tv CNN News Central CNN June 21, 2023 8:00am-9:00am PDT
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about 72 hours in and running out of oxygen. search teams may have just hours left to find and rescue the people onboard that missing sub and the u.s. military is now trying to speed new assets to the search areas as fast as they can. >> a consistent banging noise heard every 30 minutes and rescue crews say it lasted for hours. so what could that mean? >> and if the submersible is finally found, getting it to the surface can take half a day. new reporting on how they plan to do it.
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this is "cnn news central." this just in, the u.s. coast guard is set to hold another update in a couple of hours on the continued effort to find the missing oceangate sub near the wreckage of the titanic. cnn will bring that to you at 1:00 p.m. eastern. one key area of interest is the banging sounds picked up by rescuers overnight, bringing some hope that the five people onboard the vessel may still be alive. the underwater noises are being described as being consistent in 30-minute intervals and i spoke to an ocean explorer who is a friend of one of the people missing. >> tom detweiler told us this. >> his background in submarine,
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this is exactly how he would try to indicate that they were still alive and try to communicate with the surface. he would do some banging and a regular schedule so that it was distinguishable from the background noises. >> is that p.h. improvising or is this some sort of standard protocol or procedure that you're familiar of when it comes to underwater emergencies? >> it is a standard protocol for contacting any sort of rescue service that might be coming your way. >> cnn's miguel marquez has the very latest from newfoundland on the effort. miguel, what is the latest that you're hearing on these sounds detected? >>. >> they haven't and as far as we know and maybe we'll hear more at 1:00 and these sounds were heard yesterday from a four-hour period and poseidon aircraft put buoys in the ocean and they
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picked up those sounds and another aircraft put buoys in some time later and they also heard sounds and it was the consistency that caught their attention, every half hour sounded like banging. as the day went on, though, they heard noises coming from the same area, but it wasn't described as banging. they're not quite sure what it was. here's how the admiral of the coast guard described those sounds. >>. >> there is a lot of metal and different objects in the water around the site. that's why it is so important that we've engaged experts from the navy that understand the science behinded noise and can classify or give us better information about what the source of that noise might be. >> so they sent that data to the u.s. navy who will further study it and try to figure out exactly
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what it was if they can distinguish it from other ships that might be in the area. they might move ships to the area where the sound seemed to be coming from. they put remote, operating vehicles to see if they can spot whatever it was that is making that sound and it turned up nothing. they widen out the search area and moving more resources in and the horizon arctic that that seems to be carrying the gear from three different u.s. military planes and c-17, very large cargo planes for the military that landed here at st. john's and that left very early this morning and it does take a day to get there. so the ships with the people, just hoping that whoever, those individuals that are in that submersible are alive and they can be brought back to the surface a-okay. back to you. >> yeah. some of the video that you shot this morning of the ships heading out. the key is how remote the area
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is that they need to get there, how quickly they can get there and then getting in the water and that is showing the challenges ahead of them and you're seeing it play out first hand in real time. thank you so much, miguel. sara? >> with multiple agencies involved, the u.s. military is you hav moving its assets to search for the vessel. cnn's natasha bertrand is joining us now. what can you tell us about what these vessels can do? >> yes, sara. three new vessels have arrived on the scene including one that has side-scanning sonar capabilities and according to the national oceanic and atmospheric association that allows the vessels to map the sea floor and try to basically send and receive acoustic pulses that can help map the sea floor or detect objects really, really far, deep down in the ocean, and so what we're seeing right now is obviously an effort to figure out where this vessel might be
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and it is an all hands on deck effort and a number of agencies and multiple different entities with the department of defense are helping out with this effort including the navy, the air national guard and transportation command and canadian and u.s. planes are conducting flyovers. this is not just an american effort, but you have canadian and american planes. you have a french deep sea diving vessel that is mapping the sea floor trying to figure out whether they can detect anything and the navy has provide a fly away, deep ocean salvage system which is essentially a portable system that can lift large, bulky and heavy objects weighing 60,000 pounds off the ocean floor. that will be necessary if they find the submarine. they're still trying to figure out where exactly it is and at this point they are deploying all these different capabilities to figure out where it is and how they can recover the vessel
