tv CNN News Central CNN July 10, 2023 6:00am-7:00am PDT
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picks, both going one and three, which happened in 2011, and in 1978. best part about this story, dylan crews, could have been a first round pick out of high school, decided not to go professional, decided to go to lsu, became the national player of the year, won a national championship, now number two overall pick, bet on himself. bet on himself. >> so you know a thing or two about baseball? maybe because you were a baseball star in college. >> played. star -- if any of my college teammates saw you say i was a star in college, they would say, no, you weren't, no, you weren't. we're keeping a close eye on the president's trip to windsor castle, meeting with king charles at this hour. "cnn news central" picks up coverage right now. from staging revolt to sitting in his office. the kremlin says wagner chief
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yevgeny prigozhin who led the rebellion in russia met with president putin just days after the mutiny. why? and where is he now? this morning, president biden is in the uk, meeting with king charles for the first time since the monarch's spring coronation. it is first leg of his high stakes trip for the nato summit as ukraine is pushing to join the alliance. and wild weather continues along the east coast. just look at this. right now about 10 million people are under flood alerts. parts of new york set rainfall records. i'm kate bolduan with sara sidner. this is "cnn news central." this morning, another surprising twist coming out of russia. mercenary boss yevgeny prigozhin hasn't been seen in public since the attempted mutiny, but get this, the kremlin now says the wagner boss sat down with
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russian president vladimir putin just days after he tried to overthrow him. the roughly three-hour meeting was held on june 29th, according to the kremlin, five days after prigozhin's short-lived rebellion. for weeks, though, putin and the kremlin have been dodging questions about prigozhin's whereabouts. and now you can add another question to the mix. what is putin trying to signal now? cnn's fred pleitgen has the very latest for us, he's joining us now. what more is russia saying about this and what is your read on it? >> reporter: well, i think the first and most important read, kate, is that everybody who has been monitoring, reporting about this probably getting whiplash right now trying to find out where yevgeny prigozhin is and what his status is as well. i think one of the things we can read into this is that yevgeny prigozhin and the wagner mercenary group are extremely important to vladimir putin, extremely important to russia's war in ukraine and on the battlefield. and that's probably why that meeting took place.
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it only took place about five days after that mutiny happened. yevgeny prigozhin was able to go into the kremlin. now, some of the things that we're hearing from that meeting, which are coming from the kremlin, from dmitry peskov, the spokesman, are quite interesting. apparently vladimir putin came out and gave his assessment of what the russians call their special military operation, but also all the mutiny itself. and there was a little side sentence in what he said. he said he talked about possible future use of the wagner group and battlefield deployment. that could indicate that possibly wagner is back in the game. certainly that could be a really interesting development because there are so many things that are unclear. the kremcrkremlin itself says prigozhin was going to go to belarus. and then he wasn't actually in belarus, he was actually in st. petersburg, in russia. it seems as though for now it appears as though yevgeny prigozhin is still in russia,
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but it is unclear how much control he could retain over wagner if any and not just wagner, of course, on the battlefield in ukraine, but all of its other assets like, for instance, the dealings he has in africa and in the middle east as well. a huge development potentially. >> yeah, and, fred, the russian defense ministry just published a video of a top general seen out in public for the first time since that rebellion. what do you see in this? what more can you tell us about it? >> reporter: yeah, that's the chief of the general staff of the russian military. he's basically the second in command after the defense minister and that also ties in possibly with prigozhin having been in the kremlin and that meeting now being made public. one of the things that was asked at that meeting, there were 35 commanders at the meeting. folks asked were there any people from the defense ministry there and the kremlin refused to answer that. one thing we know is that the heads of russia's defense
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ministry and certainly the chief of the generals that has been under fire and one of the reasons why yevgeny prigozhin said that he was marching on moscow was to get at the defense minister and the chief of staff. so, whether or not right now the russians are trying to strengthen the position of the chief of staff is completely unclear obviously. but it is quite significant that we have seen him now for the first time since that mutiny took place, kate. >> absolutely. good to see you, fred. thank you for putting it all together for us. let's see what happens next in this soap opera, thank you. sara? >> good way to put it. happening now, president biden is at windsor castle for a face to face meeting with king charles. it is the first time the president and the king have met in person since charles ascended the throne. the stop is the first in a three-nation tour of europe that will include a high stakes summit with nato leaders in lithuania. cnn's max foster is joining us now from windsor, england. max, this is mostly a ceremonial meeting, but what is it that they're discussing?
