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tv   CNN News Central  CNN  July 13, 2023 10:00am-11:00am PDT

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towards the end. senator shelley moore capito grandmother at eight crushed it with more plays than i could count. i had the privilege of announcing the game along with senator aimly klobuchar, a breast cancer survivor. garrett haake of nbc news joined us and in the end power house hitting from katie labossco led reporters to victory with the final score of 15-9, but the real winner was the cause they were playing for, the game raised nearly $590,000 for the young survival coalition beating last year's record to $3.7 million. thank you for that and thank you so much for joining "inside politics." "cnn news central" starts right now.
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putin can't win. in fact, president biden says russia's president has already lost his war on ukraine. biden unleashing before he boarded the plane back to the u.s. today and we are covering that and new details on a potential russian military purge. and the pill without a prescription. potentially historic moment for women's reproductive health. the fda has approved over-the-counter birth control. when this could hit the shelves. we are following these major developing stories and more all coming in right here to "cnn news central." right now president biden is on his way back to washington after a pivotal european trip that delivered some significant results, including new security commitments to ukraine and a nato alliance poised to expand even more. he closed out the five-day trip
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right on russia's doorstep in the capital city of nato's newest member finland and there he delivered a stark message to vladimir putin across the border. >> putin's already lost the war. putin has a real problem. how does he move from here. what does he do? there is no possibility of him winning the war in ukraine. he's already lost that war. >> cnn's arlette saenz is in helsinki for us. the invasion of ukraine looming very large over this entire trip. >> reporter: yeah. it really has, brianna. president biden tried to use this trip to have this show of force against russia, not just by stressing the strength of the nato alliance, but also trying to secure more support for ukraine throughout. the president, of course, that summit did get off to a bit of a tension after president zelenskyy voiced his displeasure
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with some of the items he has seen regarding whether nato would set a timeline for ukraine's entry into the alliance or what pathway they might create for that. ultimately the president was able to put aside some of these concerns and again, here in that press conference in helsinki, he stressed that the u.s., and its allies do see a future for ukraine within the nato alliance. the president also had some very tough words for russian president vladimir putin. he views the war against ukraine as having backfired on putin, partially based on the fact that they were able to expand the nato alliance, the fact that they were able to rally allies to continue to offer long-term support to ukraine. you heard the president giving his assessment there that he believes russia has already lost this war. i also asked the president if he thought there's any chance that putin might resort to using nuclear weapons. he said he didn't think that's a prospect for this moment. the president is heading home today feeling he's accomplished
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everything he set out to do in this summit, four-day trip to europe. >> arlette saenz forl us, thank you for that report. jim? >> well, it is a dangerous time to be a russian general. vladimir putin's purge of senior military officials after last-month's short lived mutiny is more wide ranging than previously known. "the wall street journal" is reporting 13 senior officers suspected of disloyalty were detained for questioning, some later released around 13 were suspended from duty or fired. one of the most high-profile names on the list sergi surovikin led the military campaign in ukraine and had close ties to the wagner leader yevgeny prigozhin. sam kiley joins he me now. a member of the russian parliament told cnn that surovikin i believe the words he used is resting and not
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available. i wonder if you find that description credible? >> well, it sits very naturally within the murky world of the kremlin and the putin's reaction to the wagner led coup which i think was part of really an unraveling of the command and control structures within the russian armed forces on the ukrainian front line. prior to the wagner coup, surovikin, who was very close to yevgeny prigozhin the leader of wagner, they have been in close contact and why he's been, quote, unquote, rested after this coup attempt effectively by wagner. this is not the only movement. you've seen that reporting for the "wall street journal" and we've got the recent killing of oleg tsokov, a general in charge of the brigade, sending a message to senior officers within the russian armed forces being in ukraine is a very
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dangerous occupation, indeed, and on top of that, the commander of the 58th brigade, ivan popov, who is also a general, who was removed from his post he says, by what he said was the treacherous activities of the commanders behind him, namely general gerasimov, the head of the russian armed forces and shoigu sergi. what we're seeing here is a first time public statement or a statement made public by a russian general indicating the stresses within the russian armed forces during this very aggressive campaign being waged by the ukrainians and it's exactly what the ukrainians want to see. a collapsing command and control infighting among russian generals with the hope that some of them will clear off and go home. that will spare a lot of lives on both sides.
