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tv   CNN News Central  CNN  September 3, 2024 11:00am-12:00pm PDT

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developing stories and many more all coming in right here to cnn news central right now ukraine is reeling. >> there's no other way to put it. people there morning after one of the deadliest single attacks since russia launched its full-scale invasion, more than two who years ago, at least 51 people killed more than 200 injured after russia struck a military educational facility in central ukraine this morning, president zelenskyy says preliminary information indicates two ballistic missiles we're involved at this hour, rescue and recovery operations are underway after ten residential buildings and a nearby hospital still be trapped underneath rubble. he assault, sparking new calls from president zelenskyy for allies to supply more weapons and critical air
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defense systems cnn senior international correspondent fred pleitgen is live in kyiv. fred, what more are you learning about the strike every one i definitely devastating blow for the ukrainians and one of the things that we have to say is it could actually still get a lot worse. >> you know, it's sort boris there saying that more than a dozen people, the authorities are saying are still trapped or could still we'll be trapped underneath the debris of where those submit ballistic missiles impacted. and of course, the ukrainians are saying that because of that the death toll could still further rise. you guys were mentioning that right now it stands at 51 with over 200 people having been injured in that. and the ukrainians are saying that one of the reasons why the toll is as bad as it is, is that when those ballistic missiles struck that military educational facility, there was actually an air raid alert that had gone into effect. however, they are saying that because the time between the first alert going off and the missiles landing was so short that a lot of people are actually still heading for the shelters when
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the missiles impacted. therefore, of course, had no chance to get to safety. and that is why the toll is as bad as it is. and one of the things that we've been saying is that it could get even worse. this of course, is one of the worst single mass casualty incidents since the beginning of russia's full-on invasion of ukraine. that was one about half, almost we'll see a year ago actually in a town in the east of ukraine that killed 59 people. and right now the death toll that we're seeing here, it's quickly approaching that number as we go into the evening hours. and of course, those rescue crews are still very much at work and the president of this country, volodymyr zelenskyy, he is obviously absolutely angry about the fact that this said that this could happen. and he is calling for further long-range air defense system specifically, of course, those those u.s. supplied patriot surface to air missile systems. one of the things the foreign minister of ukraine said today on cnn was he said that ballistic missiles are
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extremely difficult to take down. but the patriots are one of the few systems that can actually do that guys fred pleitgen live for us in kyiv. >> thank you so much for the update. we want to talk about what this strike means for the war with retired u.s. army major mike lyons, sir, thank you so much for being with us. one detail from this story sort of struck out to me. it was the limited time between the air alarms going off and the russian strike hitting. i wonder what that tells you about ukraine's air defense systems well, boris, thanks for having me. what it does tell me is that unfortunately ukraine has had to have an economy of force with regards to its air defense systems and is likely protecting other areas and it's not saying this wasn't protected here those systems or wealth far out from where these locations are. however in this case of having too many false positives, too many times where they have an alarm go off and nothing happens. then the population becomes somewhat immune to them. in this case,
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it looks like they're going to have to go back and take a look at what that distance is. perhaps these ones where more inside the system and they were not able to respond with air defense systems back. but again, in some ways the population has got to recognize there's probably going to be more false positives and next time to get to those shelters if they can possibly do that major kyiv is arguing that it needs more weapons to limit these strikes. >> the u.s though is provided air defense in nearly every single aid package and sent over. it's also diverted some 2 billion meant for other countries to ukraine. do you think would kyiv has is insufficient? >> it's not enough. no question about that. that they've provided air defense systems and all different venues. for example, air defense systems had come, ballistic missiles from, from russia that come from the sky, from airplanes and the like, air defense systems have to exist in depth and they will kind of long, medium and short
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range and a lot of things that they're focused on right now is more closer to the front. they have to protect these assets back in ukraine, this was a target that again likely was low on ukraine's list as they have to decide who they have to protect and who they don't have to protect it. it's important for them to protect critical the structure as well as the capital in kyiv. so they could always use more especially the patriot missiles that would be effective against these kind of ballistic missile systems i'm curious to get your thoughts on this plan that president zelenskyy says he's going to share with u.s. >> president joe biden at the u.n. general assembly next week plan for victory in this war. what do you imagine that would look like it has to be about leverage that ukraine has gained over russia when it comes to their recent incursion into kursk, into that region, there. >> and in a way, perhaps it means there'll be willing to give up land in in the south and the donbass region, an area