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>> reporter: well, it is interesting because they were purely ceremonial in queen elizabeth's day, we would never find out any details of what happened within the castle after the red carpet moment outside. but we're being told this time there is a meeting inside of leading u.s. and uk bankers meeting to discuss how to help alleviate the impacts of climate change in the developing world. so this is what charles likes to do. he likes to bring together with his convening power senior figures on particular issues and on this issue it is, of course, climate change. so we're finding out that they're having a discussion about climate change inside. and i think it is going pretty well. because they're running late. these are two men that clearly get on. but there is a real tension at the moment in the u.s., uk relationship, if i can call it that. here we call it a special relationship because the u.s. is such a key ally for the united kingdom. that tension really comes from ukraine and how the two countries have slightly different views on the way the
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u.s. is handling it, cluster bombs is one issue, the uk doesn't support the u.s. sending cluster bombs to ukraine. so that's really setting up the scene going to the nato summit. they're discussing an issue which both men really care about, which is climate change. and it is all about celebrating the long-term relationship between the u.s. and uk, trying to solidify it. >> it is interesting to see how the crown is going to change a bit, of course, with a king, something we haven't seen in many decades. thank you so much, max foster. appreciate it. kate? >> thank you so much, sara. let's talk about all of this, put it together. joining us right now is kurt volker, former u.s. ambassador so nato and former u.s. special representative for ukraine negotiations. ambassador, good to see you again. thank you for coming in. let's talk, first, about what we were -- i was discussing with fred pleitgen coming out of russia. now, the kremlin saying that prigozhin met with putin for hours and it was just five days after the attempted mutiny. i mean, what do you think this means?
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a sign of weakness or a sign of strength that we're hearing this from the kremlin? >> well, i think what it shows is that putin actually was very concerned that he was in a much weaker position than he realized. and the fact that prigozhin could launch a rebellion like that, get as far as he did has actually shook putin a little bit. and this is why he wanted to try to re-establish control, bet prigozhin back on side, and then maybe see what he has to do to retain that support from the power sources in russia, the military, the intelligence services, to try to keep it together. >> and also, and fred highlighted something that is important in that statement, he was talking -- in the statement coming up from the kremlin, he talked about the potential of future use of the wagner group. because i was thinking back to our conversation, i think last week, it feels like a million years ago at this point, when you and i were talking about how this was unfolding, ambassador, and like everyone else, you were saying, you were questioning if putin really could survive it if
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he didn't take prigozhin on directly. so, this seems like such a surprising turn of events that then five days later, you know, he has -- he's sitting down with prigozhin. do you think it is the pressures from within russia more pushing putin to do this or external pressure is outside of russia, the need for the wagner group and ukraine and far beyond? >> well, i think it is a combination. i think first off i'm still surprised to hear about this meeting. i still think that prigozhin is somewhere where we don't know where he is. i think he's being very careful. and i still wouldn't put it past putin to try to go after him. that being said, i think that what we have learned over the course of the past several months is that the wagner group is the most effective military force that the russians have. and given the way the war is going in ukraine, he probably felt he needed to listen to them and figure out how he could use them if he's going to salvage his effort in ukraine. >> yeah. that's a great point.
