tv CNN Newsroom Live CNN September 24, 2024 12:00am-1:01am PDT
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being turned into shelters for the displaced 70-year-old janna ayash fled her village at 5:00 a.m. taking shelter and a training institute in beirut buried my son a week ago under bombardment. she says, my other son stayed behind. he didn't want to leave our home with israel's air offensive intensifying. it may be some time before gen. now sees her other son again. if at all just to put today's death toll in perspective, the death toll 492 with 93 women and children, among them. that's just a little less than half of the entire death toll for the 34 day war between hezbollah and israel in 2006. >> erin absolutely horrific what is happening. and of course the repercussions
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>> thanks for joining us. the news continues now, right here on cnn our viewers, joining us from all around the world and to everyone streaming on cnn middle east, us president joe biden will address the gathering for the last time as president donald trump raises doubts about early voting, as he campaigns in the battleground state of pennsylvania. you polls show kamala harris still has advantage over him in key states coren it's ten in the morning
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across the israeli lebanese border were attacks between israel and hezbollah are ramping up again following the deadliest day of israeli strikes in lebanon in nearly two decades ministry says nearly 500 people, including dozens of women and children, were killed in the intense wave of strikes on monday and israeli officials says prime minister benjamin netanyahu told his security cabinet that the aim of his country's operations in lebanon is to cut his villa from the war with hamas if official also says the cabinet has agreed to continue to raise the level of military operations each day. >> as is and he's aware of the risks the israel defense forces says it hit 1,600 hezbollah targets on monday. and today, israel says it's hit dozens more targets in southern lebanon. well, this coming
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after the iran backed militant group fired multiple rocket barrages into northern israel overnight i made the escalation of violence lebanese civilians in the south of fleeing their homes and seeking safety. israel's prime minister urged people to get out of harm's way while it targets hezbollah positions i would like to clarify israel's policy, accumulo we're not waiting for threat. we are ahead of it everywhere in every arena anytime were eliminating seniors eliminating commanders eliminating rockets, i'm counting those who tried to hurt us. we will hurt them gravely certainly, i promised to change the security the balance the balance of power in the north. this is exactly what we're doing paula hancocks joins me now with more paula. >> these cross-border attacks, obviously continuing ramping up. what is the latest? >> well, anna, we have seen more cross-border strikes
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overnight we heard from the israeli military that they believed there was some 30 rockets and missiles that came from hezbollah into northern israel. and they say that they carried out dozens of strikes on hezbollah ties i'll get as well. so there's no sign of this calming down, certainly in the near term and especially when we hear from many israeli official that at the cabinet the security cabinet, the cabinet did vote and approve the fact that the military can increase the level of military activity pretty in coming days. now we've heard from the israeli military as well, saying that they are planning for the next phases. this according to the chief of staff of the idf, and there have been calls and text messages and to civilians in lebanon urging people to stay away by from where hamas operatives are operating. this in the woods of the israeli military and also
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talking about the fact that hezbollah has been hiding ammunition and missiles in civilian homes. this from the idf let me be clear. >> hezbollah is responsible for this situation. this is his balanced plan to turn thousand lebanon into a battlefield for its attacks on israel we cannot accept terrorist group storing weapons inside people's homes using them to fire and other civilian communities that within that death toll of for almost 500 people on monday, that doesn't of women and children were also among those fatalities. >> so we know also from the lebanese medical systems that health infrastructure is struggling to cope with the sheer number of those that have been injured. some 1,600. we
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understand at this point at that number expected to rise and we did hear also from lebanese member of parliament's speaking at the united nations general assembly whatever we are seeing a wave of exodus and the targeting of residential areas the people of lebanon are in serious danger after the destruction of large areas of agricultural land and the targeting of residential buildings this has damaged the economy of our country and threatened our social order the biden concerned about this escalation. one us official saying with the closest we've been despite rolling to a regional war since october 7, an official also telling cnn that the biden administration does not necessarily subscribe to the israeli government's idea that you should escalate to deescalate concerned that this will end up being what
