tv CNN This Morning CNN July 20, 2023 5:00am-6:00am PDT
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bison. starting with news. odesa, one of the most hellish nights since vladimir putin's invasion began. russian missiles raining down. ukraine says the russians are striking grain facilities which would feed the world. and a pbig day as donald trump faces another potential indictment. the grand jury is getting ready to meet as it prepares to decide if the former president will face federal charges for trying to overturn the election. and this morning somebody out there who is named neither abby philip nor phil mattingly is $1 billion richer. the powerball's third biggest jackpot has a winner. this hour of "cnn this morning" starts right now. ♪ ♪
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we begin this morning with the worst night in odesa since the start of the invasion. russia's third night of attacks on the city leaving at least one person and two others injured. officials urging people to stay in their shelters until the sirens end. ukraine's air force pleading for better defense systems after they downed only five of 19 russian classrooms. >> the eu's top diplomat calls this barbaric due to the large scale of destruction of food infrastructure. he says not only did russia withdraw from the black sea deal, they are burning the grain now, too. officials claim the previous two days of attacks destroyed 60,000 tons of grain, foods that millions in developing nations rely on. alex marquardt is there. >> reporter: this city has never seen anything like this since the beginning of the war. i can't overstate the terror that the citizens of this city have had to experience over not one, but the last three nights,
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and it is no mistake that odesa is home to ukraine's most famous port. some of the destruction from last night, this is an administrative building. it was four stories high. you can see it has completely collapsed. we are told this is still a search and rescue-toration. at least one young man was killed. there were several people injured. you can see the firefighters trying to put out the fires in this building both from among the rubble and up on that ladder up there. there are firefighters, there are rescue workers, there are volunteers and residents of this neighborhood who are just trying to make sense of what we experienced last night. we are on the edge of the port, the biggest port in ukraine, which we can't show you for security reasons. but that is almost certainly why, according to ukraine authorities, russia has been carrying out strikes on ukraine. now this attack started before
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2:00 a.m. local time. it was a combination of drones and missiles. we could hear those drones very clearly buzzing the rooftops in downtown odesa. i want to play you some of the video that -- sorry, we are going to get out of the way of this water. i want to play you some of the video shot by our photojournalist of one of the explosions of the missiles in odesa last night. take a listen. that is what we heard for an hour and a half. it was not just odesa that was hit. it was mykolaiv, another southern port city. 19 people were wounded. this was an incredibly sophisticated attack. almost 40 drones and missiles. most of the missiles got through. russia used long-range strategic bombers, supersonic bombers, four kinds you have classrooms,
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used those iranian kamikaze drones. the symbolism of what they used is sending a large message to ukraine. president zelenskyy said it is very clearly russia trying to target the grain infrastructure just a few days after russia pulled out of that critical grain deal. >> that's alex marquardt live on the ground in odesa, ukraine. also today a federal grand jury is set to meet as another potential indictment looms over donald trump. the panel in d.c. will be hearing more testimony from special counsel jack sth conditions witnesses as they prepare to decide if trump will face criminal charges for trying to overturn the 2020 election. today is also the deadline for trump's lawyers to it he will jack smith if they want to offer witnesses, including trump himself. we are learning trump quietly hired another attorney to beef up his defense teams and sources telling cnn the former president's lawyers have been scrambling to find out if the special counsel has more
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witnesses they don't know about. kaitlan, it's unclear when the jury's big decision on potential charges would come. what do we expect today? >> well, phil, we expect the grand jury to be in. it is a thursday. one of the days they typically meet at the federal courthouse in d.c. to work with the prosecutors are from the special counsel's office who have been investigating trump, january 6th, the 2020 election, and we expect there will be two witnesses at the least today. one of whom has been into the grand jury twice before, will russell, an aide to donald trump, who also worked in the white house. we don't know what his testimony is going to be about or how long he will be in there. it could be short, since he has been there before. and we really don't snow what the grand jury does in secret. it stays secret, what happens in that room, when they are asked to approve the indictment they do vote. but all you see at the end of the decision-making process, the
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justice department's work, the grand jury's work, is the indictment itself and that it's signed off by the foreman of the grand jury, a jury -- one of the juries that can happen in something like this. court is really unpredictable and grand juries, since they take place in secret, can be quite unpredictable as well. it will be a long day. >> kaitlan, it's often disappointing when i come to you thinking i know something new and you make very clear you have known all of these things for a very long time, which is why this is a valuable question for my purposes. what don't we know? what needs to be sorted out? >> phil, there is a really tantalizing thing in the letter that donald trump received on sunday, this target letter. we know that the justice department indicated what they are looking at charging him with, but the meat of the case is such a huge kwoegs question. we don't know what will be in the indictment, how many counts
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there will be. in the florida case there were 37 charges against the former president t was quite a lot and quite a surprise when it happened. and also there are allegations that the justice department can make non a indictment where they will reveal what they have been doing with the secret grand jury over the months they have been gathering evidence and that can be witness from witnesses no one knew spoke to the grand jury, remained completely secret even to lawyers working on the case, and also, of course, there is all kinds of evidence, documents, records, phone records, all kinds of things the justice department has the ability to pull in and show the grand jury when they are building the case. that stuff is often quite a surprise when the indictment is released. >> yeah. there is a lot hanging out there right now. i think i will quote you here. you have a long day ahead. katelyn polantz, appreciate the reporting as you always. >> joining us elie honig, the former u.s. attorney for the southern district of new york. all eyes on this grand jury.
