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tv   CNN News Central  CNN  October 16, 2024 6:00am-7:00am PDT

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effect of one 1.6 million jobs and blowing themselves are in really dire straits financially day just took out a loan essentially from several banks for $10 billion. they're trying to sell $15 billion of stock and debt. they just announced layoffs of 10% 17,000 of their employees over the next couple of months. but this is a company that's almost too big to fail. they are one of two two suppliers of passenger airlines in the world. they are not going that way. >> they're not going to go under their number one exporter here in the u.s they are in financial trouble, but they're not going away anytime soon. >> however, the longer that this strike or csis you're just going to start to feel more and more, especially in the broader economy. what visit comes then it starts turning the ripple effects. yeah, it's great to see you, vanessa. thank you so much. thank keep track of it. new hour of cnn, new news central starts now
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>> this morning, top democrats expressing worry overhead kamala harris is campaigning in a key battleground state. and donald trump contradicted his allies to confirm he is indeed referring to his political rivals as the enemy from within. new body camera footage shows the moment two police officers punched in taste a deaf black man. why that man is now being charged with a crime? fine. and breaking this morning, israel says it will launch a retaliatory attack against iran in us sources believe it will come before the u.s presidential election i'm john berman with sara sidner and kate bolduan. this is cnn new central >> and here is what kamala harris harris and donald trump are up to today. harris is teaming up with more than 100 republicans for an event on
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unity and patriotism in a notable pennsylvania county. she will then speak with fox news. can she build bipartisan support? and what will donald trump say next? very soon he will tape a town hall with moving this after his latest town hall saw him further define and defend his enemy from within remarks cnn's alayna treene is leading us off this hour. what exactly did donald trump say? because he made a clarification here? >> he did. and, you know, it really was kind of the opposite of what we know some of donald trump's republican allies and members of congress were trying to do in defending that comment. so first of all, this came during donald trump's fox news town hall last night. it's going to air at 11:00 a.m. today. it wasn't all female audience, which i think is actually very notable given how much i know from my conversations with trump's senior advisors that they're trying to make inroads with women voters, particularly as
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they see that widening gender gap with harris. but as for this comment look donald, trump said over the weekend that he thinks are the u.s.'s greatest threat is not our foreign adversaries, but actually the enemy from within. as i said, a lot of republican allies have tried to defend that common saying he was referring to protesters when he talked about potentially sending in the military to deal with that enemy from what within. they were saying it's the same thing when you see the national guard go out to try and tamp down riots, donald trump, however, though, made clear he is talking about political opponents. i'm going to read for you some of what he said. he said, quote, it is the enemy from within and they're very dangerous. we have china, we have russia, we have all these countries. if you have a smart president they can all be handled the more difficult are the pelosi's. these people, they're so sick and they're so evil, so clearly directly referencing the pelosi's there. it's clear he's talking about democrats when he says this. now the other thing i think
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just to add to this is that we know that republicans have been consistently arguing that i the democrats rhetoric particularly calling donald trump a threat to democracy. they are blaming that for the two assassination attempts on donald trump's life, saying that donald trump never uses the same type of language. i think it's clear here that this is very dangerous language. and one other notable thing from yesterday, we saw donald trump speak at the chicago the nominee club. he did an interview with bloomberg news, but a striking moment from then is when he was pressed on whether he would accept the election results in november and donald trump, once again, refused to say that he would do so. he also really tamped down what had happened on january 6 in people were there. and i'll tell you what they never show that the primary seen in washington was hundreds of thousands are largest group of people i've ever spoken before and i spoke and it was love and
