tv Democracy Now PBS May 18, 2017 12:00pm-1:01pm PDT
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05/18/17 05/18/17 [captioning made possible by democracy now!] amy: from los angeles, this is democracy now! pres. trump: look at the way i have been treated lately. especially by the media. no politician in history -- and i say this with great surety -- has been treated worse or more unfairly. amy: a week after president jamesfired fbi director comey, the justice department taps comey's predecessor, robert mueller, deserve a special counsel to investigate alleged
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in the choiceng 16 election. we will get the latest with marcy wheeler. ,hen we remember javier valdez who died monday in mexico after he was dragged out of his car and shot 12 times less than a block from the office of the newspaper he founded. live is dangerous to be a and to do journalism and tread and invisible line trauma the bad guys -- drawn by the bad guys. this is what most of the country is living through. amy: we will hear javier valdez in his own words and speak to anabel hernandez, another mexican journalist who has also faced death threats for her reporting on mexico's drug trade. and we will look at how more than 50 farm workers here in california were recently exposed to highly toxic pesticide, whose
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use was recently greenlighted by the epa in one of the agency's first decisions since donald trump took office. all of that and more, coming up. welcome to democracy now!, democracynow.org, the war and peace report. i'm amy goodman. we are broadcasting from los angeles. the department of justice has tapped former fbi director robert mueller as special counsel in an investigation into russia's role in the 2016 u.s. election, including allegations russia colluded with donald trump's campaign to sway the presidential race. the move by deputy attorney general rod rosenstein came one day after reports emerged that president trump had personally asked former fbi director james comey to end the agency's investigation into trump's former national security adviser, michael flynn, who was fired for lying both publicly and privately about his contacts with russian officials.
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mueller's appointment came as the "new york times" reports flynn told president trump's transition team weeks before the inauguration that he was under federal investigation for secretly working as a paid lobbyist for turkey during the campaign. that is far earlier than the administration previously admitted. meanwhile, reuters is reporting flynn and other advisers to trump's campaign were in contact with russian officials and others with kremlin ties in at least 18 undisclosed calls and emails during the last seven months of the 2016 presidential race. the communications are being examined as part of the fbi probe. and in another development, mcclatchy is reporting one of flynn's first decisions as national security advisor was to reject an obama-era military plan that would have been opposed by turkey. trump eventually agreed to the plan after flynn was fired.
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we will have more on the melting trump administration scandals after the headlines with journalist marcy wheeler. on capitol hill, texas democrat al green on wednesday became the first congress member to call for president trump's impeachment from the floor of the house of representatives. callday, mr. speaker, to for the impeachment of the president of the united states of america for obstruction of justice. i do it because, mr. speaker, there is a believe in this country that no one is above the law. and that includes the president of the united states of america. amy: party leaders have sought to tamp down public discussion by a growing number of rank-and-file democrats over whether to impeach trump. meanwhile, three republicans have raised the possibility.
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congress members carlos curbelo of florida, justin amash of michigan, and walter jones of north carolina have said trump may have committed an impeachable offense. president trump lashed out at the media wednesday for the scandals rocking his administration. trump was speaking at a commencement ceremony at the coast guard academy in connecticut. pres. trump: no politician in history -- and i say this with great surety -- has been treated worse or more unfairly. you can't let them get you down. you can't let the critics and the naysayers get in the way of your dreams. amy: during his speech, president trump promised graduating coast guard cadets he would never stop fighting for them. in fact, trump has proposed slashing the coast guard's budget by $1.3 billion, or about 12%. president trump is departing to
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saudi arabia friday for his first trip abroad as president. he is slated to give a speech about islam, which is being written by the islamaphobic white house senior advisor stephen miller. miller was the architect of trump's muslim first travel ban, which sought to block all refugees and citizens from seven majority muslim nations from entering the united states. miller also get a series of vehemently islamic dish, phobic speeches after trump visits to heal had to israel and then the vatican. u.s. army whistleblower chelsea manning celebrated her first steps of freedom wednesday, tweeting a photograph of her shoes as she walked out of fort leavenworth prison in kansas as a free woman. manning spent seven years behind bars, much of it in solitary confinement. president obama commuted the remainder of her 35-year prison sentence shortly before he left office. the obama administration prosecuted manning under the espionage act after she revealed
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secrets of the u.s. state department and pentagon, including evidence of war crimes and support for u.s. allies committing torture. in puerto rico, a federal court in san juan opened bankruptcy proceedings wednesday as the island seeks to restructure $123 billion in debt and pension obligations. judge laura taylor swain will now oversee the largest-ever municipal bankruptcy in u.s. history in proceedings that are expected to drag on for years. puerto rico is legally barred from using chapter 9, the bankruptcy route normally taken by insolvent local governments. puerto rico's dept crisis has forced austerity measures on a population suffering from skyrocketing poverty and unemployment. most recently the government , closed nearly 200 schools across the island. in greece, tens of thousands of striking workers flooded the streets of athens and other cities ahead of today's vote by wednesday the greek parliament on another round of austerity measures.