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what is the realm of possibilities here? >> we are in end game. here is what we know is yet to come. first of all, the final witnesses will testify. we know that one former white house aide to donald trump, william russell, will be testifying today. we don't know whether donald trump will be testifying. he has that opportunity. i would bet no. >> does it surprise you they are hearing from witnesses at this late stage? >> no, you want to hear up to the moment you are ready to do the next stage here, which is when you are done with the witnesses adds a prosecutor, you then present the grand jury with your draft indictment. you say here are the charges we propose, here are the elements of the charges, and then the grand jury will take a vote. now, you hear how easy it is to get an indictment from a grand jury. from firsthand experience, that's true. >> i thought you would say it wasn't. >> no, it's true. there is a big difference between a trial jury, sometimes
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called a pettit jury, and grand jury. trial jury has 12 members. grand jury is bigger, hence the word grand, 23 members in a grand jury. a trial jury much more difficult because you need all 12 to convict. in a grand jury bare majority of 12. and the biggest difference is at trial the proof burden that prosecutors have to prove is beyond a reasonable doubt, the highest legal standard in our system. at grand jury just probable cause. a much lower standard. of course, a trial jury, there is a defense lawyer. grand jury is just prosecutors, witnesses and grand jurors. when you are done, they vote. if they vote yes, you have an indictment. >> in your experience, does it take long time to get to a vote with the grand jury? >> not at all. from the moment you present a franl with a draft indictment you could have a vote and indictment within an hour. >> tell us a little bit about the potential dharnls that trump could be facing. >> really interesting. there are three potential charges. we don't know for sure. the first is a broad based
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conspiracy to defraud or commit a crime against the united states. looks it means jack smith is going to charge the entire effort to steal the election, including the weeks and days leading up to january 6th. new interesting development, deprivation of rights. that means it is a federal crime to interfere with -- forget about this legalese -- any legal right or privilege. the most reasonable, i think, assessment here is the right of all the american people to cast votes and have votes -- those votes counted. finally, witness tampering. i did have an asterisk here. that's on purpose. we have to be careful. there is a law called the title is witness tampering. part of it does deal with typical witness tampering, trying to influence or intimidate a witness, but the second obstruction of an official proceeding, could do with congress' counting of the votes. >> we willnia lot of you over the next couple of days. thank you. phil? you know, abbey, we can't
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sleep on new york. when you look at the full scale of the former president's legal issues, there are significant issues here, including two pretty major developments yesterday over the course of the last couple days. what's going on? >> if we start with this -- the manhattan indictment, right, the hush money case related to that, trump tried to move that state case into federal court because it would afford him different legal difss. now there is a hearing and the judge issued an order yesterday that said that, you know, this was a purely -- the hush money reimbursement payments, even though trump was signing checks in oval office, was a purely personal matter so do not move the case to federal court. he went beyond that. he pointed to some of the defenses trump wants to one. one, even though this is a case he is charged with falsifying business records, the theory was he was doing this to conceal or commit another crimes. the judge is saying there is no