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they have not wanted and been working against for months. this wider regional conflict anna paula hancocks, joining us from other w, we appreciate the update. thank you well, joining me now is malcolm davis a military analyst and senior analyst of defense strategy and capability at the australian strategic policy institute. malcolm good to see you. israel obviously trying to break the resolve of hezbollah out. those pages your attacks last week, the targeted strikes of hezbollah leaders are now this aerial bombardment. but it doesn't seem to be working well. >> it certainly working to a degree in the sense that they are taking down israel hezbollah's missile and rocket capability but the question is, in terms of how many missiles and rockets does hezbollah have? >> to what extent is iran resupplying has blocked with additional missiles and rockets and what is the potential risk
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of further civilian casualties given that hezbollah is placing these rocket systems inside a civilian areas, including inside homes so it is working to a degree. but there's no clear path to a quick victory on the part of israel we just heard from israel's prime minister benjamin netanyahu, who said the aim of these operations in lebanon is to cut hezbollah from the war with hamas. >> i mean, what does that look like? >> well, essentially what israel is trying to do is to neutralize the threat that hezbollah poses to israel in terms of these long-range missiles and rockets that have continuously bombarded northern israel since october 7 if the israelis can remove that threat or dramatic likely reduce that threat, then it becomes much easier for israel to focus on finishing off hamas in the south because they're no longer
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face the threat of hezbollah in the north, it becomes much more difficult. conversely, or hamas and hezbollah and iran to then try and impose essentially a peace deal on israel. there would essentially allow both hamas and hezbollah to reconstitute and threaten israel again in the future. i think that what you are seeing is an israeli shaping operation designed to reduce that threat and prepare the way to a more just peace in the sense of reducing the threat from both hamas and hezbollah, cutting the two the two parties connections and ultimately seeing israel able to create a peace deal that is at least meets their conditions for peace former us defense secretary leon panetta, he has said the situation has crossed a threshold and he said, we are clearly walking into a much wider war. >> is that how you see this situation? >> i think it's highly likely
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i think that one of the key issues is to what extent does iran choose to get involved at this point around, is it a difficult situation because if it does choose to get involved in this war and open it up to a three-front war, essentially a regional war. that israel won't hold back in terms of attacks on iran israel would certainly launch attacks on iran's nuclear infrastructure including those bases where iran is suspected of building the means to acquire nuclear weapons but if iran doesn't choose to get involved in this war, it loses all credibility with its proxies such as hezbollah and hamas and others. >> and it loses deterrent capability. >> so i do think that there is a risk that this war could escalate into a regional war. but the key uncertainty is what is iran's starts? >> and israeli official has said that it's planning to raise the level of military operations every day. i mean,
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essentially israel is fighting now on, on three fronts. you've got gaza obviously, israeli control, the west bank, and now lebanon. i mean, is the israeli military stretched too thin? >> i don't think it is in the sense that israel is still considering the possibility of a ground intervention into southern lebanon. the situation in the west bank, i think is manageable at a fairly low-level. and if you look at the situation in gaza, hamas have been pretty effectively defeated to by the israeli defense forces. they're not as strong threat anymore. so really the focus is shifting to hezbollah and southern lebanon. and obviously if iran chooses to come into the world, then that's a different story and israel will be facing a much more serious threat at that point. but israel does have the means track iran hard and i think that's they're not overtaxed at the moment, but they could be facing a real
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challenge if iran were to come into this war malcolm davis joining us from canberra. we appreciate your analysis. thank you. >> thank you the u.s. >> presidential election and donald trump is urging supporters to vote early, yet blasting the fact that early voting is allowed. >> the republican nominee who regularly spreads lies about voter fraud in the 2020 election is vowing not to let it happen again we gotta get out and vote. you can start right away. you know that right now, we have this stupid stuff where you can vote 45 days early i wonder what the hell happens during that 45. let's move the cheeley's votes. you've got about 1 million votes and then let's move them were fixing the air conditioner in the room, right? now it's terrible what happened the last time was disgraceful and cnn's poll of polls gives democratic presidential nominee kamala harris a slight edge over trump in the overall race.
