tv CNN News Central CNN July 10, 2023 11:00am-12:01pm PDT
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that's just ahead. and from mutiny to a meeting. he's the guy who just posed a serious threat to vladimir putin's power and lived to tell about it, and now russia says the wagner chief sat face-to-face with the russian president. we're following these major developing stories and many more all coming in right here to "cnn news central." ♪ the northeast is just getting pummeled by rain today. over 10 million people under flood watches and landslide alerts. the national weather service recorded a once in a 1,000-year storm in west point, new york. more than 7 1/2 inches of rain fell in just six hours. some drivers were forced to swim out of their cars the water rose so quickly. others like these residents in pennsylvania just had to watch their cars get swept away.
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>> wow. >> i've been watching my car just swim away. >> [ bleep ]. >> goodness. and those waters they come up so quickly, you have to remember that. cnn's polo sandoval is live in stony point. polo, bring us up close to how damaging these waters were. >> reporter: and what we can show you here, jim, in stony point, new york, about a 45-minute drive north of new york city it will give folks north of here a preview of the potential, the damaging potential of the storm. we will take you back to yesterday when this what is usually a babbling brook basically overflowed its banks and all of that debris, large and small, was pushed up against some of the -- against some of the area homes. good thing is for these two homes here according to their owners they told me really the flooding was contained to the basement, so the damage was limited, but still going to be quite the cleanup process.
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the house behind me, an 80-year-old man that has lived there for 55 years. he said he's never seen it like this, but yet he considers himself lucky even with a really tough cleanup task ahead. that's because just north of here according to authorities an orange county woman sadly lost her life. she was trying to evacuate, swept away as she was trying to evacuate her home with her fiancé and her dog and sadly did not make t we heard from new york governor kathy hochul today saying right now it's all about damage assessment, looking at communities like this one here in rockland county and neighboring ones as well to get a better idea of what it will take to make some of those repairs. to be clear this is a preview of the damaging potential of the storm system as it continues to threaten millions of americans north of here. for new york state it's about cleanup today, jim. >> gosh, and the waters came so close to those houses, too. polo sandoval there in upstate new york, thanks so much. so it's not just the
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precipitation that's putting so many people at risk right now, over 40 million are under heat alerts from california to florida and forecasters are expecting the heat indices to reach as high as 110 degrees in some southern cities. our next guest is michael e. man, the director of the penn center science for sustainability. his new book about the climate crisis is called "our fragile moment." michael, thank you for being with
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>> there's another one as well, it's a little more subtle and it's more at the forefront of current research but the pattern of warming where we see the arctic warming faster than, say, the lower 48, that reduces the temperature difference from the equator to the pole, slows down the jet stream and under certain conditions the jet stream basically stalls and those weather patterns remain in place, those high and low pressure centers remain in place. so you get rained on, the same location day after day, or the ground gets baked by the sundae after day, heat, drought,
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wildfires out west, epic rainfall events back east. so climate change is impacting that as well and we're seeing more of these sort of stuck wavy jet stream patterns that are associated with these very persistent weather extremes, whether it's the heat, drought, the wildfire or the flooding events. >> so it's not just getting worse, it's not moving so the conditions in certain areas are exacerbated and on that point we just showed a graphic where temperatures are reaching all time highs across the map. there was a report in may from the world meteorological organization that argued that by 2028 we would see a record high global temperature. it didn't take long, it was last week we saw the planet's hottest day ever, four consecutive days in a row. so the record was broken on multiple days. where is all of this going to lead, michael? >> yeah, so, you know, we
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actually do expect that to happen as we continue to warm up the planet what's going to happen is over time every summer gets a little bit warmer and then you get an el nino event, which we have right now, this building el nino event which is adding extra heat, extra fuel to the fire. they combine and what you get is new record levels of heat at the planetary scale, but also these heat domes and these epic rainfall events. so all of that, you know, in the absence of human-caused warming from fossil fuel burning, we simply wouldn't be seeing these extreme events and we wouldn't be seeing the steady warming of the planet. those are conspiring, they're combining. the steady warming combines with an el nino, extreme weather events related to those changing jet stream conditions, it all comes together, if you will, in a perfect storm of consequences which translates to truly devastating and deadly weather extremes that we're dealing with
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here right now. >> michael mann, we very much appreciate your perspective. thanks for sharing it with us. >> thank you. >> listen to those warnings, they're important. overseas a secret meeting in moscow just days after that failed wagner muty. the kremlin now says that vladimir putin sat down face-to-face with the man behind that brief insurrection, yevgeny prigozhin, along with some of putin's top military commanders and during that three-hour meeting putin apparently offered wagner options for future deployments. it's remarkable. cnn's ben wedeman is in the ukrainian capital of kyiv. ben, it's a remarkable meeting because you have a russian leader who almost certainly is looking for folks who might have challenged him, but at the same time here is offering wagner a path back in. what's going on? >> reporter: it is
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mind-boggling, frankly. the fact that this is a man -- basically putin on the 24th of june, the day of the mutiny, he said that the mutiny is treason. five days later he's meeting with the man who led -- led that mutiny. it really does reflect, i think, the chaos that may be just below the surface within russia. and, of course, let's keep in mind nobody has seen prigozhin since the 24th of june. this meeting took place, we don't know where, on the 29th of june. since then, that's 12 days ago, nobody has seen or heard of prigozhin. now, we did hear the president of belarus, lukashenko, saying that he's in moscow -- or rather he's in st. petersburg, perhaps he's going to moscow, but he hasn't been seen or heard from. this is a man -- i mean, for instance, we are in ukraine.