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that russia has controlled for the past seven or eight years. but if they're going to negotiate, this is the one last chance that the biden administration can do something in order to try to get something done before the u.s. election because i think zelenskyy knows that donald trump is going to come in and likely put it chokehold on some of the supplies he's been getting. he knows that the republicans themselves are not necessarily for what's going on there. so they're going to do what they can to stop it and that means cutting down those supplies. so i think this is kind of his one last shot with his administration to try to gain leverage and get this negotiation over with on the note of what the biden administration is allowing the ukrainians to do. i'm curious what you think about the list of targets that ukraine provided the biden administration these are targets inside russia that they want a hit with u.s. weapons what do you think the ukrainians need to prove for the us to lift restrictions on those kinds of attacks well,
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they've got to military targets and they have to be in response to what's been coming from russia towards ukraine. >> and i do think that the administration should allow ukraine to use those assets to that this administration as they look over the horizon, is trying to say look at some the point where the united states is going to have to have a relationship with russia when this is over. and i think that's what's holding them back here. but at the same token, we've given ukraine the capability that could force russia to the negotiation table. so i do think that the administration should let them hit those military targets. they're doing it with drones that they're creating. any way. we saw them hit infrastructure sites to the north of russia. but as long as there are military targets within the laws of land warfare, i don't see why not? we wouldn't allow them to do that major mike lyons appreciate the analysis. >> thanks for being with us. >> thanks were paying close attention as well to the middle east. >> these are live pictures coming to us from tel aviv
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protests ramping up again for the third straight night and israel, this is from frustration that has just spilled over after the idf recovered the bodies of six hostages from gaza over the weekend people that they say were killed shortly before the idf was able to get to them. that's according to israeli officials, much of the anger is aimed squarely at prime minister netanyahu for failing to strike a deal that could bring the remaining hostages home for its part, hamas is now seizing on the public anguish with some brutal new tactics that one hostages family describes a psychological terror are the latest developments prompting these comments from the white house just a short time ago. listen president himself is personally involved in working with our team and it working with leaders around the world to secure this deal. and that's what we're focused on the killing over the weekend, just
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underscores the sense of urgency that we have to have in order to get it to closure soon as nic robertson is live for us in tel aviv on the ground, there, nick maigna, who has remained defiant about certain key elements in these negotiations. >> is there any sign as we look at these live images that these demonstrations might be swaying him in any particular direction you know i talked to lot of people had to say outside the bag defenses, situations, the curiae in effect for television, just be going on for a couple of a lot of different people. >> none of them believe what prime minister netanyahu is saying. >> a lot of people question why is he introducing this issue in the film? >> adelphi corridor along the border with gaza and egypt. why is he introducing it now? why wasn't it a priority before? why didn't we hear about it before? they think? dispatcher they think is lying to them. they don't think that they're
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going to change things overnight, but they do think that by continuing these protests that they will eventually too delays, build on momentum that changes his mind. they think it will help encourage other politicians to come out and speak enough evening from benny gantz who was the former defense minister, who is in the national unity party, the main opposition party until a few months ago he was in the war cabinet for prime minister netanyahu was on television here this season telling the country everything you heard from the prime minister yesterday in his address so why the philadelphi corridor isn't true. >> he says, yes, it's a problem, but we've got other ways of dealing with it. >> he said the prime minister was offered so ways by the military to deal with the philadelphi corridor other than just having troops on it what is saying? is the prime minister is using this philadelphi corridor is a tight, so i don't think anyone
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certainly the two thirds country that opposes the prime minister believes him about it? the philadelphi corridor on a course, the crowd here is all about getting the other hostages home safely in these pictures. >> as we're seeing a lot of pushing and shoving going on there in the crowd it's hard to tell exactly what's going on, but we can see there they're encountering law enforcement in protests. this is getting quite heated. nic robertson on this third day, i think there was a question of is this going to persist? the tenor of this and you're seeing these altercations between law enforcement and protesters there it seems law enforcement was trying to make their way through some of the protesters and there was an altercation between them yeah. this is what's happening on the protests. end of the
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protest? so we've been here for two hours it was very peaceful. >> a lot of the sort of a lot of people have left already. then you get left at the end with a younger elements, some of the older folks for leaving not everyone is a mixed crowd with some of the younger folks stand. they light fires and then the police moved in on them. and that's what we're seeing and i think that's going to be the nature of the protest. but i was speaking to a protest organizer earlier on and i said, look, the protests on shifting the prime minister's opinion. he doubled hold down on his position, his rejecting u.s. saying if we do want the protesters do, hamas will take that as a sign of weakness. i said, what else can you do and he said but look, there are other things that we could do when i asked him what he should look. i'm not i'm not going to say, but we know, for example, and i pressed him on that the union since tried to go on strike. that was overruled by the government in the law courts. >> but the unions were trying to close down the fort airport.