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>> still shows no clear leader. this week, harris will ramp up her visits to key battleground states, including pennsylvania where she is headed on wednesday, will drop made several stops in pennsylvania on monday where polls show him at neck and neck with his democratic rival during a rally in the town of indiana. >> trump had claimed he's protector of women and took swipes at harris record on immigration. cnn's danny freeman was there a president donald trump spoke for just over an hour and-a-half at a rally here in indiana, pennsylvania, this area of western panama so then you really crucial to the campaign in case he hopes to carry the great commonwealth once again in 2024, he wanted this specific county about an hour east of pittsburgh both in 2016 and in 2020. >> so if he hopes to carry the state, he really needs to boost his numbers in these specific more rural areas of pennsylvania. now rally was a relatively normal trump campaign event. the former president stuck to the
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teleprompter a good amount in the beginning of his remarks, he focused on the economy, on the biden administration since withdrawal from afghanistan hit on fracking, of course, an important issue here in pennsylvania, but he did drift off topic as well at one point, lamenting johnny carson so laguerre being the host of the tonight show, complaining about the moderators of the last debate, and also criticizing vice president kamala harris for her interview with oprah recently but this supportive crowd here and they really ate up a lot of what the former president was saying here, including when he spent time talking specifically about immigration, take a listen she's been in office for 3.5 years. >> she's saying what she's going to do if she becomes president, but she's been there almost four years. he hasn't done anything except destroy our country with millions of people that shouldn't be here. whether she was a border czar or just the person in charge of the border it's been the worst thing ever, maybe one of the worst things ever to happen to
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our country. look at what's happening in springfield, ohio. now earlier than april former president trump participated in a roundtable with pennsylvania farmers where he discussed the economy. he also made a rare off the record stop at a local grocery store to meet and greet with some voters. and also note that on monday evening, we learned from cnn it's alayna treene, that former president trump intends to return to butler in early october, butler, pennsylvania, of course, the place where former president trump was shot at a campaign zain rally back in july danny freeman, cnn indiana, pennsylvania arizona, is one of the crucial states. >> the u.s. vice president will visit this week. and while there, she might make a trip to the southern border with mexico. well, that's according to sources familiar with the discussions but we're hearing no final decision has been made. the harris campaign is eager to close the gap with trump on immigration. polls show him leading on that issue. and in arizona on the whole
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joining me now from los angeles is michael genovese, political analyst and president of the global policy institute at loyola marymount university. michael great to see you yesterday. it was positive polls for harris. now it's strong poll results for trump why the discrepancy in how seriously are you taking these poll results? >> well, i think there's a discrepancy because things are fluctuating. they're very close, and the littlest thing can tip the scale a little bit. but for the most part for harris, it's been a good news, bad news situation. the good news is in most of the polls, she's up by a few percentage points in the popular vote the bad news is that it's not the popular vote that wins the presidency. it's the electoral college and there's an inbred bias in the electoral college for their favorites, rural and smaller states. meaning favoring trump and so the general view is that the democrat has to win the electoral college if they want to win and the electoral contest to win the popular vote
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by 4% or so that's tough to do. biden did it the last time anyone, hillary clinton won the popular vote, but not by 4% and lost. and so what you need to look at the battleground states, and that's where trump is really doing well. arizona, georgia states that biden won in 20 20 he's ahead. north carolina. he's ahead and so for harris, the key strategy has to be you've got to win those great lake states in the midwest. and you've got to get women out to vote in a higher number than usual. got to get young people energized out to vote and it doesn't look like she's doing well, there and black voters harris is at 83%. biden won 92% of african american voters, hispanics harris, 52%. biden won 66% since she has her work cut out for her trump that he was in pennsylvania tonight. that obviously as a must-win state, he appealed to his female voters and two women saying, i
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will be your protector. >> i mean, he obviously needs their vote, but his track record is questionable. to put it mildly well, he knows that if he's going to win, he has to get both a whole a whole lot of men there on his side. but he also has to tap into the women's vote, especially suburban women and he put out a tweet the other night that was just very patronizing and that's the problem for trump. his he doesn't speak that language he speaks the language of domination and wounded man hood but i don't think women generally speaking, hear that voice as comforting or have supportive. >> he is desperate to get women's votes. >> and so i think he's making a great effort. it's falling flat know, a key issue in this election there are reports that harris is planning to visit the u.s. mexico border on friday. how will this be perceived considering that she's very much tied to biden's policies