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where they are today might not -- definitely not the final destination of where that relationship could end up. it is a very important piece of perspective on that. i want to ask you about president biden in the uk now, he spoke with fareed zakaria ahead of this trip, and i want to play for everyone and also for you once again what biden said about ukraine and potential nato membership. let's listen. >> i don't think there is unanimity in nato about whether or not to bring ukraine into the nato family now at this moment in the middle of a war. >> biden says it is not the right time when ukraine is in the middle of a war. you see it quite differently. you signed on to a letter with almost 50 other foreign policy experts with regard to this. what do you say about this? >> yeah. well, i think if you listen to what biden said carefully, he
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emphasized the word now. and there i think everyone agrees that you don't bring ukraine into nato today when the war is going on. that would commit the u.s. and other forces to begin fighting russia as well. and we don't want to turn russia's war against ukraine into a nato war against russia. but we do need to send a very clear signal to vladimir putin that ukraine will become a member of nato. his effort to extinguish ukraine and to disrupt european security is going to fail. and that we are serious about protecting security in europe in the future and the only way to do that is by bringing ukraine into nato. so we need to send a very strong signal out of the summit that this is where this train is going. >> i wanted to ask you, because an invitation to nato membership doesn't mean automatic membership. we have seen the long road many countries have taken on that. what then is the hesitancy, if you sense it is hesitancy in biden's approach into this
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heading into this nato summit. what is it? >> yeah. i think it is as i said, i think it is a desire to make it clear to everybody that this is not nato going to war against russia. this is russia fighting ukraine and everyone is trying to help ukraine survive and defend itself and we don't want to confuse that messaging. but that being said, i think we have to start thinking about the long-term. nato's job, its only real job is the security and defense of its members. and we have seen that with ukraine outside and a few other countries outside, these gray zones that are there in europe, that's been an invitation to violence in europe. it has been an invitation by putin to attack georgia, to attack ukraine. so, in the future, we're actually going to have to bring countries like ukraine in if we want to deter future war in europe. that's the long-term perspective. >> i want to give you a second to clear your throat. you have that catch in your throat i get sometimes that makes it impossible for me to continue. please tell me if we need to cut
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this short. one final question for you, ambassador. zelenskyy seemed -- i guess the way i put it is less than certain that he was going to then head to the summit, given some of the conversation leading into it, saying that he doesn't want to go there just for fun, he wants concrete steps like you're talking about, concrete steps coming out of it. >> yeah. >> do you think he should go still? do you think he should not go? i mean, what do you think that means in this context? >> well, i think it would be a mistake for zelenskyy not to go. no matter what the language of the summit is about ukraine's nato membership, it is these countries that are supporting ukraine's security and defense needs right now. and the only place ukraine goes in the future is as part of the european union and part of nato. so, this is the family now. he should show up. >> yeah, it is good to see you, ambassador. thank you for coming in. sara? >> all right, switching gears,
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back here in the u.s. this morning at least one person is dead as severe storms are battering parts of new york and heavy rain and flash flooding is occurring. right now nearly 10 million people are under flood alerts in the northeast. the national weather service says new york could see one to two inches of rain per hour. in west point, new york, a one in a 1,000 year rainfall event where more than 7 1/2 inches of rain fell in just six hours. some drivers were forced to swim away from their cars as floodwaters overwhelmed them. you see there on the roadway. right now, new york governor kathy hochul is deploying state police and swift water rescue teams as the state is bracing for more flooding. cnn correspondent polo sandoval is in rockland county, new york. what have you been seeing this morning? a bit of a backup behind you there. >> reporter: so, to that point, sara, the sun is out, the story is now shifting at least partially to one of some major
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travel trouble. just a short drive north of new york city, we'll get to that in a few moments, but first, some of the amazing and just shocking images from overnight showing some of the water rescues as authorities were deploying through the evening and into last night as well, carrying out some of the water rescues. i've been in touch with authorities in neighboring orange county, who tells me last night amounted to chaos. authorities were out there carrying out some of those rescues, some washed out roadways as well. and in the town of highlands, hard hit, home to about 12,000 residents, authorities there confirming for us that one individual, a young woman, who was trying to evacuate her home with her pet was -- lost her footing in the floodwaters and sadly carried away into a ravine. she is the one casualty, according to officials right now. orange county officials adding they seem to have everybody else accounted for, so they don't expect any further rescues. meanwhile, what you mentioned earlier this is a result here on
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the palisades parkway. that roadblock that you see off in the distance, that's detouring some of the drivers away from the interstate that basically cuts through some of the floodwaters right now. so that is really the ultimate impact for many, many people as still some 25 million individuals north of new york state are still under some form of flood alert with the potential for excessive rains into tomorrow. sara? >> polo sandoval, thank you for all of your reporting. wow. what an incredible amount of rain aphappening just like that >> when it happens in a short amount of time, this is what we get. that record-setting rainfall brought eight inches to parts of new york. the threat not over yet. cnn's derek van dam tracking the forecast for us. he's joining us now. derek, how much rain, how much more rain is expected in these areas today? >> yeah, kate, we're focusing our attention on vermont now where rainfall rates of 1 1/2 inches per hour could allow for that rain gauge to surpass half a foot here in the coming hours.