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federal preemption here by the federal election law because this is a narrow -- nthere is a narrow exception and in this case all they have to prove to convict trump is he falsified with the commit or steal another crime. now, that is a crux of what trump's defense is going to be. they will be able to make that argument before the state court judge. >> that's one issue. >> okay. >> but on the second issue, there is, obviously, the sexual assault and defamation case. what happened there? >> right. remember that verdict with e. jean carroll, the jury awarded her $5 million after finding that trump sexually abused and defamed her a couple months ago. well, trump moved to get new trial. the judge denied that request for a new trial and also denied trump's appeal of this $5 million verdict and one of the arguments trump had made, as you remember, e. jean carroll alleged that trump raped her in a department store in the mid
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19190s. on the jury form it was rape or sexual abuse and they checked sexual abuse. trump said i suld get a new ia the judge wrote the finding that miss carroll failed to prove she was raped within the meaning of the new york penal law does not mean she failed to prove mr. trump raimd her as many people commonly understand the word rape. as the evidence at trial makes clear, the jury found that mr. trump in fact did exactly that. really endorsing carroll's argument here. and this whole litigation is not over. she has another lawsuit and that isset is for trial in january. trump's calendar is getting pretty crowded with legal cases, let alone the primaries. >> we can't even keep up with all of these legal developments involving trump these days. >> as expected, it was a good point, and i shouldn't have tried to just take all the questions with you. >> we need her to sort it out
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for us. >> we are trying to figure things out. very upset with the powerball and all the other things right now. no. thank you very much. and it was an emotional day of testimony in austin, texas, where a lawsuit challenging the state's abortion ban was heard there. 13 women and an ob-gyn said the law is too vague. three people testified they were denied abortions in texas. one woman says a twin had a fatal condition and could have caused her to miscarry. the other unless she could travel out of the state for care. >> i have had to watch twin a deteriorate more and more. sorry. i would have to give birth to an
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identical version of my daughter without a skull and without a brain, and i would have had to hold her until she died. >> another plaintiff recalled the moment she learned her pregnancy was not viable. >> i could see the pain in her eyes. and she told me that my daughter has been diagnosed with encephaly, meaning that her skull and brain is not fully developed. and that she was sorry. i didn't have any options. i was pregnant. she then called in a case worker. case worker came in. and they gave me a paper that said funeral homes on top of it. she told me that i didn't have any options because there was a law that -- the abortion law, i
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wasn't able to get one. so i felt like i was abandoned. >> that woman grew so distressed on the stand, she started to vomit. this hearing is set to continue today. well, the senate judiciary committee is set to vote on new ethics requirements for the supreme court, partly in response from democrats after revelations that two justices accepted gifts from gop donors. >> the only crisis at the supreme court is the tantrum that the democrats are throwing and trying to undermine its legitimacy. >> senators are going to respond to that and much more coming up next. okay. i'll work on that. the queen sleep number 3 360 2 smart bed is now only $899. plus, freeee home delivery whn you add an adjustable base. shop n now only at sleep numbe.