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from such depths once they do find it. we should note that the navy has also been in touch with the coast guard about those banging sounds. the coast guard says that they're trying to employ navy experts to try to figure out what those might be because the navy has the scientific expertise to figure out what they might be and where they might be coming from, sara. >> natasha bertrand, thank you very much. not just trying to find it, but trying to recover it will be a huge mission. >> that will be very complicated even if they get that lucky. barry lipski currently leads the long island. these five people are trapped inside the sub and there's a search going on rate now. hopefully, they are still conscious and able to do this. how could they help themselves if they were in the sub and alert right now. >> the passengers inside the sub, obviously, there's a limited amount of oxygen that's
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there for their capabilities and they need to stay calm, reduce their breathing and just wait for help because from inside there, there's really nothing they can do except for possibly with what we're possibly hearing right now is the banging on the side of the sub which the sonar buoys will pick up if they are making that kind of a noise. the sonar buoys will pick that up and that way they can possibly locate this sub in time before the oxygen runs out. >> it is the best way to make themselves known and stay calm, i know that's easy to say and it's got to be so hard to do in this type of situation. >> absolutely. the water temp is between 38 and 40 degrees. it's 28 and 30 degrees. it's very, very cold. there is no heat inside this sub as far as i know. so they've been down there for a few days and no heat and the temperature is coming up inside the sub and they've got to be freezing. >> they've got to be
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uncomfortable there. >> no real bathroom facilities and they have the temperature to deal with and they probably don't have any food and they're expected to come back from eight hours from the time they started the descent so it's not a very good situation. >> what complicates this search effort? what makes it so hard to find a sub like this? >> well, you're in waters that are very, very deep, obviously, everybody knows. they were down 12,500 feet. so the water temperatures, as we mention side very, very cold and you're going in as rescue personnel and waters that are affected by currents that are very strong. you've got winds. you've got waves and all these conditions that you would expect in the north atlantic, very, very far from any other land source. so the rescuers themselves have their own anxiety that they need
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to contend with and at the same time stay very focused and keep the morale high so they could do the job of which they're trying to do and visibility is next to nothing down there and you're counting on the sonar and it will be your best tool to identify any location. as a diver when we go into the areas which we have to go which is not ever could, we call it plaqu blacker than anything you can possibly imagine. >> know you've been putting a lot of thinking about this, and do you have any idea? >> we've been talking to experts and it will not be a lot of things that could have possibly gone wrong. they lost communication in less than two hours. so it was probably still
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descending or it was on the bottom, so there's the great possibility of entanglement, but then why don't we hear from them? was the antenna knocked off? how come they can't communicate? was the electrical flooded and prevent good kind of signaling to take place again? and then where are all the buoys and so forth that are attached to the sub? they're supposed to come up. they're supposed to come up with the sub, but they haven't come up without the sub either that we know about. so where is the sub? is it there? is it mid-water? is it at the surface? if the currents are running six to eight knots which they do very usually around that area. that's 600 to 800 feet per minute they're traveling which means they're hundreds and hundreds of miles from the titanic as we are here today. >> look, these are all questions that are being asked after hopefully there is some miracle. barry lipsky, thank you for being here and thank you for answering these questions. kate? coming up next, new
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subpoenas have been issued in the hush money case involving donald trump. why new york prosecutors now want the videotape deposition from a totally separate case involving the former president. >> plus the leaker is set to be arraigned today on a handful of charges. more on what could be coming in court. that's next. we brought in a reverse auctioneneer. which is apparently a ththing. mint mobile, unlimited premium wireless. can i get 30, 30 bidder get 30 bidder get 20, 20, 2 20, bidddder get 20, 20, bidder get 15, 15, 15, 1 15. jujust 15 bucks a month. sold! mint mobile premium wireless. let's check his tongue for steroids. mint mobile premium wireless. 15, 15, bidder bid 15, bidder bid 15 15 15 and... sold! what brand of coffee do you drink? the subway series? it's the perfect menu lineup.