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peace love and peace. i think, you know, from us who, i mean, i was on the capitol at the capitol on january 6. i know it was not love and peace that day. so he's kind of, you know, a little bit of revisionist history there. and also he falsely claimed, of course that there was a peaceful transfer of power, as we know, there was not in 2021. and also so one other false claim i just want to fact check there as he said, there were hundreds of thousands of people who stood before him when he made those remarks. that is not an accurate number. there were less people there, but again, i think it just shows that we don't know what's going to happen on november 5 or if there could be more challenges to what happens with the results. so i think keep that in mind as we hit this final stretch, sara. >> all right. alayna treene. thank you so much for that report. >> this morning, kamala harris is in battleground, pennsylvania and working to win the favor of republicans in one critical county honey bucks county how, by trying to show
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those republicans that republican support her more than 100 republicans backing her candidacy will be joining kamala harris on the campaign trail today, the goal of this political show and tell seems pretty obvious. you're going to give the other conservative voters in that county in that in pennsylvania permission to to vote like them, to turn away from donald trump and support kamala harris. will it work? cnn's eva mckend is tracking all of this for us. she's joining us now. what is this going to look like today though? >> well, kate will continue to see harris really lean into what the campaign would describe as a patriotic message in this appeal to republican voters, the vice president plans to blast trump for previously calling for the termination of the constitution shall also warn of the threat. a a second trump term poses in her view and, slam her rival for his comment on the military that they should handle the enemy from within. and at this point, we have a sense of what this campaign argument sounds like. she aimed to draw contrasts with the former
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president in a conversation last night with charlemagne tha god, take a listen to the exchange it's two very different visions for our nation. one mine that is about taking us forward and progress and investing the american people, investing in their ambitions, dealing with their challenges. and the other donald trump is about taking us backward, got is about fascism what can we just say? it yes, we can say that today's event by republican former congressman adam kinzinger, as well as former georgia lieutenant governor geoff duncan, among other republicans in terms of her week ahead, she heads to wisconsin after pennsylvania, then she ends the week in michigan and in georgia. >> kate, good to see you. thank you so much. john. >> all right. >> with us now, former obama 2012 campaign manager, jim messina, and former press adviser to then house speaker john boehner. maura gillespie,
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great to have you both here 20 days left. this is about choices with 20 days left, you've got to make choices as a campaign in jim, i want to focus on what the vice president is doing today, appearing with more than 100 republicans giving a speech about patriotism in bucks county politico is reporting today, there are some pennsylvania democrats upset that she's not more focused on turning out democratic voters, maybe black voters in philadelphia. so what about that choice issue making the right one there? >> i think it's a silly choice, john, we can do both. we can walk and chew gum. we can turn out voters and talk to swing voters and winning campaigns do both of those things if she wins bucks county or even breaks even, she's going to win pennsylvania. do we need to turn out the vote in philly? of course we do and we will and she's focused just on that, but we also have to talk to swing voters, whether we like it or not, we're in a tied race in a tied race means you turn out your voters and you talk to the swing voters and having over 200 republicans with her today builds a
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permission structure for these swing voters to say there's a home for me in the harris coalition to so what do you think about that? >> first of all, maura, i think that's the strategy. >> she's going with because there is an entire group of voters that trump has largely ignored, which are those who aren't super keen on him based on the fact that he did not have a peaceful transfer of power. >> he tried to upend our democracy, so targeting them in fact of strategy for some of those swing states like pennsylvania, like it was continent and places like that. so i do think it's thoughtful, but i also think republicans that are going there today need to flip the question what does it say to you as a trump voter? that's so many republicans, people who used to work for him, people worked with him, are saying he is not fit to serve in the white house. >> what's their answer to that in you both think there are gettable, haley voters in pennsylvania more are you first? >> i do think there are, but i also think that there are ways to say you don't have to vote for donald trump to say a republican and a given them a permission structure like we
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talked about here, is important because again, you're asking people to split ticket vote or just not vote for hesitant and vote for republicans down-ballot. >> jim, very quickly on that question, you think there were significant haley voters that are genuinely gettable republican voters absolutely. >> in a race that could be decided by thousands of votes. every vote counts here, and there's absolutely voters who were sitting there trying to make their decision exactly like more assess alright, about choices. >> one of the things donald trump is doing differently than certainly 2016, people forget this, but in the final couple of weeks before election day, his campaign kind of put them in a box he was started giving teleprompter speeches. >> kellyanne conway work to sort of control him. that doesn't seem to be happening this time. he's talking about the enemy from within. he's, you yelling at a bloomberg economics reported during an interview who there, how much of an impact more or might that have? >> so he's going back to the 2016 playbook and was not the