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on the border this is a very risky strategy for harris on the one hand, xi's, she would go there and try to boost her support and her credentials on the border but i don't know that she can do that the narrative that most voters, now by into is that she is weak on the border. >> democrats are weak on the border. biden was weak on the border. trump is trump on the trump strong on the border and so how do you turn that around? one visit doesn't do it. i think it's probably more risky then she even imagine right now, i should also mention a comment that donald trump made tonight, raising doubts about early voting and suggesting that without evidence that fraud occurs. >> he's obviously using the same playbook we've heard over and over again, but undermining the voting process will this work the foot. >> what he should be doing this trying to find all sorts of
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avenues for his supporters, maga supporters to get out and vote. whether it's early voting, whether it by mail, whatever the process is, he needs to get people out donald trump is at 47% in the popular vote right now. that's his ceiling and so he has to get people to turn out and so when he degrades, are diminishes the importance of different forms of voting, early voting, et cetera. mail-in voting. he hurts himself and so it's hard to imagine why he would do this accept that he thinks that this will be yet a new way if he or when he loses, he can claim that it's fraud it's rigged, it's a false system i don't think he's going to help himself by doing this though. >> michael genovese, always a pleasure to get you on the program and here, analysis. thank you for joining us thank you, anna well, still to come, world latest set to rally for support on the global stage. what's expected the un general
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featuring what will likely be us president joe biden's final address to the assembly. it comes as late as attend to see eye to eye on multiple conflicts taking place around the world. speaking at the un summit of the future on monday, us secretary of state antony blinken made it clear no member state has the power to go against the core tenants of the un charter, especially those centered around independence and sovereignty we will continue to affirm that no member state has the right to redraw borders by force or repress their own people will continue to oppose the idea that nations can assert spheres of influence or dictate who other countries ally or partner with we will push back fiercely against attempts to undermine the universal declaration of human rights. >> and related international human rights treaties. >> cnn's richard roth previews what else is to expect over the coming days? >> once again it's a general assembly high level meeting
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overshadowed by wars and crises around the globe. take gaza and southern lebanon, israel involved in the israeli ambassador to the the un, danny danon defended his country's attacks on hezbollah we don't want to escalate the situation. we don't want a wall today. all if we will not have other choice, we will push back his balla. it will be painful for the lebanese people in southern lebanon, but we don't see any other choice. >> jordan and egypt prev requested a security council meeting on the latest fighting but little is expected. there have already been dozens of meetings since the war began. october 7, prime minister netanyahu is scheduled to be giving a speech here at the general assembly friday morning. but his appearance keeps getting delayed and there's still a possibility he may not appear at all due to developments back home iran is new president lashed out at israel asking for united nations helped to stop israel's aggression.
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>> pollyannaish, the end of occupation, the substation of apartheid in palestine. and an immediate ceasefire in gaza are prerequisites for global development. nps they islamic republic of iran is fair to work with other countries to achieve common global goals. >> president zelenskyy of ukraine is one of the speakers this week, he will meet with president biden, vice president harris, and former president trump, though not necessarily here in the building president zelenskyy addressed the un summit for the future, which was agreed upon sunday however, it's not enforceable for zelenskyy. he has what is what he's called a victory plan that he's going to show president biden in washington in my told leaders nations to continue supporting our joint efforts for a just and peaceful future. >> it will be president biden's final general assembly appearance. he is likely to stress unity once again. but the way these crises and sudan,
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gaza, ukraine ago bring a lot more will be needed to make any progress. richard roth, cnn, united nations to storm systems that developing this hour first hurricane john made landfall earlier off the southern coast of mexico as a category three storm the national hurricane center says it will bring heavy rain, flash floods, and mudslides to the region meanwhile, an area of thunderstorms in the caribbean is expected to develop into hurricane helene later this week, cnn's chad myers has the details all right. >> we are watching a storm that will be hurricane helene by wednesday. could possibly be a major hurricane by thursday, tropical storm watches already in effect for the lower keys, warnings for the western part of cuba and also toward canned but this is a storm in very warm water. the models are all in agreement on where it should be going. doesn't really have a big center yet, but we'll watch