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trade union activists say the latest planned cuts would continue a downward spiral for the greek economy. >> this government fooled the workers and the rest of the greek people by saying they would get rid of the bailouts. yet tomorrow, it is voting in the fourth bailout, which is much harsher than the previous ones. >> the workers cannot bear anymore suffering from austerity measures that are constantly being imposed and that slowly eat away at the small income they receive. the government must try anyway it can to take from those that have and not from the have not's. amy: in brazil, an explosive new report reveals president michel temer was secretly recorded approving of hush money payoffs for a powerful politician jailed on corruption charges. the newspaper o globo reports in one recording from march, president temer is told by a wealthy businessman about cash payments to keep former house speaker eduardo cunha from revealing secrets about his former colleagues. the paper reports temer responded -- "you have to keep it going, ok?"
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brazil is already embroiled in a vast corruption scandal involving nearly 100 prominent politicians and a third of temer's cabinet. back in the united states and immigration news, newly released government data show their trump administration is deporting immigrants at a record rate 40% higher than the previous record pace set by the obama administration. it was reported wednesday or than 41,000 people were deported through the end of april, up from about 80,000 supported in the same time frame last year. more than one third of those arrested by ice had no criminal convictions. in wisconsin, milwaukee county sheriff david clarke said wednesday he has accepted an appointment as assistant secretary of the department of homeland security. clarke has called on local police to work as immigration officers in partnership with ice. he has also declared there is no police brutality in america, and has called members of the black lives matter movement "garbage,"
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"black slime," and "subhuman creeps." clarke's appointment comes as his milwaukee jail remains under investigation after that -- after prisoner terrill thomas died of extreme dehydration after guards reportedly cut off the water in his solitary confinement cell for seven days. thomas is one of four people who died at the milwaukee county jail over a six month period last year. in tulsa, oklahoma, a jury on wednesday found white police officer betty shelby not guilty of manslaughter for killing unarmed african american terence crutcher after his car broke down last september. police video footage shows crutcher walking slowly away from officers with his hands in the air, then putting his hands on the side of his own car before he's surrounded by officers and fatally wounded by officer shelby. this is terence crutcher's twin sister, tiffany crutcher, speaking after the "not guilty" verdict.
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>> i am going to make sure that i do not rest until we get reform for this police department in tulsa, oklahoma, and we change the culture of this corrupt police department. now we got to go home. we have to go home and hug on his four kids and love on them and explain to them a system that is perpetuated so much injustice -- a justice system that has perpetuated so much injustice. and i promise you, i will not rest until we bring that change. amy: in texas, a leaked police body cam video from 2016 shows a white police officer in a dallas suburb using his taser to electrocute a handcuffed black man who was not resisting arrest. in the video, an unidentified sergeant with the balch springs police department draws his
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taser and shocks 29-year-old marco stephenson, who collapses. the sergeant then jabs his taser into stephenson's back and repeatedly electrocutes him. amy: the video was mailed to dallas tv station fox 4 from an unknown source. the balch springs police chief says the sergeant was not fired over the incident, and instead was temporarily removed from contact with members of the public until he completed classes on conflict resolution. this is the same police department where former officer roy oliver shot and killed 15-year-old jordan edwards in april after firing his assault rifle into a car carrying five black teenagers as they drove away from the officer. oliver is awaiting trial for murdering edwards.
