tv CNN News Central CNN July 28, 2023 10:00am-11:00am PDT
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you new charges, a new defendant, new accusation that's donald trump wanted potential evidence deleted. he is now facing serious charges, including trying to alter, destroy, mutilate or conceal evidence in the classified documents case. we have the latest details. plus, we'll take you on the campaign trail. trump's legal battles on a collision course with the 2024 election. it's a major day for republicans in iowa. and the candidates you can see on the screen will make their case to voters. will donald trump's grip on the republican party weaken? and get an ambulance here now. a 911 call captures the moment after lebron james' son bronny suffered cardiac arrest during basketball practice. we are following these developing stories and many more. all coming in right here to cnn news central.
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new charges and stunning new details coming to light in donald trump's classified documents case. the special counsel now charging the former president with three new counts, including one additional count of willful retention of national defense information. two additional counts of obstruction. prosecutors say that trump, along with two employees, tried to alter, mutilate and conceal evidence. long-time aide walt nauta and property manager carlos de oliveira allegedly tried to delete security footage at donald trump's request. de oliveira has been added to the case as a defendant. he told prosecutors the boss said he wanted it deleted. and trump is being charged about
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the document regarding iran. it was a tamed meeting at his bed minister golf club in new jersey. all this as charges could come at any time in the special counsel's other investigation. donald trump's efforts to overturn the 2020 election. and then, there's this. new cnn video showing security barricades placed outside the fulton county courthouse in downtown atlanta. a charging decision against trump and his allies over election interference is expected there days from now. let's discuss this and more with evan perez and elaina. evan, let's start with you. what more do we know about this superseding indictment? >> we know the former president is facing three new charges. there is a 32nd document that has been added to the listf documents thate's alleged to have been willfully retaining which is against the law. we'll read you a part of what prosecutors lay out here.
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this very, vy detailed picture of the former president and his two employees, that they say were could not speering to try delete, to try to delete surveillance footage, after the justice department had requested access to that footage which they knew had a clear view of the storage room where all the classified documents were being stored. there is a part of it where de oliveira is talking to a member of the i.t. team and he wants to footage and he says, de lete the oliveira, according to prosecutors that, he then insisted the trump employee, that the boss wanted the server deleted, and then he asked, what are we going to do? the prosecutors really ray out chapter and verse. they seem to have a lot of information. perhaps from other witnesses. perhaps some of the footage that they have of de oliveira and
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walt nauta discussing how to delete this stuff and how to keep de oliveira on the team. to make sure that he doesn't turn against the former president. >> yeah, there were questions about his loyalty. nauta in a group chat with other employees asking whether he was loyal or not. according to the prosecutors, trump reaching out to de oliveira and saying, hey, i'll pay for your attorney. that's astounding. >> the prosecutors detail a 24-minute conversation. again, this is the former president of the united states talking to his maintenance guy. the guy running the property there in mar-a-lago. i'm not sure how often those conversations happen but certainly prosecutors seem to highlight that as an example of an indication of what the former president was trying to orchestrate with his employees there at mar-a-lago. >> and again, attacking the special counsel over this super seeding indictment, much like he did in the previous indictment. >> it is important to point out that donald trump's team was
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very surprised by this yesterday. his lawyers met yesterday with the special counsel in d.c. and they were spending most of yesterday waiting for a potential indictment in the january 6th case. not relating to the mar-a-lago case or the classified documents. so this really caught trump off guard. and he's very frustrated by this, i'm told, by many of his aides and allies and advisers. but publicly, you're right. he's still using the same play book that we've seen him use time and time again when talking about his mounting legal troubles. he had an interview last night where he railed against these charges. he called it election interference. that he's the target of political persecution, and directly attacked special counsel jack smith. let's listen to that exchange. >> this is harassment, election interference.
