tv Erin Burnett Out Front CNN January 14, 2025 4:00pm-5:00pm PST
4:00 pm
the parties do appear to be in agreement that this deal is for hamas to say yes to that, that final yes. and green light has to come from hamas. and as we have been reporting over the last 24 to 48 hours, we know that the biden team and the trump team have actually been working quite closely together to try to get this deal across the finish line, including, of course, the current and the incoming middle east coordinators at the white house working together to hammer out details and even having joint conversations and joint calls. that level of engagement from the incoming trump team really is yet another reminder of how much the incoming president does not want to inherit this conflict when he is sworn in next week, wolf. >> let's hope there is a deal in those hostages can come back to israel. mj lee at the white house, thank you very, very much. and to our viewers, thanks very much for watching. i'm wolf blitzer in the situation room. erin burnett outfront starts right now.
4:01 pm
>> and outfront next, live from altadena. >> california already devastated right now at the center of new warnings tonight for those winds. fears of new fires starting right here. this as i meet a firefighter who lost his own home, trying to desperately save others in the rubble of his home. >> today, though, a priceless discovery and the search for a cause. >> cnn's spotting investigators combing several hiking trails where one of the fires started an investigation on the ground is out front tonight, and then a professional soccer player for l.a. her childhood home burned to the ground days before her wedding. so did she go ahead with it? she's my guest. >> let's go out front. and good evening. >> i'm erin burnett, live from altadena, california tonight and out front tonight. we do have the breaking news. these new warnings. we are now in the middle of an extremely dangerous situation here in southern california. powerful wind gusts
4:02 pm
are now whipping across the area. the major fear right now is that the winds will fuel even more destructive fires by carrying embers to areas like this on the edge of altadena that have not been burned. and you see how green and lush and all of the dry vegetation. also through this area, critically dry. it is in these hills behind me where the eaton fire started. they are concerned about new sparks for so much of this area to go up in flames and in these coming hours with wind gusts, that is the concern coming down the san gabriel mountains. and this is why, as you can see, we're in a part of town that is under an evacuation order. people, this is you know, you come through national guard blocked and all day here, there's been fire crews coming through here nonstop. they've been, you know, really scrambling to gain the upper hand and build up this firewall that they're trying to build up ahead of these winds that they anticipate through the night hours tonight. and as we drove around today, we saw this, you know, the pink fire retardant. we've been showing
4:03 pm
you drops of that coating homes cars yards. but up in the mountains today we literally saw a line, almost a line of defense over in the mountains behind me that they've been putting to try to prevent where they fear that that fire could try to move down in those winds tonight. areas that, of course, have not seen flame and burn in about 50 years. let's just show you some of the pictures here. you can see the pink stretching, as i said, across the hill. and we also have incredible new video from an air crew. and there you see the remarkable precision of what they are trying to do to drop, in this case, water drop on flames in the palisades fire. and meantime, on the ground, families are sifting through the ashes, trying to look for anything that might have survived the ashes and the fires. things that matter so much in any human life. i was with a firefighter earlier today. he saw the fires, went out on call. 16 hours later, he finds out his own home burned to the ground while he had been out desperately trying to save
4:04 pm
others. and we're going to show you his incredible story in just a moment. while we were with him, though, we captured a remarkable scene. can you actually found his wedding ring covered in ash? >> what's that? >> let me see. what's it? that's it, that's it, that's it, that's it. oh my god. oh my god! oh my god! >> yeah. >> oh my god. oh yeah. oh my god. >> oh my god. >> we're going to have more on this story in just a moment. but first though, bill weir nick watt and veronica miracle are all here with me across southern california. in the midst of these warnings on all sides of these fires, i want to start with you, bill in malibu. what are you seeing and hearing there now? >> well, erin, we started the day really on fire lookout. >> we drove around topanga. >> we went all the way, actually, to oxnard to see that
4:05 pm
that auto fire that broke out overnight, but it was quickly contained. it was quenched and it was really quiet. even the wind gusts we were expecting to see didn't didn't produce. but it looks like they basically shifted this particularly dangerous situation to tomorrow, some 3 a.m. to 3 p.m. tomorrow. so they got a little more time to work on those fire lines to try to get these hotspots. we saw some smoldering up here in the hills above malibu, but let me look. you give you a before and after perspective of this home here on pacific coast highway. we're right by rambla pacifica, duke's famous restaurant is just just east of us here. but that's the before photo. and then this is the after. and this whole strip of homes here, these these pacific side homes, the beaches in l.a. are public up to the, i believe, just above the high tide line. but this narrow strip between pacific coast highway and the ocean is some of the most coveted real estate anywhere in the country, frankly, and so
4:06 pm
much of it has been gutted. in addition to many of the hillside mansions that are much more opulent because they have more of a of a lot space up there. we saw search and rescue teams for the first time. i don't know when they started. they got they've done thousands of home checks up in altadena, but it sounded like from the press conference that they just started here and we saw some actually from mexico search and rescue teams. and they're going through doing the grim work of looking to confirm there were no remains in any of these houses. and oddly, about an hour ago, we got an alert like our phones blew up that malibu around las flores canyon needed to evacuate. but then they just announced half hour later at the press conference. there are no active evacuations, so they might be another bug in the alert system. >> yeah, yeah. which and of course, those alerts caused such fear. all right. bill weir, thank you very much. in malibu. let's go to pacific palisades where nick what is. and nick, what are you learning?