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2016 playbook though because he's not is he doesn't seem to me that he's trying to control or focus his message i don't think he has at all, but i also do think that that was a very a blip on the radar of him trying to control himself, which we saw a little bit here. >> and this campaign, there were moments where he was it's on the teleprompter trying to read his speeches as his team wanted him to. but time, time again, donald trump is out for number one, and that just himself. he truly is going to do whatever it is that he feels will get that current audience giving him cheers and he got some yesterday at the economic forum with bloomberg, he got some cheers. and the host their got some boos like he, that's where he thrives. he loves that. >> doesn't matter as fact that what he's saying is nonsensical. >> he likes have that adoration. >> and do you think, jim, that that will have an impact, do you because the harris campaign or they clearly does and we'll talk about the choice they're making with this in a second. but from a trump, from the trump standpoint, do you think his campaign would care to have him reined in more? >> oh my gosh. yes. as former presidential campaign manager, i can tell you his campaign team is probably throwing their desks out the window every time
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he goes off script and talks about january 6. we just had a 2022 election where almost every january 6 defender lost their election. and now we're sitting less than three weeks out and he's staring nick conversation back to it. on the same day, kamala harris is giving a speech on the constitution. that's just a disaster for the harris campaign will look, i'm sorry for the trump campaign. >> it may be the harris campaign is giving the speech on page here. it hasn't because of what donald trump has been saying, which does get to this question. and i know jim, you don't think there are choices you could do both. but generally speaking, you get one or two soundbites a day from a campaign that make newspaper headlines and get played the next day harris today giving this speech which i think will be about trump, do you feel they're making a choice to talk more about trump than they are about themselves, more about harris look every single day, we're now in early voting period and voters are voting and giving them information about donald trump is part of the choice they run a largely positive campaign kind of building in her narrative and
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now it's time to drive the choice in this election. >> and the choice is going back to the failed policies of donald trump. and that's what you're going to hear the harris campaign's say every day for the next three weeks instead of maura, you think the joy campaign she was trying to run instead focusing on proposals from her in her campaign. >> i do think you're going to hear more about trump because the reality is the polls are showing that it's very, very close. but i also think that the more we're hearing about trump talking about january 6 trying to rewrite history and say that he did have a peaceful transfer power, but then also not committing to having a peaceful transfer of power i do i think it is not just hyperbole is not fear trying to get one afraid. this is the reality we're in. donald trump is saying what he wants to do. and i think we need to take him seriously and his position about being in the white house again, is not good for this country, but in st. main, republicans down-ballot do need to separate themselves from what the president is doing and saying and they've learned to jim's point, they hate when he talks about the 2020 election
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was stolen or january 6 being a peaceful, great day with lovely people. that's not good for republicans down-ballot. and when said it is such a viable option in the house, could just, you know, grow with which already they really need to separate themselves. >> it's also not true, right? absolutely. media separate themselves because that's not helpful to them. that messaging is not helpful to them. >> jim, is there anything the harris harris campaign is not doing that you think they should do or do more of with 20 days left now, i think they're reading a very disciplined campaign. >> i think one of the big things we've learned is kamala harris is ready for this moment. she is a campaign built around this question you asked me can you turn out voters and can you persuade voters? that's what you have to do to win a presidential election. and i think they've really built a campaign to do that. >> he need to do both, but getting the proportions right sometimes can make all the difference. jim messina more gillespie, thanks to both of you appreciate it sara. >> all right. a violent arrest sparking outrage this morning, new body camera footage showing phoenix police repeatedly punching and tasing a deaf black man it's several palsy