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after more evidence in that case and he's trying to get it by subpoenaing a video deposition donald trump did in a completely separate case. the d.a. wants trump's full deposition taken during e. jean carroll's defamation and civil trial. they are also asking for e-mails between the trump organization and white house employees. trump has pleaded not guilty to 34 counts that is related to this case. cnn's cara scannell is joining us now. cara, what can you tell us about the fact that they're now going after this video? >> yeah, sara, in this -- we learned this through a court filing yesterday. the d.a.'s office has subpoenaed e. jean carroll's attorney saying they want the full videotaped deposition from the former president. that's 796 the 209 pages of the transcript was played during the defamation trial and they want the whole thing including exhibits in part because it shows how trump dealt with allegations of sexual misconduct ahead of the 2020 election, the
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key issue in this case are his payments that prosecutors say were made to silence stormy daniels and then the crime, they say, was the cover-up of falsifying business records. they're also speening a the trump organization for more information. they want the e-mails between the trump organization and the white house from january 20, 2017, inauguration day through the end of that year. that time period is crucial because that is when these reimbursement checks were made. they want to establish how much -- or how involved trump was when he was at the white house in his personal business and they've also asked for any severance and non-disclosure agreements and a number of people including hope hicks and ivanka trump and they want e-mails between trump's longtime assistant and melania trump and they want to establish that for meetings and travel that he was involved with during a two-year period. >> a heck of a lot of information they're going after in this case. donald trump has asked for the judge to recuse himself in the
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case. what is the manhattan district attorney's office saying about that? >> right. trump wants that judge recused because his daughter had briefly worked for a political organization that did work with democrats including the vice president kamala harris. he also, the judge, had made $35 in donations including some of that money going to biden. so these are the issues that trump has raised. the d.a. is saying that a recusal is not necessary. this is part of trump's history of making baseless allegations of bias of judges overseeing his case and in the court filing they say recusal would facilitate recusal by the defendant and allow other litigants to adopt the same approach. donald trump is trying to move this from state court to federal court and a hearing on that is set for next week. >> kara scannell, i know you will be all over it. appreciate your reporting. >> joining us on this is former prosecutor shannon, and michael
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moore. let me ask you about this move about the manhattan d.a., now getting the deposition for e. jean carroll's attorneys. any reason to think they won't get it? >> well, i'm glad to be with all of you. it really is not, in my mind, not that big of a deal. remember, we are just at sort of what i'd call the pre-trial discovery phase. we're not talking about whether or not this information would actually come into court, but the problem that the prosecutors are going to have, i think, is comments about women and how trump may have treated women in the past and it may make him one of the most despicable people that we can talk about, but whether or not that adds to criminality is something else. so comments that he made back in 2016 and comments that he may have made about miss carroll in the deposition and those kinds of things are not necessarily something that may come in the case. the other subpoenas and the subpoenas about the documents and the subpoenas about e-mails and communications while he was at the white house, i think those are more likely to be
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important and may, in fact, go to terrrump's arguments that ma have happened during his time as president. >> that's really interesting, michael. shannon, as michael, of course w wellpo well points out it's reading the tea leaves of what it would suggest and the totalities and the moves suggest about the d.a.'s case suggest against trump in the hush money case. >> i think michael laid it out very well. he's fishing around for stuff that makes me look bad and it's not really relevant, but i think on the d.a.'s argument's side it's quite strong because to me it goes to his pattern of conduct and not in the sense of misbehaving or lousy behavior toward women, but the pattern of conduct with how he deals with allegations from women that there's been some sort of a sexual interaction. and so part of the stormy
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daniels issue is he's paying hush money to cover it up. so i think it is quite relevant, this is how he deals with those kinds of allegations. that's why they're looking for it. on the communications with white house staff, he might have slightly better arguments that there's something federal or presidential with that, but when you have melania communicating with her aide or scheduling assistant it's hard to imagine there's something about that and while it may have the aspect of seeming more presidential i don't think it will be a basis for it to be moved to federal court and that's a pretty untested situation. >> let me ask you about hunter biden's plea deal that was announced yesterday. >> shan, in their reaction, this shows a double standard when it comes to the judicial system, that hunter biden got off easy because of who his father is. i want to play this for you.