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republican megadonor harlan crow. justice alito also failed to disclose trips fm billionaire it would require justices adops, their own code of conduct, create a froert investigating violations, include transparency standards and require judges to explain their recusals to the public. dick durbin and sheldon whitehouse are with us. thank you for taking the time. the question i have had throughout the course of the debate, we saw the news reports and public response, we have seen no movement from republican senators on this issue. have you behind the scenes had any engagement about a way to try to bring republicans onboard? >> well, i'm surprised, in fact disappointed, because ethical
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issues involving the supreme court have been bipartisan in the recent past whether it's an issue of declaring stock ownership in making it a public disclosure or cameras in the courtroom. these have always been bipartisan issues. but yet, when it comes to the supreme court apparently the republicans in the senate are taking the same position as the supreme court. it's none of our business and we want nothing to do with it. the public knows better. that's why the opinion of the public on the court itself has plummeted. chief justice roberts has the power and opportunity now to take control of the situation. he has failed to do that. i hope he changes his mind soon. but we are not going to wait. >> before i turn this to senator whitehouse, you are trying to -- you are going to move through committee to send a message and hope that that unlocks the chief justice's willingness to do something? >> it's more than just a message. senator whitehouse has really led the effort to building this
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legislation into a credible reform of ethics in the supreme court. i wrote a letter to the supreme court, chief justice, 11 years ago calling on him to do this and he has refused. we invited him to come before the committee and testify on the issue. again he declined. he has the power to take control of the situation because he has failed to do so, we're moving forward with this legislation. >> senator whitehouse, you have been working on, talking about pushing on these issues for a long time. but you said something to politico yesterday that struck me. he said, this moment, the committee vote, which doesn't are a clear pathway throh the senate, think of a boxing match. if you don't fight the first round, you can't win the match. what's a -- to carry it forward, what's a knockout for you? what's a win, tko to some degree, on this issue specifically? >> well, a win here is a supreme
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court that serves the people of the united states by adhering to the most basic standards of process and ethics that they actually impose on other courts and on the rest of government. so if there is a question about a supreme court justice's conduct, fact finding to find out the truth rather than a cover-up. clear application of the ethics code to these judges. and whether that's done by the chief justice or the judicial conference, which the chief justice chairs, or whether we have to do that in the legislature, in congress, one way or the other it has to end there because it is untenable to have a supreme court that is unhinged from these very, very basic ten ets of proper ethics and proper due process and procedure. >> senator whitehouse, i was struck by something. reason had a press conference yesterday opposed this this bill, they haven't been secretive about that, but something that senator lindsey
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graham said. take a listen. >> two things can be true. the court probably needs to address that issue. i new they do. i believe they will. and congress needs to stay out of the court's business. >> i think that the first part was interesting, particularly the part where he said he thought they will. i don't know if maybe he knows something here. but his -- the second part though is a fair point as well, that congress should stay out of the court's business. this is a separate branch of government. something you repeatedly heard from republicans. why are they wrong about that? >> they are wrong about that because the financial disclosure rules that are at the center of most of these ethics complaints are passed by congress. eights law passed by congress. the failures of the supreme court justices to recuse actually are a violation of a law passed by congress. and the administration of those two laws passed by congress is
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done by the judicial conference, which is a body created by congress. so what the republicans are saying is that congress has no authority to oversee how a body created by congress oversees and implements laws passed by congress, and that simply makes no sense. >> senator durbin, a cynical person would say the supreme court, particularly being in its conservative majority at this point, some of the rulings they have had, is a political boost for democrats. certainly an issue ain the midterm elections on abortion specifically, and that there is some incentive for democrats to keep the supreme court as an issue even when the court is not in session right now. what do you say who those feel this a political maneuver amade of 2024? >> i wrote a letter to the chief justice in the supreme court 11 years ago. i think two or three of the current justices were on the court atta time, urging him to establish a code of conduct for the supreme court. so this is not personal to these
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justices. it would imply to all justices whether appointed by a democratic president or a republican. as it should. it is a nonpartisan effort to establish the same basic rules of conduct for these public servants as the other federal judges face currently. i want to add one point that should be a part of this conversation. federal judges across the united states are not happy with what the supreme court is doing. the supreme court refuses to abide by the same standards of conduct as they are required to abide by. it is not making them happy at all. so i think we go forward with this for the good of the judiciary. we have the authority to do it. we have been chief justice roberts the opportunity over and over to take control of the situation. he hasn't done it. >> mr. chairman, are you confident that you have all 51 senators, the caucus of the democrats onboard for this? >> one step at a time. we are in the first round. we have laid the -- the democrats on the senate