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in new orleans, work crews removed a statue confederate general p.g.t. beauregard early wednesday morning, the third of four such monuments ordered to be removed by the city council and mayor mitch landrieu. white nationalists had staged a series of protests in the lead-up to the confederate memorials' removals, prompting some workers to wear masks and bulletproof vests for protection. one statue remains to be removed, that of confederate army leader general robert e lee. in new york city dozens of , protesters gathered outside governor andrew cuomo's offices wednesday to oppose a bailout of new york's aging nuclear power plants that could cost ratepayers up to $7.6 billion over the next 12 years. bruce rosen of the group united for action says new york should instead turn to clean energy sources like solar and wind to meet its goal of reducing greenhouse gas emissions. >> the governor has promoted renewables. in no way is nuclear power
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renewable. we don't know how to handle the waste. these have to go. the state should be going, as everybody is here, 100% as fast as possible to renewable energy. amy: the new york protest came as a draft budget document seen by the website axios reveals the trump administration hopes to slash the energy department's renewable and energy efficiency program by nearly 70%. and oscar lopez rivera has walked free after serving 35 year's in prison for much of the time in solitary confinement. in 1981, he was convicted of federal charges including conspiring to oppose u.s. authority over puerto rico. in 1999, president bill clinton commuted the sentences of 16 members of the faln, but he refused to accept the deal because it did not include two fellow activists who have long since been released. in generate, president obama commuted oscar lopez rivera's
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sentence. you spoke yesterday after being freed. >> i want to thank presidents jimmy carter, bill clinton, and barack obama because they responded to the complaints and demand of our people and commuted the sentences of all of our political prisoners. amy: and those are some of the headlines. this is democracy now!, democracynow.org, the war and peace report. i'm amy goodman. we are broadcasting from los angeles. it has been another extraordinary 24 hours in the nation's capital. in the biggest news of the day, deputy attorney general rod rosenstein appointed former fbi director robert mueller to serve as a special counsel to oversee a probe into russian government efforts to influence the 2016 presidential election. the move came one day after reports emerged that president trump had personally asked former fbi director james comey to end the agency's investigation into trump's former national security
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adviser, general michael flynn, who was fired for lying both publicly and privately about his contacts with russian officials. earlier this morning, president trump responded on twitter writing -- "with all of the illegal acts that took place in the clinton campaign and obama administration, there was never a special counsel appointed. this is the single greatest witchhunt of a politician in american history." in another new development, "the new york times" reports trump picked michael flynn as his national security advisor even , though flynn had warned trump's transition team that he was under federal investigation for secretly working as a paid lobbyist for turkey during the campaign. meanwhile, mcclatchy is reporting one of flynn's first decisions as national security advisor was to reject an obama-era military plan that would have been opposed by turkey. the pentagon wanted to use syrian kurdish forces to help retake the city of raqqa but flynn rejected the plan.
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turkey has long opposed the u.s. partnering with kurdish fighters. trump eventually agreed to the plan after general flynn was fired. this all comes as democrat al green of texas became the first member of congress to openly call for trump's impeachment on the floor of the house. even some republicans are now broaching the subject. republican congressman justin amash of michigan impeachment -- said impeachment might be merited if trump urged comey to drop his investigation of flynn. meanwhile, the "washington post" has revealed an explosive comment made last year by house majority leader kevin mccarthy. in a private conversation with house speaker paul ryan and others, mccarthy said -- "there's two people i think putin pays: rohrabacher and trump," referring to the presidential candidate and california republican rohrabacher.ana ryan urged colleagues not to repeat mccarthy's explosive claim. ryan said -- "no leaks.