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while he's lying face down on the ground, details on that coming up and new evidence in the menendez brothers murder case, the handwritten letter that could lead he'd prosecutors to reconsider their sentence and new details on israel's timeline to retaliate against iran on october 1, attack those stories and more cnn special event two weeks before election day vice president harris basis voters and takes to pressing questions, lie. anderson cooper moderates a cnn presidential town hall kamala harris next wednesday at nine eastern on cnn et humana. >> we believe your health care should evolve with you in part of that evolution means choosing the right medicare plan for you humana can help hi, my name is sam davis and i'm going to tell you about medicare advantage prescription drug plans that can provide more coverage than original medicare, including prescription drugs and coverage
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shouting orders to a man who turns out was deaf as he's lying face down on the ground one officer reportedly punched 34-year-old tyrone mcalpin and another officer tased him. now, mcalpine is facing two counts of aggravated assault, aggravated assault, and one count of resisting arrest. cnn's josh campbell is here with the very latest on this, this it's really disturbing video on there are a lot of questions as to the timing of how quickly officers got out and jumped on this man who turned out to be deaf >> this happened so fast. this incident in august actually started when a man at a gas station told police that he was assaulted by someone who was allegedly trying to steal his bike. still host cell phone. he then points across the street. you can see the image there from surveillance footage of mcalpine walking through a parking lot, but pay attention to that door of that truck. you see the officer barrel out of that vehicle and made contact with mcalpine and again, he's deaf, so we couldn't hear the commands to stop. i also want
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to play the vantage point of the police body camera footage from that officer i'll warn our viewers this might be disturbing. the officer rolls up, he tells me calvin to stop, and then this happens back taser against him at least twice. he was transported to a hospital for precautionary measures. those officers also injured in that scuffle now, as you mentioned, mcalpin's has been charged with two counts of aggravated assault. the third charge of theft from this original alleged incident that was dismissed, but the sheer speed with which all this
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transpired has caused the outcries there in the community is of course, also comes as we reported on a justice department scathing report accusing phoenix police officers have disproportionatel y enforcing efforts against minorities and people with disabilities. and it's worth pointing out as well that the issue of training also at the forefront here, or the lack thereof, take a listen here to those officers who were in court describing what type of training they receive and dealing with people with disabilities who are hard of hearing. >> okay. can you tell me more about that? >> that's about seven years ago. i don't remember much of it. >> have you received any training in dealing with it's members of the public who have disabilities. >> maybe briefly, but nothing recall so neither officer, there saying they even remembered the receded receiving any type of training. >> finally, sort of pointing out the union there, the police union put out a statement saying that the public shouldn't rush to judgment they say in their view, this was officers that were for in
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fully marked vehicles who were then attacked finally, it's worth pointing out that the phoenix police department has an internal investigation underway, and the chief prosecutor there in maricopa county says, because of the attention this case is receiving, she will personally be reviewing the case. sara lots to review. they're looking at this video is really disturbing josh campbell. thank you so much. i appreciate your reporting. john. >> all right. we are standing by as the family of lyle and erik menendez is set to hold a press conference on new evidence that they think could set the brothers free and one has a big appetite hi, was a bit of an introvert. one is a sagittarius, one likes getting drunk in the rain the pandas that could radically alter your wednesday morning for you are pretty odd yeah. >> what are the kinds we could run on the news before then would never happen if i got news for you saturday at nine on cnn and streaming next day
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redefining insurance, power is not good whole season based what it feels like so we are expecting to hear from the family of eric and lyle menendez today. the two brothers are currently serving life sentences for killing their parents this is back in 1988, their case made national headlines then, and there story has now become even more famous after becoming the focus of a netflix documentary and ryan murphy series based on their lives and now the los angeles district attorney has just released new evidence that could lead to a review they're sentences. cnn has obtained the letter from erik menendez that their attorneys argued corroborates the allegation eric was sexually abused by his father, joining us right now, cnn legal analyst joey jackson for more on this this new evidence this piece of evidence
