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tv   CNN News Central  CNN  August 13, 2024 12:00pm-1:00pm PDT

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value from your life insurance when you need it with advocates in pete muntean at reagan national airport. >> this is cnn closed captioning brought to you by mesobook.com if you or a loved one have mesothelial, will send you a free book to answer questions you may have called now and we'll come to you 800 a21, 4,000 a union flux, the united auto workers going after donald trump and elon musk after the former president comments about firing striking
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workers meantime, democrats are making their pitch to union members with vice presidential candidate tim walz, a politician who well as a former union member himself, plus a massive embarrassment for moscow as ukrainian troops move deeper into russia, vladimir putin is vowing to kick them out. but can he actually do that as the kremlin's war machine faces one of their biggest setbacks in the war and hope for life on maher is a study finds there could be oceans of water on the red planet, but getting at it could be easier said than done. >> we're following these major developing stories and many more all coming in right here. cnn news central this hour, vice president kamala harris is running mate, makes his first solo campaign. >> stop. moments from now, minnesota governor tim walz speak to one of the nation's
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largest unions of public employees it comes as the united auto workers union just filed labor charges against former president donald trump and tesla ceo elon musk the uaw claims the two men threatened to intimidate workers who go on strike during a rambling conversation last night on x. we're going to have much more on those charges in a moment, but let's start with cnn's natasha chen, who is live in los angeles at that walz event. natasha break down this campaign, stop for us, what should we expect to hear? >> well. boris, this is the first time that we're going to hear tim walz doing a solo campaign stop and we're expecting him to show up at that podium. in just a few short minutes. this room is full of asked me members, this is a union of state county, municipal government workers, but also cultural workers, people who are unionized at museums and zoos all around the country. it's a total of 1.4 million members around the u.s.
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4,000 of them here in this room right now. and you could see and they are second greeted by state. there are actually delegates from maryland right behind us. and i spoke to a lady at this table right next to us, who is a vocational rehabilitation specialist with the maryland department of education, and we talked about musk conversation with trump yesterday. she said she was not surprised to hear that uaw you as filing charges. she said they should she also mentioned this idea that trump has been going out there saying he would cut federal jobs, would trim government employee spending and gabbana poisoned and she said, thinking about her own position, she helps, young people on social security, on ssi benefits to get all of these benefits, some of them have autism, some of them other situation, circumstances that make it difficult for them to work to help them gain skills and get it job sometimes part-time, but it helps them feel productive. she said. and so if her job were to be cut.
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>> she said, you could eliminate spending on her salary, but you would then be spending a lot more still offering these federal benefits to the young people that she helps. so that's how she looks at the situation. >> a very energized room here. again, from a union that has officially endorsed harris walz the presidential and vice presidential ticket here. >> so they are all waiting to hear from was he did speak to uaw last week in which he said something about how the audience is a friendly audience as it is today. he said, it may be preaching to the choir, but we need this choir to sing and i anticipate that he might echo those sentiments today because while this is in california, we do have a lot of members here in the room from battlegrounds dates, including pennsylvania, arizona, wisconsin. and so he's going to meet those people to go out and spread the message of why people should vote for harris-walz of course
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natasha chen live in los angeles for us, we look forward to those remarks. thank you so much. let's bring in cnn's kristen holmes is following the trump campaign. kristen, of course, trump now being criticized for remarks that he made on x last night while talking to elon musk let's actually listen to what he said well, you you're the greatest qatar. >> i mean, i look at what you do. you walk in you want to go? say i won't mention the name of the company, but they go on strike and used it. that's okay. you're all gun you're all gone. so every one of you has gone and you are the greatest, you would be very good trump for some time and his team had been courting union voters. >> and now there are these comments that kind of put him at odds with a lot of union members. how's the campaign responding? >> okay, so first let's just talk a little bit of context here because you have the united auto workers one they have endorsed kamalaharris. they had endorsed president joe biden, and on top of that, he has he being donald trump has a
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pretty toxic relationship with the head of the uaw, shawn fain. they have publicly criticized each other over and over again. i think trump is pretty fixated on fain, if you want my opinion on not because he continues to bring him up on a regular basis. so now you have following these remarks, uaw filing these federal labor charges against both trump and musk saying that they were threatening workers who threatened to strike by saying they would get fired, which is illegal. that is illegal to threaten anyone who is threatening to strike or to fire anyone who is threatening to strike so now you're hearing the trump campaign hitting back and they released this statement saying this frivolous, frivolous lawsuit is a shameless political stunt intended to erode president trump's overwhelming support among american workers. they go on to say, democrats, special interests, bosses may lie and stoke fear to try and stop i'll president trump from creating the broadest coalition of any candidate in history. but rank and file workers and their families know the truth. now the reason why this is interesting is because there is a dynamic between the leaders of these various unions and the