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i wouldn't game him. he's gone after other people. been overturned unanimously in the supreme court. he's destroyed a lot of lives what he's done is just horrible. and the abuse of power. it is prosecutorial misconduct. >> so really interesting there. he mentioned if he's elected president in 2024, he would fire jack smith. i also think a notable thing from that interview, he talked about how this is helping his poll numbers and he's getting a political boost from these charges. and he spoke with fox news and said that he wants republicans to do something about this and clearly you're seeing a lot of republicans in capitol hill. congress women coming to his aid. trying to rally people around him. and i think you're going to continue to see donald trump use these comments. he'll be in iowa tonight. he'll be in eerie, pennsylvania. i'll be there. you can expect him to use these same attacks. >> blending the legal battle with the political campaign as
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he has done. >> definitely. we look forward to more reporting coming at any moment. thank you. >> let's dig down on the legal aspects here. paula reid and former director of the fbi. good to have you both here. two essential elements. one, an alleged effort to delete evidence of a potential crime. and two, more details about this highly classified document he allegedly waved in front of people without security clearance. paula, first, on the specific evidence, at least the implication here that he in conjunction with one of his aides tried to delete video surveillance footage showing that they were programbly trying to get rid of some of these documents here. what's the significance and about what we learned last night. >> he's being charged here with trying to obstruct his own
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obstruction. the surveillance footage is key for prosecutors. that footage shows the boxes moving around the mar-a-lago property at key times during this investigation. who do you see? well, walt nauta and carlos de oliveira. the big question was, who was directing them to have move these boxes? particular reply one where they moved them out of a storage closet right before trump's own lawyer went in to look for classified documents. not only is the former president being accused of trying to obstruct his own obstruction. he has a new co-defendant. that is significant because it raises the possibility that the government could possibly get a cooperating witness here. there's been a lot of pressure on carlos just like on walt nauta to cooperate with the government. so far both of them have refused to do that. they both have lawyers who are paid for by a trump affiliated
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political action committee, and one of trump's biggest tasks over the next year not only is he trying to get back in the white house. he has to keep these two in the fold. >> andrew mccabe, the other piece is, there's been a lot of discussion for some time about whether trump was waiving a highly classified document about iran war plans in front of folks without a security clearance. he claims he was waving some sort of news article here. now we have something added in effect to the indictment against him. what would be required to add this to the indictment here? would the special counsel need something, someone to say yeah, i saw him waving the document and by the way, it was a classified document? you don't know exactly what evidence there is. but what would be the standard? >> so a couple of things. first they would have to find it. it is clear they did find it in their possession.
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they have now added it to the indictment. interestingly enough, they've described this document as having been in trump's possession until january of 2022 which is also the time he returned 15 boxes worth of material back to the federal government. so it's likely that they found this document in those 15 boxes. second, they would have to get the intelligence community to approve the use of this document in the public prosecution, this procedure. it appears that they've now secured that approval. and finally, you have to authenticate it by having someone, a witness in the room, identify the document. they likely have a witness who saw this document. then was shown the document by prosecutors and said, yes, there is the document that i saw in his hand. it really closes the circle on this episode and turns it into a very daunting thing for trump to try to defend against. >> big picture.
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this superceding indictment. how much more there just in the classified documents case? >> so i don't think you can overstate how much worse this indictment is for trump now. and for two reasons. one, the document and the charge that we are just discussing, that is a really devastating charge because of the audio tape that they'll play in front of the jury. the visceral nature of having the witnesses. more importantly, number two. charging trump with actively being engaged in the effort to suppress or destroy or conceal the videotapes shows a level of guilty knowledge. people don't actively personally get involved in obstructing, destroying evidence in an investigation of them unless they know that that evidence is likely to lead to their conviction of a crime. so in addition to being a charge in and of itself, it brings the
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specter of guilty knowledge to the prosecution, and that is devastating. >> in the indictment, it suggests at least that this third now defendant in this case, oliveira, he said the boss told him to get this security footage deleted. how do we know that? >> this comes from conversations, texts and signal conversations, exchange between multiple employees at the trump organizations. now, this is mar-a-lago in particular, but there were also conversations between employees at mar-a-lago and the trump organization in new york. so much of what they know about these conversations comes from that evidence. there have been questions about exactly, for example, who forgot to wipe their signal. messages and things like that. we know, for example, carlos's phone was seized by investigators and there are other people who have sat down and answered questions. at this point it is unclear how they obtained all of these text messages.
