tv CNN News Central CNN June 16, 2023 6:00am-7:00am PDT
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beauty is healing. you can change your environment. you really can. sometimes i just sit and i just smile. then i say, you know what? i'm not done yet. >> not done yet. to see more of mama shoe's incredible work cnnheroes.com and while you are there you can nominate your hero. >> you're my hero today. >> i got you, sister. >> have a great weekend. >> enjoy. >> everyone have a great weekend. cnn news central starts now. ♪ ♪ a tornado slams a small town in the texas panhandle killing at least three people and leaving utter devastation in its wake. cnn is on scene with a first look at the damage. the federal judge at the
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center of donald trump's classified documents case issues her first order. some see a sign maybe that she is looking for a speedy trial. this even as the trump team searches for additional attorneys. plus, pope francis leaves the hospital this morning after his surgery. his message today. we are following these major stories and more all coming in right here to cnn news central. ♪ ♪ three people are dead, dozens more injured after a tornado ripped through the small town of perryton, texas, leveling homes and businesses there. this drone footage shows some of the devastation left behind. the tornado shocking even some storm chasers. >> huge tornado on the ground! >> oh, my god. a tornado just went through town!
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>> tornado just went through town. guys, we have major damage. >> the catastrophic winds left behind piles of metal. a residents saying she saw dumpsters flying. medical staff from hospitals near perryton treated 100 patients. texas governor greg abbott has deployed state emergency resources to, quote, meet urgent life safety needs. it was more than 260 storm reports made in the last 24 hours from across multiple states. cnn's lucy kafanov joins us from perryton, texas. good morning. what are people telling you? >> reporter: well, folks in perryton are waking up and scrambling, struggling to come to grips with the scale of the destruction. you can see the extent of the damage down this alleyway behind me. this is just a small slice of the town. the town taking a direct hit. but more than the extent of the
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damage, what people are really struggling to come to grips with is how quickly all of this unfolded. keep in mind, this part of the country is no stranger to tornados. there are several tornado shelters right here, including a local library. i spoke to residents who said there was simply no time to get to safety. it unfolded so quickly. some thought they wouldn't survive. take a listen. >> and there was a time where i thought that i was going to die and i was going to leave a lot of things undone. i know there is people here who died today serving our community, and some of the best people i ever met in my life are here in this town. >> reporter: so much grief. this is a close-knit community where people know one another, people help one another, and those are the skills that folks are going to be relying on. right now people are finally
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returning to main street. there it is right there. you can see some of the trucks, some of the people. folks are dragging some of the metal rooftops that had collapsed. a lot of the structures are standing, but the glass is blown out. and so there is going to be a lot of cleanup and rebuilding work ahead in the days to come. >> certainly a long road ahead. lucy, thank you. >> i want to bring in cnn meteorologist derek van dam. we know that the threat of severe storm is not over yet. where does the focus turn now? >> we focus on the same kind of unusual weather pattern that's setting up across the deep south but we have got a flash flood warning ongoing for pensacola as well as mobile, alabama. take a look at the 12-hour rainfall totals out of this area, specifically the west pensacola region. they have had unconfirmed reports of up to 16 inches of rainfall, much of that falling within a three-hour period. cnn meteorologists did an
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analysis. that is similar to a rainfall occurrence of a one and one thousand-year event. so a small likelihood of that type of weather pattern unfolding across anywhere throughout the pensacola area. you can see the flood watches in effect. there is the flood warnings. mobile to pensacola. this has a considerable tag on it impacting a quarter million people. there were in fact evacuations that took place in the forest creek apartments in the heescama county region in west pensacola. that occurred overnight, coming from ala, our affiliate. you can see the training storms. what that means is that the storms moved over the same location for several hours at a time. there is more precipitation forming to the north and west. so this is concerning as a meteorologist to see more rain forming in the wake of what already occurred. so with these rainfall totals in such a short period of time, there were swift-water rescues that took place, emergency
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personnel were on the ground and now with more precipitation that is going to exacerbate the problem. talking about that 1 in 1,000 probability of occurrences, this in any given year. i want to highlight this. our analysis shows that there is literally a 0.1% chance of this occurring in pensacola. a rare event to say the least with more rain in the forecast right through the weekend. you can see how the forecast radar lights up. >> a lot more to watch. thank you. keep us posted. >> right. >> john. this morning we are learning two of donald trump's lawyers have reached out to the justice department to get security clearance. this is a requirement for them to get access to the evidence in his federal indictment and was also the subject of the first order by the judge overseeing the case, aileen cannon. she told trump's legal team they had to request the clearance by today and report book to her by next tuesday. jessica schneider is with us now on this. talk to us about the pace here and what that means.