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this is how we know we're a real family here." mccarthy now says the comment was a bad attempt at a joke. well, to help make sense of these developments, we are joined by marcy wheeler, an independent journalist who covers national security and civil liberties. she runs the website emptywheel.net. welcome to democracy now! talk first about this new development, the appointment of a special counsel -- not announced by jeff sessions week as the attorney general had to recuse himself from any investigations into russia, given his own relationship or undisclosedviously with the russian ambassador to the united states, but announced by rod rosenstein, the deputy attorney general. he made robert mueller the former fbi director, special counsel.
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the scope of the investigation is interesting because he described it as the confirmedion the gym, an earlier house intelligence committee testimony. so the investigation into whether trump and his campaign associates have ties to russia. the appointment of mueller is good on a lot of points. oftentimes, they appoint an assistant u.s. attorney for an existing us attorney, and that really was not possible in this case because trump has fired them all and not replace them. but by bringing in mueller, he is somebody a small list of people would immediately have credibility both within the fbi and the justice department because he used to be part of them. i am sure within fbi, the agents are taking a lot of reassurance, having just lost comey, that mueller is coming in. they know him. they have worked for him. so that is great. he can claim to be bipartisan.
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cheneystood up to dick in 2004. so on all of those levels, he is a pretty good choice. the only kind of black mark on his record is the handling of the anthrax investigation in 2001. aside from that, we should be able to expect him to conduct an independent, solid, professional investigation here. my biggest concern is with the scope that rosenstein gave to this investigation post of amy: before we get to that, what you mean the anthrax investigation of 2001? >> remember in 2001, right after 9/11, patrick leahy and tom daschle worse in the sent -- were said live anthrax and the number people died. that was a huge terrorist investigation. it was not as big as 9/11. they effectively chased down a scientist who was not the culprit. they had to pay out a big settlement with him. they chased down another for
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dietrich employee. he probably wasn't the guy, either. it probably has never been solved and era been ongoing -- i mean, one of the fbi agents in that case actually sued mueller, saying he was not given the resources to carry out the investigation. as i said, that --mueller, for a lot of reasons is a good pick will stop the biggest concern i have is the anthrax investigation. amy: talk about for a moment, what does it mean to be special console dust special counsel prosecutorndependent , an independent investigator -- council versus prosecutor? >> this is not ken starrfor ose old enough to remember ken str wanvesgating everything everywhere and could not be fired. the law that authorized such investigations was ended on the logic that they encourage kind of -- they encouraged
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investigators to keep investigating until they found anything such as the consensual relationship between clinton and monica lewinsky. what this is, robert mueller reports up through doj's 10 of command to rod rosenstein. he had brought authority to prove his own subpoenas, that kind of thing. if rosenstein refuses to approve certain things, then he has to go to congress and tell them about it. ultimately, mueller could still be fired by donald trump. he is still technically working for donald trump. and the one of the concern i have is beyond the scope -- a key part of the scope question is whether or not mueller will be able to investigate the firing of jim comey. there is language in yesterday's --er that says he can invest investigate anyone obstructing his investigation.
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but if you recall, the cia leak case, which is a close parallel to what we're seeing, patrick inzgerald was appointed 2003. scooter libb he was found guilty of obstruction of justice in 2007. at each stage of a shift in that investigation, fitzgerald got -- approvedproved from jim comey. it would be awkward if mueller felt yet to get instruction investigation into the firing of comey approved by rod rosenstein because after all, rosenstein kind of put the fig leaf on that firing by claiming it was a good reason for it. complete independence. has both the credibility and the respect among all of the people he will be working with and the ability to largely drive the investigation. we will see if things like budget and a couple of weeks --
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it is a good sign. there are still reasons to be vigilant, i think, on the appointment process. amy: marcy wheeler, talk more about this scope you're so concerned about. who mueller will be able to investigate and who he will not be able to investigate. >> i'm not so sure it is a who. as i said, the investigation is for trump and his campaign associates, whether or not they coordinated with the russian government -- we like to think of the hack of the dnc, but anything else, tampering with the election -- or obstruction into that or anything that arises out of that. you spent i think two or three minutes talking about mike flynn's turkish connections, right? we know mike flynn is a key focus of this investigation already because he took money from russia because he hit