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>> understood. not the indictment many were expecting yesterday but significant nonetheless. thank you to both of you. >> trump's legal troubles are not getting in the way of a key event on the campaign trail today. the republican candidates gathering in iowa. the big question, who can break through the trump noise? can anyone? and president biden making his own pitch for re-election. in just minutes, he's touting biden-omics. and more proof of how extreme the heat is outside right now. even the hearty cactii in arizona are dying. we're back in just moments. ♪ (please don't go) ♪ ♪ (pleaease don't go) ♪ ♪ (please don't go) ♪ ♪ (please don't go) ♪ ♪ (don't gooo) ♪ ( ♪ ♪ )
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annual gop dinner. the lincoln dinner. it will be trump's first appearance. he is getting hit with new federal charges in the classified documents case. it will be the first time he shares the stage with rival ron desantis. jessica is in des moines. i wonder, given these new charges here, is anyone going to directly challenge trump and his position? particularly with his position in his classified documents case? particularly with what we learned last night? >> reporter: well, that's the big question. we don't know until they show up on that stage. what we do know is on the trail, we have not heard anyone going directly after him on that specific issue. i talked to a number of voters yesterday. they're very focused on who can beat joe biden in 2024. the word indictment did not come up a lot. there is trump fatigue. that's for sure. they're trying to figure out who can win. if it's trump, they seem open to that possibility. governor ron desantis is in the middle of a campaign reset.
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he's here on a bus tour in rural iowa. he had several stops yesterday. more stops today. he did talk a little about taking on the former president but not on the stump. only when asked about it by the media. it's that delicate thread, the needle he has to thread. it's tough because he has all of these voters that likely voted for trump in the last two elections, that he wants to convince he's the better option this time. we have a little clip of him talking about that yesterday. listen. >> in florida, he won by three. i won by 20. we're winning independent voters by double digits. that's really the formula that you need to beat biden and to be able to beat the democrats. we're not getting a mulligan on 2024. you go and get the job done or you don't. i will get the job done. >> and jim, that's what we're hearing more and more from governor desantis. his pitch to voters on
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electability. he can win in 2024 based on what he did in florida as a blueprint for what he can do in a general election. the fact remain, the former president continues to have a very strong hold over this republican presidential primary despite everything that's going on. >> there has been a lot of talk going desantis for some time. he hasn't delivered on those expectations but there are a lot of other candidates in this race. sitting senators, current and former governors, folks with some national profile. as you've been speaking to voters, is there any one of the other challengers that are getting talked about? >> reporter: the voters certainly seem open to seeing all these people. senator tim scott's has come up. nikki haley. different names come up. em and ascertaining for eing themselves, who they think can take on biden in 2024. that's why events like this are
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so important. especially for everybody not named donald trump. in this crowded field, they're all looking for that breakout lane. they're all trying to find whatever the edge might be. i obtained a memo from the super pac supporting former vice president mike pence. they were talking about what is happening with desantis' campaign could be an opportunity for him. he wants to take a more aggressive stance in the weeks leading up to the debate. he hasn't yet qualified to be on the debate stage. there are so many candidates looking for what that edge could be. that's why tonight is important. some of them have higher name identification than others. but pitching themselves to voters. but what happens, what could happen tonight, we'll see the former president come into town with all the news about his legal issues surrounding him. it will be the first time being seeing them in public in the last 24 hours. the question for the other candidates consideration they draw the attention of the
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voters, or will donald trump suck up the oxygen in the room? and how did they deal with that? it is kind of fascinating. and we'll watch it play out in real-time. >> if there's any lesson to previous cycles, prepare yourself for surprises. thank you so much. let's expand the conversation with cnn political analyst and white house correspondent for pbs news hour, and cnn political commentator, alice stewart. alice, under normal circumstances. if you're talking about a candidate that has been indicted twice. a potential third, maybe a fourth indictment looming. accused of endangering national security, accused of obstruction of justice, that would be a slam-dunk. it seems like more republicans are is that righting donald trump at this point in the race. why do so many republican voters stick with him? >> you said under normal circumstances. normal circumstances, that person would be gone and out of the race. and would do so voluntarily, if not being forced out by others.