4:07 pm
>> well, some pretty good news today. frankly, erin, there are no active flames around this massive fire. some hotspots around the edges that they're trying to mop up in anticipation of that wind picking up later. but that wind, which we thought was going to be powerful through last night into today, just never really materialized, never really picked up. you know, last night on the local news, one of the meteorologists was talking about the wind. and he said, basically, people in this area need to be most fearful. that was around where i live. so i've been driving around all last night and today with paintings and a few other things in the back of my truck, just in case. you know, the longer you cover this fire, the more you believe that the worst can actually happen. when you see that the worst has happened to so many people. mayor bass of l.a. meantime, talking about reconstruction already, it's time to look forward, she says. i was driving along sunset boulevard just through the palisades, and you can see all the utility trucks are out there starting some sort of work. it's difficult to know where they can start in just
4:08 pm
this utter devastation in this nearly 40 square mile burn imprint. so fears again for tonight just a little bit as those winds might pick up after dark, you know, because what happens is when the land loses temperature, the ocean keeps temperature. and that can help get those winds moving again. so there is a little bit of fear for that. fingers crossed. by this time tomorrow i'll be feeling a lot happier. erin. >> all right, well, we hope so. of course we'll see. at that point, you're going to have pass through that that period of incredibly intense wind as the forecast is right now. all right. thank you very much, nick watt. let's go now to the pasadena fire chief, chad augustine. and he is here with me now. so you were here obviously, in this moment you don't have heavy winds, but that is the concern and the fear. we're in that area that you're worried about what can happen here just in the mountains behind us. so. so tell me how fast it moves from just say, a ridge or coming through that little crevice in the mountains, how fast it
4:09 pm
could move down to these areas of altadena, which so far from from this point this way have not burned. >> right? >> first off, thank you for having me. and if we just go back to the start of this fire when we had 70, 80 mile an hour wind gusts, we had ember cast two plus miles ahead of the fire. so to put that into perspective, that can tell you how quickly with those ember casts. if we had a flare up, how fast that these homes could be threatened. >> right? >> i mean, because, you know, this is this is close. >> it's very close. >> and the winds, they can just come. so all day i know i've seen a lot of activity. you know, you're worried here. you've had fire trucks coming and going. you've been dropping fire retardant along some of the ridges to try to block it. how? but of course then there's still the great unknown of exactly what and where. but how do you feel about the preparations for this win that you anticipate really picking up overnight? >> yeah, i would say it's it's twofold. we're concerned and there's been so much loss and devastation. we want to prevent that. the
4:10 pm
positive thing is we have over 3200 firefighters assigned to this incident. and so we have tons of contingencies of of strike teams, of firefighters patrolling this area. we we're protecting critical infrastructure. >> so when they patrol and we see them here, we see copters up on these ridges. we see what are they looking for? >> two things. they're looking for hotspots. and they're looking for any embers that may be that may be casting that could cause a flare up, that could already be, could come over and just blow right over. >> even now, where it seems calm and it lands. >> that's. you're exactly right. >> all right. >> so then how do they how do they find those? >> i mean, the sense you look at this and the scale, the scale is so vast. >> it is for for some of our aircraft, they can detect heat for some of our firefighters, they're literally stopping. and and as you've seen, they're stopping house to house to make sure there are no hotspots that could ignite. >> and exactly. >> all right. well, i know this is going to be crucial talking to some of your crews today. you've got everybody on high alert through the night here. right. with this next. three 3:30 a.m. you
4:11 pm
expect that this potential surge in winds. >> that's correct. and we have a whole contingency of additional strike teams on the ready, if need be, to come in and protect this community. >> chief augustine, thank you very much. i appreciate your time. >> thank you so much. >> good luck tonight with with everything that your crews are doing. >> appreciate it. >> all right. and that's, that's that's what they've been doing. as he said, walking, checking on the house to house along those ridges, looking for anything stray so they could catch it early. and the winds are anticipated to pick up significantly that particularly dangerous warning coming in those early hours through tomorrow. the fear of new fires igniting is dangerously real here. firefighter chen, who knows what that fear looks like because he saw the fire, and then he evacuated his wife and two boys from their home. he went out on a 16 hour shift to fight fires in his altadena neighborhood. 16 hour shift. he didn't know until the end of it that his house was gone. i met up with chen this afternoon for his first day back at the firehouse. he's on on high alert tonight. over the night.
4:12 pm
everyone at that firehouse is. we visited his home where he found a miraculous discovery. as we were there. >> what is it like coming back to work? >> um. >> i just wanted normalcy. so that's why i came back to work. >> but it's never going to be the same for the kids. yeah. >> i mean, how are the kids managing? because they would have. i mean, i know your wife packed some stuff, but they're very unrooted right now. >> yeah, they're i think they're doing as best as they can, you know, but they do have moments like when my wife puts them to bed. >> they've talked about, you know, like, i want to go home. i want to go back to school. yeah. you know, and unfortunately, we live right next to the school. so that fire took the school to school is gone. >> yeah, totally. >> yeah. this is my route home.
4:13 pm
>> this is how i get home in the morning. >> in the morning? because you usually work in overnight, right? >> yeah, we worked two days, 48 hour shifts. >> my bench made it with the concrete. >> so it's this house right here. chen. yep. right here. >> oh my gosh. >> basketball hoop. the boys asked about the basketball hoop and they've made it. >> hey man this is my garage. >> this is your garage. >> yeah. we had just like i said, we had just cleaned it up. yeah. this was the front door. little porch area. we're sitting right here. >> and then where did she see the flames? >> you can just see the orange glow over the trees. >> right over there. >> yeah. >> now, you're not going to take the boys back here, right? >> no, no. >> yeah. we, uh, initially thought maybe we can come back and give them closure, but i don't think they need any of this. no. yeah.