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judiciary committee will support our effort for senator whitehouse's bill and we hope that some republicans will join. >> senators dick durbin, sheldon whitehouse, thank you very much for your time. >> thank you. and ahead for us, the wife of an accused serial killer in new york taking legal action of her own and new details about how the suspect is acting in jail. but it does so much more. this thing shows you your fico® score, you can get your credit card recomommendations, and it shows you ways to sasave money. do so much more ththan get your fico® score. download the experian app n now. a single strand of mrna could change the way we fight respiratory diseases. and the company at's getting us there? moderna. this changes everything. this is american infrastructure. megawatts ofower, rails and open road, and essential services of every kind. all running on countless invisible networks,
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of rex heuermann, the suspected serial killer accused of murdering at least three women whose remains were found on a short stretch on liu's gilgo in 2010. his wife is now file for divorce and the suffolk county sheriff says he has been extremely quiet in jail. meantime, from nevada to south carolina, investigators are looking back at unsolved cases for any sign that heuermann may have been involved and in new york authorities are reinterviewing women who had heuermann contact them to solicit sex years ago. >> so we were able to match up the phone numbers that are
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attributed to him to these females. we were able to actually realize that he reached out to two individuals. the phone calls are just like any other john that wanted to get together and for some reason they did not want to meet with him. >> and joining us now is cnn chief law enforcement and intelligence analyst john miller. this a case right out of, you know, the books and the movies in some ways. and what is also extraordinary about this case is the number of victims and now the scope of where the investigators are looking. does it surprise you that they are expanding to even other states? >> they have all kinds of advantages they didn't have. number one, they don't have to operate under the veil of secrecy where they are doing things that might tip-off the suspect. so las vegas, he that as a timeshare. both the las vegas metro, i spoke to them yesterday, they are going back through open cases, missing persons to see does anyone fit the victimology
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or offender characteristics of the crime scene of this case. as we know. las vegas is a city that is not strange to the sex worker business or tracks yents who come and go. so they are looking. but there is hunting cabins he had access to in upstate new york. those counties will be looking at those cases. there is a brother down south who had the pickup truck that was central to identifying him in this case. they will be looking down there. but they will also be looking here. now they have the phones. they are going through those calls. they have got his computer activity. who did he contact? are they going to find a witness who said i had a close call but i got away? these are people who generally don't call the police in many cases. so they have a lot to do. >> yeah. >> is that based on the efforts that they are doing outside of what think already know s that based on a theory? is that based on the profile that he cuts? or do you think that they know that there are other victims tied to him in these myriad of
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places? >> i think they are looking at the basic profile, if you will, of offenders like this who are involved in multiple murders, who are organized offenders, who plan ahead of time, who execute carefully, who intend to get away with it for a long time, if not forever. and they are seeing you have the gilgo cases. three that are charged. a fourth likely to go into that mix and then more bodies that were buried there that they have to determine are these within that, too. but what they are looking at is, generally an offender like this doesn't grind to a halt and say the urges are going, i am going to stop killing people. they may their m.o., the geography, that's why they are expanding in all these directions because it's something they have to do, need to do, but also should do. >> i want to turn to a different story we have been talking about this morning. >> this is about carlee russell. she is a woman in alabama who made these 911 calls. she said she saw a toddler wandering around the street and
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then disappeared for 49 hours. now there are really serious questions about her side of the story and questions about what she was doing in the lead-up to her disappearance. >> so this is story that brought, you know, hoover, a small town, together. a 25-year-old nursing student vanishes. it starts with a 911 call saying i see a baby in a diaper walking on the side of the highway and then, you know, she disconnects from 911, calls a family member, screams and the call goes dead. so, you know, they thought this was a kidnapping. as they investigated further, the layers they pulled back are, when they find her car on side of the highway her purse is there, phone is there, apple watch is there. she ends up being traced to a target store after that where she buys some snack foods. her internet searches show she searched for the movie "taken"
