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tv   CNN News Central  CNN  June 19, 2023 8:00am-9:00am PDT

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new developments in the criminal case against donald trump, and details of how the judge's order will limit what the former president can say about the case. also, the secretary of state antony blinken is meeting with the chinese president xi jinping in beijing and what they said about the high-stakes meeting. one man is dead and two dozen injured after a tornado touches down in mississippi, and the severe weather is not over yet. this is cnn "news central." and we begin this hour with new developments in the federal
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indictment of donald trump with judge saying that he cannot reveal any information that was given to him in the attorney discovery phase. so what more are we learning about this order? >> well, rahel, what we have here is a procedural thing, but it is one of the early things that happens for a criminal defendant in this case donald trump where the criminal defendant has to follow the judge's rules. the rules we have now, it is called a protective order, and this sort of order is something that tells a criminal defendant, their lawyers and any witnesses and their lawyers that they might be talking to in preparation for the trial that they can't just share evidence that the justice department turns over. so the justice department is going to turn over all of the evidence that they have collected to go to trial, and he can't share it. trump can't share it, and the lawyers can't share it, and the witnesses can't share it, and specifically, he can't keep
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copies of it, and even notes that he would make about the information of the evidence that he would make, it has to stay in the hands of the lawyers and locked down. and on top of that, none of the information can be shared with the public or the press or shared on social media either crucially, and this is going to mean two things in the crucial course of the case, this is moving fast. they have the protective order in place, and the justice department is going to be turning things over quickly, and this is an order that the trump team and the justice department did not have to fight over, and that is something that is going to be how this case gets started. and this is an order that donald trump is going to have to follow in this case as he heads to trial, and it is a crucial thing on top of the regulations that he has not to be talking to any of the witnesses that the justice department identifies to him about the details of the case. >> that is crucial kaitlan p
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poelantz about what he can and cannot do. and now, the post report of the fbi about january 6th is that they had resisted opening up an investigation for more than a year. and now joining us is the article here, andy, that is very long here, and many, many pages long and i am trying to digest it over the last several minutes, but the gist of it is that there is reluctance within the justice and the fbi circle that they were working on the january 6th capitol, but they did not want to start from the top-down, and say s hey, what is the former president's role
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there, and the people around him that day, do they have responsibility, and what are you making of this, andy mccabe? >> well, a couple of things to point out. the article does not allege that there is resistance on the part of the investigators, and so there is not any part of the investigators unwilling to move forward for the colleagues to investigate, but the resonance was coming from the highest levels of the office including attorney general, and then the fbi director including deputy wray and this is so powerful to me because not only navigating the bureau through a politically-charged set of investigations through 2016, but
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also because this article, if accurate, and we have no reason to believe otherwise, clearly shows what happens when you subject institutions like the fbi and the department of justice to relentless baseless political attacks. what happens is the threshold for taking action in any individual case that involves political people begins to rise. so, you will see the people in decision-making positions become more and more weary to become sensitive that could affect the political ire and prevent them from doing their job. so that is the allegation here and the many facts that it brings up are concerning along those lines. >>erroll, there was a time in the january 6th congressional
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hearings that all of the facts were coming out where there were those who said, wait a second here, why is this only being learned now by this congressional committee investigation, and isn't this the type of thing that a legal investigation should have been unearthing, and this is answering that. >> yes, and they did it along the lines of the organized crime investigation, and you see the low level offenders putting the feet up on the speaker's office or ransacking the capital, and you get them to flip, and move up slowly, slowly up the chain. it is a detailed investigation, in part of what we have seen, and a lot of the loose talk on the campaign trail, and people saying "defund the fbi" it is the deep state, it is all the political state, former president saying that time and time again, and the way you
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counter act that is with specific details, and it is part tof the justice department, assuming it is true that they were not going to be driven by the political calendar or ks. >> -- or considerations. >> and to my estimation, it was to a fault. so one of the things that donald trump and his allies are saying that he is treated differently by other people and the legal system, and this is an example of yes, he was treated differently, because he was not investigated as quickly and harshly as others might have been. >> that is absolutely right. so let me address the first part. having spent the entirety of the first half of my career doing nothing but organized crime organizations, i know that full well although this is typically, and that is the descriptions of the investigations like that, and it is like organized crime