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>> it would have thanks on hospitals, they would have an effect on buses around the country. and the unions are considering alternate ways to try to legally pull all look big powerful unions here out on strike. and that's really the mechanism to bring about change in this country has tried and tested in israel has happened before. so when i think we here and people fruit protest, organizers saying they have other tactics, i think it's the running of the governing of the country that they will talk about finding a way to try to shut down, not just coming out on the streets confronting the police. late in the evenings but finding a legal way to try to bring the country to a halt, shape the countries to its roots is what they say bringing the country to a halt, stopping at working as a country, i think as the direction this is all headed. and they know until they do that, this prime minister is not going to listen to them we just saw fire set there.
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>> these are live pictures that you're looking he now coming out of television. we just saw fire set in-between the crowd, as nic says, this is sort of the end of this was the getting towards the end of the protests. a lot of people have actually left and yet you're starting to see some altercations with police. you're seeing a fire set here. we're going to continue to monitor so this nic robertson. thank you so much for that report for us from the protests there in tel aviv, we will keep an eye on this and bring you the latest still to come this hour. vice president harris is reproductive rights bus tour is on the road. it's starting actually in donald trump's backyard in the meantime, despite warnings from his allies, the former president is going full steam ahead on his old playbook launching a barrage of insults at harris in the hopes of disrupting her momentum i in the polllls. >> your frfriends are e turning 32, , the u.s. i is hosting g t ultimamate friendsds syllable e
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>> had to hungry route.com for healthy groceries and simpmple rerecipes. plulus get freeee ve fofor life mororgan ststanley i partneringng, but ththe women's tennnnis associatition to remov bounundaries becauause this gams for everyone cnn special events, we, abc news, presidential debates. >> simulcast next tuesday at nine it is crunch time for vice president kamala harris and former president donald trump is they're preparing for their debate showdown. it's just a week away. if you can believe it. and while both candidates are taking a break from the trail today, harris's team remains focused on key issues at the top of voters minds today, the harris campaign released a new ad on the economy and inflation an area that trump continues. pull well on and tomorrow several of her advisers say she plans to release new details on her economic plan and harris's team is also putting a spotlight on abortion rights with a bus tour
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that kicked off today in donald trump's own backyard of palm beach, florida. let's discuss with cnn political director david chalian and cnn national politics correspondent eva mckend. along with cnn reporter alayna treene. thank you for being with us eva, talk to us about this bus tour. how many stops and where's ago. >> it kicked off today in palm beach county notable because that is the former president's backyard and what that illustrates is that democrats are feeling particularly bullish on this issue. to begin it in florida, which has been a red state for a long time, where democrats have suffered a lot of political heartbreak, heartbreak cycle after cycle. i was listening to debby merkel cell powell, she's a former congresswoman who's running for senate down there and she told a crowd today on the bus tour florida is very much still in play. there's also a lot of momentum around amendment for that would end restrictions to abortion access prior to viability, we saw the former president's sort of get caught up in this and how to answer for this. but what we're seeing
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that become it's a really galvanizing issue for democrats in that state and why they started but the tour there in total, they're gonna do 50 stops. they're going to deploy celebrities and surrogates all across the country on this tour as they tried to advance this message. >> david, can you talk to us a little bit about this strategy in florida, what they're trying to do there and beyond with obviously the backdrop that eva has laid out, which is there is this vote on this referendum. it's a six-week ban. a lot of americans think that that is just too strict. it would move it well beyond 20 weeks instead. as you mentioned, trump got caught up in that. what is the appeal there and beyond florida? >> well, certainly the backdrop because of the six-week ban, one of the most extreme in the country, there's no doubt about that. but listen, democrats want to go rev up their base on this issue anywhere that base exists, is florida a battleground state and selection? it is not just look at how the candidates are being deployed to spend their time. one of the most important resources on a campaign and
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their money in dollars in advertising on television. florida is not where we're seeing there are seven battleground states where this election is going to be decided florida is not one of them, but because of the message backdrop of the law, the referendum, the home of donald trump and the like. it made it an opportunity to kick this off. i have no doubt kamala harris and tim walz will be in florida to at least raise some money not the course of this election. but i don't think the electoral votes are going to be something we're hanging on on election night. >> one of those americans who seems to think that the six week abortion ban in florida is too strict, at least last week seemed to be former president donald trump. he said that he would be voting for more than six weeks and an interview before for his campaign sort of turned around and said that he wasn't saying how he's going to vote on that. and we're learning this week that he's actually going to vote to keep that in place, alayna. >> yeah essentially, i mean, donald trump was a little bit all over the place with that. >> his answer on the abortion