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that and the models will do a better job when that happens. what we know is that the water temperatures are in the upper 80s, in the middle 80s, that's well warm enough to get rapid but intensification. and in fact, the american model is significantly stronger. many other models are to than the european model, but we'll have to see where this goes in the days to come. the problem is, we don't have that many days to come. this will be onshore on thursday, whether it will be tampa or all the way to the left on the west side of that cone, we'll have to see what we do know is that there will be significant power outages. there will be an awful lot of flooding. all this red here, six inches of rain or more. and the waves in the gulf of mexico, not that you're going to be out there. i hope we'll be 40 feet as they crest. there in the middle. so yes, halyna's next and then it will be isaac. but this could be a very big, impactful storm for the gulf coast left or right of that middle, we'll have to see this is just getting going, but
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we won't have a lot of time to prepare chad myers. >> thank you. will live it on. sees its deadliest day of strikes in nearly two decades, sending thousands fleeing to safety and now there have been more strikes overnight that's next on cnn and most serious charges are expected against the man suspected of plotting to kill donald trump on his golf course. we'll have the latest evidence in the case after a short break the highest rated oprah winfrey show of all time. >> we're still talking about it. >> she opened the door to have discussions about way in a way that we had not before tv on the edge, moments shaped our culture. sunday at nine on cnn, if you're about to replace your roof, stop here's a solution that's a fraction of the cost. >> roof max guaranteed to extend the life of your roof up to 15 years at a fraction of the cost of a new roof, move boxes scientifically proven bio oil restores flexibility and
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cabinet, he's aim is to cut hezbollah from the war with hamas and an official says the cabinet has agreed to raise the level of military operations every day a us official tells cnn the area is the closest. it's been two spiraling into a regional war since the october 7 attack on hamas, israeli strikes on southern lebanon reportedly killed nearly 500 people on monday alone forcing thousands to flee to safety a us state department officials says the idf attacks on hezbollah have likely set the iran backed terrorist group 20 years backwards. >> well, cnn's ivan watson is following developments and joins us now, ivan, those comments from the israeli prime minister to his cabinet. >> and the warning of increased daily military operations tell us more that's right. >> i mean, since the october 7 terror attacks by hamas into
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israel ushered in, now nearly a year long war between israel and hamas militants in gaza that have killed some 40,000 people after that day hezbollah joined in the fray as well and has been engaged in a cross-border war with israel that's also going on for nearly a year. but in the last week, israel signaled that it was basically going to intensify this what had been a border war into encompassing much more of its northern neighbor. if you look at a heat map that nasa created as showing fires and heat sources over a 24 hour period in lebanon starting on monday, you get a sense of where some of these ferocious barrage of aerial bombardment from israeli war planes hit across a broad swath of lebanon. the israeli military says that on monday, it hit some 1,600 targets well,
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one of the results of that has been an absolutely catastrophic death toll according to lebanon's ministry of health, some 492 people killed among them, 35 children and 58 women. nearly 100 women and children, and more than 1,600 hundred people wounded. it's one of the deadliest days in generations, and that's coming from a country that fought of 15 years civil war and had a nearly 20 year israeli military occupation of southern lebanon. no stranger to conflict the bombardment though israel says it issued warnings. clearly many civilians were still caught under the israeli warplanes and people were sent running for their lives. take a listen to what one woman had to say they struck our house and our building was
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shaking. we got very stressed. this is why we had to leave and we came here. we were told it's safe here. the situation is very tragic. the strikes were right next to us now, israel says that hezbollah seems to have fired around 50 rockets since midnight into israel on tuesday with aerial defenses shooting down most of them, they say throughout the past 24 hours that one israeli woman was slightly injured anna ivan, i know that you have family in lebanon. they were very close to one of the strikes last week in beirut. how are they holding up? >> full disclosure on my family, my in-laws have been displaced by the israeli bombardment of the southern suburbs of beirut there was an airstrike on friday that took down a nine story building. it killed at least 41 people among them number of senior hezbollah
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commanders. but also women and children. my mother-in-law was a block and a half from where that airstrike took place and thought that the neighboring building from my wife's grandmother is apartment where she was at the time had been hit. that's the force of the explosion. the amount of damage just in the air since that attack on friday, there's been another attack in that neighborhood on monday, the southern suburbs my in-laws group of them have left the southern suburbs as have many other people and moved to an apartment in another neighbor of hood of town where there are for generations of displaced relatives, including a one-week old, newborn, and my wife's grandmother, who is paralyzed and a stroke victim. these are teachers a building contractor and again, one-week old newborn, none of them have any affiliation with him as