4:14 pm
>> no, they. i mean, they know, right? >> yeah. they. >> yeah. we evacuated so they know. and we told them that that's burned down. our house is burned down. the school is burned down. so they're trying to figure it out. >> how long had you lived here, chen. >> um, we were here probably, like 7 or 8 years. yeah. >> do you come back to altadena? >> do you stay in altadena or. >> yeah. i mean, i grew up around here. i grew up in san gabriel valley. um, so we're not too far. and the plan of now is. yeah, we want to be back. and i think that's the the feeling of most everyone on the street. yeah. oh, this is the baby grand that we had. >> you can see there's a piano. >> yes. this is where we had our baby grand. you can see the the metal. oh, the strings with the strings. >> you see the strings? yep. oh, my gosh. >> i mean, you see fire every day, right? you see? destroyed destruction every day. but how is it different now that it's your own life?
4:15 pm
>> yeah, it's. i don't know, it's just undescribable. i mean, you know, when we go to a house fire, you kind of detach, you know, and you just try to do what's best for the homeowner, and you put the fire out, and we kind of salvage what we can. we pull what we can from them. and hopefully some of their stuff make it. but this is just just gone. >> looking for his wedding ring. >> what's that? what's that, what's that, what's that? let me see. what's it? that's it, that's it, that's it, that's it. oh my god, oh my god. oh my god. >> yeah baby wow. >> oh yeah. oh my god. >> oh my god. >> tim, what's your wife going to say? >> she didn't know. but you hadn't told her. >> you didn't tell her you lost it. >> now she's going to know. >> now everybody knows. but we
4:16 pm
found it. yeah, we found it. >> you're all good. you're good. >> what? oh my gosh. we found it. >> we found it something special about that moment and just what they're going through. >> you can help the youth family by donating to their gofundme page. go to gofundme.com and search for. jen. you. c h i e n u to find their donation page. and we're going to take a very brief break. when we come up, come back on the other side. hikers capturing what may have been the start of the fire that leveled the palisades, even as behind us investigators are saying they're looking at part of the origin of what they think might have been the eaton fire. i'm going to talk to one of the leading investigators looking into these origins. plus, a professional soccer player loses her childhood home in the
4:17 pm
flames days before she was set to be married. her heartbreaking story with a silver lining is next. and trump's pick to lead the defense department, grilled today by senators, did you take your staff, including young female staff members, to a strip club? >> absolutely not. anonymous smears. >> kobe believed in himself at the youngest possible age. >> people who may never even know what a basketball looks like felt his presence. >> he wants the opportunity to make his own mistakes. he's going to end up making them. >> that's when the black mamba was born. >> it's one of the most remarkable stories in sports history. >> i don't want to be remembered as just a basketball player. kobe the making of a legend premieres january 25th on cnn. >> welcome to tackling life with fred and sydney. >> brought to you by experian.
4:18 pm
question number one who is on their phone more? >> i think i got to say you because you love that phone. >> because i'm always on the app. >> are canceling those subscriptions that we don't need anything organized, making things easier, saving time and money. that's why i'm on my phone. honey, you know what i just thought of? these are the questions that the fans are asking. responsible fans. that's my type of fan right there. >> download the experian app now. >> your life is pretty smart, but when it's time to eat, suddenly you feel out of sync. refresh your routine with factor chef prepared meals delivered with a tap ready in two minutes. >> imagine dinner on autopilot and enjoying tuscan tomato chicken without lifting a finger. upgrade your plate. >> optimize your nutrition eat smart with factor at fisher investments, we may look like other money managers, but we're different.
4:19 pm
>> you can't be that different. >> we are. >> we have a team of specialists, not only in investing, but also in financial and estate planning and more. >> your clients rely on you for all that. >> yes, and as a fiduciary, we always put their interests first. >> but you still sell commission based products, right? >> no, we have a simple management fee structured so we do better when our clients do better. huh. >> we're more different than i thought. >> at fisher investments, we're clearly different. >> why do 80% of nfl players choose a sleep number? smart bet? >> because the higher my sleep iq score, the better i play. >> but that's not the only reason he likes inside firm. i like my side. >> soft sleep number does that effortless comfort all night. so sleeping on a smart bed is why you can play like this. >> yeah, because i also like to sleep cool and i like to sleep even cooler. and i really like it when we both get what we want. >> sleep number does that. introducing the new sleep number. >> climate cool smart bed. sleep up to 15 degrees cooler on each side. visit a sleep number store near you for more than a decade, pozega has been trusted again and again and
4:20 pm
again i see god. >> ask your doctor about pozega i didn't do this for the lights or the fame. >> i did it to pay it forward to the next generation of athletes and pass on the support my family gave me. >> i believe in sofi because they gave the same support to millions of members, helping them bank, borrow and invest for their future. because for most people, it's not about the lights or the fame, it's about let's say you're deep in a show or a game or the game. on a train, at home, at work. okay, maybe not at work. point is at xfinity. we're constantly engineering new ways to get the entertainment you love to you faster and easier than ever. that's what i do. is that love island?
4:21 pm
4:22 pm
to figure out where and how the fires started here, where they're worried about more fires spreading down the san gabriel mountains. this particular area of fear. tonight, even behind us, there's been a lot of investigators down low looking to see possibly the genesis of the eaton fire as they try to figure this out. nick watt is out front. >> we know what sets the scene for these fires. dry brush, low humidity, high winds. but what about the spark? bottom line, we are usually to blame. >> 95% of all fires are started by humans. but that's not all arson. it can be accidental. >> a cigarette butt, a campfire, fireworks, or a spark from a power line. it's the infrastructure of human life that's often to blame after the eaton fire just devastated altadena, the electric company already being sued for allegedly starting it by mistake. socal edison denies this. investigators still do not know. >> we did see the embers flying.