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>> reporter: yeah, both doj and the judge, aileen cannon, want this process to move along as quickly as possible. judge cannon's first order of business was instructsing the attorneys to get in touch with doj to begin the security clearance process. our kaitlan collins is reporting that trump's lawyers todd blanche and chris kise have been in touch with doj because of course this case is comprise ds of highly sensitive classified materials and because of that these attorneys need to get security clearance in order to work with all of that material. in another turn here, john, this order is also significant because it shows that judge cannon, who has been criticized for siding with trump in a previous related case and whose ability to effectively manage this case has been questioned, it does show she is already getting into motion to manage her docket within days of trump's arraignment. you know, judge cannon is relatively new to the bench. she was nominated by donald trump in 2019 but she will be
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running this massive and complicated case and she is taking charge off the bat by trying to get the security clearance process in motion. in addition, judge cannon's order puts this additional pressure on the former president to get his legal team fully aligned. trump has chris kise, that's florida's former solicitor general, he is on his team. also todd blanche, they were in court with him during the arraignment this week. with ohno that trump is still looking for at least one other attorney and his team has been in touch with florida law firms. as you are aware, attornies have been hesitant to work with the former president. he really does have a history of not necessarily listening to legal advice and not always paying his bills. so they have to report to the judge by tuesday as to whether they coordinated with the doj which two of his lawyers have. we will see if we can get others onboard in the coming days. >> anything else on timing that judge cannon betrayed in this order and what can doj do? what can prosecutors do at this
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point if they want to keep things going in a fast manner? >> reporter: well, we know that the doj wants to get the security clearance process moving as well. it's not just the judge. presumably all parties will work quickly to get in touch with doj to get the security clearance process moving along here. judge cannon has set the deadline for today for the lawyers to get in touch with doj, for tuesday to report to her about the progress. so presumably, john, she will be monitoring things if not at a daily level, maybe weekly or, you know, gets status reports. she wants to keep this moving as well because such a high-profile case with massive implications and also a massive case for her to deal with. john. >> jessica, thank you so much for this reporting. >> with us now is national security attorney mark zaid. mark, that actually doesn't do you service. this is your space. you know as much about these types of cases broadly speaking pretty much as any attorney in
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america. so how quickly can these attorneys get the clearances they need in this case, and what does this first order from judge cannon tell you about her? >> i think the order made a lot of sense. good for her, for taking charge and moving forward. i would already have imagined or expected that trump's at least minuscule legal team at the moment was in contact with the justice department to start coordinating this. but it was a good first appearance by the judge to take this step. the counsel are going to have to complete what we call an sf-86, standard form 86. that's the national security questionnaire for all of us to obtain security clearances. and it is very lengthy form, 130 or so pages depending on which version you are looking at. it will depend on what's in these lawyers' background. it doesn't have to be negative
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like an arrest. it could be one is married to a foreign national or relatives overseas or as i understand it one of them, at least one, used to represent or still does some foreign government officials. all of those are issues that the u.s. government will take into account when adjudicating their trustworthiness or, more precisely, the risk to national security if they were given access to classified information. how long it will take? up to the executive branch, i once had a federal judge order the government to clear me in ten days. and i just laughed because that generally just can't happen. >> mark, we learned the former president has scheduled a rally for a couple of weeks from now in south carolina. what are the potential problems that could arise from these public political events? how could it impact the legal case? >> well, there is a huge conflict between the legal case
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and the public relations political case. and i don't think that conflict is going away. the lawyers would be telling donald trump, what has been discussed so many times, please stop talking. every time he talks, he digs a further hole for himself from a legal standpoint. the problem is, politically, every time he speaks, it looks like it's favorable. his poll numbers go up. fundraising increases. it energizes the base. this case, as has been discussed so often, is going to be dragged out as long as possible. it is in trump's best interest to take it past the election in 2024 because if he wins, this case goes away. not the state cases if they still exist, but this case does. so he might as well push it out as far as possible. so i think you are going to hear him say a lot of things at the rallies and most of us as lawyers and you as journalists are going to go, you've got to be kidding me. this is what we have right now. >> mark, as i said, you know, no
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two cases are exactly alike but you have worked in this space more than most attorneys in this country. so most people who have done similar things to what donald trump is accused of doing, what charges have they faced? in other words, is he being treated differently? and ultimately, what's the possible sentence for the types of crimes that you have seen? >> sure. he has been treated differently. but it's been favorably to him. if this had been my client, my normal mid-level senior manager inside a federal agency, what we say a gs-14 or 15, maybe even a senior executive service representative, they would have been indict add long time ago and they would have not been asked nicely to return the classified information the way donald trump was over a period of many, many, many months. so things would have been different for sure. these cases are rare.