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rank and file members. when donald trump goes to michigan league, don't have an expectation that the leadership of any of these units are going to show up however, what you have seen is this chipping away of these rank and file members. and even if you talk to some of the leadership at these unions, they will acknowledge that that is where he's really trying to dig in obviously insulting unions and saying things like, you should fire people who are threatening to strike is not a great tone, but he believes that the messaging is not about unions. it's about the economy and focusing on inflation essentially targeting rank and file voters by saying, we are for the working class. again, donald trump doesn't really have the record to back that up in terms of unions and being pro worker, but that's part of the reason he also brought on j.d. vance, who as somebody who they believe speaks to workers and supporting workers, it is notable that trump was speaking to elon musk, who has fought efforts among tesla workers to unionize kristen holmes. thanks so much for the reporting. jessica let's turn now to rob him. okay. who was the campaign
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manager for hillary clinton's 2016 presidential campaign? robin, great to have you on. thanks for making time today we just heard the reporting about, unions in a number of these battleground states, there is a fight for these union workers. we know that the vice president has been endorsed by several key unions but do members, i think this is the big question. do all members of those unions follow leadership and how does the campaign count? capitalize on those endorsements and make sure rank and file follows that lead well, look some do, some don't. >> i think that depends on the quality of the leadership, frankly, fain is a great example of a president who was one tremendous victory for his members chip in these labor negotiations and these contracts. so he's not exactly the best person to be going after, particularly in michigan, where i just think the uaw has a very special
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presence there, both proportionally in terms of the number of members they have, but also culturally and i think it speaks to a weakness that donald trump has had since joe biden got in this race, which is, he really needs to make this a change election where he's going to make the economy better for people and always seems to be doing is swirling controversy around himself. talking points here actually pretty simple. and he just can't get over themselves to get them out. so i think this is just another poor strategic choice in terms of where to train his fire and what kind of controversy he wants to create on his campaign and we're looking ahead to the democratic convention next week. >> obviously you ran hillary clinton's campaign in 2016 against donald trump. she's going to be speaking at the convention. were democrats are going to formally nominate the second woman in history to the
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top of the ticket. and from your experience, from your perspective, how does secretary clinton's campaign fit into this historic moment that we're going to see well i think there's a lot she can bring in her speech at the convention. i think first and foremost, if she can really be an advocate for the vice president, she she can talk about the historic nature of her candidacy historic her when would be in a way that, you know, it's not as easy for the actual candidate himself to talk about and let's also remember you know, hillary at that time, got the most popular. >> he got the biggest popular vote that a democrat had gotten to that point. >> so and do you think people around the country are interested in what she has to say, then she ran against donald trump. she was the only woman in history before harris
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to run against donald trump. so i think she is uniquely positioned to make a pretty sharp critique of the kind of leader he will be but keep in mind, she repeated over and over again in 2016 to listen to donald trump, to listen to what he'd say because he was telling us exactly what kind of a leader he would be. and it turned out he didn't do the things he would say the reckless, irresponsible, harmful things that he did to this country, to people in this country so i think she can powerfully lay that out again to people. the mantra of the harris campaign has been, let's not go back i think she's a particularly helpful messenger to say let's not go back and i also want to ask you about another shade of 2016. >> we know the fbi is investigating this hack of the trunk campaign, also warning the harris campaign about iranian hackers potentially targeting that campaign in 2016, russia successfully hacked the personal email of
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the clinton campaign chair john podesta. you lived through all of that. you know what that's like. what do you think the lessons are we should take from that instance in 2016? when russia was trying to metal and for today, with whomever these foreign actors might be that most likely or iran. but we're not sure yet are trying to do again yeah well and it wasn't just john podesta. they were trying to get into they were trying to get into dozens of people's accounts that came out later on, including my own. we saw that i learned that in retrospect. >> we also learned in retrospect that shino was very active in 2012 trying to break into the romney and obama so this is clearly a problem. >> it's a pervasive problem. and what we're seeing is it's dictatorships that do this. and what they're trying to do is get us to fight with each other even more to divide our country. so that these dictatorships can be more competitive against us. on the
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world stage. so first and foremost said, say this is wrong, we need to condemn it when it happens, i condemn and happening to the trump campaign, to the harris campaign, i condemn it happening in the past and any campaign out there, let's keep in mind in 2016, this was happening at the congressional level every campaign needs to act to protect themselves against this happening and i think this is here to stay. this is just a fact of our politics now, i appreciate that the media this time has been coating this information in its proper context. >> it sounds like a lot of outlets refused to take the materials for reporting that this is in fact a foreign government. >> we're being told by the fbi that's behind this. it's important that the voters have that context for voters should remember, you didn't check your sources and nowhere it's all coming from robin. >> thank you so much. we appreciate it.