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meetings with sergey kislyak, then lied about it. mike flynn, for his role dust for his relationship with russia, is a key part of this investigation. the question then becomes, what about the turkish side, which in many ways, is much more damning because he got more money, because the change in his own policy views was far more dramatic, because we have seen a change in u.s. policy. we took the turkish side rather than the kurdish side in military operations. does that count? count? paul manafort's that one, as far as we know, is being conducted not in virginia, which is where the existing campaign investigation is -- would mueller be able to protect the investigation into manafort
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that might be in new york or investigations into money laundering through real estate in new york or investigations into the goose of her figure -- gucifer figure? any one those investigations may provide a thread that would be key to the election investigation. if paul manafort was doing certain things during the election because of his prior ties to russian-backed ukrainian oligarchs, that may explain why trump was so favorable to the russians and so on and so forth. you see what i mean, that there are a number of different corners of this investigation -- the when i did not mention is the one into the actual hack in pittsburgh. anyone of them might be important to the question of the trump associates role in the election. i just want some kind of assurances that mueller will also be able to protect those other ones that are not
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technically part of the election. , your commenteler on the "washington post" revelation of this comment eight last year the house majority leader kevin mccarthy in a private conversation with house speaker paul ryan and other republicans, mccarthy said -- ryan urged colleagues at the time. to repeat mccarthy's explosive claim. ryan said "no leaks. this is how we know we are a real family here." inst, the republican leaders the house denied this, but then that "thee out washington post" got an mccarthyist saying, oh, he is just joking. >> he is using the same excuse trump uses, right? trump says he was just joking when he said comey should in the investigation into flynn. and paul ryan is taking the same
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approach that he is with trump's litigation, sticking his fingers in his years and hoping it will go away and relying on loyalty to party over real concerns. i think it is just another piece of this story in which people are acting the same way, pretending it is a joke when it probably was not, hoping that gop loyalty will take precedence over real concern for what the heck trump was doing. amy: marcy wheeler, yesterday trump spoke at the coast guard academy graduation. now it has become the fodder of late-night comedians who are comparing his speech and sort of showing similarities to "legally blonde." said, andeech, he reese witherspoon did not say this in her commencement address
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in "legally blonde" "no other politician in history has been treated worse or more unfairly by the media." your response? >> ronald reagan, jfk, abraham lincoln -- those politicians were shot. i think the notion that trump would compare himself to politicians who, in jfk and abraham lincoln's case, gave up their life in service as president, is pretty offensive. top of that, trump does not admit there is a legitimate reason for the press to pursue these questions and he is trying instead to turn himself into the victim. his supporters coming know, frame to survive, he needs to ensure he retains the support of his voters long enough such that republicans can't turn on him. and that kind of language is precisely what worked for them in the elections and so i expect to see him continue it. i expect to see him pretend that
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he is the victim here because the people who put him in office really like that language. amy: i want to correct the comparison. the speech that was being compared to "legally blonde" was the one at liberty university. commenteeler, any final -- especially around why you think a special counsel was set up, what you think was the motivation. think the justice department, even the trump administration, realized this is a tipping point, republicans are joining the call for impeachment and they had to stem the flow of this, so this was the next worst thing for them or the next best thing? >> i had argued that the conductor of the investigation, the only u.s. attorney in the country right now, was not necessarily a bad position. rod rosenstein may have agreed rosenstein, iod
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can imagine two different motivations on his part. one, he looks terrible. he provided the fig leaf for the firing of comey. he was a guy who prior to that, had a really good reputation, again, bipartisan, people in both parties left him. guy., stand up justice and this really devastated his reputation. add inthe fact that -- comey said he has notes, but does anyone who is been around the doj long enough to see jim comey's prior experience while he was deputy attorney general, but even in the last two years, knows how comey works and knows that when comey prepares a cya, prepares evidence of corruption that is going on, then it is going to not just be solid and
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effective and convincing, but it is going to be very dramatic. givesh time as comey testimony to congress, it is going to be huge tv. i think rod rosenstein, whatever other motivations he has, i think he realized that was coming. and knowing where comey's pushback is going to go, this was the best way to anticipate that. rod rosenstein also has to testify before congress today. we will see wn the road precisely what his motivation was, but i could see how rod rosenstein recognized he could no longer deny the political applications of this in the need to protect this investigation. amy: finally, "the new york times" reporting that president trump had asked james comey at that valentine's day meeting for your 14 in the oval office to journalistsrisoning who report on leaks of classified information? >> right.