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and we already have seen roadways turned into rivers and the national weather service has a slogan, turn around, don't drown and they mean it because 6 inches of rain can stall a vehicle. 12 inches of water along a roadway can float many vehicles. 24 inches of fast-moving water can submerge and float and wash away a full-sized suv. i want to share some of the latest information, we're getting from the weather prediction center, the high risk, a rare level 4 of 4 from the center has been extended further south to include all of south central vermont and look at this, we have flash flood warnings encompassing much of the state. in fact, some of those actually tagged with a flash flood emergency in and around the ludlow region. we have a stationary band of rainfall moving across the area. it is training over the same regions, allowing for the inch to inch and a half rainfall totals we have been experiencing. the potential here for half a foot of additional rainfall still exists as this kind of convergence of moisture starts
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to really move into northern new england. we had impressive rainfall totals across eastern pennsylvania and into southern new york across the hudson valley. 6 to 10 inches of rain where that 1 in 1,000 year event took place. an incredible amount of precipitation for west point, new york. the likelihood of this occurring in any particular year only .1%, just incredible to show you how unlikely an event like this actually is. kate? >> yeah, concern really in vermont now as you were showing almost the entire state covered in red. got to keep a very close eye on that one today. derek, thank you. sara? >> republican presidential candidates are flocking to iowa to try to win over voters ahead of the state's caucuses in january. but history shows gop contenders may have better odds in new hampshire. also, a missing 14-year-old girl in california was found in the barracks of a military base. now a marine is in custody and he's being questioned.
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and more energetic. lighten every day the metamucil way. ...and for a delicious way to promote digestive health... ...try metamucil fiber thins. this morning, the 2024 republican nominating calendar is coming into a bit of clearer focus. iowa republicans voted to hold their first in the nation caucuses on january 15th, that's also martin luther king jr. day. no date yet for new hampshire's republican primary. but that will likely take place before the end of january. let's talk about what this all means and so much more. harry enten is here with me now. it is obviously a big honor for iowa and new hampshire as we always discuss to be the first in the -- first in the primary calendar. but, when you look at these two states, there is a bit of a mixed bag when it comes to their record and choosing the eventual nominee. >> yeah, that's right. if we were looking at the democratic side, i might say, hey, iowa is the better -- gives
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you the better idea who is going to be the nominee. if you look at the republican side, the fact is new hampshire has a far better track record of picking who the eventual nominee would be since 1980. so primaries in which there is no incumbent running, the iowa caucuses have only picked the eventual nominee two of seven times in 1996 and 2000. the new hampshire primary, five of seven times. remember, back in 2016, donald trump, of course, lost in iowa, but was able to regain his hold on the republican nomination by winning in new hampshire. so to me looking at the republican side, new hampshire gives you a better idea than iowa. >> you wanted to look at this year from two different angles. ideology and demographics in terms of how the front-runner is doing in the republican side and donald trump, again, looking amongst the group. when it comes to ideology, why do you think trump is weaker in iowa this year? >> it comes down to, get this, it comes down to what we see is that the groups that trump does
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best amongst, look at that, very conservative, they are far bigger portion of the republican electorate in iowa than they are in new hampshire. trump gets weaker as you go more toward the middle of the republican electorate. he only leads that group by 14 points over ron desantis, moderates are a big portion of the electorate in new hampshire. they are a far smaller portion in iowa. so the fact is at least ideologically speaking trump does better amongst the groups that are a bigger portion of the iowa electorate than they are of the new hampshire elebt rat. >> you think trump is still when it comes to demographics weaker in new hampshire too. >> trump's base in the republican primary, right, is amongst those voters not as well off economically speaking. if we look at that vote, we see that trump has a much large r lead among those in a household that has less than $100,000. trump leads by 27 points. look at $100,000 or more, trump only leads by about 3 points. new hampshire is a wealthier
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state than iowa is. the republican electorate in new hampshire is again a -- wealthier than the republican electorate is in iowa. so the fact is whether you look at ideology, whether you look at demographics like income, those groups that trump does best amongst are more plentiful in iowa than in new hampshire, so if i'm one of trump republican rivals, i think i have a better chance of breaking through in new hampshire than iowa, despite the fact all the trump rivals are going to iowa. >> which then might call into question some of the strategy to this point. but people make a big play in iowa because they think -- >> it is the first. >> it is the first and that's where you gain momentum. let us see. good to see you. let's talk more about this and the latest on the campaign trail, here with us now, national political correspondent for "time" magazine molly ball. thank you for being here. can we just quickly talk about the fact that this presidential caucus in iowa is happening a bit earlier than it normally does. does that even matter?