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i've been spending a lot of time in the front. there is no private military company engaged in the warfare there. there are no mercenaries. the fact that there was a mutiny in russia and five days later the president of the republic meets with the head of the mutiny and seems to let it go, mind-boggling. >> and we should note, you know this as well as me, there are multiple militias in russia today, everybody seems to have their own private army, even the national gas center does. all these power centers, highly armed, deeply unstable. ben wedeman in kyiv, thanks so much. now let's get the view from nato. president biden landed in lithuania a short time ago and cnn's natasha bertrand is there for us. what is president biden hoping to accomplish during this nato summit? >> reporter: boris, there are a number of key items on the agenda oefrd the next two days and all are pretty major.
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essentially the biggest question is whether ukraine is going to have a path to nato membership and if so how fast is that path going to be and what is ukraine going to have to do to actually get in a membership in nato that it has sought for so long. that is one of the biggest questions going into the summit tomorrow. it is something that president zelenskyy has made a really big priority, something that he has said he is not doing for fun, just attending the nato summit, if he does, in fact, end up doing that. he is not just coming for talks, he is coming for concrete plans as to how ukraine is going to one day become a member of nato. the allies are not unanimous on this at this point. biden said over the weekend that he does not believe ukraine should be a member of nato right now. zelenskyy doesn't necessarily believe that, either. he has acknowledged it's very unlikely that ukraine is going to become a full-fledged member of nate know while at war for russia because it would imply
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the states and other allies would have to go and fight the war in ukraine. the u.s. and other allies are still not on the same page about what this is actually going to look like in terms of timing. a concrete timetable for ukraine's potential membership here. there are also questions looming about the u.s. and nato support for ukraine practically, the kinds of weapons that they will continue to provide and how long they can continue to produce the level of weaponry including ammunition that we have seen them provide over the last year. of course, now the u.s. says is that it's running low on ammunition. these practical things will be at play and then of course another major topic will be sweden's accession to nato. turkey has been blocking that, were hoping this would be resolved by tomorrow. it doesn't look like that is going to happen. >> there will be a one-on-one meeting between precip erdogan and president biden. thanks so much. it was a year ago that nato
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said they wanted sweden into the alliance. let's discuss the stakes of biden's trip to nato. we now have a senior fellow at the atlantic council. good to have you on, sir. on biden's statement on ukraine's nato membership, i've spoken to multiple european officials who said privately now is not the time for ukraine to be in nato because of the mutual defense agreement that would in effect put the alliance at war, in direct war with russia right now. i mean, was biden saying out loud what is effectively the official nato position here? >> good to be with you. well, if there's one thing during this war biden has said one thing, for example, no jets for ukraine and then they changed their decision, but on admitting ukraine it's very strange because just a couple of hours ago ukrainian foreign minister kuleba treat twooeted a
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consensus has been reached among nato allies to reach the so-called membership action plan for ukraine which will basically expedite its entry into the alliance. so we haven't heard much else from any other alliance members but kuleba is a pretty straight shooter and wouldn't say something like that if it wasn't happening. that is a positive sign for ukraine. there are a lot of fears among alliance members that should ukraine become a member while it's at war this could escalate things with russia and that has been a big factor that's been deterring nato leaders for a long time in this war is provoking russia further. >> a path to membership is different from joining the alliance today. i mean, are there any circumstances where if ukraine were to become a member before the end of the war, russia invaded ukraine, the nato -- the nato pact says anyone is
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attacked it's an attack on everyone. how could you join under those circumstances and not put the other nato alliance members including the u.s. at war with russia? >> sure. and a lot of observers say that ukraine has a lot of housecleaning to do, for example, strengthening democratic institutions, cleaning up corruption. there is a lot of arms as you know, a lot of money coming in here. but, look, the other thing we have to keep on our minds, jim, is that russia watches very carefully what nato is doing, lots of talk revamping nato, creating these so-called mobility hubs, but it's well-known that it still takes a long, long time to mobilize nato. bridges, tunnels, paperwork, all that stuff. so that's something that everyone has to keep in mind as well. >> well, the other irony here is that ukraine's army is arguably the best equipped and by many measures much bigger than several armies of nato members today. it's certainly earned its keep so far. let's talk about another issue