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but the reality is, what donald trump says is what his base believes. they are not looking at the facts and the substance of any of the indictments. none of them. they don't care what is in them or the volume of them or if it come every day in the iowa caucus. they're not concerned about that. they're lucas more of the weaponization of the doj. they say jack smith has it out for donald trump and they truly believe that donald trump is a victim of the justice system. that there is a two-tiered justice system and it is going after donald trump. no matter how any rational person cannot see it that way, that's what they believe and they'll be the to stand by him. the problem is there are other people who look at the substance of this and look at the concerns of trying to overturn an election. the mishandling of classified documents and the whole litany of documents. they realize we don't need a nominee tied up in the courtroom. we want someone in the corn fields of iowa talking about the issues important to us. so many people in iowa tonight
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and moving forward are looking for that alternative that will fight for them and not for their past grievances. >> their concern for those voters is whether what will work in the primary will work in the general election. one thing that is starting isn't just trump's resilience, it is a resilience with so many republican lawmakers. especially on capitol hill whose lives he put at risk by sending his supporters to the capitol on january 6th. they're sticking with him. >> a lot of house republicans are sticking with him. i say more house republicans than senate republicans. even so, you don't hear a lot of senate republicans out there hammering the former president or encouraging other candidates to really break from him. and part of why voters view these indictments as a weaponization of the government is because the former president continually attacks the justice system that way but also the other candidates. you've seen ron desantis, tim scott and others question what
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the justice department is doing. and that feeds that among the gop voters, which still about, six in ten republican voters believe the 2020 election was stolen. that's what republicans are making a lot of this election about. >> to alice's points about a rational person not totally ascribing to the same set of facts. if you were strategizing with these other republican candidates, for instance, this dinner in iowa tonight, how are you suggesting they not only take on trump but court the voters supportive of him. >> there are those who are supportive of him and they're not going anywhere. others are not going to lose any sleep if you directly attack donald trump because they feel the same way. my recommendation, having been on a campaign against donald trump, you have to go right at him. you have to call a spade a spade. we're going to get that tonight from chris christie, i would assume, asa hutchinson will do
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the same. i've talked with other campaigns. they'll focus more on issues important to iowa. focusing on the economy, desantis looking at the optimistic vision for the campaign and the country, and tim scott, a new visionary outlook for the future. but republican voters in iowa speaking with leaders and evangelical and party leaders. they're looking at the long game. they're not looking at who is the best to win the iowa caucus. they're looking at who can win the general election. iowa has the distinct responsibility not just to pick the party's nominee, to winnow the field, who is the best to win the general election. that's what many are looking for. hopefully more republicans as we head into the early states. i'll tell you the person i feel sorry for. each candidate has ten minutes to speak. i feel sorry for the one who has to turn off the mic on donald trump. he will keep on talking. >> they won't have a good time. >> speaking of iowa setting the tone and the early tone in a primary season.
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ron desantis has been trying to change the tone of his campaign for at least a couple weeks talking about a reboot. getting rid of a third of his staff. what does he need to do to distinguish himself? >> i was talking to a republican strategist about this. he said when desantis is going places, his events are very small and he's not getting that big of a draw compared to trump. and he's also surrounded more by floridians than any other state republicans which could be a problem when he's trying to win voters. also, speaking to what we've been talking about. he's not going directly at trump. he will occasionally sometimes take a small punch at the former president and then he steps back. he also waffles on some of his policies. we saw that when he said he would put robert f. kennedy jr. in charge of the cdc. then said never mind, i wouldn't do that. so it feels as though he is still desperately trying to figure out what exactly he can say that will bring trump voters
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to his side. no matter what, there are a set of republican voters that alice is talking about that certainly want a totally different nominee. in order to win the primary states, you have to get a big chunk of those trump voters. we see that desantis is trying to figure out a way to do that and not doing it very well. >> and this will be a unique opportunity. donald trump doesn't like the share the stage or the room with other candidates and he's doing so tonight. so any of the chances these candidates may take to punch donald trump. they'll get boo'd. that will be a difficult balancing act for them. >> it will be a risk. thank you so much for the conversation. appreciate it. the sweltering temperatures baking the southeast could be at their worst today. 150 million americans impacted. when will it get better? we'll let you know. and the show won't go on. the emmys are postponed as
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quite feeling that just yet. let's take you live to 1600 pennsylvania avenue with the new cnn correspondent. we're grateful to have you. bring us the details of president biden's democracy message. >> reporter: it's great to be here. hopefully this is the first of many times i'll be joining you from this perch. president biden is expected to take the stage momentarily at auburn manufacturing to tout recent economic wins, and to talk about a new executive order prioritizing production. it will be a familiar speech. a refrain of a lot of talking points that he's been highlighting recently. it come with a brand new set of data points. a bunch of economic tail winds at the president's back, higher than expected economic growth for the second quarter. the lowest inflation read in two years. rising consumer sentiment. a strike of ups workers averted and much, much more.