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is what people are most focused on and most talking about this letter that erik wrote to his cousin, and in it he alludes to the alleged sexual abuse from their father. i'll read for everyone part of the letter. i'm stuck here alone. i've been trying to avoid dad. it's still happening, andy, but it's worse for me now. i can't explain it. he so overweight that i can't stand to see him. i never know when it's going to happen and it's driving me crazy every night i stay up thinking he might come in. how important is this, joey? >> so it's significant and here's why, just in terms of a timeline, we know what happened in august of 1989. there arrested of course, several months later in march. okay. but the reason i mentioned that kate is because the letter was allegedly written and it was written several months before the murder in 1988, december of 1988. now, the first trial we know was a mistrial and it seemed to be that the men on the jury, we're not buying the issue of sexual abuse. the women work however, with
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respect to the second trial where they were convicted, the judge did not let in a lot of evidence with regard to sexual abuse. why is that critical? they will arguing self-defense and they will arguing the brothers that they fear for their life as a result of this sexual abuse over the years, it built up to the notion, hey, our parents that's all going to kill us. we have to kill them to the extent that this information about sexual abuse was excluded and taken off the table from the second trial. now the da says, wait a minute, if we would have allowed this evidence in the second trial, would it have made a difference to the outcome? that's what they're examining. that's why it's so critical case so one, then is the central question now? >> because the da has said there's no question they committed the crime. that is that is that is not in question. right? the central question now before that could be reviewed and could potentially lead to a review of the sentence, the sentencing is so there's two things. number one is i alluded to what this letter and the information
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regarding sexual abuse, would it have been outcome determinative, meaning, if a jury heard about this, what did have swayed that jury to conclude, right knowing that they did commit the murders, was this justification? >> it does this have anything to do with how how criminal justice is viewed and sexual abuse is viewed wildly differently from the late 80s to today, without question, right? because things change in society, right? if you look at everything that's changed, the fact that there was not gay marriage before. now there is social mores change, not me to before people thought they can get away with abusing women with impunity. now, you don't do that. it's me too as it relates to the issue of sexual abuse of children, et cetera. taking a lot more seriously. and so to your question, you look at this and you say if the core reason or the criminal justice system, when someone is found guilty is punishment, rehabilitation, and deterrence. could they rehabilitated? have they been rehabilitated? and what will the da now do? will
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the da now say, hey let's go before a judge? will the judge set them free if the da decides to do that, saying they'd been rehabilitated them off, will the judge say will impose a sentence whether you only serve a little bit more time will there be a new trial? i doubt there'd be a new trial at all here. so i think what they're looking at, if the da buys into this as a potential release, if a judge does reconsider their sentencing, how does the time that they've already served? does it factor into the factors that the judge will take into in a big way, kate, why? because they were serving and are serving life without parole. >> now the issue will be, are they going to serve something less? they've been in for 30 years. so the question shan is, is that punishment enough? is it sufficient? and then one last thing, kate, what happens is is that they killed, that is there's no question that they killed him. there's something else on the books called manslaughter. it means you kill, but who were provoked to do it. if you get sentence for manslaughter, you've got what's called time served, plenty of time. and for that, they would be released. and so the issue for the da i think is if even if it's manslaughter,
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they would based on what the statutory law provides for sentencing, have serve that sentence already and would have to be released. let's see what the da does, but if the da buys n, the district attorney in california, this will be really big and it seems like they're evaluating this. they're taking it seriously, is enough, enough. will they be released? we will soon know that seems to be momentum, but we will see together it's good to see you, joey, thanks for laying it out for waste, john. >> right. record breaking early voting numbers in some places. what it absolutely positive it really tells us about who was going to win the election class president will be slogan, wow, working on campaign posters. >> yet, well, in my experience, the best campaign slogans are short and memorable like, well, that's definitely memorable amazing.