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events in russia today. it is a dicey time in russia to say the least. you had an open insurrection, you still have the person who led that around at least. what is prigozhin's status now? can he, can wagner actually survive this or is putin in a meeting like this looking for the plotters in effect? >> you know, i'm going to stick to my line that i think the kremlin is still scripting this, that they're playing us. look, putin and prigozhin are co-dependent on each other, maybe not as much anymore in the war in ukraine, but definitely commercially, helping to fund putin's war machine from extraction of gold and diamonds in africa, but also being an extension of russian foreign policy providing security assistance to certain governments in africa. so i think the other thing that might be happening here is putin kind of sending a signal through
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the so-called coup that there are other people worse than me, other con men worse than me in the form of mr. prigozhin. so i'm going to dangle him out a bit. quite a meeting, too, as well, right? more than 30 people, something like three hours. but we haven't seen the end of that drama play out. >> can the plotter coexist with the target of the plot as a practical matter or any length of time? >> right. well, you know, maybe it wasn't that much of a plot. maybe, again, it was something scripted by the kremlin to throw people off course. i think there was a lot of wishful thinking at the time, genuine wishful thinking that this could be the start of the end of putin. you know, there are a lot of what if's in this and of course the other thing prigozhin did was put the first kind of chink in putin's armor in terms of calling this a real war rather than a special military operation, that sort of thing, also taking aim at russian military leaders for the intense
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corruption, for sending their kids to western schools and beaches and that sort of thing. what an incredible plot, one that even hollywood probably couldn't have scripted, but something the kremlin seems to be pretty good at. >> he also took aim at putin's justification for war. michael bociurkwiv. thanks so much. larry nassar who sexually abused girls for decades has been stabbed ten times in prison. we have details on his condition. while nearly half the states in the country have red flag laws for gun possession, some are still struggling to enforce them and that is having deadly consequences. next you are going to hear one mother's story about losing her daughter whose life may have been saved by the law. and ahead, the united nations is is warning of a full-scale civil war after 22 people were killed in an air strike in sudan over the weekend. stay with us.
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nassar was stabbed ten times. the former doctor for usa gymnastics is serving a 60-year sentence on federal child pornography charges. civil court records show that he victimized more than 330 girls and women. cnn's carlos suarez is live with more details. carlos, what happened in prison? >> reporter: well, boris, nassar is recovering at a hospital in central florida after he was assaulted and stabbed by another inmate ten times. that according to a union president for the corrections officers just northwest of orlando. we're told that nassar was stabbed two times in the neck, two times in the back and six times in the chest. now, back in 2018 nassar admitted to sexually assaulted athletes while he was at michigan state university and while he was the usa gymnastics doctor. among some of the athletes that he admitted to sexual assaulting
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we're talking about famous olympics yaolympian simone bile. more than 150 women and girls all testified, they all described how nassar sexually assaulted them after they went to him for sports-related injuries. he assaulted them and told them that it was all a form of treatment. now, nassar who is essentially serving life in prison, he also pleaded guilty to child pornography charges. boris, again, he is right now at this hour recovering in a hospital just northwest of orlando after he had some sort of altercation with another inmate that ended with him being stabbed ten times. boris? >> carlos suarez, thank you so much for the update. jim? let's turn now to someone who knows that prison well, joée joe rojas is a local president of the union representing the
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employees at the penitentiary. joe, fgood to have you on here. i understand you are the person who told cnn the number of times nassar was stabbed in this attack. do we know who carried out this attack? >> right now it's still under investigation and it will come out probably within a day or two. >> how could something like this happen at a prison, an attack like this, and you worked there, you know the circumstances. are there opportunities for, for instance, one inmate to attack another? >> the problem with the bureau in whole is the staffing crisis we've been having. like, for instance, about three weeks ago we had an informational picket to let the community know about our staffing issues. we had over 145 vacancies within the complex, 44 alone at penn 2. so that's how it can happen. when you don't have the staffing, we don't have the support from central office, the administration, things like this