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the question remains, when or even whether voters will give biden credit for any of this. in the most recent cnn poll on the economy, voters gave him a 34% approval rating on the economy, and three quarters of respondents said the economy was in bad shape. that poll was from back in may. the number have hovered roughly in that ballpark since then. it is unclear what will create a breakthrough there. there are also some economic snags that could be in the wings coming up ahead. you have student loan payments restarting in a few weeks. and then surging gas prices just this week. a senior administration official tells me, the white house is watching gas prices very carefully. the president is being briefed regularly. and officials are already discussing policy options if they need to step in to tame those prices. for now the message is a good one. the white house wants to embrace it. especially as the president's age has been thrust back into the spotlight. we'll see him momentarily.
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>> thank you for the reporting. jim? well, just another day of extreme heat, historic heat across the country. more than 150 million americans remain under heat alerts. nearly half the country. with many facing triple digits all the way from the southwest to here in the nation's capital. it's hot here, too. in arizona, the record-breaking temperatures are so bad that even cactuses can't take the heat. the desert botanical garden said the saguaros are collapsing. the city's record streak of temperatures over 110 degrees is now in its 28th day. the triple digit heat set to take over parts of the northeast and midwest now. the cnn meteorologist is in the weather center. we talk about it. it is really bad. how bad for how long and what do we do about it? a lot of questions for you.
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>> chicago, 18 hours. and it's a lot better. new york, philadelphia, d.c., you're probably looking at another 36 hours before the front gets down to you. the temperatures are already in the 90s and we're just after the noon hour here across parts of the midwest. and the heat index, the current heat index in my home town of omaha is 111 to 112 degrees at this hour. and high temperatures will be hot. coast to coast today. and because we're talking about these 150 million people, it isn't that it's hot here. it is that it is hotter than it should be. they don't post these boxes here because it's hot. it's a threshold above where you should be. the good news is for phoenix, you're cooling down. that will be a big help. even from the 85 plus record highs we'll get over the weekend, this is going to help. although it will be a severe weather event. even for you chicago, milwaukee, toward rockford, and even toward, i would say, detroit,
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toledo, this is the area that will push all this humidity out. you're going to get severe weather after dark, chicago. you go from 95 this afternoon to a morning low sunday morning of 61. i think you'll take a couple leaves on the driveway with a wind gust with that drop. that's the rub here. this is potentially a pretty severe event for chicago. and even tomorrow afternoon, we can see the temperatures drop drastically when the storm come rolling through down to philadelphia and even richmond, virginia. >> the only green box i saw on your ma'am was san francisco. 69 degrees. that will make us want to run out there. >> i think bismarck, too. >> all right, well, those are our two choices. thank you. still to come, hear what happened during the critical moments after lebron james' son bronny went into cardiac arrest. details on that 911 call. and that rookie police officer who was shot in the head while
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responding to a mass shooting in louisville is going home today. you're in cnn "news central." and i'm even finding ways to save. finally getting smart about money feelels really good. see all you can do with the frfree experian app. download it now. at pnc bank, you can find us in big cities and s small towns across the u, where our focus is to always support the people who live and work there. because you call these communities home and we do too. your shipping manager left to “find themself.” leaving you st. you need to hire. i need indeed. indeed you do. indeed instant match instantly delivers quality candidates matching your job description. visit indeed.com/hire with your hearing, if you start having a little trouble, you're concerned that it's going to cost you money. to this day i only paid what i had to pay for the device... when i go back everything is covered. there's so much you're missing
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bronny james is now out of the hospital and recovering at home from his cardiac arrest. his physicians are saying they're encouraged by how quickly he's responding. meantime, the frantic 911 call that reveal the quick response after he collapsed. listen. >> get an ambulance here now. >> where exactly are you?
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yeah, yeah. all right, sir. we're going to send help -- hole on. don't hang up. how old is he? all right. get next to him with the phone get next to him with the phone. i need to find out. is there a doctor on the scene with him? a registered nurse? >> no. >> help is already on the way. get next to him, please. >> cnn national correspondent natasha chen is in los angeles with more on james' recovery. natasha, despite what that caller said, we understand there were actually trained usc medical staff around when brian james collapsed. >> yes. they were credited when yesterday a doctor at cede arrests -- cedars-sinai medical center, that part of reason he was able to go home. that was a very swift and effective response by the usc staff.