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that may still happen most of jeff sessions wants to do it. dana benton may still do it with wikileaks. trump, again, it feels very nixonian. way he survives them if he does, is to try to badmouth the press and make himself into the victim. i don't think that is going to work this time around. i do suspect he will continue to ratchet up efforts against the press -- except to the degree that the people who would prosecute it really are rooting for the press here, not for donald trump. that is not necessarily a good luck. but look, everyone at fbi come i conduct thee to investigations there currently conducting, wherever they are. they are doing to be less interested in donald trump's which i against journalists -- which fight against journalists, knowing that all the way the fbi gets to conduct their
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investigation is to have stuff like that coming out in the press -- at this point, it is like in every 10 minutes basis. amy: marcy wheeler, thank you for being with us, independent journalist who covers national secured and civil liberties, runs the website emptywheel.net. we will link to your new post "the scope of the special , counsel appointment is totally inadequate." will go toe back, we rome, italy, to speak wi a mexican reporter who is been threatened with death herself repeatedly when she goes to mexico, she is bodyguards 24 hours a day. as she is going to remember a friend, a well-known journalist in mexico named javier valdez, who was gunned down this week. this is democracy now! we will be back in a moment. ♪ [music break]
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amy: "i wish i knew how it would feel to be free." nina simone. if you want to see the video behind that music, you can go to democracynow.org as we showed chelsea manning and oscar lopez rivera, both became free people yesterday. , i'mthis is democracy now! amy goodman. "let them kill us all, if that is the death sentence for reporting this hell. no to silence." those the words of award-winning mexican reporter javier valdez after one of his colleagues, miroslava breach, was assassinated in late march.
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well, on monday, valdez was also assassinated, dragged out of his car and shot 12 times less than a block from his newspaper the , newspaper he co-founded in the northwest mexican state of sinaloa. as news coverage here in the united states is hyper-focused on president trump, we'll look at a major scandal just across the border that is not being covered in u.s. media -- the widespread violence in mexico and the impunity for the killers. the killing of valdez who wrote for the prominent newspaper has sparked widespread outrage across mexico. on tuesday, hundreds of people gathered for his funeraln culiacan, sinaloa, hundreds more protested outside the interior ministry in mexico city. multiple mexican digital media outlets also went on a 24-hour strike, refusing to publish anything but a black banner with the names of the journalists assassinated in mexico so far this year -- cecilio pineda,
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maximino rodriguez, ricardo monlui, filiberto alvarez, miroslava breach, and javier valdez. in 2011, javier valdez came to new york to receive the international press freedom award from the committee to protect journalists. this is part of what he said that evening. >> i have nursed my weathered soul >> [indiscernible] it is dangerous to be alive and
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to do journalism is to tread in invisible line drawn by the rag us who are in drug trafficking anthe government, in a field strewn with explosives. this is what most of the country is living through. one must protect oneself from everything and everyone and there not options were salvation and often it is no one to turn to. -- often there is no one to turn to. [indiscernible] , i'm told of the tragedy that mexico is living. a tragedy that should shame us. blood. and guns and we are murderers of our own future. this is a war, yes, the one
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controlled by the narcos. we, the citizens, providing the debt. in the mexican and u.s. governments. and they, the immint invisible [indiscernible] they take the profits. i dedicate this award to the brave journalists and to the children and youth who are living a slow death. i prefer to create a portrait of he said desperate and panorama. this award is like a lighthouse on the other side of the storm, a safe harbor. if experienced macabre solitude because nothing published has reverberation -- makes us more vulnerable.