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when it really comes down to it, but they do happen. there are other mishandling cases or leak cases, but even with mishandling, we have got 37 counts against him. if you look at everything, you are talking over 300 years, that's not realistic, obviously. most of these cases, which rarely go to trial because the person pleads out because there is really nothing to say at the trial itself as to whether they did it or not factually, but they have recently been like three to nine years for prison time. so president trump is facing real jail time. i am sure any one day for him is going to be unacceptable. but that's what he is facing. >> mark zaid, great to have you on this morning. you can handle the truth despite what the book behind you says this morning. great to have you on. rahel. >> thank you.
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and in just a couple of hours, attorney general merrick garland and other top justice department officials expected to announce the findings of a two-year-long investigation into the practices of the minneapolis police department. the long awaited probe followed the murder of george floyd by former minneapolis police officer coderek chauvin. adrienne broaddus is live in minneapolis with the details. do we have any sense of what this federal investigation found? >> reporter: well, rahel, it's likely this federal investigation will mirror a or reflect some of what we saw in this state's investigation. you may remember minnesota's department of human rights investigated the minneapolis police department and it found practices of racial discrimination. we are talking about traffic stops and use of excessive force, especially when dealing with people of color. now, i'm not saying that's exactly what this report will
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reveal, but based on those findings, folks here in the community say they will not be surprised if that is the case. now, in terms of the department of justice, not only did to look at training within the minneapolis police department and some of the practices within mpd, doj members also spoke with community leaders. they wanted to hear about their experiences with officers with the minneapolis police department. and that included teams. we are talking about youth. i spoke with jerome richardson. he founded a local group here called minnesota teen activists, and it's really not local because if you look on social media they have at least 50,000 followers, not only here in minnesota, or minneapolis, but across the state. and he shared some of his experiences, too. so the big question that folks here in the community say they want answered is how will the minneapolis police department be
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reformed. rahel. >> we will check in with you as we expect to matter from alejandro mayorkas at 11:00 a.m. new overnight, a combined air attack on kyiv as president zelenskyy says there is a way ukraine can win this war. we are waiting to hear from the supreme court today on several high-stakes cases. the opinions that had have sweeping impacts across the united states. and first on cnn, a global cyberattack hits major u.s. government agencies and we know who was behind it. ♪ ♪ let your love shine. book an appointment now with a bridal jewelelry expert. at zales, the diamond store.e. doors lead us to new opportunities. your dedicated fidelity advisor... -surprise! -for you, mama. ...can help you open those doors. by proactively reviewing your entire portfolio. with an eye taxes and risk.