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>> you are the leading opponent of the president. you're going to get jail time, but if you're the son of the president you don't get any jail time. >> this does not happen if hunter's last name is anything other than biden. if he's hunter smith he's doing hard time. >> shan, you say that that's not only inaccurate. i've seen what you've been writing and you think it's the opposite of this. explain. >> yeah. i think that's exactly backwards. it's absolutely important that his last name is biden. if his last time was not biden i don't think he would have been charged. typically in tax cases where the person has paid back the taxes, appetite going after them criminally is low. this is not a monstrous amount of taxes, about a thousand underpaid in two years and second in regard to the gun application charge, that's rarely gone after a stand alone unless the gun later got used in some sort of crime, so i think
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biden is getting the short end of the stick on this because it's such a high-from file case and the justice department will make sure that it has accountability for it to make it fair and even handed. >> michael, if this case crossed your desk as u.s. attorney and this was not the president's son, it was someone else. what would you have told your team to do? >> this case would have never come across my desk if i was u.s. attorney because it is so low profile and there's nothing to it. shan shan's right. if we'll start charging people about making a statement about a gun we would be a country full of jails. if they'd given him life in prison they'd be asking why did not they cut his head off with the guillotine or something. there's nothing to this and they trying to make something much ado about nothing. he was more severely looked at and remember this was a
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trump-appointed prosecutor who remained in place to finish this case, and i believe he's come out and said there was nothing political about this. so i don't know how they're complaining about their own people making a decision in a case that really had it been anybody else would have never seen the light of day and certainly wouldn't be the subject of the media scrutiny. so i -- you know, he was treated differently, but he was treated differently to his detriment. >> this is why we bring you guys on. you're the experts. michael moore, shan wu. john? >> happening today the man accused of leaking documents online is set to be arraigned. jack teixeira, a massachusetts national guard member was indicted last week and he's facing six criminal charges including willful transmission of classified information related to national defense. cnn's orrin liebmann, what's
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expected today? >> that arraignment scheduled for later this afternoon before 4:00 and as to what we will see in court this will be fairly simple. 24-year-old jack teixeira a member of the air national guard accused of leaking troves of the classified information will hear the counts he's charged with, six counts of willful retention and transmission of classified information and we expect teixeira and his lawyers to enter a plea and they've not entered a plea of guiltiy or not guilty and that is part of the arraignment and the judge will schedule the next hearing. teixeira was indicted last week by a grand jury on these six counts. prosecutors say he leaked this information, first by accessing classified systems with information and then copying it down and posting notes of it online and then taking pictures of documents and posting those online. prosecutors say his posting of information lasted just under a year and a half from january of
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2022 to april of this year. in terms of the information with which he's being charged with leaking, prosecutors say and the indictment says that we looked at last week for the first time that some of these documents contain sensitive and classified information about the war in ukraine including troop movements and the provision of equipment. some of these documents also had information about a foreign adversary trying to target u.s. troops abroad and a foreign adversary trying to compromise information of a u.s. bank. so, john, in terms of what to expect we'll keep you posted on the latest movements in court and where it goes from here. >> that is later today. or orren lieberman. >> the sonar picked up banging sounds under the water. expected in a few hour h the u.s. coast guard expected to detail what they now know. we'll have the very latest. special counsel durham facing questions on his investigation of the fbi probe into donald trump's 2016 presidential campaign and its alleged ties to
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far have not yet yielded any results that we know of. cnn's paula newton is following this in ottawa for us. paula, what is next for this rescue mission? >> yeah, kate. we just had an update from the canadian coast guard, the minister responsible and remember, it was a canadian aircraft that first picked up those banging noises because they dropped the sonar listening devices into the sea and what they said, joyce murray which is the john cabbet, the coast guard ship has advanced sonar capabilities. she confirms it is on the scene right now and in her words they are going to double down now to see what can be done in terms of locating the submersible. at this point they have to be cautious, but this kind of jives with what i've been hearing from canadian officials in the last 36 hours in the sense that they heard no, sir noises and at that point they knew they were doing the right thing to pre-position all that equipment in the north atlantic so that if they do
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locate the submersible that they have the capacity to bring it up as soon as possible, and kate, as we've been explaining, right, this is a race against time and what they are hopeful about is the fact that they have two people onboard, both the ceo of oceangate expeditions and also the french mariner who has so much experience. they are hopeful that they are the ones who were doing the banging, who were bringing up the noises and not haphazardly and in intervals and they hope that that will also lead to, you know, more optimism in terms of actually rescuing these five passengers, kate? >> what are you hearing about the possibility that the oxygen supply could duactually last longer than the estimates that have been put out so far? >> kate, this is what's really interesting, as well. we've been talking about the fact that they might have a day left, 24 hours of oxygen, perhaps less, but perhaps more. we do have examples of people especially when you have expertise onboard that will know