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let's read the rest of that doctor's statement. saying he arrived at cedars-sinai center neurologically intact and stable. we are hopeful for his continued progress and are encouraged by his response, resilience and list family and community support of which there is a lot. remember, this happened monday morning during basketball practice at the galen center at the university of southern california. by tuesday we learned that he was out of icu and in stable condition. yesterday afternoon we learned that he was able to go home. this is an incredible event to have happened, and a lot of people are wishing him well. the team earlier in the year had announced they were going on a tour to europe on august 5th. that's likely what they were practicing for. the usc medical staff are experienced with this. this happened to another player just last july. a player had a cardiac arrest
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during practice and according to the "los angeles times," the staff really surrounded that player within 45 seconds to really respond to that situation as well. and he ended up recovering and coming back to play. >> we look forward to seeing him on the hard court sometime soon. thank you for the update. jim? now to some of the other headlines we're watching this hour. a serious sign of instability in haiti. the state department is ordering all nonemergency staff there and employees' family members to get out of country along with advising all u.s. visitors to haiti to leave immediately. haiti has been in even deeper chaos since its president was assassinated two years ago this month. gang violence has overwhelmed the country. the crime rate has doubled. the state department said kidnappings are widespread. and a hero's welcome home for a louisville officer. the 26-year-old, you may remember, was shot in the head
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in april in a mass shooting at a bank there. days earlier, he had just graduated from the police academy. he spent just, he spent 109 days in the hospital. he was in critical condition there for a month. his family overwhelmed with gratitude. >> because of the work they did, we get to take our brother home today. >> he gets to go home, sleep in his own bed, watch his own tv, and he's been asking for a steak dinner and we're going to get him a steak dinner. he has a long road ahead of him with the help of the doctor and everybody here, he'll get back to it. >> steak dinner. we wish him well. and it appears, variety reports for the first time in more than 20 years, the prime time emmy awards will be postponed. they were scheduled for september 18th but event vendors are being told the ceremony will not air only day.
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of course, the ongoing strike. boris? still to come, the idaho college murder case. prosecutors demanding to see details of the suspect's alibi. we'll break it down in just a few miminutes. i'll be taking meetings with family and friends. and checking voicemail as my activities permit. i'll connect with you after reconnecting with me. ♪ get 1.9% apr for 36 months plus $1,500 purchase allowance on a 2023 xt5 and xt6 when you finance through cadillac financial. ♪ this is your summer to smile. to raise your glass and reconnect. to reel in the fun and serve up great times. to raise your glass to help you get ready your aen dental team is celebrating 25 years of fordable care with an epic summer of smiles event. right now, new patients 25 yewithout insuranceare get a free full exam and x-rays. plus, everyone can get 20% off their treatment plan. but hurry, because while these summer savings won't last,
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suspect, bryan kohberger's defense team to share information about his potential alibi. just days ago, his lawyer suggested kohberger was not at the scene where four students were murdered last year, you'll remember. his attorney also filed a long shot motion to dismiss the case entirely, claiming that the grand jury was misled on a technical issue. tell us about this court filing, specifically about the alibi and do we expect the judge to order the defense team to share more details? >> reporter: yeah, it will certainly be interesting, jim there has been a lot of back and forth between the defense team and the prosecution over this last week, including the alibi as well as the fact that the defense team wants this case thrown out. they're arguing that there are problems with the grand jury proceedings, which led to the indictment, and therefore the indictment should be dismissed. in reference to that alibi, bryan kohberger had a deadline
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earlier this week to provide his alibi of where he was on the night of the murders. and in a court filing, ts is what his defense team said, they said, quote, evidence corroborating mr. kohberger being at a location other than the king road address will be disclosed pursuant to discovery and evidentiary rules as well as statutory requirements. so, they're suggesting he was not there, but they did not provide exact concrete details as to where he was. so the prosecutors have come back and said, this is simply not enough. if he was not at the home the night when four university of idaho students were murdered, they want to know where he was and they want that evidence now. so the preliminary hearing will be in october. it is expected to be six weeks long. we'll have to see if both sides will be ready at that time. usually in cases like these there are delays. and also important to remember this is a death penalty case, and so it is certainly complex. jim? >> to say the least. more to follow.
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veronica miracle in chicago, thanks so much. boris? >> donald trump is facing more federal charges in the classified documents case, all while a separate potential indictment looms over his efforts to overturn the 2020 election. we'll break it down with our legal experts next. ♪ hit it ♪ ♪ it takes two to make a thing go right ♪ ♪ it takes two to make it outta sight ♪ ♪ it takes two to make a thing go right ♪ ♪ it takes two to me it outta sight ♪ ♪ one, two,et loose now ♪ ♪ it takes two to make a... ♪ ♪ it takes two to make a... ♪
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