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referendum, which is interesting because i know behind the scenes i've been talking to donald trump's campaign about this. they've been talking behind the scenes scenes about how donald trump would address the issue, how he would vote for the florida abortion referendum. so they knew it was coming and still donald trump kind of went back and forth on this issue. at first, he did say that he thought the six-week abortion ban was too strict. he later said that he would actually be voting against the referendum, which would remove and change florida is rawls laws as they currently stand. but look, i think the big picture here to take a step back is that this is an issue that donald trump continues to struggle with. and i think the timing of it is really interesting and honestly helpful to the harris campaign for when they hit the debate stage next week in pennsylvania, because this is of course an issue as eva pointed out, that has been really strong for democrats, they want to make it a priority in this election. donald trump for his part, has really tried to straddle the line on it to say, you know, take credit for stacking the supreme court with three conservative justices that overturned roe versus wade, while also telling
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people, you need to think about elections, you need to win elections. and he knows the politics is not necessarily on his side with so much of america very much being in favor of more abortion rights. and so this is an issue we're going to keep seeing. and one other thing to keep in mind and i know this is a key concern for the trump campaign as well, is that this plays into the widening gender gap that we're seeing right now, particularly with harris now at the top of the ticket, we're seeing more female voters say that they want to go with harris and so that's also playing out behind the scenes on all of this i mean, abortion is a really animating issue, certainly for the base, a lot of americans care about it eva, but it's not the issue that they care the most about old show that they're really concerned about the economy. >> they have major concerns about immigration. harris is now trying to turn into that and address that with an economic message. >> she's very focused on the economy. >> part of her election argument is that there needs to be an economy accessible to everyone. as she tries to frame
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herself alphas are champion for the middle-class. and i think that this is landing in some corners. i was just in detroit yesterday at her rally there. i spoke to a union carpenter and he told me, listen, i don't make enough money to support republicans so you see that connection is being made at least in some places and then she also has a new ad out that speaks to this. let's watch we all know costs are too high, but while corporations are gouging families, trump is focused on giving them tax cuts but kamala harris is focused on, you building up the middle class will be a defining goal of my presidency so her, the first part of her economic rollout focused on going after corporations, price gouging. it also included $25,000 for first-time home homebuyers tomorrow in new hampshire. she's going to roll out the next pillar of that economic plan, which is expected to focus on small businesses.
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>> and we are seeing her make some progress on the issue of the economy against donald trump. she's not losing that issue by the margins that joe biden was losing that issue. it's still like donald trump, stronger suit, and it is issue number one. so harris needs to continue to close that gap on the economy, but it's so interesting to watch that paid advertising, that new ad and where her messages right now, it is aimed squarely at the middle of this electorate. that is where she was focused on that. and dan, his interview last week as well, you don't see her sort of picking up some wedge issues or some just real base motivating issue she'll do some of that. you see her squarely trying to aim at, trying to chip away at trump's advantage on the economy and with independent voters one week out from the debate, david, you imagine that these two issues are going to be central to what we watch on abc that night. who stands to gain more on next tuesday? >> well, i think they both
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stand to gain. listen, this is a tossup race right now so they both stand to gain, they both stand to lose. that's why the stakes are so high for this debate. it is the only one that is officially scheduled, although both have said they're open to another debate, but that won't get really discussed until we see how this debate goes. or they see how this debate but i can't. we've already seen one massively consequential debate this cycle, but i don't think that should lessen our expectations for what a big moment this is. if you look at the calendar over the next 63 days, nine weeks until election day circle next tuesday, because this is the big moment that could be really potentially race altering yeah, it's a good reminder. we could see another one who knows everyone. thank you so much, really appreciate the conversation hitting the road for the launch of the harris campaign's reproductive rights bus tour. we have cnn senior political commentator, ana navarro with us. she's been along on it and anna, abortion rights, a key he issue in the upcoming election. i do want to