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and you start at the bottom, and work up, and this is true, because it is easier to find witnesses for organized crime cases for the lower level offenders, but you don't just target the lower level people, but you go to the head of the crime family, and come at both directions, and what is alleged in the article is that it was not done here, and they deliberately did not direct people in the president's orbit to provoke backlash or criticism of the organization, and i find that to be very, very concerning. the risk that you run in doing that is to move too slowly and losing access to critical witnesses, memories, phone records, things that disappear over time. did that happen in this case? well, it might have, and we will find out later. so i think it is a very concerning, very concerning allegation, and one that
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deserves more scrutiny. >> errol, what does this tell us about attorney general merrick garland and what to expect for the rest of the administrations? >> most of us heard about him when he was a nominee for the supreme court. he is not in that position, but what is coming through in this article, and what to expect is a kind of the judicial pace and temperament, and someone who is scrupulously fair, and sweats details, and spending 10 to 12-hour days at the justice department and personally signing off on every charging decision, and making sure that it would not be subjected to criticism or overturned or found to have been done procedurally incorrectly, and procedure is what we can expect to him, and crackdowns on the staff who gave unauthorized information to the
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media, and the crackdown, and he, himself said that there are hundreds of cases made of the judicious conspiracy of the oathkeepers and the work speaks for itself. >> thank you for helping us to digest this article so quickly. thank you. and now, after high-stakes talks happen in beijing, where do the two super powers go from here? we got reaction from china, and we will bring it to you. and this is one of the most intense gun firefights i have ever seen, as state troopers were randomly attacked and one was killed. what the police are saying about the gunman. this morning a juneteenth celebration takes a deadly turn outside of chicago. there are zero suspects, but one killed. we will take you live to the scene. you are watching cnn "news central."
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of brain health. to help keep me sharp. neuriva: think bigger. apa state troop ser dead as a second trooper remains hospitalized after a shootout with a suspect. the officials say that the gunman first shot a trooper outside of a police barracks. the officers chased him and exchanged gun fire in multiple locations, and eventually he was shot and killed. eva liu has been identified as the american tourist who was
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assaulted a andnd pushed into a ravine in germany. the classmate was also pushed into the ravine, but survived. the suspect is a 30-year-old man who is also a u.s. citizen and also in custody, but his name has not been released. and now, after the cash has been disqualified, the crew's blue marlin weighed in at 104 pounds, but the judge said that they found at the tournament that it had been mutilated by a shark or some other animal, and so it was disqualified, and the tournament went to a fish that weighed 135 pounds less. go figure. rahel. and now, secretary of state antony blinken's critical high
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st stakes meeting with chinese president xi jinping went to call it remarkable, and then called it current suppression, and the bottom line is that the tension is running deep, and that as secretary blinken said it strengthened relations. >> i came here to anticipate areas of disagreement, and explore where we can work together where our positions align and work on transnational agreements, and we have done all of that. >> he said that they made progress and reached agreements on some issues. key points of tension, taiwan, spying and the war in ukraine, and also the sale the u.s. sanctions have placed on semiconductor chips. so the u.s. seems to be placing
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blame on china for the downturn of relation, and what are you seeing there, jim? >> well, a scolding tone of secretary blinken before the meeting and saying something along the lines of i hope that you, secretary blinken, and america will do more to help relations and putting the onus on the u.s. implying that it is the u.s. to be the problem, and on the flipside with the high stakes meetings, you have to take the good and the bad, and the president did sit down with the u.s. secretary of state, and with that, he met with foreign minister and other chinese official, and this is progress where in the past, the whole meeting was canceled. so they are talking, and talking considering how serious the divisions are right now, that is something. it is providing channels the discuss these issues and
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hopefully not allowing them to escalate, but the issues as you pointed out, they still exist. >> and this is a first step as you pointed out and representing something towards progress, but jim, from your point of view, p pov, where is there room to grow, and where was progress made? >> well, the biggest one is taiwan. i just returned from taiwan, and i met with high-level government and spent time with the military to observe some of the drills they are doing regularly, because taiwan is preparing for the possibility of a chinese inv invasion, and they are weorried there and also to be caught in between the two super powers, and they are not certain of what to do there.