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that is part of the long-term strategy of the ukrainian armed forces. >> great point with a possible breaking up of the wagner group, which has been one of the most successful fighting others in ukraine for russia. that potentially impactful. sam kiley, always good to have you share your experience. before heading back to the u.s. president biden at his news conference offered a rebuck of tommy tuberville, he went after him for blocking military promotions over objections to the defense department's program that reimburses service members and their dependents for traveling across state lines to seek abortion care. here's what he said. >> he's jeopardizing u.s. security. i expect the republican party to stand up and do something about it. they -- it's in their power to do that. the idea we don't have a chairman of the joint chiefs of staff, the idea that we have all these promotions that are in
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abeyance right now well, don't know what's going to happen, the idea that we're injecting into fundamental foreign policy decisions, what, in fact, as a domestic social debate on social issues is bizarre. >> and joining us now republican congressman michael waltz of florida, he sits on the armed services committee and also a combat veteran, a former army green beret and a colonel in the army national guard. thanks for spending time with us this afternoon. >> good to see you. >> up for a vote on the house floor is this pentagon policy that is at the very heart of tuberville's hold and i know that you don't support this policy, that provides leave to receive reproductive care including abortions, but since service members and their families do not choose where they serve, i want to ask you, why should a female soldier,
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sailor, airman or marine, someone say who is serving at macdill air force base in your state shoulder these expenses that someone who is serving at edwards air force base in speaker mccarthy's california district that they would not shoulder? >> i think what you're speaking to is really opening up the military to questions circumvent or give individual soldiers, sailors and marines a say on state and local political issues. so take what you just said in terms of florida state law versus california, well, we could ask the same question in a future administration if a soldier doesn't feel like he can adequately protect his family in downtown chicago or 30 to 40 people are being shot a week because he doesn't like the gun restrictions or he feels like this is abrogating his second amendment, should the pentagon pay for him to go out to a more
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gun-friendly state? at the end of the day this is a pandora's box of political issues. the pentagon should not have gone there. we asked them last fall to not do this. conveniently they did it right before the midterm elections when the administration knew that abortion was a key hot issue and a political issue. but i can't get any data and i would hope you would ask the pentagon how many women out there are like this? how many are pregnant, seeking abortion and living in a place they don't feel they can get one? it's an issue that's impacting the force. it's a violation of the height amendment and by the way, senator tuberville has said let's have an up or down vote on it. he'll live with it either way. the pentagon can't just abrogate existing law because it disagrees with it. >> on the issue of gun laws, you're talking about someone leaving a state maybe permanently. we're talking someone going
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temporarily for a service. these are different things. >> no. i'm sorry. i'm talking about the pentagon starting to pay for soldiers travel and lodging because they don't like an existing local law. and we've also had the pentagon suggest -- >> can you answer the -- >> [ inaudible ]. >> sure. >> can you answer the question this is something that affects, obviously, service members and their ability to serve, and it affects their family members and they do not have a choice, obviously, on where they're serving. you say on the height amendment i will grant you paying these expenses makes it possible, right, you could argue this enables someone to afford to access abortion, but the policy clearly does not violate the height amendment because it does not pay for the abortion. >> okay. brianna, that's kind of cute and
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lawyerly, no, we don't have the defense department cutting checks to planned parenthood. i'll grant you that. but when they're facilitating it with taxpayer dollars that was certainly the intent of congress and that's a lawyerly reading of the law and at the end of the day, let's have a vote. we're having a vote at the house. senator tuberville said let's have a vote in the senate. and he'll live with it either way. the question is why shouldn't schumer take him up on that and the pentagon and the reason is, is as you've seen the administration likes this issue, they like how much your network is covering it, frankly, and they think it's good for them politically so they don't want to resolve it. >> senator tuberville seems happy with this issue. he's continuing the hold. he seems happy with it. >> the reason he's doing the hold is he is unhappy with what the pentagon has done. >> why should one family shoulder that expense in the military but another should not,
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when when none of them have chosen where they are going to serve? >> you could say that about a slew of issues, brianna, and what we're trying to do here in the house is get the military out of these contentious political issues and get back to having a force that is ready and able and lethal enough to deter war and win war and we are absolutely struggling there. 40% of our submarines can't get out of maintenance right now. the chinese navy is double the size of us, launching more into space, we have so many issues with our acquisition and force and recruiting, gee, let's just focus on that unless you come to me and show me this overwhelming number of service women that are -- none of them are calling my office in florida, that's for sure. that the pentagon had to take us down this slippery slope of politics. let's focus on winning wars -- >> it's not just service women.