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focus on a personal story that you told. i just want to paraphrase a little bit about it so that our viewers can understand and you can tell us more. but basically, you revealed that you had been diagnosed with an ectopic pregnancy and that it was something very scary for you because it was something that your mother had once been diagnosed with and nearly died from ultimately, you had some treatment and it turned out that it was not ectopic, but it was nonviable. and you did have to proceed with a dnc and you talked a little bit more about this. this was a big decision for you to come forward and talk about such a personal moment. tell us why you decided it was really important to share that story with people look, i've never talked about that story publicly until very recently, until after dobbs. and it's because if you're watching me today the possibility i assure you you
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are either a pr a woman who has had a pregnancy emergency or no? a woman who has had a pregnancy emergency may not have spoken about it. it's a very private thing. it's a very painful thing. the reason i speak about it now is because i want to make sure that the girls i love in florida, the girls across this nation have the same access to treatment that i did that then i am not sure that in florida this all happened after six weeks. i am not sure that in florida today, a doctor would be willing to treat me. i'm not sure the doctor would not be afraid of being penalized. are prosecuted. i'm not sure that i could get the same treatment i don't want women to have to flee the state or flee their country, or wait until they're almost dying. in order to get treated. i speak about it because i think we have got to de-stigmatize this. and because
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i'm also so touched by all the women who have shared the horror stories that they've had to endure as a result in consequences of dobbs, the women who've had to carry on viable children to only to hold them and watch them die as they gather for their last breaths. the women who had to carry that pregnancies that are result of incest or rape. the women who had to leave either states, the women who's, whose reproductive systems are threatened because they couldn't get the treatment. the women who had miscarriages and have been prosecuted the women who've almost had to die of sepsis in order to get treatment in places like texas, if those women can come forward, i can come forward because it is a lot more common than people know. i'm in the state of florida where this issue is on the ballot and there's only one candidate running who has been consistent in this because donald and that's kamala harris donald trump has had more positions on
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reproductive rights that he has had one what and i know it's as you said, it's a difficult story to share. but thank you for speaking with us about it. can you talk a little bit about the strategy of taking it? to try this message to trump's backyard in the campaign doing that, what, what is to be gained with that as the backdrop, as we see this very significant referendum vote happening here shortly in florida on their six-week abortion ban well, i think there's credible reasons that make a logical to start it in palm beach. one is the fact that the issue is on the ballot in florida. but also that you can point down the road ten miles away from where we were lives, donald trump, you have got to tie donald trump to the consequences of dobbs that have
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resulted in these horror stories. women are having to endure that. >> trump wants to be a little bit pregnant on right in front of somebody he takes pride and credit for having gotten roe v. >> wade overturned in front of other audiences. he wants to keep a distance one the one hand. he tells you he wants more than six weeks, but then he tells you within 24 hours, but he's going to go know on amendment four. well, he can't have it. all ways. we're not stupid and we don't forget and he is going to be pregnant what the consequences that horrible consequences of dobbs, and he's going to have to carry it to term because come november, women will remember ana navarro. thank you so much for being with us. we do appreciate it more questions than answers in the investigation into monday's train shooting in chicago. what we know about this suspect to open fire on people who appeared to have
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and don's paying so much for at&t, he's been waiting to update his equipment! there's a smarter way to save. comcast business mobile. you could save up to 70% on your wireless bill. so you don't have to compromise. powering smarter savings. powering possibilities. coventry direct.com i'm stephanie elam in los angeles. >> and this is cnn chicago area police say they are reviewing surveillance footage that shows four people being gunned down on a transit train and official say there appears to be a common thread among the victims. they may have all been home homeless and they were apparently shot while sleeping on the train cnn security correspondent josh campbell has the latest on this. joshua chicago investigators think this was a random attack yeah, brianna random and still no motive at this hour, authorities say that they continue to gather evidence to