4:23 pm
>> it was almost like a snow flurries. >> 6:19 p.m. tuesday, the koo family doorbell cam captured fire at the base of a power line pylon in eaton canyon. >> it was burning bright and it was the the base of the tower on fire above the palisades. >> a puff of smoke on a satellite image taken 1037 tuesday morning. and this video shot by hikers high on a hillside of trails and bone dry chaparral. >> it was probably only about 50ft away from us. >> we started to hear the fire crackle, like right behind us, and the wind started to pick up really fast. >> arson investigators and sniffer dogs searching for any sign of accelerant here. should those trails have been closed when fire danger was so severe, you might argue that it would prevent a spark. >> but when you've got this much dry vegetation and this much wind preventing all the sparks is is pretty hard.
4:24 pm
>> midnight last night, as winds whipped up the angeles national forest was closed to the public. that's more than 1000mi÷ of wilderness north of the city. late thursday, this man was arrested in azusa, accused of trying to set a tree on fire. he did not start a major blaze in california. >> seems to have a large number of crazies who get off on setting fires. >> in fact, just last year we arrested over 150 arsonists who started wildfires. >> intentionally here in california. >> but power lines and equipment are the most common culprit, sparking some of the most devastating fires in the state. the woolsey camp and tubbs fires. live cables get hit by branches in the wind fault and spark. that's why more than 20,000 households face power shut offs today, which are going to prevent our next fire from starting. but who or what
4:25 pm
exactly sparked these current fires? >> at this point, it is just too early to determine what that or who that might be, and we likely won't know for months. >> so right now i am in the general area of origin up there on the hill. investigators trying to figure out the specific. it will take a while. they go pebble by pebble, blade of grass by blade of grass to try and narrow down the exact point of ignition i mentioned there. they had dogs sniffing for accelerant, so arson on the table. those two. power pylons up there also an issue. and also there was a fire here, aaron, on new year's day early in the morning. and so there's a possibility that some embers, something could have still been burning under the ground. that was then reignited by that heavy wind. it's going to take a while, months, perhaps, before we know what happened up here. >> erin. >> all right. nick watt, thank
4:26 pm
you very much. we've just learned the death toll in these fires has increased to 25. it has been 24. the governor of california, gavin newsom, has indicated he expects that those numbers will go up substantially, but they are going house to house. they have cadaver dogs. they are trying to understand the magnitude of this damage, even as in these hours here with these winds, they are worried about embers and fire over these ridges, igniting more fire out front. now jose medina, he is the acting special agent in charge of the atf los angeles field division. he's leading an elite team that's been deployed to investigate what happened. the cause of that palisades fire that has changed. los angeles. and, jose, i want to start with the breaking news. 14 people now under arrest in connection with that. palisades fire, i mean, 14 people is a lot of people and three of them, we understand for arson. so can you give us any context around these arrests, whether they're related to the cause of the palisades fire well,
4:27 pm
thank you for the question, aaron. >> and first of all, our thoughts and prayers are to all the victims of this horrific tragedy. um, as you know, this is an ongoing investigation, and it's atf's top priority to give everybody answers. >> and to the citizens of the, uh, southern california, the answers they need. and through a thorough investigation, um, as it relates to those arrests, i cannot speak on those arrests. those are our state and local partners. um, but as of now, it is atf's top priority to provide the citizens with answers can i ask you just. >> and i understand there's only so much you can say in the context of an investigation, but 14 people seems like a lot of people. is it a lot of people when if you're thinking about arrests related to starting a fire just from your experience doing this. >> well, it depends on the type of charges they are arrested for. but that would be with our
4:28 pm
state and local partners. um, like i said, this is an active investigation, an ongoing investigation which atf and the national response team has responded to. and we have a lot of experience investigators up in the canyons and up on that mountain investigating. >> and in the on the ground in the palisades where you are. i want to ask you about that video that nick just mentioned in his report. i don't i don't know if you heard it, but i know you're well aware of this. these are hikers in temescal canyon, and they captured what may have been may have been the start of the palisades fire. and the hiker who took the video said that by the time they got to the bottom of the canyon, he could hear the fire crackling right behind him, which just i mean, that that, as we know, is consistent with how these things spread. you know, they start, they spark, they spread. that's these fires. how important is a video like that one from the hiker or others? these videos that we see to you when you actually are trying to figure out how it started.
4:29 pm
>> well, all evidence is important. that video is just some of the evidence we have received from our from the citizens, from the 911 calls and from our state and local partners who are investigating this fire with us as part of the national response team. we have media collection specialists that will take that evidence and analyze it. so any video, any, um. 911 calls and interviews by any of the 911 callers is very important to this ongoing investigation and can at this point, are you able to rule out arson or not? we it is early in the investigation and it's atf's top priority to provide a thorough investigation. we are ruling out nothing at this point. what we want to do is provide facts and answers to the citizens of pacific palisades, and that's what atf intends to do, no matter how long it takes. it's a slow
4:30 pm
process and we understand everybody's sense of urgency, but we will provide those answers. >> all right. >> jose medina, i appreciate your time. thank you very much, sir. and next, not far from where we're standing tonight along these ridges that they're so worried about in these coming hours, residents are scrambling to put out spot fires that are popping up because of the heat and the winds. and that is the real concern when you say, where does that next spark come from? plus a professional soccer player watches as her childhood home goes up in flames days before she is set to get married. so what did she do? she's next. >> hey, ryan reynolds here for, i guess, my 100th mint commercial. no no no no no no, don't know, don't know. >> i mean, it's unlimited premium wireless for $15 a month. i mean, honestly, when i started this, i thought i'd only have to do like four of these. how are there still people paying 2 or 3 times that much? i'm sorry, i shouldn't be victim blaming here. yeah. anyway, it's still $15 a
4:31 pm
month, so whenever you're ready. sorry about all that production value. >> my moderate to severe crohn's symptoms kept me out of the picture with skyrizi phil's symptom relief. at four weeks, many people were in remission. at 12 weeks at one year, and even at three years. >> don't use if allergic serious allergic reactions, increased infections, or lower ability to fight them may occur before treatment. get checked for infections and tb. tell your doctor about any flu like symptoms or vaccines. liver problems leading to hospitalization may occur when treated for crohn's. control is everything. >> ask your gastroenterologist about skyrizi mishra joy. >> the overwhelming relief after miralax helps you go. miralax works naturally with the water in your body, putting you in a supernaturally good mood. miralax for your gut to free your mood. >> if you have wet amd you never want to lose sight of the things you love.