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>> thanks. >> i had this hour on cnn news central moscow orders new evacuations as ukrainian soldiers move deeper into russia ukraine says it seized as much land in the last week as russia has all year. also, police are investigating a break-in at one of donald trump's campaign offices. everything thing we know about that as well as the suspected iranian hack of his campaign, plus new evidence suggesting there is water on mars where is it? and what could it mean? those stories and much more coming up on cnn news central cnn is live from chicago as democrats unite to offer their support to a new nominee and her running mate fellow cnn for complete coverage, the democratic national convention monday, at 7:00 a.m. cnn, and streaming on back shoes, advil, liquid gels for faster, stronger, and longer lasting relief than tylenol, rapid release jailed because advil targets pain at the source of inflammation.
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ukrainian government i spoke with my staff on a regular basis probably every four or five hours for the last six or eight days and it's creating a real dilemma for we've been in direct contact, constant contact with the ukrainians that's all i'm going to say about a wireless act. >> okay? >> starting to take reading horrible, see what you will see, what aranda we'll see what happens but i'm not giving up to president biden just moments ago on the tarmac in new orleans one's talking about ukrainians getting into russian territory. >> meantime, president zelenskyy, zelenskyy says, in the last 24 hours, ukrainian forces have seized another 15 square miles of russian land in the kursk region. he also says ukrainian forces now control 74 russian communities. that
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brings the total of the week long surprising curve virginia nearly 400 square miles. and to put that into perspective, that's as much ground as russia has gained in ukraine over the last year. now, russian officials are ordering new evacuations. we know tens of thousands have already fled as ukraine port forces continue to push forward. cnn chief international security correspondent nick paton walsh is following the law latest from london for us and nic. all of this of course, a massive embarrassment for vladimir putin yeah, make no mistake about this. >> were a week into something which ukraine didn't even accept. it was doing for 48 hours, hinting at it only in the middle of last week around about the time too, in which that i'm a putin heard from his top brass us that they essentially halted the advance. and now today it continues with the number of settlements under their control leaping from local russian official saying 28 yesterday to now volodymyr zelenskyy he's saying 74. now, bear in mind, this is a large swathe of some relatively
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sparsely populated border area that presumably russia thought ukraine would never try. and take. yet they seem to have marched in relatively unimpeded. yes, there's video of ukrainian soldiers lost in the fighting here and russian taken prisoner to but ultimately well, we have 121,000 from yesterday russians being evacuated. the numbers are frankly staggering as is the speed in which ukraine has moved and the efficiency to, and there have been a number of videos we've seen those suggest western supplied armor has indeed been used as part of this. and i couldn't quite hear everything. president biden was saying, but it was clear he's being kept abreast of the situation and rightly so this is an utterly staggering moment in the war. and jessica, we have to try and work out really what is ukraine's end game here? they've already achieved probably their first goal, which is to embarrass moscow to make it clear that they're potentially good at those slow grinding fights over one small town in the winter losing thousands of men over tiny amounts of territory. but when
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it comes to responding to large sweeping mobilizations of ukrainian troops across large areas of undefended territory. they've proven useless. they've not sent strong enough forces. and the ultimate question i think about this is, does ukraine stay in this long enough to force vladimir putin to stem the embarrassment by sending his better troops from parts of the frontline where they're fighting in occupied ukraine or is he willing to just allow this remarkable ukrainian run across farmlands, border areas that he keeps being told is about to be stopped for that to continue for yet more days not a turning point in the war. i would say, but certainly a moment where ukraine strength, mobility and western supplies and now seeing full us and one that may give ukraine a upper hand if indeed we end up seeing something approaching, talks in the months ahead, bizarrely during this ukrainian lightning dash course, russian territory, both sides keep referring to peace talks this and as they see now, but i think that's what's