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go through evidence. they're trying to determine this motive after four people were essentially executed on a chicago area train on the morning of labor day. we're talking about monday, police say that the victims they believe were asleep, three people were on one and train. there was a one another person who was on another train. the suspect then opens fire, killing all four of them. the victims have not yet been notified. authorities say that there's still waiting to make notification to their next of kin. now, about 90 minutes after the shooting happened, authorities did indeed apprehend the suspect. they say that it was surveillance footage footage from inside the transit system that was key, allowing them to track this suspect intercept him, and then take him into custody or you can imagine that the chicago area commuters they're certainly shocked. police gave an update describing this as a tragedy striking yet another american community on a holiday, have a listen it's a horrible situation. it's definitely something that you don't want to wake up to a monday morning on a holiday,
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everyone's supposed to be enjoying their time off time with their family ways. it's labor day. so to actually have to be here to address a situation like this, it's a horrible now authorities have not yet released any information on the suspect himself. >> they're keeping all of that information close to the vest as they comb through this evidence that they are gathering, they do have until tomorrow morning to 40 formally charged the suspects. so we expect that that will be happening and we just got word, guys just a short time ago, police will be holding a press conference here in a short amount of time, we'll maybe we'll learn more about this ongoing investigation truly a tragedy striking the chicago area on labor day josh campbell, thanks so much for the update we look forward to learning more details soon we have some breaking information right now in a criminal case that's linked to the office of new york governor kathy hochul, one of her former top aides has been arrested on charges of acting as an agent for the chinese government. >> the former aides husband is also in custody the two are due in court at some point this afternoon. cnn's gloria
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pazmino is here with the details. gloria, what do we know here? >> well, boris, brianna, this basically amounts to the successful infiltration by a chinese government agent into the new york state government for at least a decade. and we are learning the details they were are outlined right here in this indictment, which we got our hands on earlier today. and a federal prosecutors are accusing lynda, son and her husband, chris, who of acting as agents for the chinese government, enriching themselves, taking millions of dollars in kickbacks helping their families emily, members and their friends, and all of this while she was working as an aide to both governor kathy hochul most recently, but also during the administration of former governor andrew cuomo, part of what's alleged here is that linda son was using her position of influence to help the interests of the chinese government. now you might be wondering, what does the
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chinese government have to do with new york? but as you know, here in new york city, nearly every community is represented and they often look to their state officials for support and recognition. and that's exactly what the chinese communist party appears to be. doing here. >> and linda son is accused of helping to make that happen at one point prosecutors say that she used her position even to block taiwanese officials from having access to government officials who were looking for connections around cultural events, cultural activity which is so much of what a state government does. >> now we do have a response from the governor's office, who responded earlier today to the news that linda son and her husband had been arrested this morning they said in part, we terminate her employment in march of 2023 after discovering evidence of misconduct
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immediately reported her actions to law enforcement and have assisted law enforcement thought throughout this process. now, i do have to say boris and brianna, this does raise serious questions just about how hochul and cuomo were vetting their employees considering that linda son worked in the office of for several years and in other government agencies that raises some questions about that as well. just how much access she had and the fact that she was able to provide that access and information to the chinese government really interesting. >> gloria pazmino, thank you for that the family of the late musician, isaac hayes telling former president trump holed on. i'm coming to federal court that is the latest on their legal fight with the former president over his use of hayes is songs at his rally i'i've never oncnce had to wait for r ininsurance toto a approvt
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mesothelial more victims call now 30 billion in trust money has been set aside. >> you may be entitled to a portion of that money all when 8085920400. that's when 800 five-nine, 2,400 former president trump suffered a setback in court today, and this time it's over a song included on the music playlist that he uses it. his campaign events. today, a federal judge in atlanta ruled the trump campaign must pause using the song. hold on. i'm coming. the song was co-written by the late r&b artist and songwriter isaac hayes. and the haze family went to court to try to force the trump campaign to stop using the song cnn's ryan young was in court today for that hearing. ryan, what is the haze family saying about this? what is the trump campaign saying about the ruling well, both sides feel like they got somewhat of a split decision here. >> his family definitely feel like they've got a victory, but you guys know how this works when you go to these campaigns to get the crowd involved in, get them happy about what they're hearing.