4:32 pm
>> we get it. some things should stand the test of time. >> long lasting eylea hd could significantly improve your vision. more people on eylea hd had no fluid in the retina compared to those on eylea. at four months, eylea hd is the only wet amd therapy that helped eight out of ten people go up to four months between injections. after three initial monthly treatments. if you have an eye infection, eye pain or redness, or allergies to eylea hd, don't use eye injections like eylea hd may cause eye infections, separation of the retina, or rare but severe swelling of blood vessels in the eye. an increase in eye pressure has been seen. there is an uncommon risk of heart attack or stroke associated with blood clots. the most common side effects were blurred vision, cataract, corneal injury, and eye floaters, and there's still so much to see if you are on eylea or a similar type of treatment, ask your retina specialist about eylea hd today for the potential for fewer injections. >> an alternative to pills, voltaren is a clinically proven arthritis pain relief gel which
4:33 pm
penetrates deep to target the source of pain with non-steroidal anti-inflammatory medicine directly at the source. >> voltaren the joy of movement. >> just because it's wet outside, you don't need to wear boots. presenting skechers waterproof sneakers with rugged, 100% waterproof construction in a comfy, breathable, lightweight, easy
4:34 pm
$79. dress shirts at $69. suits 399. >> download the m taylor app or visit m taylor. >> com today. >> i'm here in altadena. >> let's just you see here. >> national guard humvee. there's a lot more national guard. we understand about 600 national guard here now on the scene. their presence is palpable. you notice it? they're manning a lot of these checkpoints because this is an evacuation zone not allowed to come into altadena. this is. so they're here checking to make sure who comes in and doesn't come in, just take you around their humvee here because it just shows you the nature of
4:35 pm
this crisis. they've got fuel, they've got all their bags. they're all around here. as i said, they they check for everyone coming in. and then they also you guys are going to sleep out here, right? yep. they sleep out here. they're going to sleep in their humvee. um, they'll take shifts. as they were explaining, because someone always has to be up. it gets cold out here at night, but there's not somewhere for them to go. and they're certainly not using hotels because they want to make sure hotels in this area are available for people who have been fleeing the crisis, who have been made refugees. but lana will come around with me a little bit just to, um, these guys are working, so i don't want to bother them. but you can see when they say they're sleeping in shifts, there's not a lot of space in here. so this is what they're going through as they are in this ongoing crisis that has basically continued to be at a sprint pace. they're dealing with a marathon situation and leading into these winds tonight. but these are the national guard teams that you see posted everywhere. again, altadena evacuated, some of it
4:36 pm
burned, some of it not burned. this side really essentially not burned, which is why they're so worried about these sparks and winds in this particular area coming off the san gabriel mountains. they've been looking for hotspots throughout the day. so you see the mountains where they think maybe even close to here is where the original fire eaton fire may have started. they have been checking these mountains aggressively all day because of fear of fire spreading right into this area, and they've been going throughout looking for hotspots that could ignite an ember. and those embers picked up in these winds overnight that are anticipated with gusts up to 70 miles an hour near where i am, and altadena where they're looking at those hotspots. my colleague veronica miracle has been watching them do that. and, veronica, what have you been seeing? >> well, erin, so much activity today. we are outside of the evacuation zone, but there are still many houses that have completely burned to the ground. we saw a firefighter here checking and assessing the damage earlier in the day, but just across the street we saw a spot fire actually flare up in one of the homes that has
4:37 pm
burned down, and we saw neighbors just jump into action. everyone is so on edge here. so the neighbors ran across the street with barrels of water bottle fire extinguishers, putting it out even before firefighters arrived. and all of these neighbors here, they've been gathered and they were able to see it because now all of these donation sites have popped up. so this house right here, still standing, even though two houses on this block have burned down. and the neighbor who lives here told me, he said that because his house was still standing, he knew he needed to do something. so on friday he called for donations. and this is what it has turned into. it actually goes all the way around the block. in fact, they have received donations from as far away as indiana, and now they have so much clothing, they're actually asking people to stop, bring clothing, and they want now people who have been impacted by the fires to come and take everything that they need. so a lot of community support here, of course, but people still on edge because of
4:38 pm
this wind event. erin. >> all right. veronica, thank you very much. and also tonight, los angeles professional soccer player ali riley, a women's soccer superstar known around the world like everyone who suffered during this horrible traumatic crisis so far, was helpless. she watched helplessly as her childhood home burned to the ground. her parents still live there. they were able to get a few things into their car and run like everyone else. almost everything else lost, and it all happened three days before she was scheduled to get married in santa rosa valley, about 40 miles from the palisades fire. ali riley is out front now a member of the angel city fc los angeles women's professional soccer team. and ali, thank you so much. i'm so glad to have a chance to talk to you. i mean, you had to watch just a horrific thing. your family house burned down where you grew up. you posted a picture of your neighborhood and what had happened there. it looks, you know, there's there's almost nothing left there. your post was this was our home. how
4:39 pm
is this real? it can't be real. does it even feel real to you now that you've had a few days? >> no, it still doesn't. >> and thank you for having me. and thank you for keeping us so informed, because i think if i didn't watch the news, i probably wouldn't believe it. still, um, we obviously feel really lucky that we're all safe and healthy, and our neighbors and everyone, and we're regrouping and we're able to still celebrate my wedding, but it just feels like a nightmare. not not that i'm able to sleep, but it does. it feels like a nightmare. and it's just never ending. >> no, it's just it's a it's a trauma now. and so you're you mentioned you had three days before your wedding when this happened. so sounds like you almost answered the question there. but did you go ahead with it? did you do it?