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potentially in the distance here may be guiding ukraine's moves along with the possibility that they're just very eager to get some positive military headlines after a bad year of losing ground yeah, as you note, i key moment that certainly could have implications on the future. alright, nick paton walsh. thank you so much for that reporting. boris. >> let's get some analysis now on this ukrainian offensive with us, retired air force colonel cedric leighton. colonel leighton, always great to have you on first explain where this is in russia. put it on the map for us absolutely, boris. >> well, one of the key things here in fact, let's go to the big map first just to give everybody a bit of an idea. this area right here is what we're talking about. this is where the ukrainians have made their big incursion. and when you go up here, this is a detailed look at this same area, the town of sudzha is the first area that the ukrainians captured. and they're moving basically in this general direction toward things like the capital of the course go
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blas do with this region right here, as well as a nuclear your power plant, which just happens to be right there as well. so the ukrainians could potentially go in that direction if they wanted to extend themselves, if they have the capability to do that, is the nuclear power plant that target why exactly are they headed? and mr. so we don't know if the nuclear power plant is really the target, but there's several other things that are going on here. first of all, this is the kursk nuclear power plant. it's right up here where the symbol is. and then we have this pipeline. this pipeline is the gas pipeline, about 50% of russia's gas exports let's go through this pipeline to europe, specifically to countries like hungary and slovakia. and that's why, that is one of the reasons that the ukrainians have captured things like this gas meter planned right here. this is actually part of the pipeline. this is what it looked like back in july of 20 two this is what it looks like now clearly we have a bit of damage associated with this and that is perhaps one of the targets they can cut off
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supplies. if they cut this off right here, right now, ukraine gets money from this gas pipeline but they could also tell the russians, okay, enough is enough. and we can cut this and colonel, if we could go back to the broader map, i am curious about what this means. >> for the war altogether, because as nick paton walsh noted, over the last year, at best you could say it's been a stalemate. russia has made some gains. so what does this mean for ukraine going into russian territory? >> so this is really big because nobody hands as invaded russian space, russian territory since the second world war so the ukrainians have done something that really nobody has done even though this is a very small area right here, i only about 10,000 square kilometers, a little less it's been 400 square miles. it is still a significant thing. now, you mentioned the rest of the war, so let's focus on the donbass region because the donbass region we remember the town of bakhmut which was fought over for a really long time. i and all the towns that you see he listed right here. but one of the problems that the
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ukrainians have is basically this line of defense right here is the one that the russians are contesting right now. and they are advancing along this area incrementally, but they are advancing in these advances really mean that there's a lot of pressure on the ukrainians if the russians move forward, they would take all of the donbass region, which is one of vladimir putin's goals and for the ukrainians in terms of their goals for this incursion into russia could this be seen as a bargaining chip moving into potential peace talks? >> that's the one thing that putin got, right? potentially. because when you talk about some of the things that have happened here in this particular area. you see that the russians hit really control all of these areas right here all of this is about 18 and percent of ukraine's territory, internationally recognized territory. the ukrainians obviously want to get most of this back, if not all of it and if they get this back, then they will have achieved they are major goals.