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despite all of this, with all of you and with this award, i can say that i have somewhere to take shelter and to feel less alone. thank you. [applause] journalist javier valdez speaking in 2011 in new york also the committee to protect journalists said held as the mets the grit of the most that a hardened reporter with the soul of a 19th century romantic but would. on the same day of his assassination, another journalist, sonia cordoba, was also shot and wounded in a separate attack that left her son dead. since 2000, more than 100 journalists have been murdered in mexico. a recent report by the international institute for strategic studies says mexico
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endured the second most conflict deaths of any country in the world last year, with a staggering 23,000 people killed amidst mexico so-called war on drugs. mexico was second only to syria, where 50,000 people were killed in 2016 by the ongoing war. the third, fourth, and fifth most dangerous countries were iraq, afghanistan, and yemen. we are joined right now by a colleague and friend of javier, award-winning mexican journalist anabel hernandez. she has also faced attacks and death threats for her reporting on the mexican drug trade, and has said "a journalist who has to walk with bodyguards in an embarrassment for any nation." hernandez is the author of "narcoland: the mexican drug lords and their godfathers" and "mexico in flames: the legacy of calderon." anabel hernandez welcome to , democracy now!
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we are speaking to you in rome, italy, so there is a little bit of a delay. can you talk about who javier was, the reporter who was gunned down this week right next to the offices of the newspaper he founded? >> hello, amy. mehas been very sad days for and for hundreds of journalists in mexico because javier valdez is our friend. .avier valdez will always be and thishis words speech in 2011. this is javier, a very brave man. this is javier, the journalist that believed in the courage to work for the mexican society
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at in liberty to take their own decisions. i met him many years ago. i saw him the last time at the beginning of this year. he was laughing, as he used to do. he was worried, as may, about all of this violence in sinaloa. the cartelied about after the arrest oel chapo course, is after, of extradition-- his to federal court in new york. javier was and is and will always be a very honest journalist and a friend, a
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brother for me. amy: so talk about his newspaper, where he was gunned down, and talk about what he was taking on in mexico and who you believe killed him. -- ill, javier valdez braziled one article in about inside the cartel. i reveal one photograph, the [indiscernible] guzman and el chapo started a war against him. after my article, nuñez sent to
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to thehis close people office of riodoce, this newspaper where javier valdez was working, and javier valdez make an interview to this guy to hear the explanation of nuñez, trying explaining he is not the enemy of el chapo guzman, and he was not fighting against the sons of ultra vocus men, and these kinds of things -- sons of el chapo guzman, and these kinds of things. inside the cartel. ofhould note the problem journalists in mexico is you always try to talk about when cartel come always you have to talk about all of the people
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that work in the government that is involved with the cartels. and this is the case, i have to familyout nuñez that has and members of his family works in the government of sinaloa. so if it is the hypothesis that may be people related to nunez were involved in this terrible murder, i think that this cannot theossible if someone in similar government -- sinaloa government or even the federal government is involved. i have a video that proves this that also in the payroll of nunez were high members of the federal police that belongs to the federal government, to the government of enrique pena
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nieto. i have here that the government tried to say, oh, no, no, it was just two guys that tried to assault the car of javier valdez . but you know, this attack was at noon in front of everyone. and no one shoots 10 times, 10, 12 times to steal a car, even in sinaloa. no one. amy: so you're saying the sinaloan government might have been involved in javier's murder? it is one of my hypothesis. in rome and him will be in london giving some conference . then i will go back to mexico. i really want to meet -- have a meeting with the wife of javier and try to help to resolve this because i think the problem is that, as you know, more than 30 journalists have been murdered this year.
