> reporter: even as trump faces legal jep arrestky, he remains the clear frontrunner in the gop primary. the former president's rivals so far offering a range of reaction to the indictment. >> he says i'm more important than the country. these are my papers. >> if what it says is actually the case, president trump was incredibly reckless with our national security. >> this in-kdictment contains serious charges and i can't defend what is alleged. >> reporter: and some republicans believe that the allegations will help trump politically. >> this is uniting people. people are saying wait a second here, it is not d versus r. it is us against them. >> reporter: he too doesn't believe what is in the indictment. >> for you to know what is really the charge, you have to believe the charger.
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>> so contents of the indictment are essentially disqualified? >> completely disqualified because it is all done by a completely tilted justice department. >> reporter: and despite the latest allegations, he doesn't plan to change his vote. you voted for trump in 2016? >> i voted for trump in 2016. >> and in 2020? >> i voted for trump in 2020. >> and you plan to vote for him this cycle coming up? >> if trump is on the republican ticket for 2024, i will gladly vote for him again. >> he was the first person to give me the vote, 56 years old, and i did vote for trump in 2016, i voted for him again in 2020. at this point, i will vote for trump. >> you haven't seen anything to change your vote from trump? >> not really. but i do wait until the end but i do make the decision. you knee, if biden comes through with something stellar, who knows. >> reporter: one woman we spoke to who didn't want to appear on camera told us that she is not
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voting for him anymore. and she says that it is not just what happened over the past week or so, that since the last time she's voted for him in her words she's just done too many things wrong wrong. but this is the dynamic that some of the contenders will be dealing with, that if some of the trump supporters waiver, it won't be because of an indictment from the department of justice. omar jimenez, cnn, new hampshire. and manhattan grand jury indicted a veteran who held a man in a chokehold on the subway. he was indicted on second degree manslaughter charges. and he surrendered to police but is out on bond. the incident was caught on cellphone video. here is some of it. penny held neely in a chokehold after neely shouted he was
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thirsty, hundred sgry and didn' if he died. deputy commissioner of intelligence john miller has more on the legal process. >> the process has been a bit of a flash point. the family of jordan neely wanted to know why wasn't he arrested had night. prosecutors told police to hold off because they said we need more information. they wanted to hear the 911 calls, they wanted to see if there was any other video, they wanted to talk to the passengers on the train, ask them if they felt threatened. and finally on may 12 tth, they ordered his arrest and began the brand jury pr grand jury presentation. and the video is what he always wish you had. but the tape starts halfway
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through the incident. what it does not capture was the pacing around by mr. neely that witnesses described of him, balling his fists up, throwing his jacket down, talking about not being afraid to go back to jail or go away for life. so they are wondering what is he about to do that he could go away for life for. it suggests that he was about to hurt somebody in the mind of daniel penny. so it may come down to that video but also to the decision that his lawyers will make about do you put daniel penny on the stand because they are going to have to have some show of proof of what was in his mind when he decided to use that level of force that he can articulate he thought was about to happen that justified it. ahead, a medical breakthrough, scientists say they created the very start of an embryo in a test tube without any of the normal ingredients, would you believe.
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a medical school at the center of a bizarre scandal. the former head of the school's morgue is now facing federal charges of trafficking in stolen human body parts allegedly taken from the cadavers donated to the school. apparently no body parts were off-limits and were even sent through the u.s. mail system the past five years. he was fired from fharvard last month. and the dean at the school says that the reported incidents are a betrayal and those that willed their body parts for advanced education and research. u.s. and uk says they have created the first u.s. embryo like structures using stem cells
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and not using any eggs or sperm. while it doesn't have a beating heart or brain and raises legal and ethical breaks, but scientists say the embryo models could some day improve our understanding of the genetic diseases or what causes misca miscarriages. planting them in a womb would be illegal. meth was hidden in containers in canada. they intercepted more than 700 kilograms of meth worth more than $150 million. the seizure was made in january as part of an operation that involved police in australia and ca canada. six people have been arrested. pennsylvania's governor says develop demolition of the section of i-95 will be completed today. it happened after a truck caught
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fire. and pete muntean has more from washington. >> reporter: officials in philadelphia say the work of demolishing the bridge on i-95 in northeast philadelphia will finish up on thursday, but it is only the start of the process of getting traffic moving again which will take place in two parts. first fill in the gap created by the downed bridge and then there is no time line yet, but the good news is that temporary fill will allow all six lanes of i-95 north and south to open to traffic again. governor shapiro says this is the best and quickest way to get the critical spot of i-95 open. >> the most efficient way to reopen i-95 is to backfill the gap in the roadway behind me and
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then pave over it. this approach will allow us to avoid delays due to shipment and supply chain issues and pursue a simple quicker path. >> reporter: shapiro also says the work will take place around the clock and also they will stream it 24/7 on a web cam to show folks just how quickly this work is getting done. and it just shows how important this spot is to the area and beyond. we're also finding out more about the truck driver who was killed in this incident. the 53-year-old nathaniel moody, he was a life long trucker, he worked for a company called penn tank lines which ntsb says was this good safety standing with the fell government. pete muntean, cnn, washington. america's top selling buyer is no longer an american beer. the new number one beer, we'll tell you next. how can you sleep on such a firm setting? gab, mine is almost the same as yours.
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- [announcer] do you have an invention idea but don't know what to do next? call invent help today. they can help you get started with your idea. call now 800-710-0020. new to the stories in the spotlight. rover has sent back a stunning picture of the surface of mars. it took this photo in black and
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white. nasa added it in color to show the difference between light in the morning shown in blue and afternoon light showing yellow. beyond the rover track seen near the bottom of the screen is the site of an ancient lake previously discovered. barry henson will tee off today at the u.s. open in los angeles. he is ranked 444th in the world, but his rating as an uber driver is almost perfect. the 43-year-old has been shuttling people around southern california the past seven years while pursuing his passion for golf and now he finally has his big break. he qualified after a dominant performance in new jersey this month. amazing. buzz light is being de-- bu light had been the most popular beer, but now another lager has captured more than 8% of the
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retail beer sales with bud light falling to second place. analysts say a number of factors contributed to the drop in sales among them a barrage of negative headlines from right wing media over the company's partnership with a transgender influencer. and then the brand's tepid response angered many lgbtq+ advocates. thanks for joining me. i'm max foster. "early start" is up next. beach defense®, from neutrogena® more protection. more sun. more joy. the suncare brand used mosost by dermatologists for themselves and their families. vital protection for all yoyour days in the sun with neutrogena® beach defense®. moderate-to-severe eczema. it doesn't care if it's girl's night... fright night... or the big night. make your move and get out front of eczema with steroidree cibinqo.
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