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but of course they would have to do a lot more than just stayed invade this little part of this particular territory of russia. >> sure that those are probably their long-term goals, but also what does it mean for the psychology of russians to have vladimir putin embarrassed this way to have ukrainian troops on his land, on his territory. >> yeah, that means a lot because it's coupled, you even though the russians are advancing a little bit incrementally in this particular area, we have to keep in mind that the ukrainians have been pretty effective. they sunk this submarine while it was being repaired. they also have taken out the s 400 systems in several locations. this is a major surface to air missile system. in other words, near defense system that the russians have this very effective. but when you take it out, that gives the opportunity for f-16s to go flying uncontested, potentially uncontested airspace or at least less contested airspace. and for all of these areas right here, this would be a major goal for ukraine. and of course, to capture this area right here, those would be the kinds if things that they would absolutely love to have. and if they can get that for at least part of this, then they will have the capability to at least
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sit down at the table with the russians whether or not they go that way and whether or not they're effective enough to do this, or whether or not they're going to be stopped. of course we saw other questions. >> colonel cedric leighton, appreciate the insight. thanks so much for being with us. you bet boris, of course, still to come, president biden is in new orleans today announcing a critical plan to fight cancer at key part of what he wants wants to be his legacy will take you there live plus, we now know who hackers targeted as part of their plot to access donald trump's campaign. a live report and just moments laura coates live tonight at 11 eastern on cnn at fisher investments. >> we may look like other money managers, but we're different. >> you can't be that different we are we have a team of specialists, not only in investing, but also in financial and a staple planning and more, your clients rely on you for all that? >> yes. and as a fiduciary, we always put their interests first, but you still so
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to show the world how good i am i train all over the globe. >> and that's what you're going to see an awol whole different be at we wednesday night at 8:00 on tbs president biden arrived norlin just a few moments ago. he and the first lady are there to promote the biden cancer moonshot initiative that aims to cut the nation's cancer death rates by at least taf over a 25-year period. the white house saying president biden will announce $150 million in research grants it this afternoon at tulane university. cnn's kayla tausche is in new orleans for us. kayla, what more can we expect? >> jessica, the president and the first lady are going to be touring the cancer facility here at tulane that is set to receive some $23 million of that $150 million award that will be given to eight different organizations. it is part of this cancer moonshot that president biden has prioritized most recently in
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the last two years since he became president, though he first launched it in the immediate aftermath of the death of his son, beau from brain cancer back in 2016? so certainly this is a cause that is near and dear to biden's heart, and that is one of the reasons why it is toward the top of his policy shortlist as he eyes what he wants to do during his final months in office to cement his legacy as president. now that shortlist, i'm told also includes proposing reforms on guns, climate, and the supreme court, which we saw him rollout just a couple of weeks ago. also lowering costs for americans, bolstering alliances overseas. and notably implementing legislation that he passed in that congress passed, and he signed into law over the last three-and-a-half years so far, the government has provided about 500 and billion toward various government agencies and state and local authorities for signature infrastructure
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semiconductor, and clean energy legislation that has been ushered in in recent years. and a part of that legislation aims to say if the government tens of billions of dollars buy negotiating prices for drugs under medicare, president biden and vice president harris in their official capacity, are going to be discussing that very issue together on thursday in their first appearance together certainly that is going to be something that vice president harris disgust this is on the campaign trail as well as she's set to unveil her own economic narrative in the coming days. but certainly president biden is trying to cement his own legacy with policies that he can highlight even as congress is likely to continue making it difficult for any new legislation or new policies seems to be enacted. his aides say that he still wants to put a stake in the ground on what matters most to him, jessica. >> all right. kayla tausche for us in new orleans. thank you so much for us. for a closer look at president biden's cancer moonshot program. let's bring in cnn medical correspondent
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meg tirrell. so meg, tell us about the details in biden's initiative yeah, boris, it's really been focused around five priority areas where they've been putting funding and resources. one is to expand access to cancer screenings and others to understand and prevent toxic and environmental exposures that can lead to cancer a third is prevention, particularly he threw things like reducing smoking rates. a fourth is innovation. where they have put $4 billion of funding into a new agency called arpa-h, age, which is focused on health care innovation turning things into new medicines and technologies, for example. and the fifth is support of patients and caregivers. i was talking with dr. rhonda pinhole who's the past president of md anderson, who is saying it is too soon to measure the progress of the cancer moonshot. this is something that has 25 year goals, but he said even just formulating them in this way in articulating them is helpful. he thinks in particular the creation of that new agency will be a really important part