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how to conserve that crucial oxygen and we'll know how to make it last longer than the next day and that is the reason that a u.s. and canadian officials will continue this search, perhaps, for days to come because they want to be sure that they explore every avenue and they are giving credit to the experts on the titan, on that submersible that they know how to preserve that oxygen. so certainly, they are not losing hope. the canadian minister said that herself in the last hour and that's why they have all of the experts they need now hopefully on site to locate that submersible. >> yeah. it can be as simple and almost impossible considering the circumstances as staying calm and consuming as little oxygen as possible while they're down there as we were hearing from another ocean explorer nargeolet very well as they were telling us in the show, truly remarkable. thank you for the update. sara? >> if officials are able to locate the missing sub they will then be tasked with the highly
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complex mission to recover the craft and those onboard. there are very few assets in the entire world that can reach more than 12,000 feet below sea level where the titanic lies and even those that can, they can only travel about a thousand feet per hour which means it could take 12 hours to reach the titanic if it's at the bottom. let's take a look at those machines which are called remotely operated vehicles or rovs. this is one that we know has been deployed to the search site now and rovs are about the size of a cargo van and they're tethered to a surface ship with a two-inch thick cable which provides power and communication. u.s. military rovs have electric motors and cameras, but would not have the capacity to lift the submersible. that is where this piece of equipment you see there could come in handy. experts have suggested the rov could attach a cable to the
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salvage system or fdas. has the ability to lift loads up to 60,000 pounds and could potentially haul the submersible to the surface, but of course, they have to find it first. john? >> so many challenges there. sobering, that is the word that special counsel john durham used repeatedly in his testimony before house lawmakers this morning. lawmakers are questioning durham about his report that harshly criticize the fbi for its investigation into the 2016 trump campaign and its alleged ties to russia. his investigation, frankly, into the investigation. cnn's sara murray has been following today's hearing. sara, what are the highlights? >> look, unsurprisingly, we are seeing john durham stick to the fundamentals of his report and stand by his criticism that there never should have been a full-blown investigation into the trump campaign in 2016. take a look at how john durham
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was talking about his findings today. >> as we said in the report, our findings were sobering and having spent 40 years plus as a federal prosecutor, they are particularly sobering to me and a number of my colleagues who spent decades in the fbi themselves, they were sobering. >> now, of course, the lawmakers on the committee are not just focused on the report. they are also focused on the politics of all of this. we heard from democrats questioning john durham essentially drawing attention to donald trump's indict ams and throwing dog whistles to the far right. we also heard from jim sdwrord an who is continuing to raise concerns about the conduct of the fbi. he's been involved in this large-scale investigation into what he calls the weaponization of the federal government and so he's using this hearing to sort of drive home this points that
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there are still issues with the fbi, and bringing up the fbi's search of donald trump's home in florida, the mar-a-lago resort. we should note this is a very different tone from what we saw when john durham was behind closed doors yesterday with the house intelligence committee and we heard from the top republican and democrat after the closed-door hearing yesterday and both of them voiced concerns about how the fbi conducted themselves and there should be changes in the future. back to you. >> this hearing continues, sara. keep us posted on what else you hear, sara? >> this just in, the federal trade commission is suing amazon. it alleges that the e-commerce giant has tricked millions of consumers into signing up for its amazon prime subscription service by using deceptive interface designs. the complaint filed in the u.s. district court for the western district of washington also accuses amazon of making it difficult for users to cancel their memberships. amazon did not immediately respond to a request for
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comment. also new this morning, dna of the suspect accused of murdering four university of idaho students is a match to dna collected at the crime scene. court documents reveal that dna comparison for the knife sheath recovered at that idaho home was a statistical match to bryan kohberger. kohberger has pleaded not guilty and goes to trial in october. gambling violations by nfl players has the nfl reminding the league of the rules. there are six key rules. among them, don't bet on the nfl and don't share team inside information. a league official says many of the rules are not new, but league officials are visiting teams in person to talk about the rules on sports betting and all rookies are being required to attend a mandatory education session on gambling. kate? >> what could go wrong with all of that? coming up for us, in texas people are baking cookies in their cars. temperatures there and across the south and southwest are
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breaking records. what people need to be prepared for with the next round of extreme weather coming in. plus a school attacked. students kidnapped and now some have been rescued. what we are learning about the military mission overnight. that is next on "cnn news central.l." over $1.5 billion la. that's decision tech. only f from fidelity.