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>> probably not. you know, we have seen this calendar go through this kind of churn every cycle there is a bit of a dance between the early states, but, you know, i think if you zoom back on what harry is talking about in the last few cycles, and the lack of a predictive power, particularly for iowa, really on both sides, we have see and a diminishment of the early states overall as it becomes more and more nationalized. so many voters these days, especially the types of highly engaged voters who vote in presidential primaries are tuned into the national news. they're watching cnn, national cable news, getting their news from national sources. so there aren't necessarily paying as much attention to which candidate went to the pizza ranch in my town or which candidate, you know, appeals to voters like me on local issues specifically. we're seeing a declining influence in all the early states. >> it is interesting. i want to talk about one of the candidates on the trail, ron
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desantis is really pushing back hard against this notion that he's way behind trump. i want to let you listen to what he said as one of the reasons. >> maria, these are narratives. the media does not want me to be the nominee. i think that's very, very clear. why? because they know i'll beat biden. >> the media doesn't want him to win because we know he'll beat biden is the words that he used. does that make any sense to you being that one of the heads of his super pac is the one who said we are way behind in this race? >> that's the problem for desantis, it is always easy to blame the media for a story you don't like, but in this case, it is backed up by a lot of data. he maybe could have said this in the first couple of weeks of his candidacy when we didn't have a robust array of polls showing just how far behind he is both nationally and in those early
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states. but at this point, it is a very strongly evidence-backed claim and as you mentioned, some of his own allies have noted it. he simply is pretty far behind trump at this point. that doesn't mean he can't make it up, that doesn't mean he's dead in the water and, you know, i think in a lot of significant ways this remains a two-man race, he remains the only candidate in strong position to take down trump, none of the other candidates who are not named trump have come this close. but he hasn't built on his lead, he hasn't broken out, hasn't managed to have a sort of viral moment that i think would stick in people's minds and really show them why he ought to be considered in rsnd the frustration but, you know, i just don't think it is going to get far blaming the media when we have so much evidence to support this fact. >> i do want to talk about the point that you made, this is sort of a two-man race right now had you look at the numbers and the polling. they do more trump than desantis
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trade barbs with each other. does that give any chance to a person like nikki haley or tim scott to make a move that would help them since these two are kind of going at it? >> well, that's the perpetual fantasy of those candidates in the bottom tier, right? the two front-runners end up destroying each other. and that creates an opening. but so far that's only been a theory. we haven't seen it happen. and the reason it hasn't happened is that someone would have to lay a finger on trump first. and, you know, we have been waiting eight years, i think, and by we, i mean the entire republican establishment, not necessarily myself or the media, but, you know, a lot of republicans have been thinking and wishing and hoping that trump will sort of collapse under his own weight or implode in some way and he certainly -- he's got two indictments already and more could be coming. but we haven't seen any sign of a sudden collapse or deflation in trump's appeal to the base of the republican party and so without that, it remains just a theory that the top two
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candidates could somehow take each other out. >> all right. molly ball, thank you so much for your analysis there, appreciate it. kate? >> coming up for us, a u.s. marine is in custody now and being questioned after a missing 14-year-old girl was found on a military base. we have the very latest on what they're finding. plus, a manhunt in pennsylvania. law enforcement searching for this man, searching for an escaped inmate. the police say he's a self-taught survivalist and how that's playing in to how he's missing. the very latest on the search is next. ] the day you get your clearchoice dental implants changes your struggle with missing teeth forever. it changes how you eat, how you feel, anand how you enjoy life. it changes your smile and how others smile at you. clearchoicice network doctors have changed over 100,000 lives with dental implants, and they can change yours, too. because a clearchoice day changes every day. schedule a free consultation.