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of this legacy, as well as trying to close the gaps in terms of access to health care in this country an earlier detection of cancer, and that support of patients and their caregivers. those are the things he really focused on here. and of course, this is deeply personal to president biden, but it is deeply personal to so many americans. cancer is still the second leading cause of death in the united states it's right now according to statistics from the american cancer society 42 out of 100 men will get cancer in their lifetime according to current statistics. and that's 40 out of 104 women and that goal that the cancer moonshot has is to reduce the death rate from cancer by 2047, by about 50% now this has already come down by more than 30% since 1991, where it hit its peak. a lot of that is because of reduction smoking, also new technologies and earlier detection of some cancers. now it's declining by about 2% per year, maybe a little bit more on average, it needs to pick it up a little bit to meet that
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goal and of course, a lot of people hoped that this mug shot has a long lasting legacy, guys in terms of improving cancer outcomes, where do things stand now well things are getting a lot better. we are seeing some incredible technologies coming. so it's both in the prevention stage and also in the new technologies stage. we are seeing that get better, but we also just had that kind of shocking report yesterday that predicted that cancer deaths and cancer cases among men are going to increase dramatically over the next few decades, just from population growth alone. so a lot more needs to be done to prepare our workforce for that and to make sure that people all have access to the care that they need to help them with this let's roll thanks so much for breaking down those numbers still to come. do you recognize this person police say this is a suspected burglar that broke into one of donald trump's campaign offices what was anything taken or potentially left behind that story next
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>> sources tell cnn that investigators thing hackers tried to gain access to the campaign by first breaching the personal email account of longtime trump operative roger stone. cnn senior justice correspondent evan perez is following both of these stories. it's interesting that roger stone still appears to be connected to the trump campaign in some way. >> do we know what, if any, campaign materials were compromised? well, we know that some news or news organizations are saying that they've received documents that were from the campaign that are now believed to have been from the campaign that one case appears to be some kind of document related to a vetting document about j.d vance, vice presidential nominee on the republican side. and look, i mean, this was a campaign according to the people we've been talking to investigators believed that this has been a campaign that targeted both the democratic camp paying both the biden-harris campaign and the republican campaign. and in
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this case, it appears what they did is they went to, they got to roger stone. they've got roger stone to click on something and then use that to impersonate and be able to get to their targets refine their targets. in this case, actually getting inside the campaign. so the question is, what else did they get and you know, what kind of damage could come from that of course we all remember 2016 when the republic when the russians did exactly the same thing, they tried actually to get into the republican to a republican side. they also try it on the democratic side, there were successful with the dnc and managed to weaponize a lot of the documents they were able to get. >> now, everyone it comes to this physical break-in in virginia this wasn't watergate, right? >> no not quite. not quite. not not what we know right now. and look, watergate really wasn't what seemed like a very small thing when it happened as well. so look, we're going to wait and see. but at this point it
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appears that this person got in into this office, the the loudon county sheriff says a desk is the person there who they've seen on surveillance camera. they're asking for tips. they say they've gotten a lot of tips. and one of the concerns there is whether that person left behind something perhaps a bug, some kind of surveillance device in the office. it's not clear that they took anything. so again, we're not sure what this was about, but they obviously want to try to resolve this the obvious comparisons to the nixon era are there and we will keep reliving 2016. it looks like right with roger stone and all this whole thing. so maybe we were going to relive that one too know, goodness, well, let's see what comes with. cameras there. they got the guy that isn't the guy we live in a weird time loop. right now. so i'm not sure what we can expect next. >> evan perez. thank you so much. appreciate it so a man in michigan is facing 558 days of jail time after repeatedly shouting expletives at the judge, overseeing his trial. darryl george pell was in court