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in african leaders peace mission. the ukrainian president volodymyr zelenskyy says he sees a path forward for ukraine to win this war. >> translator: i cannot give you all of the details. there are both defensive and offensive actions. things look not bad, and it is generally positive. our heroic people, and the troops, who are now at the front line, they are facing very tough resistance. we understand why. because for russia, to lose this campaign to ukraine, i would say actually means losing the war. >> cnn's sam kiley is live in kyiv and you can hear the president zelenskyy saying that the counter offensive is going as he puts it "not bad." he is clearly fighting a
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military war, but also a public relations war in a diplomatic battle at the same time, sam. >> yeah, and that diplomatic battle has gone his way thanks to this overnight attack while seven heads of government and heads of state ministers from african nations are here in kyiv and the next stop is moscow, and a visit to the kremlin, anded they are traveling with what they are saying is a peace plan with what both sides are going to be willing to endorse, and it is going to require the withdrawal of russian forces entirely from the ukrainian territory which is the position of the western allies backing president zelenskyy and the rest of ukraine frankly, and by firing the missiles for example, and six of them, the most hypersonic missiles in the armory and while the south
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african president ramaphosa is here plays into the hands of president zelenskyy, because president ramaphosa is part of the kremlin to have joint military exercises with the russian navy is backfiring on the kremlin, and also, president zelenskyy is preparing the international community and the kremlin when he is describing quite honestly a grinding and difficult campaign, and it is going to be bloody, and even if the ukrainians are successful, they are still going to be taking significant losses, and the greatest hope, john, is to try to have a sufficiently frightening advance that the russian military, themselves, collapse, because political support for this war among the fighting men and women of russia is dwindling, and this is their hope, john. >> to wear them out is one of the goals of the ukrainians to
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be sure. sam kiley, great to have you there for sure. ra rahel. >> we are keeping an eye on the supreme court as to which cases court will rule on and if any, but some of the cases will have a major impact on affirmative action and student loan debt forgiveness and lgbtq rights. so i think that we should start with the three cases impacting college students, and a lot of people could be impacted by these case, affirmative action and student loans. what are we expecting? >> right. all eyes are on this conservative majority to see how fast and how far it going to go. in the two affirmative action cases, the court will answer the questions as to whether colleges and universities can continue to take race into consideration as a factor in admissions plans. the plans are harvard's plan and
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the university of north carolina and the schools are basically saying, look, we want to be able to increase diversity on campus, and the campuses are a pipeline to society, and that is why we want to be able to do this, but the challengers here say, look, this violates equal protection, and they say it amounts to racial discrimination, and important to watch here is that once again, this court is being asked to overturn decades' old precedent here in a case that could really change the face of college campuses. there is another case where the courts are taking aim at president biden's student loan forgiveness program. that initiative was put forward to give relief to millions of borrowers in the wake of covid, and here, republican states came back and said, look, biden has no authority to do this and to basically erase billions of dollars of student debt. important here, because at the
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oral arguments this conservative majority seemed very, very skeptical of biden's authority here, and of course, that is a real blow to president biden. >> and also, there is another case that involves religious liberty and gay rights and a question of whether an opinion here could really open the door for many more cases like it. >> right. well, this case has to do with the graphic designer. she wants to start a business to celebrate weddings, but she does not want to create her web sites for same sex weddings, and it is a closely watched case, because the supporters of the lgbtq rights say that she is looking to give businesss a license to discriminate to give exceptions to the public accommodations laws, and this could impact other areas, and not just religious actions and what about race and disability. the web designer sees this through a web of speech. she says that the government
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cannot force her to create a custom product that delivers a message that goes against her religious beliefs. and so that is why she wants them to rule in her favor in this big case. we have seen some surprises already in some of the opinions, but the court usually leaves most controversial cases until the last, and that could come in the next couple of weeks. >> as you point out, could have major cimplications for million of people. thank you, arriana. and now, there is an investigation into the saudi firm that owns liv golf and the pga. the surprise deal is coming after the senators are raising concerns about anti-trust violations. they say that controversialing a fwreem -- agreement could sportswash
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their human rights deal. and now, it is decided that pearson and jones were suspended after a guns right protest on the house floor. their hearing is later this year. and now, a bangladeshi woman has been sworn in as a judge for the eastern district of new york. rahel. and now, the deaths of two americans staying at a luxury resort in mexico, and what the authorities are saying about a possible cause of death. and the warning after several federal agencies including the department of energy were hit by a global cyber attack, and why hundreds of american companies could also be at risk. we will be right back.
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for $49.99 a month for 12 months. plus ask how to get up to a $750 prepaid card with qualifying internet. now, to a cnn exclusive. atop u.s. official says that several u.s. agencies have been hit in a cyber attack conducted by russian hackers, and it is unclear how many organizations have been affected in total, but some of the known victims are department of energy and john hopkins university and their hospital system. and natasha, what more are you learn about this cyber attack? >> yeah, rahel, and this is a sprawling global cyber attack that has impacted hundreds of
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governments across the u.s. as well as state and local entities as well as major u.s. universities, including john hopkins universities and several federal agencies and according to the department of energy, they were included in the hack. they released a statement last night that learning that two department of energy entities were hacked, the doe took further steps to prevent further vulnerability, and notified the infrastructure agency, and that agency has been taking lead in investigating how this happened, but according to the u.s. officials what happened here is that a very popular widely used file transfer software called move it was found to have a flaw by these hackers and they exploited the vulnerability that allowed them to get into all of the different entities, and according to the company that owns the software, that company
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has found a second vulnerability that they are working to fix right now. but, the fact that this vulnerability was found has allowed the russian hackers, but also potentially other criminal cyber actors to potentially exploit it, and get into more victims. now, in termsf who is respo responsible, we are told it is a russian hacking group called clop, a ransomware organization taking responsibility for many of the attacks, and it is not clear if they are responsible for all of them, but they have been asking the victims for ransomware payments on the website, but they told federal agencies that they are not interested for payment of that data, and it has been erased, but it is showing how when you have a vulnerability in a widely used software, kit have devastating and sprawling and global consequences. >> concerning. thank you, natasha bertrand, live in washington.