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after a missing 14-year-old girl was found at marine corps base camp pendleton in california. the girl's grandmother reported her missing last month, according to the san diego county sheriff. she was then discovered at the base two weeks later. cnn's camila bernal is at camp pendleton, joining us now. what more are you learning about how the girl was discovered and how these two people are connected? >> reporter: kate, unfortunately we don't know exactly how they're connected. there are not a lot of details being released at this time. but we do know that the 14-year-old girl was actually found at the barracks here on base. and then after we do know that a marine was taken into custody for questioning. this all happened on june 28th. that's according to stement from the marine corps. i want to read part of that statement. here's what they're saying. this command takes matters and the allegaonvery seriously. the incident is under
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investigation and we will continue to operate with ncis and appropriate authorities. now, ncis is the naval criminal investigative service and we reached out to them as well. they declined to comment out of respect for the investigative process here. but the san diego county sheriff's department did give a timeline as to exactly how these dates played out. they said that the girl's grandma reported her missing on june 13th. she talked to deputies that day, but told them that she actually ran away from home on june 9th. and so they put her name on multiple databases for missing persons and it wasn't until the 28th of june that military police actually found the girl here on base. detectives interviewed her, we know they offered services. and she was reunited with her grandmother. but unfortunately they're not answer, a lot of the questions that we have. so we will have to wait for this ncis investigation to really get more details here because so far
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we're just left with a lot of questions, kate. >> absolutely. and you're also talking about the circumstances surrounding a minor and so it is very sensitive and have to be very careful in all of that. much more to be learned. thank you very much. sara? >> two people have been killed and five more injured in yet another mass shooting. this time at a private party in amarillo, texas. police say a fight broke out there sunday among partygoers and at some point shots were fired. two victims were 28 and 32 years old. police say the other five are expected to recover. they have not yet made any arrests in that case. also there is now a $10,000 reward for information about this man, an escaped inmate who police say is very dangerous. officials say michael charles burham used tied up bed sheets to descend from the roof of the warren county prison. he is also a survivalist and state troopers say they found small stockpiles in a wooded areas near the prison they
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believe are associated with him. burham was being held on arson, burglary charges and he's also the prime suspect in a murder investigation. all right, it's a wrap. the fabulous elton john has played the last show of his farewell tour. the five-time grammy-winning performer performed for a massive crowd in stockholm, sweden, this afternoon after playing 330 shows in just 663 days. ♪ good-bye yellow brick road i'm going back to my flat ♪ >> that was saturday. the 76-year-old started this tour in 2018. it was supposed to end in 2021, but the pandemic, like for many of us, got in the way. he said he's leaving the road,
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he deserves to spend more time with his two sons. kate. >> he's an amazing concert to see. that's good stuff. coming up still for us, members of congress, they're headed back to the hill facing a tight deadline and a long to do list before their next recess. why people are talking once again about the threat of a possible government shutdown. we'll be right back. like the subway series menu. buy one footlong in the app, get one free. for freeee. that's what i'm talking about. order in the subway app today. they'll be here in 5, we ready? - there's uh... - oh. left. left. i don't have it. i don't have it. - keep going. - we should've used behr. yeah. today let's paint. right now, get arica's most trusted paint brand at a new l price starting at $28.98.
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try killing bugs the worry-free way. not the other way. zevo traps use light to attract and trap flying insects with no odor and no mess. they work continuously, so you don't have to. zevo. people-friendly. bug-deadly. six people are dead and another person injured in what is turning out to be a horrifying knife attack that we're learning about outside a kindergarten in southern china. we're going to show you video of what we're told is the aftermath in china, outside of this kindergarten.