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happen. when you have officers working doubles, 16 hours back to back to back three days in a row, inmates see the weaknesses. >> how about getting a weapon in like this or is it possible someone could make their own? >> i've worked at the state and the federal prisons for over 30 years. inmates are very intelligent. they can make weapons out of anything. it is not far-fetched that a metal object they can find anywhere and they're made into a homemade weapon, homemade knife. >> in your experience what leads an inmate, if that's what this turns out to be, to attack another one? does it tend to be personal grievances? i know there's something of a hierarchy in prison, certain crimes are looked at worse than others, including attacking children. do you have a sense of what could have been behind this particular attack? >> i don't know the motive for this attack because where he was
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secured was a programming unit and usually in the programming unit those inmates are well-behaved because we give them good programs. so it could be a number of things. like you said, it could have been based on his criminal background. >> joe rojas, thanks for helping us try to understand this a bit better. we appreciate you taking the time. >> thank you so much for the time. >> boris? still to come, we're following a major upset at wimbledon. how one player just went from tv commentator to quarterfinalist. there's still hope for us, jim. and madonna planning her concert come back after a health scare. we're back with the details. ree. so i can save on something special for a first date? wait! that's all for a first date? whoa. alright, c c'mon. earn big with chasase freedom unlimited with no annual fee. how do y you cashback? your record label is takining off. but so is your sound engineer. you need to hire. i need indeed. indeed you do.
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mass shooting last week was shot and killed by the suspect nearly two days before his deadly rampage. police say the suspect had been displaying abnormal behavior for quite a while before he went on that random shooting spree that killed five people. now pennsylvania is among the states that doesn't have a red flag law which can help keep guns out of the hands of potentially dangerous people. but as cnn's chief investigative correspondent pamela brown explains, some states that already have those laws in place, are struggling to use them. >> reporter: vanessa's nightmare began last spring in her albuquerque home. >> he was molesting my daughter. >> reporter: she learned her live-in boyfriend bradley wallen had been sexual assaulting her
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16-year-old daughter alexia for years. she called the sheriff's department. >> we're going to try to get a restraining order. >> reporter: on the body cam video you can hear alexia telling deputies about an argument. >> he was telling me that i had been acting like i had an attitude towards him. i couldn't keep it in and i said it's because you sexually assaulted me. then he got out of his car and he admitted what he did, told me it was wrong. >> reporter: weeks later wallen spotted alexia's car at a shopping center, he shot and killed her and her cousin mario salgado and then turned the gun on himself. it was mother's day. >> no parent wants to lose a child. no parent wants to see their child gone before them. honestly i wish he would have took me, let her live. >> reporter: vanessa says she had told law enforcement wallen owned guns, the restraining order she filed against him lists two firearms. >> i literally opened up the
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drawer that had the guns in it and showed the officer. >> and did the officer say anything about whether those guns could be taken away? >> no. >> these two were inseparable. >> reporter: what vanessa didn't know then was that new mexico passed a red flag law which allows firearms to be temporarily taken away from those deemed dangerous to themselves or others. deputies escorted wallen as he retrieved his weapons from the home, along with his belongings. >> i said i was concerned that he possibly might commit suicide. >> so you told law enforcement you were worried he would commit suicide? >> yes, ma'am. >> reporter: that alone should have allowed vanessa or the police to file what's called an extreme risk firearm protection order or gun restraining order, but she was never told of that option. >> i just wish i would have known so i would have had the right path to protect my daughter and my nephew. >> the system failed on all
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facets. >> reporter: sheriff john allen wasn't in office last year when the murders happened, but he says there was a breakdown in the process. >> she did convey that he could harm himself. that seems to be an example of when guns should be taken away under this law, right? >> correct. >> so was it a mistake they weren't? >> i don't think it was communicated correctly, the information wasn't relayed to the district attorney's office enough and that could be from our detectives, that could be from family, that could be from witnesses, that could be from victims. >> reporter: what happened to the salgado family is a key example of how difficult it can be to implement these life-saving laws in some states. records obtained by cnn show new mexico's red flag law has only been used about 30 times since it took effect in 2020.as a com similar law has been utilized more than 11,000 times since it was enacted in 2018. >> it's difficult for people to understand how to enforce the law. education and training hasn't gone around the state like it should have.