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john. >> the federal jury is deciding the fate of the man involved in the 2018 shooting in a synagogue with the largest shooting in u.s. history, and the jury will decide if the man should be put to death. danny freeman has been following this case in pittsburgh, and we heard the closing arguments and now the jury is deliberating. >> that is right, john. we have learned that the jury is back to court and started to deliberate at 8:40 this morning. we heard the powerful and intense statements from the prosecution, and much shorter and muted arguments from the defense. the prosecution started first by arguing that october 27th, 2018 was a normal day here in pittsburgh, especially for the members of the tree of life synagogue and other congregations there, and it was rainy and overcast, but otherwise normal until, i will quote here robert bowers turned
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a sacred house of worship into a hunting ground. the prosecution further said that bowers killed the jewish people there just because they were jewish. throughout the prosecution's closing arguments they reiterated and showed some of the more horrific and graphic images of what occurred that day, and we have a look at the survivors of the people who were killed that day, and they were stoic, and then we broke for lunch, and the defense brought their case, and it was only 25 minutes. they said no dispute that robert bowers is the one who killed those 11 worshippers that morning, but then they tried to poke hole in the motives that he did not kill them because they were jewish, but because one of the congregations supported a refugee settlement group, and it is not about because them being
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jewish, but because they were immigrant supporters, and this is the crux of that. and now this is what we got a statement from the new life congregation, and they lost three members. they wrote in the statement saying that there can be no forgiveness here. forgiveness requires two components, it is offered by the person who commits the wrong and accepted by the person who accepts the ask, but the shooter has not asked for forgiveness, and so it cannot be given. and so those who, i should say, those are capital offenses, and if he is convicted of the 22 charges, then we will be talking about a death penalty phase afterwards. >> so hard to see the pictures. danny freeman, keep us post and the jurors are behind closed doors deliberations at this moment.
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rahel. >> new questions about the gop accusations that there are audio tapes indicating the bidens in a bribery scheme, and now the same republican leaders who have been pushing the theory admit that they don't know if the tapes exist. bill gates is in china for what the chinese president called the first meeting so far for what he called an american friend. details on what the two discussed. built with rotisserie-style chicken and doububle cheese. i love what i'm seeing here. that's some well-coached chickcken. you done, peyton? the susubway series just keepsps gettin' better. yoyour work is your calling. it drives your days and powers your nights. but if your teeth no longer work as hard as you do, aspen dental is here with smile replacement solutions that work for your le. whether it's your first step, or a fast x, you can get in today for all your dentureeeds, all at an afrdable price. right now, get 20% off dentures and make your smile work for you again.
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you get listening more than talking, and a personalized plan built on insights and innovative technology. you get grit, vision, and the creativity to guide you through a changing world. ♪ this morning, some republicans are admitting that they don't know if there is any truth to the allegation that 17 audiotapes exist that implicate president biden and hunter
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biden. this morning chuck grassley brought up these tapes when biden was vice president and now he is backtracking saying that he has not heard them, and he does not know if they are real. >> the foreign national who allegedly bribed joe and hunter biden has recordings with them, and 17 such recordings. i just know that they exist because of what the report exists, but how do i know that they exist, because the fbi is going to tell us. >> and the senators learned about the tapes from the form known as fd-1023. the document summarizes several conversations of a informant and international who said that the executive offered joe and hunter biden $5 million bribebribes.