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next level moments, we're 30 seconds out. need the next level network. [north corridor, hurry!] -coming through! -or 3, let's go. the network more businesses choose. transplant received. at&t business. all right. some of the other stories we're following for you from around the world this morning, an off-the-cuff comment from president biden ruffling feathers in china as the u.s. tries to thaw relations with the economic powerhouse. president biden compares xi jinping to a dictator at a fund-raiser tuesday. the respond from beijing was swift and it was angry. china's ministry of foreign
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affairs called the comment extremely absurd and irresponsible. the u.s. will send another $2.3 billion in aid to ukraine. secretary blinken made the announcement this morning. the financial assistance will help ukraine overhaul the energy grid and modernize critical infrastructure. also in uganda, the ugandan military says it has rescued three students who were kidnapped in friday's attack on a school. a woman and two other children who had been abducted earlier were also rescued. they were being held by a rebel group in the democratic republic of congo. a military spokesman said they killed two terrorists. 42 students were killed in friday's attack. kate? >> we are watching extreme weather here and in the south a dome of heat is bringing in the
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next round of, treatment conditions. starting the season with dangerous recordbreaking temperatures. more than 30 million americans are under extreme heat advisories across texas, oklahoma and new mexico today. the heat index in some areas could reach as high as 120 degrees. in texas yesterday meteorologists, they were baking cookies in cars to show what they're dealing with there. cnn's rosa flores is back with us from texas this hour. what is going on right now and what are officials saying about all of this and what do people need to be prepared for? >> you know, kate, some people go to the sauna and they pay money. well, here in texas it is free, courtesy of morther nature. currently it is 87 degrees and it is so humid you can feel it in the air, just walking here along the beach. a lot of people are going to beaches like this one to try to cool off. in nearby houston the temperature has not dropped below 80 in about a week.
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the temperature there is about 100, 101, but you add in the humidity and the heat index is 110 to 115 and that's why cooling centers have been opening up not just in this area, but all across the state of texas and the power grid has been, of course, asking for people to conserve energy and kate, you mentioned that the national weather service in san angelo, texas, had baked cookies in a car, well, we'll talk to them here in galveston, texas because i have some double stuffs here, some oreos and chocolate chips and we'll see a test to see if these are a little melty. they are. so there you go, kate. a little melted chocolate. not bad. the texas heat will do this. back to you. >> the only thing i'm going to counter with is it has nothing to do with the texas heat when you're dipping oreos in
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chocolate. it's just delicious in any state at any temperature, rosa, but i totally agree it's good to see you, rosa, thank you. >> i get oreos. >> she's totally making this up, the oreos have nothing to do with the story. what do you expect from people when talking about extreme heat? i understand rosa and i see her and i would also like her oreos. >> i totally endorse what she's doing completely because you get hungry. next time i'm in a hurricane i'll say it's all wet. >> do that 100% and please let me be working with you on that day. >> there is san update scheduled by the coast guard and the search for the missing sub. well braing that to you the minute it starts on the pressures of diving to see the wreckage of the titanic from someone who has been in the very sub now missing. tourists that turn into scientists. tourists photographing thousands of miles
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very shortly, we will get a live update from the coast guard in the latest on the search from the missing sub. this, we are hearing new first- hand accounts of what it is like to take part in this type of experimental adventure. one year ago, "up simpson's" writer, mike reese, was on the very same sub. listen. >> it was just 11 months ago, in this same sub. and i see over and over on every dive we took, they lost communication. this is just one of the problems with this thing.
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you know, i'm sure the world is very worried, and that kind of thing, but something to know having gone through it is, you know going and how very dangerous this is. it is not any bad reflection on stockton rush. it is his company, he designed it, it is just, we are all a part of this ongoing experiment before you even get on, you signed this alone long, long waiver that mentions possible death three times on the first page. so, you know what you're getting into. in fact, when i stepped onto the sub, i just knew, part of my mind was going, well, this could be the end. >> wow. >> mostly, it is a very creepy
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feeling to think if they are alive down at the bottom of the ocean, or something like that, just knowing, i don't think there is a way to get them out of a situation like that, and that they will just be sitting there for 3 or four days before the oxygen runs out. very, very scary thought. >> it is a terrifying prospect. we are about to you from the coast guard in just a bit here. thank you for joining us. "inside politics" is next. t d whoa... ...which leaves you feeling... ahhhhhhh listerine. feel the whoa! ♪ at morgan stanley, old school hard work meets bold new thinking. ♪ partring to unlock new ideas, to create new legacies, to transform a company, industry,
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