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bli blinen accused china of having unspecified military equipment in the area, and one thing that the u.s. didn't get was near contact. and we have had a chinese jet fly right in front of a american aircraft and that was on purpose, and we had a sea vessel almost come up right to a u.s. vessel and almost made contact, and that was very important, but
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there is no lines of communication, and they did leave the meeting without an agreement. >> so, jim, if you are sitting in taiwan and you see this meeting, and they are stuck in the middle. what is the p, v there? >> well, taiwan is happy to see the u.s. and china talking. they have been carrying on their own military actions, and making it clear that any military action against taiwan is serious, and they are such training everyday for such a possibility. i watched some of the exercises last week training for the airborne assault on taiwanese strait itself, and so they are taking it seriously so. they are trying not to maintain independence from china, but they are a democratic state and
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they have their 10th own economy in the world, and they want things to stay the way they are, a their worries are more than onement one, china chooses to invade, and the other is that the u.s. and china, events and relations are so hostile between that taiwan becomes a pawn in between them, and they don't want that to happen either. so, it is a nervous island right now, given the state of the relations, but one that >> jim sciutto, thank you for your insights. john, as we said, a senior official calling these talks a new beginning, and so what that looks like, we will wait to see, but they are having the talk, and seems to be moving in a different direction s and thaug direction. >> and jim sanger used a phrase set a bottom. so china did not want them to be worse. maybe that is what they are
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this morning, assessing the damage after a deadly tornado swept through mississippi leaving widespread damage in the wake. one person was killed while the storm touched down in lewen and this is one of six tornado reports in the last 24 hour, and the threat is not over yet. cnn meteorologist jennifer gray is in the weather center. jennifer, where are the danger zones now? >> well, the threat for today is going to be along the gulf coast, and into the portions of the southeast, and damaging wind gusts and large hail will be the primary threats today, but we could see isolated tornadoes the daix and we could see more risks today. the greatest risk is five percent chance from the gulf of
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mexico from the louisiana and mississippi border to the florida panhandle which is the area to be on the risk of tornadoes. again, it is a small chance, but we could see some. we have tornado warnings right here in southern portions of birmingham, and very, very strong storms, and a lot of lightning associated with these, and severe thunderstorm warnings across portions of georgia and southern portions of alabama. so as they continue the push to the east, we will see them slide down across the gulf coast, and this is late tonight around 8:00, and you can see the spotty showers, and storms through atlanta, charleston and charlotte through the overnight hours, and then across the ark
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la >> and i understand it is hot in texas. >> yes, it is, and people across louisiana and northeast texas they don't have power, because of the storms that came through there over the weekend, and so excessive heat warnings in effect, and heat advisories in effect across a huge chunk of the south, and temperatures in the triple-digits, and factoring in the heat index, and we will be feeling warmer, and some areas could feel warmer than 120 for the afternoon, and it is going to be a dangerous heat settling in, and feels-like temperatures today 121 for corpus christi, and san antonio at 114, and shreveport at 107, and the temperature in dallas running 10 degrees above normal and triple-digits monday and tuesday, and it is going to put a strain on the power supply, but they believe they have enough to meet the demand.
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>> thank you. rahel? >> one teenager was shot at a party, and the authorities say they recovered multiple weapons and one person is in custody. in washington state, two people were shot at a campgrounds electronic music festival. one man ran through a crowd, and officers tracked him down and arrested him. west of chicago, a juneteenth celebration took a deadly turn after an unknown number of suspects fired multiple rounds into the crowd, and 22 people were hurt, and adrian broaddus is joining with us more on that. >> of those hurt, ten of them transported to nearby hospitals. a spokesperson with the
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sheriff's department says two in critical condition and one of them died after a parking lot party took place here according to deputies with the dupage sheriff's department. >> it was major gunfire and about 60 rounds and you could tell it was two different groups of people. >> people were running, and a man fell on top of me with a gunshot wound on his leg, and it is like something that you would not imagine. >> investigators say that an unknown number of suspects fired multiple shots into the crowd that was here. and here we are monday still no arrests and no one in custody. rahel. >> awful.