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right. it's also there's spouses which tend to be female and there are a lot of them and it is their dependents, half of which are female, if they are of a certain age. only 23% of young people and it's a shrinking number, quite alarming are eligible to join the armed forces and roughly half of those are women. why make service harder? >> but, what you're getting into is the decision of local and state legislatures. elected legislatures. many of these service men and women also vote and they can now vote on that issue. many of them frankly like to keep their voting registration in florida for tax, beaches and other reasons. you really are going down this road on one particular issue and we -- look, if the pentagon wants to do that we can broaden it to all kinds of issues. they don't get to choose where they live, but we can't start
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allowing them to travel wherever they want and live where they want. when you sign up to the military you're signing up to fight and win for this nation, and you do set aside some of your privileges that an average civilian has. that's what we have to get back to. i keep getting back to the issue let's vote on it in congress if this is such an overwhelming issue. >> one of the amendments another one turning here is an amendment proposed by congresswoman marjorie taylor greene would end funding for the war in ukraine in this defense authorization bill. you support funding ukraine and have joined democratic colleagues on supporting oversight for funding. what do you tell your colleagues like marjorie taylor greene who do not want to fund ukraine's defense and what you think is at stake and do they listen to you? >> yeah. look, if we want to keep american troops out of this war, we have to keep putin from slicing through ukraine and hitting a nato country that
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would drag us into. the ukrainians are doing the fighting and dying, asking for the bullets, we have to have strong oversight of where those funds are going and some type of strategy from the administration so that this isn't another endless war. i have an amendment called dollar for euro that says the europeans need to step up, particularly france, germany and italy, and provide parody in what -- in military support to the united states. it is jaw-dropping to me that this war is on europe's doorstep, the largest since world war ii, and the europeans are providing half of what the united states is providing. i am tired and many of us are tired of subsigh diesing european defense. we pay for their defense while they pay for their social programs. there's things we can do better and that's what -- >> you're not talking about ending funding. when talking to some of your colleagues who are -- >> i'm talking about match our
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funding or pulling ours back or pulling our back to match theirs. >> are your colleagues listening to you? >> well, i mean, we're going to have votes on it. i'm making that case both on national television and within our conference, but there's some important nuances here in that the europeans have to step up and we have to have a strategy from the administration, just saying blank check as long as it takes, isn't sustainable. >> congressman, thank you so much for your time. i do want to say because we just got nis from our kaitlan collins, the defense secretary lloyd austin's office attempted to call and set up or did attempt -- they did call they attempted to set up a call between the defense secretary and senator tommy tuberville today, but tuberville's office declined the opportunity. they said he did not have time for a call today or this weekend. that is according to a senior defense official.
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so, obviously, this issue will continue on and we will continue talking about it. >> let's bring it for a vote. let's just bring it for a vote. that's how our republic works an we can drive on and defend this nation. >> we will see that in the house. thank you so much. >> thank you. jim? >> still to come, prosecutors working with the special counsel's office interviewed michigan secretary of state in the ongoing investigation into election interference by the former president and his allies. we're learning new details about the cocaine found in the west wing as the secret service wraps up its investigation. cnn's k file uncovers robert f. kennedy jr. has repeatedly suggested that chemicals in water are impacting the sexuality of children. we'll have more. you're watching "cnn news central." rthe company i was excited to empower pepeople of all abilities.