4:40 pm
>> we did so right when we got confirmation that everything was gone and that our whole block was gone, and it was my friend who biked into the neighborhood and sent me that confirmation. >> and so i was the one who had to pass that message on to our neighbors. that was a really hard message to send. um, but the message that i got back wednesday, thursday was, at least we have your wedding. um, so i think we knew what we had to do. and the show and the love and the joy had to go on. and so, um, of course, i wanted to make sure that my parents felt up to it, and they were just like, we need this. we're going to party so hard, and it's going to bring us so much joy, and we're so glad we did it, because, oh, my gosh, the support that we've received. and it gave us an opportunity as well to support our neighbors and our friends who had also lost everything. but we hadn't been able to see them since everyone evacuated.
4:41 pm
so we were there together. some people were in mismatched shoes and borrowed clothing. my dear friend said he was very happy that we we made him save his his one good suit because he thought about the wedding when he evacuated. so yeah, it was. i've never felt anything like that. >> that's the choice he made his suit. >> he grabbed, he grabbed his suit. >> i know he had a t-shirt underneath it, but he's never looked better. >> that's what i will remember. so your soccer club is selling a shirt that says l.a. strong on it. the proceeds are going to the los angeles fire department as well as the red cross. have you been able to to speak to your teammates? were any of them also affected as dramatically and personally by the fires as you were? >> thank goodness. no. i had two teammates, two teammates who evacuated, who live in calabasas, who were able to
4:42 pm
return the same day. i have one friend who lives in encino with her family. they're still evacuated, and she she came to the wedding. she drove so she'd be ready to leave if she had to. there were a few families in that same position. um, but she was like, i'm not going to miss this. so, um. yeah, the club, the girls, the players have been so supportive. the staff, everyone has reached out offering, um, clothing, places to live. like anything we need. um, but i think for us, we're very privileged that my parents got out in time. they packed two cars. um, we have home insurance, and so we really want to. we have all this love and this energy and support. so we want to focus our energy and our, our money on on people who need it more than we do. um, so yeah, we're going to be volunteering on saturday and i'm going to work with the club to see what we can do. i know they have some big events planned, but preseason starts on friday. so yeah, it's it's it's a pretty,
4:43 pm
um, a pretty overwhelming week. but, um, everyone has been all over the world, has been sending messages and just giving us so much love right now. >> well, your, your your your marriage, a trial by fire. uh, hopefully an omen for a long and wonderful and wonderful life together. ali, thank you so very much. >> thank you. next. >> incredible new images of those deadly flames that tore through this region, captured by a retired firefighter. they are quite stunning. and you're going to see them next. plus, trump's nominee for secretary of defense today facing tough questions about allegations of sexual misconduct, excessive drinking and more. work. >> play blink relief work play. blink. >> relief. the only 3 in 1 extended relief formula for dry eyes.
4:44 pm
>> blink. >> not again. you told is coming your cold is coming. >> thanks for beer. we really need to keep calm in the house. >> only if you want to shorten your cold. >> when you feel a cold coming, shorten it with zicam. >> scary action hero necessary. >> was that necessary? no. >> neither is a blown weekend with paycom. >> employees do their own payroll so you can fix problems before they become problems. get paycom and make the unnecessary unnecessary. >> i brought in ensure max protein with 30g of protein. those who tried me felt more energy in just two weeks. here, i'll take that. >> ensure. max protein, 30g protein, one gram of sugar and a protein blend to feed muscles up to seven hours. look out, cause here i come. >> have you always had trouble with your weight? >> same. discover the power of wegovy with wegovy. i lost 35 pounds and some lost over 46 pounds.