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adrienne is live for us there in willow brook. john. >> thank you, rahel. our friend victor plblackwell jt went into his family and the country's painful past. that is next. e a thing go right ♪ ♪ it takes two to make it outta sight ♪ ♪ one, two, get loose n now ♪ ♪ it takes two to make a... ♪ stay two nights and get a $ 50 best western gift carar. book now at bestwestern.com. neutrogena® retinol? that's whenever you want it to be. it has derm-proven retinol that targets vital cell turnover, evens in tone, and smooths fine lines. with visible results in just one week. neutrogena® retinol.
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place for history. victor blackwell, good to see you. you worked with the museum to find your ancestors. >> yes, they traced my ancestors back 350 year, and it started with a phone call, and i knew a little, but not a lot. i started with my ganrandfatherf the early 1930s, and my grandmother held on to an article of an obituary with names. i am a black man with deep roots in the south, but i thought that i knew, but as you are about to see s i was wrong. >> reporter: very few moments in my career have ever brought me to this. this is, oh, man. it happened at the charleston african-american museum in
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charleston, south carolina. it happened at the historic gadsden's wharf. >> most african-americans would have come through this wharf which we call ground zero of the importation of african-americans into the united states. >> this is dr. tanya, the director of the museum. >> relics and imports. >> it is the full story, but you get the full context in it. >> what is the best celebration of full context is the center's family history and a team of researchers with access of millions of records that can trace the african-americans sometimes back to the slave ship that came into this very port. the expert genealogist here
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spent months tracing my lineage, and this is the day of the long awaited reveal. >> make sure that you have a box of kleenex by you and sit there and enjoy. >> that is the museum's top genealogy michelle troy at the museum. >> this is a snapshot of your tree and i am following your maternal line. >> wow. that is a lot to see, the tree. you see that box? that is david viney, my great grandfather's father. they lived on a farm with their 18 grandchildren. he filed this claim to be reimbursed for supplies requisitioned by troops in the civil war. >> what is significant is that he owneded land he was on and it is 23 acres. >> where did a man in the
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1870s -- >> yes. >> reporter: so soon after the end of slavery get the money to buy 23 acres. >> absolutely. and the thing of it is that i would question that he said that he was free-born. >> reporter: for answers we have to go back more than 300 years to my great great great great great great great grandmother mary. she arrived a ship in north umberton county in 1812, and her mother, my eight-time grandmother bess was uncovered in a deposition. >> at that time, she was about 13 years old, and witnesses said they apparently looked like indians. >> researchers said they were
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looking like matmattaponi. >> well, researchers in that richmond county did enslave one of beth's children and that was sara. >> and sara was my seven-time great grandmother changes trajectory of her children and all of the descendents who followed. >> there was a law in 1705 that declared that all children that are enslaved or free, their condition would be based on whatever their mother was. >> reporter: remember, sara and bess arrived free people. >> so sara has a lawsuit filed that says we are free. >> reporter: this is the actual lawsuit filed by sara suing for her freedom, and the freedom of her descendents, and in that deposition, it is from a witness who saw mary and bess arrive decades earlier. >> so in 1791, the court agreed
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with sara and her children and grandchildren and all of those relatives who were descendents of mary and beth's are going to be free. >> that my ancestors filed and sued for their freedom, and it is remarkable. >> we are not done. >> we are not done. okay. we are not done. okay. let me get a kleenex. >> i told you to have a box there. >> but not all of sara's family was free. before she was free, her daughter was sold, rachel, and then for the next 20 years unaware of the court's ruling, they remained in bondage. when she learned of the decision, more than a quarter century of her mother's court-breaking decision, she
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learned of the enslavement to be free. >> and then the witnesses and things came through, and they were awarded their freedom. so, what do you think? >> man. this is, oh, man. to be an enslaved woman suing your slave master, and to do it twice in one blood line. >> and in virginia. >> remarkable. >> your line started out enslaved and became free up until where you are at right now. >> it became free because those women fought for it. >> i'm going to tell you what, victor, the women in your family is unbelievable. >> hmm. it fills in a lot of gray. a lot of blank space. there was nothing there.