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first on cnn, sources say the secret service has concluded its investigation into that baggy of cocaine that was found at the white house, and they have been unable to identify a suspect. the drug was found in the west wing last week. it was the focus of a secret service classified briefing on capitol hill. white house correspondent jeremy diamond is with us now hp this is -- this is going to be unsatisfying to people who think there has to be video of this, it is the west wing, how did they not catch whoever it was that left low cane there? >> yeah. totally valid questions too, right. this is the white house after all, but what we're learning is that the secret service oovgs -- after a week and a half of investigating the small bag of cocaine found inside the west wing they have closed the investigation due what they say is a lack of physical evidence. let me take you through what they've been doing over the last week and a half. they combed through visitor
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logs, hundreds of individuals who walked in and out of the west wing of the white house in the days -- on the day the baggy was found and the days before then. hundreds of them were visitors who were coming into the west wing for tours and this bag of cocaine was found in the cubbies where visitors are asked to leave their cell phones. they tried to go through dna and fingerprint evidence and they were unable, insufficient dna according to the secret service and they were not able to pull fingerprints and they couldn't identify whose baggy this was. on that surveian footage piece this is what the secret service says. there was no surveillance video footage found that provided leads or means for investigators who identify who may have deposited the substance. without physical evidence the investigation will not single out a person of interest from the individuals who passed through the vestibule where the
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cocaine was discovered. a source tells priscilla alvarez is the cubbies where the phones were left was a blind spot for the surveillance cameras and so that ultimately resulted in a dead end there as far as surveillance footage being used to identify this. as of now the white house says they are reviewing the findings of this investigation, but the secret service have closed this matter. some infuriated saying the secret service should have been able to get to the bottom of this. >> jeremy diamond. let's head to capitol hill where melanie zanona is tracking the reaction to close the investigation without finding a suspect. what are you hearing? >> yeah. the secret service held a briefing this morning for members on the house oversight committee and there was interest from republicans on that committee, but gop lawmakers left that briefing feeling outraged and disappointed and
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unsatisfied with what they heard. some members were particularly concerned about the locker system that cubby system that jeremy was talking about for visitors who come to the white house located near the situation room. let's listen to congressman tim burchette. >> they do not know who did it and that is the most ridiculous thing. someone walks in the white house, most secure building in the world, actually, and can place something in a locker, what if that was a biological entity or an emergent that would mature over a few days and it would -- could -- you know, there's a lot of questions. >> reporter: lawmakers did say that they learned some additional new details about the investigation the key to the cubby was missing, none of the suspects were drug tested, that they obtained the information about the visitor logs from a presidential request, whether republicans will continue
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investigating this nancy maze says their plates are full and do not anticipate looking into this further. >> maybe cocaine gate is over. >> melanie zanona live on capitol hill, thank you. another state election official sat down with the special counsel investigating trump's efforts to overturn the 2020 election. this was first on cnn. federal prosecutors interviewing the michigan secretary of state for several hours in march. a democrat was a key voice pushing back against baseless election fraud claims, coming from donald trump and his allies in the days after the election. michigan was one of several states rudy giuliani tried to flip with a scheme to submit illegitimate electors. this is notable because of benson's role in this, but also it seems to indicate the special counsel's involvement in this is
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a multistate one and that we know there have been interviews in michigan, interviews in arizona, and elsewhere. >> reporter: that's correct, jim. this investigation is not just about what happened in the white house or on capitol hill on january 6th or on the national mall at the speech at the ellipse, what was happening right in the room with donald trump. it also is about what happened in those battleground states after the 2020 election as there was a pressure campaign from the trump campaign to try and have fake electors come together and state legislators block the election result, but also to have people coming together and harassing potentially some of these officials who were top election officials. we know from various people who have confirmed it publicly that in this special counsel's investigation, there have been benson, secretary of state of michigan, but brad raffensperger of georgia.