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hezbollah, or any links with the most powerful military and political force in lebanon country that doesn't have a president right now. and its government is basically bankrupt with a severe economic crisis so the israeli prime minister says, eat once he wants to cut hezbollah from the ongoing war with hamas the death toll that we saw on monday indicates that as part of this strategy, israel is also willing to kill large numbers of civilians people potentially like my in-laws, who have nothing to do with hezbollah, that appears to be part of the israeli strategy. so my family are terrified that they could become the next statistics the next numbers that i will be counting on the air for innocent civilians killed in this rapidly escalating conflict other than
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i'm so sorry that your family is going through this and thank you for sharing your story. >> all right. with us. ivan watson for the update. we appreciate it. thank you we're turning now to other news. >> a judge has ordered the man suspected of trying to assassinate donald trump over just over a week ago to remain behind bars during a hearing on monday prosecutors revealed new details about the case against ryan, ruth, and say he will soon be charged with attempting to assassinate the former us president he's cnn's randi kaye in court, we learned more about a letter that was provided from a witness who said ryan ruth, the dropped a box at his home a while ago. >> go and that box was passed on to federal investigators in it was a handwritten letter, according to investigators that they believe ryan ruth wrote that letter says in part, this was an assassination attempt on donald trump, but i failed you. i tried my best and gave it all the gumption i could muster. it is up to you now to finish the
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job and then he went on to offer $150,000 followers to whomever could complete the job. we also learned from, from the agents in court that the defendant, ryan ruth, they believe was in a position mission that provided a clear line of fire to the sixth hole, putting green. now remember, donald trump was on the fifth hole putting green at the time this all occurred, that would have put him about 12 to 15 minutes away from the sixth hole, putting green also, if he had gotten to the six hold putting green, he would have been about 100 feet. investigators say from wu, they believe is ryan ruth in that in that position in the bushes. also new information regarding the scope that was attached to the weapon that was discovered at the scene that we're we are told was attached to the weapon by electrical tape. and investigators in court said that they there was a fingerprint that they believe belongs to ryan ruth on that electrical tape. that is a preliminary finding. they are still looking into that. we also know there was a letter now addressed to the new york
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times that was found at the scene. they did test that letter for fingers the prince and dna, they have not found ryan roofs fingerprints or dna on it just yet, but they did find a fingerprint belonging to someone else the fbi agent who was testifying did not say who that person is, who that fingerprint belongs to, or what was in the letter also, they did search routes car. they found a hawaii driver's license and a passport in his name alone with 12 pairs of gloves and six cell phones. one of the cell phones prosecutors say included a search of google search from how to get from palm beach county where this all happened to mexico. also, they found cell phone data that would have placed ryan ruth in this area for about a month before this incident occurred. they said that he arrived i've tier as of august 14, that's according to cell phone data pinging off the cell phone towers in the area. and finally, there was a handwritten list of dates and venues. prosecutors say that was found in his car. those includes those include dates
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where donald trump was expected to appear before election day they believe that that handwritten list was written by ryan ruth randi kaye, cnn, palm beach county, florida still ahead here on cnn newsroom, haitian children in springfield, ohio. >> so they're living in fear after donald trump falsely claimed that migrants all right unbiased reviews, unrivaled research, and unreal savings elevate your every day. >> cnn underscored see all our reviews and recommendations that underscore dot which the greatest invention of all time, new hands-free skechers, slip-ins just sleeping in their on it's like they have an invisible built-in shoehorn. so your foot slides into place without bending down or touching your shoes, then he'll pillow technology keeps your foot coffee and secure it's free sketch your slippers 48% of americans don't get enough magnesium, which is vital for bone, nerve, and muscle health. >> i recommend qtls magnesium glycine, eight, it's
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do.com i mourn liebermann at the pentagon this cnn on donald trump's speech monday at a campaign rally in pennsylvania, the former president appeared to make light of the fallout from baseless rumors. >> he's helped spread about haitian migrants eating pets in springfield, ohio hi, you he said the migrants needed to be removed from the country, prompting chants from the crowd take a listen do you think springfield will ever be the same? i don't think the fact is and i'll say it now. you have to get them the hell out. you have to get them out. i'm sorry to get them out.