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about a woman abduct the, searched about bus tickets to other cities from there. she was finally shows up at home with $107 in her sock. okay. so there is a lot about her story that isn't holding together. >> and look, one of the things people really paid attention to in this case is that you know, black and brown women going missing is a real issue and i think still a lot of questions now about what really happened here and, you know, whether we will hear more about her side of the story as well. >> well, her parents are standing by her. she has put a pause on talking to the police. this has a while to go also. >> thank you. minutes from now robert f. kenny jr. will testify in front of congress. that's next. before break, today is the anniversary of one of mankind's giant leaps. 54 years ago, neil armstrong
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ethnically targeted certain groups. with me to discuss are john avlon and scott jennings. i -- i -- >> [ laughter ] >> what to say about this one. >> what i think is interesting about this, and this is less that robert f. kenny is the conspiracy which is completely object absurd, but more that he is polling at 17 to 20% as a democratic presidential candidate and cynical person would say if you are a republican, let's continue to elevate him on a regular basis and that would include having him testify on capitol hill. republican scott jennings, your thoughts? >> it is sort of governing by trolling. just this screwing with joe biden by having him up there. on the other hand, it's also platforming someone who shhas n just recently become a kook and a crank and a conspiracy
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theorist, he has been one his whole life. he invented the conspiracy theory that george w. bush rewired the voting machines in ohio in 2004. republicans have known he has been a weirdo for a long time. now because it's hurtful to biden, we are platforming it. i think it's kind of a waste of time, kind of a troll, and particularly when you look at what he said over the weekend. you know, do we not have anything better to do with our time? the topic they are discussing i think republicans are interested for a good reason. there is probably a thousand other people you could stick up there. >> you could look through the emails and the lawsuit -- or the judge's decision related to the administration and -- like there are significant issues throughout the course that you could dig in on that don't include something like this and platforming. >> and scott makes an important point. i mean, the lies are dangerous. i mean, on childhood vaccines. but the numbers ever pretty clear. the fundraising numbers. robert f. kennedy raised a lot of money and according to
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analyses of the donors, trump donors, desantis donors, there is a sense that, first of all, the anti-vaxxer stuff is very potent on the right, but also that rfk, because of his last name, the kenny name, can be annoyance to joe biden. >> let's take those one, two, three. a cynical person might say that republicans are promoting this candidacy. well, the data of the donations would suggest that is indeed the fact. the trolling sort of, you know, hearing today also would indicate that fact. now, look, polling also shows that there is a large number of text messages whoers dissatisfied with the idea of joe biden running for re-election. clearly robert f. kennedy on the -- banking off the strength of that name, his father's historic name, could get a lot of that energy. the problem is that he has been a proponent after he was a responsible environmentalist. give him credit for that for a period of his life. this is known in extremism work as horseshoe theory.
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the far right and far left circle back on each other. he was a early proponent of it. now there is a degree of common cause. doesn't make anybody smarter or safer. >> i'm stealing that one. i learned something new. scott -- >> always learn something new. >> i know. scott, you were talking about republicans on capitol hill governing, you know, by trolling. there is a lot of that, it seems, going on these days. earlier in the program we were talking about even the hearing on the hunter biden case and putting aside the accusations from the whistleblowers. there was the marjorie taylor greene of it all, holding up photos in the hearing room. if you are kevin mccarthy, is that helpful? >> i am not certain the explicit photos are helpful. i think the testimony of the whistleblowers is, if you listen -- i watched quite a bit of it, read about t looked through it. what they had to say was important, damning, in fact. so i don't think it's getting
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the coverage that it deserves and the exploration of it is important stuff. hunter biden aside, ultimately the connective tissue is does joe biden have anything to do with what hunter biden was doing. >> and this is the self-defeating irony, right? the whistleblowers are credible. irs agents. their claims should be taken seriously. should testify to answer -- he said they are incorrect and what they characterized. but the republicans end up demeaning their own investigations with the circus, with the trollingness of it. marjorie taylor greene having naked photos on the congress floor. so they actually diminish whatever seriousness there may or may not be in with this by bringing in the sir you can kiss and the troll army. >> her mission is to get attention for herself. the larger republican mission would be to get attention for the issue of what the whistleblowers have to say. she probably did step on that. but overall, i think -- i think -- i think having -- >> well, at least they blurt out
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the -- >> yeah, mccarthy has really elevated her in so many ways. it really only enables this kind of behavior. >> yeah. >> yes. >> john? >> the whistleblowers, it was very interesting testimony. just -- and it gets in the way of everything. and keep acting like -- we are not pulling out the damn photos. >> john and scott, both of you, thank you. and the 2023 women's world cup is officially underway. the united states is trying to become the first country to win that tournament for the third time in a row. and two of the most anticipated movies of the summer come out this weekend. john avlon doing the double feature, "barbie" or operation warp speed. who is going to win in the box office battle? >> i think "barbrbie." >> you think "barbie" wins. we're carvana we createded a brand new way fr you to sell your car go to cacarvana answer a few queuestions and our techno w wizardry calculates your car's value and gives s you a real offer in seconds we'll come to you