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a lot there. and zachary cohen is here to parse this. what exactly are these tape, and explain the backtrack that is appearing to be happening among some republicans. >> yeah, john, this is a bold claim from a senior republican in chuck grassley who says that there is a dozen audiotapes of unknown national with bidens and president joe biden when he was vice president and son hunter about the alleged bribery scheme. we, reporters have been pressing the republicans to prove this and show any evidence that it is remotely true, and so far, the republicans have failed to back them up, but they have shyed away from grassley's claim about the audiotapes. listen to what the house oversight james comer and senator ron johnson whose own investigation into the biden's foreign dealings have said about
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grassley's claims. >> we don't know if they are legit or not, but the foreign national claims he has them. >> i don't know if we have verified that the recordings exist. >> so the republicans have lobbed a variety of allegations out there under hunter biden who is under investigation under his own right, but there is no direct correlation between the president and the allegations, but this is a series of allegations of the republicans trying to make something stick. >> does the fbi have something to say about this? >> the senior fbi was up on capitol hill and asked about the existence of the audiotapes, and because we know that the fbi form and allegations were passed along to the u.s. attorney, he would not comment on the investigative matter, but still, a line between legitimate investigations, and then these
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political attacks by republicans, and that line can be blurry. >> thank you, for explaining what is and isn't maybe going on here. rahel. john, coming up for us, a historic case playing out in montana as a dozen or more are stepping out saying they are being impacted by climate change and being violated by the constitution. and now, pope francis being released from the hospital, and how he is going to be conducting public events starting this sunday. it gets in between teeth to destroy 5x more plaque above the gumline than floss. for a cleaner, healthier mouth. listerine. feel the whoa!
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did you ever stress about us having three kids? no, that was always part of the plan. three kids?! this was never part of the plan! these kids order the lobster mac 'n cheese! what if she wants to play golf? we're going to have to outlaw golf. absolutely no golf in this house! not under my roof! since we started working with empower, all of our financial questions have been answered, so we don't have to worry. so you never- nope. always part of the plan. join 17 million people and take control of your financial future to empower what's next. start today at empower.com the sleep number climate360 smart bed is the only smart bed in the world that actively cools, warms, and effortlessly responds to both of you for up to 44 minutes more restful sleep per night. save $1,500 on the sleep number climate360 smart bed. shop now only at sleep number.
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the state department says that two americans who were found dead at a mexican resort have been identified as abby lutz, 28-year-old, and her 41-year-old boyfriend john heathco. they had been sick on the trip, but they thought it was food poisoning, and they are poisoned by a substance to be determined. there is no indication of foul
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play. in canada at least 15 people are dead after a bus carrying senior citizens collided with a semi truck. it happened in manitoba province. the survivors of the bus and the truck are being treated and the prime minister is sending condolences to the familiesf those killed in the crash. and this morning, gates was called to help with foreign relation, and xi says that he is the first american friend he has seen all year. and now, the pope is out of the hospital and back at the vatican. he was released after abdominal surgery last wednesday. he was surrounded by well wishers before he left the hospital in rome, and he joked
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saying "i'm still alive." we go to barbie at the vatican in rome. what is the pope saying? >> he is 86, and any pontiff who has had this string of surgeries and health concerns, you would be extremely happy that he is alive. he is going to be given the angelis, and he comes to the window, and says a prayer and blesses people from his window, and unless that changes, he is going to be doing that. they have canceled his wednesday audience which is a grueling three-hour play for tours and visitors, and he won't be doing that, but he is meeting with leaders from cue band a brazil, and private audience, because
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they want him to recover and rest. he has two big trips coming up. a youth trip in portugal and then another big trip in the end of august, so they want him to finish his recovery. after he left the hospital, he went to the basilica of st. mary, and he always goes there, and he undoubtedly went there to pray to the virgin mary to thank her for the recovery and the fact that he got out of the hospital. >> and the trip to portugal and brazil, and those are still on the calendar, and they are quite arduous? >> yes, and time and time again, the pope has prove tone have the stamina of someone much younger than him, and he is such a symbol of someone suffering in public, and the fact that he is in pain so often and continues to work, and this is inspiration to a lot of people.
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john? >> thank you, barbie naseau, thank you, and keep us posted. a search and rescue team is continuing in perryton as a tornado ripped through the town and survivors are picking up the pieces. the supreme court is expected to release the next round of decisions, and many with major implications. we will have all for you ahead. o enjoy what i love e to do. as long as you can make an impact, why stop? subway's still upping their game. show us how stephen. italian style capicola brings
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