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that's a holiday classic just like you you got a place for that take place. every style, every home was gone, alvarez covering the harris-walz campaign cnn all, right. this morning, a new nbc news poll finds just more than half of likely voters plan to cast their ballots early in georgia, the secretary of state's office says a record 328,000 people cast ballots on the first day of early voting this will set off the quadrennial speculation about what it all means it who had benefits, cnn, senior data reporter, harry enten is here and this is kind of like a public service announcement? yes. with guitar? yes. okay. >> what does it early voting tell us and not tell us you're skeptical that it tells us everything i rarely bag the audience for anything. >> i beg of you don't read anything into many of these trends, please. every four
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years we do the saying, gosh darn thing. look, here's the bottom line. on election day vote counts the same as an early in-person vote or a mevo. we know from the polling and we know through history that kamala harris is very likely going to win that male vote. we know the early in-person vote is going to be very, very close to point lead well, i can find a few polls. in fact, where trump is ahead in that. but we know that donald trump is going to crush the election day vote and it doesn't matter when the vote is cast. they all count the same. one vote counts for one vote, whether it's cast today or whether it has cast on november 5, john in that goes for people look he at this from both sides. there's nothing magical about an election now versus a vote. this mailed in early. >> there are trends though that you can compare when you're talking about early voting, mail voting in-person voting, you can try, you could certainly try. >> but remember where we were four years ago there was a
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pandemic. we were in the midst of the covid pandemic. john and i couldn't stand next to each other four years ago, the bottom line is this. there's no discernible baseline in most of these states because in 2020, 69% of the vote was cast early in person or by mail this year, we're looking at maybe about 52%. so how are you supposed to? pair this year to four years ago and more than that, you know, you might say, okay, all that record early in-person voting, right? but here's the deal even the components of that early vote are going to change because the male vote is going to be way down. here's a projection, 23% for this year compared to 43% four years ago. the early in-person vote could actually go up. that's what the nbc news poll is suggesting, 29% versus 26% four years ago. but the overall complexion and the overall number of folks who are going to cast about before election day is going to go way down. but the way they're going to do it is very likely going to change. it just makes it impossible i don't know how anyone could compare this to anything to be maybe they know something better than i do, john, the important thing is
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that its lower voting people are voting and that's a good thing. but you have one final warning. >> yeah, it quote before trump's 2016, when comparing party registration trends from 2012 some political scientists that early voting predicts who wins. this is good news for democrats i don't think hillary clinton won that election, john, do you know early voting not a good predictor if you want to campaign, i will say this. >> if you're running a campaign, you'd like early vote because it's your bank, the vote exactly. it's there it's done. you can turn your focus to someone else, maybe a persuadable voter there. but in terms of predicting who's going to win, no please leave, please. >> i'm begging you, please. please don't make harry said, sara. thank you to you both. the head of units have told our christiane amanpour that over 40 children per day have been killed in gaza for more than a year during this war. and the israeli airstrikes, this comes as a us is putting pressure on its ally demanding israel improve the humanities terrion conditions in gaza if they want
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military aid with me now is dr. ferro sinwar, the trauma surgeon who worked in gaza for march 25 to april 8, of this year, you penned an article in the new york times titled 65 doctors and nurses. what we saw in gaza, you work with the new york times, gathered these folks that had been there, the doctors that had been there, and nurses that had been there. first to you, what did you witness in those couple of weeks that you were i think in khan younis in hospital, correct? >> yeah, i was at european hospital on the southeast so now jeff khan younis, when i was there, that was probably the best resource city block in the entire gaza strip and it was still an absolute and total disaster while hello, was there on on average, i saw one kid shot in the head every single day. every day we had mass casualty events from bomb, mostly from bomb blasts the hospital it was completely overwhelmed. there were ten to 15,000 people sheltering on the grounds of the hospital itself. and even within the hospital. so when you're moving a gurney through the hospital, there's ten son beau both sides of the
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hallway. you're trying not to run a little kids fingers over the hospital, hitting its water, inconsistent electricity. there were only supplies we had what we brought in with us it's a 200 it wasn't 220, but hospital with 1,500 people admitted to it, half of whom are severely injured children. so it was a very, very difficult situation. >> talk about children, particularly in this article, and i think the very first graph that is there, when you looked at and talk to 65 doctors and nurses along with the new york times who are on the ground round in the first graph that says 44 of the 65 doctors and nurses and paramedics are multiple cases of preteen children who had been shot in the head are you and these other doctors and nurses saying that children were specifically in purposely targeted by the israeli military. >> so it's important to remember we're not war crimes investigators or something like that, were sitting in the hospital and then these kids come to us. we ask their families what happened, of course, and they would say that they were shot by the israelis, but it's very hard to infer it