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>> can have it did have it they've destroyed it those false claims have had real world impact including a bomb threats against migrants in springfield. >> it's one thing to spread rumors from a position of power on a national platform. it's quite another for a child to process them cnn's gary tuchman reports haitian evangelical church of springfield, ohio was less than a year old the sunday services vibrant, a reflection of the haitian community that is regarded springfield is a great place to live at the same time in another room children ranging from toddlers to teams
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gathered to pray and play with a youth pastor who encourages the young people to talk about a tough subject. oh, you feel about what happened? in springfield, about what they say about immigrants and the common sentiment. >> these three words how you feel about alicia is 10-years-old. >> she's in sixth grade. she was born in the united states. >> her father as jeannine. >> he moved to the u.s after the devastating 2010 haiti earthquake they are both upset at what's been said. >> he made me feel a little bit sad a little bit angry in springfield. >> they're eating the dogs, the people that came in, they're eating the cats. they're eating they're eating the pets of the people that live there last enough. >> springfield, there is no basis for what the former president said. and it's very upsetting and humiliating too many of the children here. >> most patients can here for a
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better life so i think they have to stay strong and don't let the things that that trump says get to just this strong job would is 13-years-old in eighth grade. he was born in the u.s. but moved back to haiti before his first birthday with his mom, baby they came back to america about four years ago. would says he likes living in springfield. and how does that make you feel that there are people who don't want you to stay in the country. >> and those before a little bit tell me about that doing nothing. we just came here just a little bit of life. >> but now with bomb threats against the city of springfield, many are frightened woods. mother, are you scared you feel safe for your family in this community absolutely not. >> nobody knows what's going to happen. leader would is a confident young man. he wants to own a car dealership in the
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future and he wants to protect his mom in the present. >> how long stay at home. so not a lot of people can come up to us make front of us a lot comments eating cats and dogs for the youth pastor at the church has some within the community have told her they are looking to get out. >> they leaving swing fee because they feel unsecure the scare alicia and her family are staying put. but the ten-year-old who wants to be a doctor when she grows up, did listen carefully when her father told us he's concerned about his family's safety what does that make you feel your dad say dad, what can you save somehow? no matter what happens. >> gary tuchman, cnn springfield, ohio that's how those kids are all okay well, the investigation resumes into the titan submersible's deadly voyages to the titanic. >> when we return details of the testimony against the company when he behind the
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intentionally sit on fire thursday. >> official say the bridge was a historic part of the communities infrastructure the investigation is still in its early stages. those days, file was the second at the bridge in less than a week. the first was reported last tuesday it makes it go city demonstrators demanding justice and answers for 43 students abducted. ten years ago the interior ministry, hurling firecrackers, smashing windows, and vandalizing walz. the government says the students were abducted by a corrupt police colluding with a local drug cartel. today, only three of the students remains have been identified their families say they are desperate for accountability a decade later an investigation into the titan submersible implosion resumed on monday. >> the co-founder of oceangate, the company that built and
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operated the submersible, testified they did not originally intend to develop its own vessels. the u.s. coast guard panel investigating the implosion released this new recovery footage. the hearing now in its second week has heard testimony accusing oceangate are prioritizing profits over safety it was very frustrating because it was left in st. john's and left on the doc and we had no way to work on it, no way to look at it and we were told it was a cost issue that the the cost of shipping it back was prohibitive. >> they were low on money the titan submersible suffered a catastrophic implosion in june of last year during its voyage to the titanic wreckage killing all five people on board now before you go if you rely on emojis to get your message across, it's a big day, eight
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u.n.'s are coming to your smartphone. >> next year, it's the most anticipated in an exhausted face sorry, the most anticipated is an exhausted face with bags under its eyes. will others include a fingerprint, splat, a root vegetable, a hop and a shovel the leaflets tree is meant to raise awareness about climate change. you emojis don't just happen every day. it's a formal process led by the unicode consortium, a non-profit which oversees global emoji standards interesting oh thanks so much for your company. i'm anna coren, cnn newsroom is coming up next with my colleague, max foster in london for have i got news for you are pretty awful yeah. >> what are the kinds we could run out the news before? more than one never happened. if i got news for you saturday at
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