4:45 pm
>> and i'm keeping the weight off. >> i'm reducing my risk. >> wegovy is the only weight management medicine proven to reduce risk of major cardiovascular events such as death, heart attack or stroke in adults with known heart disease and obesity. >> don't use wegovy with semaglutide or glp one medicines, or in children under 12. don't take if you or your family had mtc men2 or if allergic to it, tell your provider if you plan to have surgery or a procedure, are breastfeeding, pregnant, or plan to be. stop taking and get medical help right away. if you get a lump or swelling in your neck, severe stomach pain, or any of these allergic reactions serious side effects may include pancreas inflammation and gallbladder problems. call your prescriber if you have any of these symptoms. wegovy may cause low blood sugar in people with diabetes, especially if you take medicines to treat diabetes. call your prescriber about vision changes. if you feel your heart racing while at rest, or if you have mental changes, depression or thoughts of suicide may occur. common side effects include nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, constipation, stomach pain, flu or upset headache, feeling tired, dizzy or bloated, gas,
4:46 pm
and heartburn. some side effects lead to dehydration, which may cause kidney problems with wegovy. i'm losing weight. >> i'm keeping it off and i'm lowering my cv risk. >> wegovy ask your prescriber about wegovy. >> we are living with afib, and over half a million of us have left blood thinners behind for life. >> we've cut our stroke risk and said goodbye to our bleeding worry with the watchman implant watchman. >> it's one time for a lifetime. >> introducing allison's plaque psoriasis. >> she thinks her flaky gray patches are all people. >> see. >> otezla is the number one prescribed pill to treat plaque psoriasis. otezla can help you get clearer skin and reduce itching and flaking. doctors have been prescribing otezla for over a decade. >> otezla is also approved to
4:47 pm
treat psoriatic arthritis. don't use otezla if you're allergic to it. >> get medical help right away. if you have trouble breathing or swallowing. swelling of the face, lips, tongue, throat, or arms severe diarrhea, nausea or vomiting, depression, suicidal thoughts, or weight loss can happen. >> tell your doctor if any of these occur and if you have a history of depression or suicidal thoughts with clear skin. >> girl's day out is a good day out. live in the moment. >> ask your doctor about otezla. >> now's the time to go back in time and shine a light on the family journey that led to you. ancestry can help you piece together the past with billions of records, photos, and more. memberships are on sale now. >> super man the christopher reeve story. february 2nd on cnn. >> our breaking news. we're live in altadena, california. and those hills behind me is one of the main areas they are
4:48 pm
focused with fear about those winds picking up overnight. hotspots and igniting potentially massive fires. below that is what they're vigilant for. the death toll that we are told has risen at this hour. 25 have now been confirmed as killed in this horrific tragedy. a number the governor of california says will go up. l.a. county fire department warning tonight of severe fire weather in the coming hours, particularly where i'm standing. i was with crews today. they were saying, this is where we are so concerned. checking for hotspots, checking for the fear that an ember could just come over the ridge in the wind and then spread to areas like this on this line in altadena, where so far there has, they've been spared. it comes as we're seeing these incredible new photos from retired firefighter todd sudmeier, who spent three decades fighting fires across southern california himself. he now documents these battles firsthand, and todd is out front. and todd, you know, we've all seen everyone, i think around the world has seen that a battle is the right way to describe what firefighters do with these fires. you've witnessed hundreds of fires.
4:49 pm
you've been in hundreds of fires. have you ever seen anything like this one? >> probably the strongest winds i've ever seen or experienced >>m, as well as the fire. los. >> you know, i've been on other large los fires up and down the state, but typically those have been in the hundreds of homes, not thousands. so this is by far the largest loss that i've personally ever witnessed. >> i mean, and we still don't even know the scale of it. and i know, you know, we're in the middle of the event. that's the thing. it's not over. i mean, so you had a video where you're a couple of feet behind firefighters and they're hosing down houses. these houses are totally engulfed. what was that like? >> um, very chaotic. um, a lot of firebrands that were being carried by the wind that were, you know, pretty large the size of golf balls, tennis balls, softballs. >> that's the trunk of an ember. just. yeah. correct. >> that's on fire. >> that's burning. um, the wind, the wind gusts. and one of the things that probably, unless you're there and can experience it, you don't really think about is the stream, the water stream that
4:50 pm
they were spraying onto the unburned home to try to keep it from burning at the height or the apex of the of the wind gust is ineffective, and it pretty much goes straight up into the wind and comes right back into soaking us as we're standing, because the winds are carrying it. >> it's ineffectual, right? >> so probably not something you would think of as a firefighter squirting the hose, but that's in effect what exactly happened. so yeah, very chaotic, a lot of moving parts. and uh, yeah, it's uh, it's incredible to see and to feel and to hear. it's very loud. there's a roar. >> um, yeah. very. >> it's incredible. and you have firefighters at this sort of they're frantically running around the way they described it to me. they said, you know, there was nothing, you know, you know, if you think they're going to finger point and say, oh, if we'd had this or this, i haven't heard that from them. i've heard them say no matter what they had, they would have been overwhelmed. but it was the most incredible thing that they had ever seen. when did you realize how bad it was? >> um, you know, when i first got to. when i first got to the incident, um, and i was coming
4:51 pm
around on new york street and i could see the magnitude of what was currently burning, plus kind of the flaming front that was that was moving to the south. and i knew at that point, this is this is moving at a pace, and the flames are big enough that this is something more than, you know, this is something very unusual. this is something with a much larger magnitude. >> and. all right. >> and so, you know, when did at what point did you realize, you know, you've been there for hours and hours? i mean, was there a point where you felt like, how big where is this going? a moment of fear. >> yeah. i mean, you think about that. and the reason that i think about it is because the things that the things that i document or the video that i grab or the photos i grab, i like to be out in front. i, i try to position myself to be in front of the flaming front so that i can catch the firefighters engaging the fire. >> that's the stuff that i like to get. that's the video that i shoot. so that's always on my mind. so where it's going and where it's going to be in 5 minutes or 15 minutes is always on my mind.
4:52 pm
>> thank you very much for sharing those with us. maybe just give us a moment of the incredible sacrifice that every one of those firefighters was willing to make in that moment. thank you so much. thank you. and next, trump's pick for defense secretary on capitol hill, pressed about his past. >> your life is pretty smart. >> but when it's time to eat, suddenly you feel out of sync. >> refresh your routine with factor chef prepared meals delivered with a tap ready in two minutes. eat smart with factor. >> for more than a decade, fast has been trusted again and again and again for s. e. cupp. ask your doctor about pozega. >> if your car is out of warranty. your next breakdown could cost thousands unless you have endurance. >> they covered a $14,000 engine replacement.