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-- six journalists in five weeks. i think for me, the murder of my friend javier valdez is something personal. if we do not resolve this case, we are condemning two other asrnalists to be murdered now. amy: we are talking to anabel hernandez, incredibly brave mexican investigative reporter herself, was awarded the 2012 golden pen freedom award, author of "narcoland: the mexican drug lords and their godfathers." understand when she says she's going back to mexico, the threat she, too, faces as she is surrounded by 24 hour day bodyguards as she talks about the death of javier valdez, murdered this week, another unbelievably rate journalist in mexico. we're going to come back to our discussion with her. we have one more break. i also want to share this
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italy. and this breaking news, roger ailes, the head of fox news -- former head who was driven out because of sexual assault and , onel harassment scandals after another, fox women talking about his assaulting them or harassing them over the years -- well, roger ailes himself has died at the age of 77. all of the media is reporting this right now. we don't know the cause of his death. we're going to go back to anabel hernandez, mexican investigative reporter who was awarded the 2012 golden pen of freedom award. the golden pen of freedom, the author of "narcoland: the mexican drug lords and their godfathers." her latest book recently published in mexico is titled "the true night of iguala." that as well.bout i want to go back to you saying
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you're going to return to mexico. when you are in mexico, you need 24 hour a day guards. who are these guards? talk about the threats to your own life, even as you remember today javier valdez, the crusading reporter who took on the drug trade in mexico, who was gunned down himself in his home state of sinaloa this week. know, i wasyou collaborating with a reporting program at uc berkeley. since last august, the program finished for me. i had to go back to mexico. so i am living in mexico since last august. i had to go back to my nightmare. and now i am in italy because i
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am working. when i finish this travel, i have to go back anyway to mexico. i have to live with bodyguards. these bodyguards are paid by the federal government in this terrible and cynical simulation of protection. as you know, the federal supposedlycreates to attacked journalists. protectsedly journalists. even of the have the faces of the people that have threatened me since 2010 and have been attacking to be in my family every moment, every year, even the government has all of this information, they don't want to resolve the case. just two weeks ago, the last
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message from the federal government to me was gave me -- the bodyguards gave me one bullet-proof vest to protect message from the federal myself. andine that someone came shoot me 10 or 12 times as happened to my friend javier valdez. is really this vest that will protect me or the justice? are put in jail the people that are threatening the and threaten many, many other journalists in mexico. really the crisis in mexico is huge. just a few days ago, yesterday, to be exact precisely, the tosident pena nieto promised the society -- promised to the journalists he will resolve the
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case. it is not true. i know the people he is working in the attorney general's office. i to the society know they're not in- even though they have all of the information. i think we have to stop the simulation. and if the government is that able to resolve the cases, we will do it. we will have to do it in many, many other cases of abuse of violations. rights the 43 missing students. amy: i want to ask you about another recent attack on journalists. on saturday the southern state of guerrero, a group of reporters was attacked, robbed and threatened by a group of , armed men saturday. the attack occurred outside iguala, where 43 students were disappeared from the ayotzinapa teacher's college in 2014. the journalists, who all survived the attack, said the, . men threatened to burn them alive. anabel, you know iguala well
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from your groundbreaking reporting on the disappearance of these 43 students. can you talk about the recent attack? we just have a minute to go, i am sad to say. >> i mean, i just would tell you this. it is impossible that this group of journalists has been threatened if the federal government is not involved. the guest now the federal government is in charge of the state of guerrero. and all the streets is the army, the federal police for supposedly giving protection to the citizens. of course, again, i just can't believe that this attack occurred without the permission
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orthe federal government involving the federal government. really, it is not possible to think that this happened without the knowledge of the federal government. , i want to hernandez thank you so much for being with us, mexican investigative reporter, awarded the 2012 golden pen of freedom award. author of "narcoland: the mexican drug lords and their godfathers." her latest book recently published "the true night of , iguala." news, former chair of fox is dead at the age of 77. roger ailes has died. we don't know yet the cause of his death. he resigned from fox news in july, accused of sexual harassment by more than 20 women, including megyn kelly, gretchen carlson, and fox ultimately paid out $45 million to settle the claims.
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-on this episode of "eat! drink! italy!"... we celebrate mozzarella. a chef from buffalo mozzarella's home makes an unforgettable mozzarella triple play. we talk about sagrantino. remember this name. it's a great wine that's on the move. then back to our mozzarella roots. ♪ my name is vic rallo, and i love to eat, drink italy. follow me, and i'll prove it. -"eat! drink! italy!" is brought to you by... wine enthusiast magazine and catalog -- for wine storage, glassware, and accessories. the historic count basie theatre in red bank, new jersey. the atalanta corporation -- importing authentic italian products and more for over 50 years. coffee afficionado -- artisanal roasters of sustainably sourced coffee.
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