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one state-run news outlet says three children are among the victims. the attack apparently taking place as parents were dropping off their kids for school. cnn's anna coren has more on this. what more are you learning? >> reporter: yeah, kate, such a disturbing attack. earlier this morning in china, a man fatally stabbing six people outside a kind gergarten with a knife. according to state media, the victims were three children, two parents and a teacher. as you say, one person was wounded. cnn has blurred the images of the lifeless bodies lying on the road. we understand that emergency crews were quick to act, but unable to save the victims. they all died at the scene. police arrested a 25-year-old man, from the same place where this kindergarten is located. he's been taken into custody and an investigation is under way. authorities have released very few details, kate, about the
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fatal stabbings other than to say the attack was intentional. now, guns in china are strictly controlled and out of reach for most people, but knives have become a common and accessible weapon. and in recent years there have been a spate of mass stabbings at schools, targeting children across china. let me go through some of them for you. in august of last year, three people were stabbed to death and six wounded at a kindergarten in china's southern jinshi province. two children were killed, 16 wounded in a stabbing attack at another kindergarten, this time in southwestern guangshi. and in june, a knife attack at an elementary school. china has low rates of violent crime compared to the united states, compared to other places in the west, but these horrific knife attacks often targeting young children in school, you
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know, they're incredibly disturbing, kate. >> anna, thank you so much. we'll see what more we can learn about this one. sara? >> stunning claim, the kremlin says the man that spearheaded the revolt against russia met with putin just days after the revolt against russia. but no one has seen him in public since that revolt. we'll have more on the next chapter of this very interesting time in russia. what do you get from the morgan stanley client experience? listening more than talking, and a personalized plan ♪ to guide you through a changing world. ♪ we all need fiber for ouour digestive health, but less than 10% of us get enough each day. good thing metamucil gummies are an easy way to get prebiot, plant-based fiber. with the same amount of fiber as cups of broccoli. metamucil gummies theasy way to get your daily fiber.
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this morning back in session as lawmakers are returning from july fourth recess to fund the federal government and avoid another potential showdown, but the house and the democratically controlled senate are miles apart. our congressional correspondent manu raja is there, and what can you tell us about them coming back? >> yes, just coming back until the recess in august and not
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that many hours between now and to avert a deal before a shutdown. it is not just between the house republicans and the senate republicans. recall that as part of the deal to raise the national debt def default deal avoidance, it was a deal for the entire federal government, and it was an agreement that was signed into law, but after it was cut, speaker mccarthy backed off of the agreement amid a rebellion among a handful of the hard right members who wanted it to go further. so speaker mccarthy wanted to move the government to go for deeper cuts in the coming fiscal years which is causing a lot of concern among the senate democrats and those concerned about the impact of defense
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programs as well. the house republicans are moving on one track, and the senate republicans and democrats are on another, to get to an agreement to avert the shutdown by october 1st, and a lot of questions, sara, if they can get there. and congress once again, headed for messy fiscal clash to avoid another messy fiscal clash this fall. >> and there is something they are looking to pounce on and that is whether or not they are going to do this impeachment proceedings of this pitfall of hunter biden's investigation and the allegation of the whistle-blower for the
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investigation of the ultimate plea agreement between hunter biden and the president's son and the justice department and he had denied the interference of any u.s. attorney in delaware and the case appointed by donald trump and held over to the biden administration, and even still, they had held the basis of the impeachment against marek garlag -- merrick garland and there is going to be pressure on tim peachment, and this is a rare occurrence, and only once has a cabinet official been charged with high crimes and misdemeanors and only once has it happened. and will it happen to merrick garland, a second time in history, but it is one that the speaker will have to confront. >> the bar is really high. thank you, manu rau
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thank you, manu raju. kate? >> there is an ongoing fight that has killed over 22 people this weekend that has killed this full-scale civil war in sudan. and we are showing you attempts of people rescued through a zip line in india. new delhi recorded the wettest day in july with more than six inches and authorities have said that more than 22 people have lost their lives in the regions of these storms. the bbc have suspended a male
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member of the staff following allegations of sexual misconduct. a woman had presented a bbc member for sexually explicit photographs, and they have yet to identify the presenter, and saying that the presenter panic called the young person who made the allegations after the report came out and demanded that the mother stop the investigation. sara. minutes now, the governor is to update us on the widespread flooding in new york. incredible images there that you can see of the water rushing into stairwells and some of the streets wiping away cars as some areas have gotten up to 2" of rain per hour. a live forecast is next. we planned well for retirement, but i wish we had more cash. you think those two
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