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>> reporter: of the 21 states that have red flag laws on the books new mexico is by far the most gun violent. it's a blue state that is mostly rural, yet it has the third highest gun mortality rate per capita in the u.s. even with that violence, new mexico's sheriffs petitioned against the passage of the law and created second amendment sanctuary counties where it wouldn't be enforced. a judge weighs every decision, but because red flag laws are relatively new there tends to be misinformation. >> it's not law enforcement filing in a vacuum. there is a judge looking at the facts of the case and then making a determination based on that. >> reporter: studies show red flag laws can work to diffuse potential violence, the key is making sure people know about them. >> i just want to have a voice for my kids and i want this story to be told. and hopefully it will save another mother that's going through the same thing i'm going
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through. >> reporter: red flag laws temporarily disarmed more than 660 people in six states who threatened to kill multiple people. according to a recent johns hopkins study. of course no one is suggesting that all of those people would have gone on to commit murder but experts say if even a small percentage of those lives were saved the laws are worth enforcing, pamela brown, cnn, washington. this just into cnn, in a letter obtained by cnn the prosecutor overseeing the hunter biden criminal probe is now refuting claims made by an irs whistleblower about alleged political interference in that investigation. cnn's sara murray here with us now. of course, this attorney was appointed by trump, no you refuting claims that have, well, cause add firestorm among the right wing. what do we know? >> that's right. we've heard a lot from two of these irs whistleblowers about concerns there was political interference in the hunter biden probe, among their concerns was
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that davidw weiss wanted to be made a special counsel. there are also concerns the whistleblowers raise that had weiss may not have been able to bring charges against hunter biden in the jurisdictions he wanted to. he says in this letter i was never denied the authority to bring charges in any jurisdiction. so in this very succinct letter frankly weiss is refuting two of the many complaints we heard from these whistleblowers. one of the whistleblower's attorneys says it doesn't matter if weiss wanted to be special counsel or not what matters is there were biden political appointees involved in this process who shouldn't have been. david weiss was a trump appointee and ultimately it was his decision and this resulted in hunter biden agreeing to plead guilty to two tax related charges. >> has there been any response to the republicans to whom this letter was addressed. he's saying how you're characterizing this case is simple lie not true. >> i'm sure we're going to hear more from republicans on this matter.
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christopher wray will be testifying this week and i would be surprised if this issue doesn't come up. it's clear republicans want to hear from david weiss himself ideally in testimony on capitol hill. probably not something that will happen before we see hunter biden formally enter his plea in court in a couple weeks. >> thanks so much. some incredible footage to share with you of rescuers using zip lines to reach people stuck in floodwaters after northern india was hit with record rainfall. we will have the details when we come back. and mine's unlisted. try boost® high protein with 20 grams of protein for muscle health vers 16 grams in ensure® high protein. boost® high protein. w available in cinnabon® bakery-inspired flavor. learn more at boost.com/tv
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people. we've been reporting for months now on the ongoing fighting between rival military factions, violence that has left hundreds dead as nearly 3 million people have fled sudan. let's go now to cnn's stephanie busari who joins us live. step stephanie, what's the latest on the ground in sudan? >> reporter: so it's just not looking like this war is coming to an end anytime soon. both factions seem to be resisting efforts to bring a long lasting resolution to this. the eu has intervened, the u.n. has intervened, africa union has intervened. we have ceasefires and in the same breath these ceasefires answered and both sides blame each other in a frustrating blame game for the sudanese people who are bearing the brunt of this. the latest attacks the health
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ministry showed in a video which was very graphic with bodies covered in blankets, bloody bodies on the floor, and about 22 people, but that figure could be higher. the u.n. is expressing concern that civilians are increasingly being targeted in these attacks. some civilians reporting that their homes they've been forced out of their homes by para militaries who are effectively using their houses as battle grounds. the u.n. has released a statement, i will read some of that, where it says it is worried that there was an utter disregard for humanitarian and human rights law that is dangerous and disturbing. now, they're worried also that there's no peaceful resolution in site and that this could lead to a civil war, which would be catastrophic for a region that is quite strategic and borders many countries, some of whom are facing their own challenges such as ethiopia, chad, libya and