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pension already from our data. in this case, or that case, or that case, that's not what anybody should take from this. what they should take from it as the overall pattern how can it possibly be that in the catch? to an area of every hospital in the gaza strip for an entire year, international' s have seen children shot in the head on a regular, if not like it, mike cayce, a daily basis. that it's hard to believe that that's not intentional on the part of the people doing the shooting. >> i do want to let you hear what the idf said in this case, a spokesperson for the idf that he talked to you responded with a statement? i did not directly answer whether or not the military had investigated reports of shootings. of preteen children or if any disciplinary very action had been met it out. but in part, the statement says that the idf has committed to mitigating civilian harm during operational activity in that spirit, the idf makes great efforts to estimate consider potential civilian collateral damage in its strikes. the idf is fully committed to respecting all applicable international legal obligations, including the law of armed conflict you talked
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about taking pictures and you did take some when we've been looking at some of those pictures from your experience there where you say that you didn't even have. so sometimes to wash your hands in this devastating situation. there is also another picture that was published. it's one of the first things you see is very disturbing. here is that picture. it shows three children. i think it's a ct scan. i am no doctor, but a ct scan there and it shows several children, three of them, where you can actually see the bullets in their skulls are down that have gone from this goals to their neck and it's breathtakingly awful. but there is controversy over this. they were people that came out and said these were lies that this was fake. the new york times has responded saying it's too graphic to publish the actual pictures that went with this. what is your take on why this controversy erupted? because those pictures there's are so stark. >> yeah. i think the controversy is precisely because the pictures are so stark. anybody i just want to be very clear about this. i'm a trauma surgeon. i see about ten
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ct scan and it's per day. i work in stockton, california. i see plenty of people who are shot in the head. it's part of my daily work. there is absolutely no reason to doubt the authenticity of these pictures. she was at all any doctor who says they are is either not a doctor or as lying to. and i just want to be very clear about that. i've seen the ct scan itself. what you're seeing is a ct stout image which is like a two-dimensional picture so that you can set up how high the ct scan who is going to go on, how low it's going to go? i have the full video of the ct scan of his mood, particular of that child, that dr. side took and i also have a picture of her forehead with her eyes are closed. she has a breathing tube in and there's a bullet wound right where you would expect it to be based on the skin claim that these photographs are faked is just beyond ludicrous. >> lastly, i just want to ask you how you are doing after witnessing such horror in gaza i'm fine. >> i wouldn't i wouldn't make it about me. i would i would
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focus on the fact that the palestinian health it's care workers. there are targets of the israeli military, the ministry of health put out a statement, said that almost 1,000 identifiable health care workers have been killed in gaza. that's one out of every wanting health, healthcare workers in the gaza strip so that's that's devastating a lot more have been taken, tormented, tortured starved their own families have been killed he'll, they're all displaced, they're all homeless, and yet they go to work every day and they're not even being paid for it. so i think that's admirable, but everybody has a limit and we need to stop what's going on before that limit is asked. and there's no hope after that doctor said, well, thank you so much for bringing your story to us and explaining all of this and what's going on there in gaza from the perspective of a trauma surgeon, we appreciate it. >> we'll be right back kamala harris. next wednesday at nine eastern on cnn. >> that moment, you walk in the office and people are wearing the same year and you feel a sense of connectedness and belonging right away in our shirts from customizing help bring us together. >> we make it easy to well all
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reserve is one of the most dependable goal distributors in america. i'm dr. sanjay gupta in atlanta and this is cnn so the eagle has landed and in this case, the eagle is two very cute giant pandas, bao li and qing bao have officially arrived in washington every time anyone would enter the cargo area he would look, you know, he wanted to see who's coming. >> and will they give me treats but don't plan your visit yet? >> they will not be making their debut at the national zoo. still for a few months. but this panda diplomacy, as it has long been called isn't elaborate and highly coordinated missions. cnn's david culver was there for the adventure safe trip you are getting a sendoff here in china. i've
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never been this close to a panda, but there she is. >> a few hours earlier, a private farewell for the three-year-old panda pair and the ceremonial transfer of care from china to the u.s. >> we got here a few days ahead of the sat down made it a launcher the traveling to chengdu and bd up with the panic keepers from this us one ins national zoo. thanks for making time. i know you guys are busy. marrio, trish we catch them just outside the panda quarantine zone. >> this was what i worked for and it feels so surreal. >> the majestic mountains of sichuan province or the natural habitat for these beloved creatures. >> chances of us actually seeing went out here we're told are quite slim, were granted access to a reserve that tourists aren't allowed joining researchers from the smithsonian who specialize in panda rewilding or efforts to reintroduce them to their natural habitat.