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they played music in the background will show you donald trump dancing to the song. hold on. he's done it several times. he's played it over 100 times at campaign events across this country isaac case, junior, or the third, basically wanted them to stop playing the music said was coughing we'll be right infringement for the last year and-a-half, maybe even two years, they've been asking the donald trump campaign to stop playing the music. and of course you have licensing agreements. so you have to pay to use some of these songs if you don't have an agreement from the artist. so this back-and-forth has really played out not only on social media, but between the lawyers i can tell you today at court, the judge basically told the trump campaign they had to stop playing this song. the one victory for the trump campaign was the idea that did not have to bring the videos down from online they have the song playing in the background as trump dancers along. but take a listen to isaac case, the third talk about this victory for his family today i always want to make sure that we are able to protect my father's legacy. >> my father lost the rice, his music a year before i was born,
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that music started to come back. so after 56 years here's the last thing that we want to do is sell our copyright. he wrote songs that were the soundtrack of the 60s and the civil rights movement hold on. i'm coming. his son man, those records were part of that and that's extremely important yeah. >> brianna boris, we know this live from the world that we live in these days is all about branding. they believe they're going to lose value based upon this song being attached to the campaign. other artists have asked donald trump to stop playing their songs as well from beyonce to bruce springsteen. so you understand why people are trying to separate themselves the same time. they're probably more cord ahead because the isaac hayes family says they're not done just yet. guys all right. >> very interesting. now, we'll see where this goes. ryan young. thank you. and when we come back, how nasa rocket scientists are using underwater robots to figure out how long coastal areas areas have been hao before rising sea levels, takeover stay with us i don't
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>> call now i, hanako montgomery in tokyo. and this is cnn mate masses newest tool in the fight against climate change. and rising oceans. a fleet of autonomous robots that would dive deep under polar ice. >> their mission is to determine herman how fast antartica's giant ice shelves are melting and how long we have until rising sea levels swallow coastal cities. this project is called ice node cnn chief climate correspondent bill weir is here with the details on this. tell us about this bill will be on boris, nasa known for their suite of cool tools. >> this one really focused on life here on earth, especially at the polls trying to answer the question, what happens on a planet overheated by fossil fuel pollution? when land ice and artiko melts faster than anyone even predicted a decade ago. well, measuring how fast it's going away has been a real problem you can imagine
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some of the most inhospitable places on the planet, especially considering that the grounding line of these big glaciers around antarctica are the key places to study. that's where the ice meets the under seabed there. and there are new fears, new science has shown when they sent down a controlled sort of attached robot called ice fin, that warm water is getting under big lake shares down south like the thwaites a glacier, the size of florida that's acting as sort of a cork holding back all the land ice on antarctica. they have ten new sort of robots. these are these ice nodes. they want to deploy around antarctica, their autonomous, they're not connected to a chord the way that ice fin was they let them float and are sort of directed by the computers on board to ocean currents to then attach to that grounding line under water. and that frozen and then stay there for up to a year when they eventually released, though, there'll be able to send all the data of what's exactly happening into satellites and get a much more accurate long-term datasets but of what
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is going on on the bottom of the ocean, it's important to remember the north pole is basically a frozen ocean surrounded by land, south poles, the opposite big chunk of frozen land surrounded by ocean. and if that goes away, just the weights could raise sea level rise by two feet it could be 20 feet. that's a really apocalyptic scenario that scientists are talking about. but even a few inches, six inches a foot could be devastating in places like miami charleston, boston, shanghai around the world, coastal cities that are right on the edge. and we built for a different age, different earth that is sort of steadily going away. so knowledge is power and understanding really what's happening with these glaciers that took millions of years to form. >> now, we're getting a preview in some parts of what this may look like in a few decades and it doesn't look good looking forward to that science coming forward. bill weir, appreciate it. thanks so much. a day after seizing his official airplane, the u.s. now says its weighing a range of options with venezuela's
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president nicolas maduro as he tightens it's crackdown on political opponents. another hour of news central up after a short break k kinda reeveva's support t your brainin health janet, h hey, eddy, , know apappraiser, f frank, frfrank b how are yoyou? >> frered fuel up p to seven br hehealth indicatorors, includid your mememory, joinened the nern braiain health c chat when y yo anangie for yoyour home project you knknow, all yoyour jobs hehe well, , roof repaiair donene we ememergency plplumbing donone wo the nextxt time you u have a projoject, leaveve it to thehe skilleled pros andnd join the e millllions of hohomeowners w wh anangie take c care for ththeir homes,s, get startrted at angigm you u know what's brilliliant boring. . think abouout it b bo is the unsnsung catatalyst for bobold. > what straraps bold toto a t anand hurdles s and into s spac >> or boriring m makes vacatati hahappened, eaearly retireremen possibible, and ststuff startut start ofoff because e it's smar depependable, anand steady. . a words you u want from m your ba
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