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sudan for context is the third largest african country and has these countries around it. egypt is a key country where millions of sudanese have fled to and this week holding a summit to bring these neighbors together to try to find another lasting resolution, a peaceful resolution that will allow urgently needed humanitarian aid and medical assistance to get to those who desperately need it, boris. >> stephanie busari reporting for us in nigeria, thank you so much. now to other headlines we are watching this hour. heavy rains are bringing deadly flooding to parts of northern india. take a look at this, rescuers using zip lines to lift trapped survivors over the raging floodwaters there. incredibly dangerous as the waters rush underneath, dangerous for the villagers and also the rescuers, rescuers say they've saved 27 people so far. the latest floods have been
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blamed for at least 22 deaths. the country has seen a stretch of extreme weather. last month nearly half a million people were caught in severe flooding, but they've also seen several blistering heat waves. also comedian sara silverman and richard kedri and christopher golden are suing meta for copyright infringement. they are claiming the companies used their books to train their ai language models which replicate human conversation. the lawsuits seek unspecified monetary damages on behalf of a nationwide class of copyright owners who were whose works were allegedly inn frigid. meta and open ai have not responded to request for comment. 27-year-old christopher eubanks continues a stunning surge at wimbledon today, the american beating the world's number five player stefanos tsitsipas to punch his ticket to
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the quarterfinals. eubanks openly doubted if he would be able to continue his professional tennis career at all, even took a job as a commentator on the tennis channel while continuing to play in a few tournament. he will now take on daniel medvedev in a quarter final match. >> still a shot for us, jim. still a chance we can make it. so the material girl is coming back to the concert stage. we have new details on her health scare and her comeback when we return. [announcer] if you're thinking about earning your degree online, snhu can help you get there. - i felt supported throughout the whole process, even from the rst call. [graduate] my adsors consistently reached out and guided me along the way. it was like i was talking to a friend, like someone that i had known for years. - the instructors were very helpful
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the material girl. madonna says she's on the road to recovery after a sudden health scare that landed her in the hospital. chloe, madonna actually was spotted recently. >> yeah, she was spotted on the upper east side of manhattan near her home over the weekend. some fans snapped some pictures and posted it and madonna taking to instagram today to tell fans she is so grateful all of the kind words, the support, the prayers. she did say she is unable to kick off her north american tour scheduled to start july 15th. no idea when that tour will start. live nation said to the ticket holders, hold on to your tickets and they'll be valid for any upcoming dates. she said when she woke up in the hospital, boris, her first thought, her children. the second all of her fans and the people that make her tour possible. so what we do know is that
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madonna is going to be kicking off her international leg of the tour in october, so she will be taking the stage soon. she says my focus now is my health and getting stronger and i assure you i'll be back with you as soon as i can. again, her health, that's the most important thing. people want the material girl, i do, too, to live on for decades to come. a few months won't hurt anyone. >> and to keep performing at the high level that she does. and speaking of performing, chloe, it's happened again, more performers getting pelted with stuff by people in the crowd at shows. >> harry stiles over the weekend was performing in vienna and an unidentified object hits him in the face, in the eye. you see him go to grab his eye, you see him bend down, he winces in pain but he continues the show like a pro. but this is a very dangerous trend that we're seeing.
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bebe rexa had a phone through at him. drake had a cell phone hit him on the wrist. this is catching the attention of big stars like adele who came out in her biggest concert and said don't even think about throwing something. this is happening far too often. as people have pointed out, yes, people have thrown things at the stage for countless years, but this is different because it's happening so frequently. like i said, kelsey ballarini is someone else. it has to stop, boris, because it is going to change the way that we all see live music. you're going to probably see cell phones being confiscated, perhaps nets being put up around the stage, which maybe could obstruct views so concert going won't be the same as we know it if people don't stom this random
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and terrible violence. >> maybe more artists will take the approach that adele has, even if she was joking. you do not want to mess with adele, jim. >> you do not. when we come back, president biden is in europe and it follows his agreement to send ukraine cluster munitions. we're going to have details coming up. buying it, flying it, or wining n' dining it,, then you gotta be cashbacking it. [chuckles] come o on now. earn big with chase freedom unlimited. how do you cashback? you founded your kayak company because you love the ocean- not spreadsheets. you need to hire. i need indeed. indeed instant match instantly deliversuality candidates matching your job description. visit indeedom/hire
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