4:53 pm
>> just two claims saved us over $1,700. >> i've had five claims, and that is $3,500 that i've kept in my pocket. >> so who's going to pay for your next car repair? you or endurance? >> call right now to get $300 off any plan. >> call 1-833-415-4846. >> now dry. tired. itchy. burning my dry eye. symptoms got worse over time. my eye doctor explained the root was inflammation. sidra was made for that. so relief is lasting. >> sidra treats the signs and symptoms of dry eye disease. don't use of allergic to sidra and seek medical help if needed. common side effects include eye irritation, discomfort, blurred vision, and unusual taste sensation. don't touch container tip to your eye or any surface before using sidra. remove contact lenses and wait 15 minutes before reinserting dry eye over and over. >> it's time for sidra. >> at fisher investments, we may look like other money managers, but we're different. >> how so? >> we're a fiduciary, obligated to act in our client's best interests so we don't sell any commission based
4:54 pm
products. >> then how do you make money? >> we have a simple management fee structured so we do better when our clients do better. >> your clients really come first then, huh? >> yes. we make them a top priority by getting to know their finances, family, health, pete g. writes, "my tween wants a new phone. how do i not break the bank?" we got you, pete. xfinity mobile was designed to save you money and gives you access to wifi speeds up to a gig. so you get high speeds for low prices. better than getting low speeds for high prices. right, bruce? -jealous? yeah, look at that. -honestly. someone get a helmet on this guy. xfinity internet customers, ask how to get an unlimited line free for a year, plus a free 5g phone.
4:55 pm
your new favorite pair of jeans today. m taylor available on the apple app store or android anderson cooper 360. >> next on cnn as we continue our breaking news coverage from california, we have some major news today also here. >> obviously, you know, with with these fires from washington, donald trump's pick to lead the pentagon, pete hegseth under intense questioning on capitol hill, december of 2014 at the christmas party at the grand hyatt at washington, d.c., you were noticeably intoxicated and had to be carried up to your room. >> is that true or false?
4:56 pm
>> anonymous smears. >> another time, a staffer stated that you passed out in the back of a party bus. is that true or false? >> anonymous smears. >> in 2014, while in louisiana on official business for cva, did you take your staff, including young female staff members, to a strip club? >> absolutely not. anonymous smears. >> outfront now, the senator that you just saw questioning hegseth democrat mark kelly of arizona, he sits on the armed services committee. of course, the center of this decision that is so crucial for this country, whether pete hegseth will be the defense secretary for the united states, senator kelly diddy hegseth convince you to vote for him. >> well, erin, i walked into that hearing this morning very concerned about his experience to do the job. >> defense department is a huge organization, $850 billion a year budget, 3 million people. he didn't seem to have the requisite experience to do
4:57 pm
this. when i walked out of the hearing i have to say i was more concerned about his transparency. he talks about personal issues without specifying what those were, and then when asked about what i think the personal issues might be, and some of the things he's had to try to overcome, he talks about that these are just smears. and it can't be, you know, it's got to be it can't be both at the same time. so i have significant concerns. i'm going to meet with him tomorrow and talk further with him. >> so you're going to have a one on one conversation. >> yeah i am. i want to get back to a couple of the things i brought up today, but also talk to him about some policy. i asked for a second round of questions. i think it would have been appropriate if we did that. this is a very serious position. it affects our national security and our safety for us and our families. but i've got some specific policy questions i want to talk
4:58 pm
to him about, too. and i have to say, you know, to give him some credit here. when asked about the policy stuff i thought he was he was pretty good and he seemed to understand it. but on the personal issues, on the issue that i brought up about being intoxicated in the workplace, taking young female staff members to certain kinds of establishments that he couldn't answer if these things were true or false. and that's a very simple and basic question. he kept coming back to the to these were smears. so that concerns me. >> so i want to ask you about another thing, though. you talk about policy, and i think you're saying that that he had seemed on more solid footing on that is is obviously significant. i know you're going to meet with him tomorrow, but there was an exchange with the democratic senator, elissa slotkin, your colleague who's a former cia agent who had served three tours in iraq. right. and hegseth has said that his time in service is so important to him. so let me just play this exchange do you believe there is such a thing as an illegal order that joe biden or any
4:59 pm
other president donald trump could give? >> is there anything that a commander in chief could ask you to do with the uniformed military that would be in violation of the u.s. constitution? >> senator, anybody of any party could give an order that is against the constitution or against the law, right? >> okay, so and are you so are you saying that you would stand in the breach and push back if you were given an illegal order? >> i start by saying i reject the premise that president i understand you've your illegal orders at all. >> were you satisfied with that answer? >> no, no, i'm not satisfied. i don't think anybody on the committee on either side of the aisle should be satisfied with that answer. you know, any president at any time. i mean, first of all, you got to understand the demands of the presidency. and presidents could make bad decisions. and it could be up to the secretary of defense or other cabinet members to stop him from executing on a bad decision.
5:00 pm
that's the job of the secretary of defense. and he clearly did not want to answer that question. i think it's a pretty simple answer, and it should be, you know, if you're secdef and the president tells you to do something that's clearly unconstitutional or illegal, you should tell him that and you can refuse to carry out an order of the president. that's that's fine to do. i think the president elect should accept that. and i'm troubled that he could not answer that question adequately. >> all right. well, senator kelly, thank you very much for your time. i appreciate it. as we are live here in southern california, it is dusk here. the sun is setting. these winds anticipated to rise where we are right now at the san gabriel mountains behind us. one of the areas they are so deeply concerned about with embers and hotspots potentially sparking more massive urban fires. tonight they are on high watch. these next
0 Views
IN COLLECTIONS
CNN (San Francisco) Television Archive Television Archive News Search Service The Chin Grimes TV News ArchiveUploaded by TV Archive on