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rusty bowers former house snooeshg arizona getting calls from donald trump and rudy giuliani, as well as some of the fake electors that they had reached out to. a lot of officials getting inquiries in the criminal investigation that is ongoing. here's more about what jocelyn benson told kaitlan collins last night about what she testified to. >> i think it's a connection between what we witnessed which i've talked about for several years now, a real coordinated strategic effort to block the counting of votes in our state and then spread lies that transnoormds threats against lives of election officials doing our job. >> so this investigation now having information from this top official in the state of michigan about what happened after the election to her and
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others, but also it's a sprawling investigation and we don't exactly know where it stands right now, jim, but what we dough know is that the grand jury, it is in, again, today and prosecutors from the special counsel's office here at the courthouse behind me. jim? >> of course trump continues on the campaign trail to spread those election lies about 2020. brianna. >> the state ge set, actors poi to go on strikes. what does this mean for your favorite shows. a pill that could have big impacts on women's health here in the u.s. the fda okayed the first over the counter birth control pill. we'll have details ahead. (upbeat musisic) - [narrator] what if there was a hearing aid that could keep up with you? (notification dings)
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for the first time in more than 60 years the talent behind the cameras and in front of the cameras could go on strike at the same time. contract negotiations between the studios and sag-aftra actors fell apart overnight. the union representing more than 100,000 actors will likely join the writers who have been on the picket lines for the past 70 plus days. natasha chen is covering all of this from los angeles. tell us where things stand and what the sticking points are. >> reporter: yeah, so the negotiations fell apart as you
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said. this was an extension of their original deadline and the guild of 160,000 actors had previously authorized a strike if not no deal was reached. now they're waiting for the national board of sag-aftra to formalize a vote and we'll about that at noon in los angeles. the sticking points have to do with a few major things. compensation, residuals when it comes to streaming and artificial intelligence. in what sag-aftra has been telling the public, they have said that there are enormous shifts in the industry and economy that have been detrimental to their workforce. as you can imagine we live in a world where we stream all of our content now and the residual payments have not caught up with that. of course you can imagine a.i. is a concern when you think about that technology taking the digital likeness of an actor. there have been opinions on this, of course, and today we
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heard from disney ceo bob iger commenting on the strike as well. here he is. >> there's a level of expectation that they have that is just not realistic and they are adding to a set of challenges that this business is already facing that is, quite frankly, disruptive. i respect their right and their desire to guess as much as they possibly can in compensation for their people. and i completely respect that. i've been around long enough to understand that dynamic and to appreciate it. but you also have to be realistic about it. it's a business environment and what this business can deliver. it has been great business for all of these people and it will continue to be even through disruptive times. >> now the studios have said to the press that they actually made a historic pay increase offer as well as groundbreaking protections as far as a.i. is concerned. and they said they're disappointed that sag-aftra made the decision to stop negotiating
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saying that this potential strike here causes further har hardship for the thousands that depend on that for their livelihood. there is a lot of financial hardship with writers on strike more than 70 days and with act tors potentially joining them this is about to get worse for people even outside of the film and tv industry who serve these productions. bianna. >> natasha chen with the latest from los angeles, a lot of people watching this, they want to know how this is going to impact them. thank you. a major change in the availability of contraception coming to the nation's store shelves. for the first time the fda has approved an over-the-counter birth control pill called o pill and as otc, means no doctor visits needed to get it. reporter jacqueline howard joins me now. it's been available for decades with a prescription. now without a prescription.
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can you explain the difference that makes today in terms of availability across the country? >> that's right, jim. i mean this makes a huge difference and we could see as soon as the first quarter in 2024, so early next year, we could see o pill available on store shelves including drug stores, grocery stores and even online. and what this does, it makes it more accessible for women. this o pill, it is as you mentioned a daily oral contraceptive, so this is not meant to be an emergency contraceptive, and it contains the hormone prose gueprogestin we have seen this used with prescription, now available without a prescription, any woman of reproductive age is able to access it over the counter. jim? >> jacqueline howard, a big development for women, thanks so much. rfk jr. no stranger to making controversial claims.
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cnn's k file debunking another. we'll explain. and essential services of every kind. all running on countlessss invisible networks, making it a prprime target for cyberattacks. but the same ai-powered security that protects all of google also defends the systems running america's infrastructure. for these services. for the 336 million of us living here. ♪
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cnn's k file has new reporting dispute something controversial claims from robert kennedy jr. who has a history of sharing unfounded consider theories manmade chemical in the country's tap water could be affecting the, quote, sexual identification of children. andrew kaczynski is joining us now on this. you spoke to some experts on this, scientists and toxicology experts. what did they tell you? >> that's right. so rfk jr. has been making this