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>> part of the reason for putting them in an area like this in keeping them away from people is so that they're not akamai's to people. you wouldn't want to release a panda and have them approach a village, for example we're told we can meet some of the forest panda trackers, but first, we need to suit up one should get this right. a panda suit just in case we stumbled across a panda cub, they don't want humans to become part of their everyday routine. so it's for that reason that were suiting up to look like them because it looks like a panda you're not only putting on just to see it by itself years old, going to pit pandas. >> you're in and pooh-pooh on. so you heard a sense has that been on this suit before justice secretly this his fitness it's been cleaned the lego black so if they sense on a sick note that covers nearby, they're going to put on a hood going to hiding conservation
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efforts like these are funded in part by panda exchange program are two guys that came over 20 years ago and zoos like the smithsonian's pay $1 million a year to host a pair of giant pandas adding to the pressure. >> we just imagine everything we do. the entire world is watching and there's no margin for error especially given how beloved pandas are in places like chengdu the creatures are larger than life here and there most loyal fans stand hours in line to catch a glimpse of their favorite ones you could see like everybody gets super excited or they've already got their positions needs one shot and there were even panda influencers like o2, who post content from his bedroom so your independence. i should sorry, before we start, can we just move in f1 big pander to that one there, which doubles as his studio why do you love them so much? killed. so kilts the pandas that go part of the exchange program. from here in
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china to the u.s. what do you make of that? >> and you waited so goods, this is an agreement between china and the u.s. and because i love my country and i love pandas, i support it the way you got the panda exchange for panda diplomacy dates back to 1972 president nixon's historic visit sparking china to send pandas to the u.s. >> and now to many other countries once of planning to pull off this transfer and in washington renovations to make sure about li and qing bao was new home is just right down some tree trimming here also they're going to climb. >> they loved the zoo has been advertising. pandas are coming in now they've arrived. david culver, cnn, chengdu, china there take my takeaway, but my biggest takeaway was the panda outfit well, you know, it's interesting. you need is david actually was a sideline the story because he already had the panda it was it was called
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savings. >> you have to find a reporter who dresses up like a panda turnout. david culver how david is going to come for you and so many ways. >> and i can't help. is it award-winning jordan? >> another one? >> soon guy who that was like we know now, following. >> thank you so much for joining us is say that it was up back in that is suit >> about to choose the most famous man in the same way and we're wanted to pay proceed the men were dangerous. >> other ones who do want it play rated pg only in theaters. october 20
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804, 519356. that's 800 519356 ever worry that you're drinking too much? >> take back control with or health, or health provides access to medication proven to help. >> a daily pill to drink less. already quit drinking altogether san francisco's leadership is failing us. that's why mark farrell is endorsing prop d. because we need to tackle our drug and homelessness crisis just like mark did as our interim mayor. mark farrell endorsing prop d, to bring the changes we need for the city we love.

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