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for a simple misdemeanor trespassing charge but he got obsessed after he was unhappy with the date of his next court appearance. and that led to this don't okay. that's contempt. that's 93 that's another that's another 93 deaths. another 93 now i think we're all the gentleman on the bottom left with his now who have been the back and forth exchanges happened and total of six times, that means 558 days. >> if you were wondering, what other defendants in zoom thought of that tirade here, was that next defendants face the judge, cedric simpson, proceeded to the next case telling that defendant that he shouldn't be concerned about the other man's outburst that judge has overseen some interesting stuff lately. a story we will continue to keep an eye on next, there is new evidence that water is on mars
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will break down where researchers think they could find it. and what it would mean the democratic national convention monday at seven on cnn. and streaming on max one. >> remember, i don't want to surgery for my dupa trends contraction i want to be able to lay my hand flat i want a non-surgical recovery for i want options. >> non nonsurgical option and five, and have non surgical treatment as an offer i'll get a second opinion let's go take charge of your treatment if you can't lay your hand flat, visit, find a hand specialist.com to get started here's some information about replacing windows and doors that just may surprise you. >> i'm brian gary. i'm here with brian price from renewal by anderson. >> hey, brian, homeowners always ask my windows aren't even 10-years-old. why do i have to replace? but if they aren't quality windows, they
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year-old been programmed to expect some radicals look at me keep this data guy industry streaming exclusively on max and amazing potential fine on the red planet groundwater nestle's seven to 12 miles below the surface of mars and get this nasa scientists believe there may be enough water trapped in the crevices of rocks to cover the entire planet, at least a mile deep
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cnn space and defense correspondent kristin fisher joins us now. kristen, take us through this discovery. >> so the idea that liquid water may be buried deep beneath the martian surface. >> that's an idea that's been around for decades, but this is the first time that you have real data backing that up, but it's a big deal because the saying on earth where there's water, there's life scientists are excited that the same principle may hold on mars. >> so this was discovered using data that came from nasa is insight lander, a little lander that landed on mars back in 2018. you can see it right there, sitting on top of the martian surface. and what it found, these scientists found was that there is data trapped in that water saturated fractured mid crust, right there seven to 12 miles beneath the surface, water trapped in tiny cracks and pores of rocks right in the middle of that martian crust. enough to where if it all came out, it would fill the surface this of mars about a mile deep. that's the
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theory. now, you may be wondering how on earth did this little lander figure all of this out? it can't even move, right? it just landed there well, this lander was attached to a seismometer, something that measures seismic waves, earthquakes here on earth on mars. it found the world's first mars quake. the first time any seismic activity had ever been detected on another planet. and so you can see right there, you've got the lander on top of the martian surface and it sent out those when a seismic wave or a mars quake occurred, that seismometer was able to watch it and detect those waves. and scientists on earth two years later have now been studying all of that data and found that the speed of the seismic waves change depending on which type of rock those waves were going through. and they matched it up with the types of rocks on planet earth that matched it best and found that it was volcanic rock filled with liquid water. so that's how they came to this conclusion.
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they've got the data, but they have actually touched, scene, felt the water. yeah. okay. so quickly do they go do a mission now to try to get the water out? i know everybody is saying now you got to bring in bruce willis, right? i get it. but in order to actually get this water out, you need a big drill that can drill down seven and 12 miles. >> me, bruce willis or elon musk's starship rocket that's the only thing that would potentially be big enough to get a drill of that size are saw east right now, either you're going to say steve buscemi, he was also i thought he was rid of numbers any of them would work. ben affleck. >> kristen, thank you. >> it's it is still swelter sweltering out, but some companies are already offering there fault flavored treats their plan to get you to spend more money. >> that's next moments that
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officially fall. >> no. >> no. >> no? no. it's part of the new marketing strategy at krispy kreme. this is going to spark some serious debate. the doughnut chain is offering it seasonal men much earlier than usual as of yesterday, you can buy pumpkin spice, doughnut and a pumpkin spice latte from your nearest krispy kreme. >> i have apparently also kicking things off early, rolling out, pumped can spice pancakes and coffee starting september 1st, all part of a plan to get consumers excited and willing to shell out some cash. >> and here's the thing the data shows americans spent half $1 on pumpkin spice products every year. >> they love their pumpkin spice, but this is offensive summer then over the thing people want to rush it, you have to save her on. >> you have to savor summer because you know what comes after a fall winter. he likes thanks so much for being with us today. great to see you as always, jessica, the lead with jake tapper and just like five seconds

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