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claim manmade chemicals could be children gay or transgender. he's also said that these chemicals could be making boys more feminine or girls more masculine. we spoke to experts who strongly pushed back on this. he cited the way these chemicals have affected frogs and what they told us was this is basically comparing apples to oranges. look, we are humans, frogs amphibians. they affect us different. for humans our sex is determined at the moment of conception, for frogs it can be affected by environmental factors. now we posed this question to the kennedy campaign, how do you dispute what these experts are saying, and here's a little bit of what their spokesperson told us. they said that he's merely suggesting that given the copious research on the effects on other ver te brates, this possibly deserves further
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research. >> merely and suggesting are doing a lot of work in that quote, andrew, i will say. they certainly are. k files andrew kaczynski, thank you for taking us through that. >> always on top of it. to the other headlines we are watching. wild weather on tap for millions of americans yet again today. a day after several homes damaged as suspected tornados were rolled through the chicago suburb of elgin, illinois. the storms so concerning that meteorologists albert raymond with cnn affiliate wvbn had a warning for his colleagues. >> newsroom, time to get out of the newsroom. time to get into an interior room. we have enough rotation. if you want to you can come to our level in the most protected part of the building. we have to get away from windows. control room, you should be in good shape. >> he knows what he's talking about. that's the severity. in an effort to conserve
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water, scottsdale, arizona, will ban natural grass in the front yards of new single-family homes built after august 15th. city council says 86% of water consumers support that move. scottsdale is expected to reach, guess what, 109 degrees today. christopher eubanks thrilling run at wimbledon may have come to an end but the american tennis star wants to keep riding that wave of success. a year ago eubanks took up a commentating job with the tennis channel about doubts with his professional career. it's all changed in a year. he talked to cnn. >> to walk off the court court one at wimbledon cheering for me, it's special. it's something that you dream of as a kid growing up, watching wimbledon on tv, saying i hope to be there one day. it's a bit emotional being able to watch it again. it's really special, it's something that i'll never
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forget, and i can't wait to just try to use this momentum i have now, this confidence as we spoke about earlier into the u.s. summer swing leading into the u.s. open. >> so fun to watch. he will enjoy what is surely the biggest payday of his career, a cool $444,000. not bad at all. >> not bad at all. police are on a manhunt in pennsylvania for a prisoner that escape. >> we'll have details on that and why authorities believe a drone flying around the jajail beforehand could be connected. evens skin tone, and smooths fine lines.. with visible resulults in just one week. neneutrogena® retinol. hi, i'm norma, and i lost 53 pounds on golo. once i entered menopause, i did not like the fact that i had gained body fat around my waist. and i thought, "oh, no, thatan't happen." i've never h that problem. after starting golo and taking release, i immediely saw an improvement in my waistline.
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it has now been a full week since michael burham went on run from the jail. an officer saw his breakout from a jail in northwest pennsylvania through surveillance cameras yet he escaped from a recreation yard on the jail roof. officers could not reach the space in time. he then used bed sheets to repel down. as cnn obtained this video. he's in warren, pennsylvania, following this story. the reward for his capture is now $20,000. do authorities have any leads? >> well, jim, the latest and maybe one of the most crucial
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pieces of information we have comes from lieutenant colonel john vivens. just before he escaped from this jail in the minutes, hours beforehand there was a drone flying very close to the warren county jail right behind me. they did not say who the operator of the drone was, they do not know what the origin was. lieutenant bivens said there could be an explanation or it could be part of the escape. i'm not a big believer in coincidence. now another person who has spoken to the media is tim ryan. i caught up to him yesterday. he owns a cabin in the allegheny national forest not far from here. he knows the terrain very well. he hikes there all the time. i asked him what michael burham and his pursuers are up against? take a listen. >> it's either going to end because he is exhausted,
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dehydrated, starving and he burns out because of that or it's going to end with a body b bag. >> that was a sound bite from the ex-girlfriend of the escaped convict nicole who spoke with wicu. now here's a clip of tim ryan and the terrain in the allegheny national forest. looks like we may not have that clip. in had lieu of that, let me show you at least what the route was that this man took. amanda swineheart is going to show you right at the top of the roof is where the gym is. it's a caged in gym he was working out in on thursday night, last thursday night. he came over that wall on a string of tied together sheets. came through here and there was a stonewall right behind us. he jumps the stonewall and
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there's a yard to a house behind us. he takes off that way and goes into the woods. so that was the route that he took. one other piece of information that is key here. officials -- city officials told us yesterday while they had eyes on him at the moment of his escape through surveillance footage, there was a correction's officer watching him. at the moment he went over the wall there was no one physically with him at the gym, at the rooftop gym at the moment of his escape. >> the presence of that drone raises the chance there was some outside help. certainly something they're looking into it sounds like. in warren, pennsylvania, thank you very much. brianna. when it comes to the economy it is not all doom and gloom. we'll break down the numbers. dare i say good news that could have an impact on your wallet. whoa. alright, c'mon. earnrn big with chase freedom unlimited with no annual fee. how do you cashback?
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