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under the assumption that the u.s. is going to win because we are awesome. however, the team is very different. it's a lot younger. they have had a lot of injuries and the competition is a lot better. is that fair? >> that is a fair and accurate analysis. in fact, the 23-team roster, 14 of those players are newbies. can you imagine? so i will say this. what they lack for in experience, they make up for in talent. we have such a great group of young women. some of the storylines you should be looking out for and players you should pay attention to, trinity rodman, at 18 years old to go to the league here and last year became the highest paid player in the league. obviously her father is dennis rodman, and people are vote asso --
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associating the two. so i think she's going to play with a chip on her shoulder to prove she's not only her father's child -- they don't have a great relationship -- but she's a great player in her own right. this weekend we have the double header of blockbusters set to open. "barbie" and pom"oppenheimer" aa lot of households are split if they're going to see the movies separately, maybe together. why do you think this has tapped into something, maybe touched a nerve in our public life here? people really are kind of excited to get back in the theatres it seems. >> yeah. i think that this movie in particular, it's really weird because i'm in los angeles, the backdrop is, you can feel there's this palpable attitude in hollywood with the writer's
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strike and the actor's striking. you can feel the sense i want to support this film it's amazing. the marketing is genius. it's everywhere, you can't go anywhere without seeing it. i also know people feel like i'll go to the movies, this will get me back into the summer movie fling because we haven't had one in a while, especially since covid. but there's this feeling of i'm torn tweeb the two. you want to support and families want to watch. we're well aware, in this day and age, society is well aware of what's happening in holywood and people feel torn between supporting the writers and seeing the film. but there is this excitement because they have built so much into it, it was a $200 million marketing campaign for barbie specifically. >> the films are made and actors are in them and supporting the films may mean supporting the actors in there, too.
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kerry champion, always great to have you on. thank you so much. coming up one -- one lucky winner in california -- i'm so mad i can't speak i didn't win. >> the disappointment is palpable. >> while the rest of us wonder when we'll get this lucky. harry enten is here. you're all i need. it's the same thing, so is your dancing. >> good move.
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(bridget) with thyroid eye disease i hid from the camera. and i wanted to hide from the world. for years, i thought my t.e.d. was beyond help... but then i asked my doctor about tepezza. (vo) tepezza is the only medicine that treats t.e.d. at the source not just the symptoms. in a clinical study more than 8 out of 10 patients taking tepezza had less eye bulging. tepezza is an infusion. patients taking tepezza may have infusion reactions. tell your doctor right away if you experience high blood pressure,
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fast heartbeat, shortness of breath or muscle pain. before getting tepezza, tell your doctor if you have diabetes, ibd, or are pregnant, or planning to become pregnant. tepezza may raise blood sugar even if you don't have diabetes and may worsen ibd such as crohn's disease or ulcerative colitis. now, i'm ready to be seen again. visit mytepezza.com to find a ted eye specialist and to see bridget's before and after photos. after 91 days and 38 consecutive drawings, bad news unless you're one of these
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people. a new power ball winner, it happened. the single winning ticket worth more than $1 billion was sold in california. the third largest jackpot in history. if thursday wasn't your lucky day friday could be. for a paltry $720 million. >> i would take that. >> your odds of winning are worse. >> okay. >> i don't know how to explain that so we brought harry enten. >> i'm glad i can play a role for you. >> give us a number. >> this morning's number is odds of winning the jackpot is 1 in 303 million. somehow worse than the power ball which was 1 in 292 million. 1 in 303 million doesn't strike me that your answers of winning are that good. >> that's why you're the numbers
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guy. >> it's actually become harder to win over the last few years. they made the jackpots harder to get win to get more money. the power ball they added ten extra regular balls in 2015 and ten extra megaballs in 2017. >> what's more likely in terms of things that could happen to you? >> your chance of the mega millions is 303 million, the chance of a shark killing you is 1 in 4 million. still bad odds of that happening but still better than your chance of winning the mega millions. how about the chance to be at
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least 6'2", phil, is one in 20. so maybe in the upcoming years. >> i looked at the slide and knew where you were going. >> stone cold, my friend. >> not only am i not a billionaire, but you've come in assault. >> tough day for phil. >> but a wonderful time being with you, two. >> thanks, harry. cnn "news central" starts right now. don't go anywhere. in washington d.c., a federal grand jury is expected to meet once again. that same federal grand jury could vote as soon as today to indict former president trump for his efforts to stay in power after he lost the ec
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