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there was an assumption, and now there are names and relatives and places and stories. it certainly fills in more of the story of my family's place in this country. >> incredible. >> that is remarkable. >> every time i watch it, and they gave me a book of all of the documents and i flip through it, and i'm still floored. every time i look through the names and the dates and the places, i knew none of this. i knew none of it. >> i frankly didn't even know that this type of thing went on. i would not have known that this was even possible. >> the lawsuit. >> yes, a lawsuit like that. >> the lawsuit, and the purpose initially of the law was to keep people enslaved. so that, if there were essentially, and let's be clear, rapes here that created children
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of a free man and enslaved woman, that is an enslaved child, but this is used in the opposite direction to free people who came in free and were not supposed to be enslaved because of that law. >> victor, can i just ask how you are feeling, because it is a lot. it is a lot to unpack there. >> those tears were tears of gratitude, of joy. but that is the moment, i could not reach the words, and i said remarkable, but it was astonishing, and as i went back to the hotel to sit with the book, there is responsibility that comes with it. all of the little stuff that i complain about and challenged about, and two generations of enslaved women in my family found the courage and the bravery to sue their enslavers to travel around the state of virginia to find people while
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owned by the person in the lawsuit to get free. >> and your mom kept the obit to go down this path. >> yes, and it started with a scavenger hunt and do we go to north ummerton county to go see what is back there. i novi connecti-- i know that i connection there, but do i go back there, and it was shot two weeks ago, but the curiosity. >> and so many people watching this say, i would love to fill in blanks, too, and is the museum offering this as a service to other people or is that an option. >> this where they are now, the official opening is coming up this weekend, and they have had the resources on the website to start, you know, the path yourself. you can go through their millions of records, and start
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where you are if you know a date, a place and name and marriage records and death records, and military filings, and they can do more of the one-on-one appointments like they afforded me. i said, this is a digital heirloom for my family, and so many people who knew so little in my family and now we have this that go bas tock the 18th century. >> fills in the places. >> how american you are and 1712, and like you beat my people by 160 years which is astounding, especially on this day when we think of where we are and what we are commemorating. victor, that was extraordinary, and thank you for sharing. for more information, and how you can empower the black community on juneteenth and beyond, go to cnn.com/impact. we will be right back.
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all right. we have live pictures behind me of the house of commons in london. lawmakers there preparing to vote on this damming report detailing boris johnson's covid era conduct. the year-long inquiry found that former prime minister deliberately misled parliament over his rule-breaking parties during covid lockdowns. police are looking into a video of johnson staffers dancing and singing at a 2020 office christmas party, right smack in the middle of the pandemic.
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at that same time, johnson was telling uk citizens that holiday gatherings could not go ahead and urging people to stay at home. nadia bashir joins us now from london. what are the consequences here? >> reporter: look, the findings of this report, john, are serious for any member of parliament, not least the former prime minister. he did step down from his post as a member of parliament just over a week of ago so that changes the consequence swas. if he was still in office that could lead him into a 90-day suspension from parliament and trigger an election. he did step down, so now this decision, which will be taken by the mps this evening, isn't focused on determining his parliamentary future or endorse the findings of this report and whether boris johnson a access
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should be revoked. this is very much still in the headlines. concern, anger, frustration over the party gate scandal under the leadership of boris johnson. as you saw the video releasing over the weekend as well. . >> now london's metropolitan police is assessing this video and other evidence as well as that investigation, still very much ongoing. they are assessing whether this would warrant an investigation. prime minister -- former prime minister boris johnson still in the head looinsz over that scandal. >> very much in the headlines. nadia bashir, thank you for watching that for us. that party, people swinging and dancing, was smack in the middle of the lockdown. >> it's the idea that, you know, he was not necessarily -- he didn't have to follow the same rules that everyone else did.
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thank you for joining us. it's good to be with you. >> great having you here. >> come back. >> i might. this is "cnn news central." "inside politics" is coming up next. lities and relentlessly work with youu to make them real. ♪ after switching to the farmer's dog we noticed so many improvements in remi's health. his allergies were going away and he just hadamazing . it looks like nutritious food, d it is. i'm investing in my d's health and happiness. get started at longlivedogs.com 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.
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. today on "inside politics" a handshake and hope for a re-set. the american secretary of state and china's leader meet face to face.
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