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tv   ABC World News Tonight With David Muir  ABC  January 27, 2025 3:30pm-4:00pm PST

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bowl champs for the fans, we know one piece of the perfect super bowl party is the food. that's why website finance buzz is looking for an official taste tester for super bowl snacks. one lucky winner will go to costco and try out all the usual favorites like pizza, wings and buffalo chicken dip. they'll rate how good the food is and earn $1,000 for doing so. super bowl 59 will take place on february 9th at the caesars superdome in new orleans. that's going to do it for now. thanks for joining us for abc seven news at three. world news tonight with david muir starts now. and i'll see you back here at four. tonight, president trump's immigration crackdown. the raids across the country. tonight, the images from across the nation. from chicago to denver to miami. undocumented immigrants loaded
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onto military planes, as well. president trump and the president of colombia both threatening tariffs for a time over flights headed to colombia. tonight, what's now coming next. what i.c.e. officials told our rachel scott. also tonight, the trump expected to sign new executive actions involving the u.s. military, and the new defense secretary pete hegseth at the pentagon, and he's asked, will he fire america's top general as he suggested before? how he answered, with the general right there. we're tracking a powerful cross-country storm tonight, after rain in california. now hail and damaging winds coming to texas. and then the storms hitting the east. ginger zee with the forecast. tonight, the sudden turmoil in the stock market, after that news from china today. is china ahead of the u.s. on artificial intelligence? costing less, fewer chips, less energy. tonight, the u.s. company nvidia suffering the largest single day drop ever. here in the u.s., an earthquake rattling parts of the northeast, and you'll see the images tonight. also, the rare strain of bird flu now discovered here in
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the country. where it's been detected, with teg prices already skyrocketing. tonight, five years after we went back to auschwitz, the survivors now fewer and fewer of them, and what they told us tonight. and the super bowl is now set, the chiefs, the eagles, and getting ready already. the images tonight you likely haven't seen. good evening and it's great to have us with you here on a monday night. we do begin tonight with president trump's immigration crackdown. agents conducting what they have called targeted operations across this country. nearly 1,000 arrests in 24 hours. multiple law enforcement agencies taking part in the raids. the scenes tonight from chicago to atlanta, from denver to los angeles. and u.s. military aircraft is being used to deport migrants. another plane has landed in guatemala. colombia turning two planes away for a time. president trump immediately threatening to impose a 25%
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tariff. colombia's president then threatening a tariff right back. eventually backing down. abc's senior political correspondent rachel scott, and what i.c.e. officials told her just today about what's coming next. rachel tonight leading us off from florida. >> reporter: tonight, in cities across the country, a surge in immigration raids like this one in chicago. agents pulling a man from a home. walking him out to their waiting vehicles, part of a 24-hour nationwide roundup the trump administration says arrested 956 undocumented immigrants. the highest daily number since trump was sworn in. border sarr tom homan in chicago to supervise there, but the sweeps from coast to coast. in denver, agents raiding a nightclub, detaining around 50 people. a bus driving them away. the dea says they were associated with the violent venezuelan gang. these are the images the administration wants out there. hoping to convince undocumented migrants to self-deport.
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and others not to come in the first place. here in miami, homeland security posting these photos. agents leading people away in handcuffs. >> there's a more robust posture out there. we're making more arrests, we're doing, like i said, what we're -- what the law intends that we do, and we are doing it, but just more on a -- like i said, in a more overt presence. arer the local i.c.e. field director says they're targeting violent offenders, but they're not stopping there. are other undocumented immigrants off the table right now? >> well, i wouldn't say necessarily they're off the table. that's kind of on a case-by-case basis. we make discretionary call on every case that we arrest, whether that's a criminal or not a criminal, but we're going to take enforcement action on every individual. >> reporter: what does the next stage look like? >> the next stage is going to be, again, we're still going to go after the worst first, but as we go through those lists, individuals, primarily with final orders of removal, perhaps
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that don't have criminal records, those would be the next priorities that we'll go after. and eventually we'll see where that leads us to. >> reporter: in some communities, where undocumented immigrants work and pay taxes, a sense of fear setting in. >> we are here to address the fear. no one should be afraid to go to work. no child should be afraid to go to school. >> reporter: this as military jets fly migrants out of the united states. another c-17 heading to guatemala tonight. over the weekend, the government of colombia refusing to allow two american military planes carrying migrants to land. president trump threatening to impose heavy tariffs on colombian imports, which would have spiked prices at the grocery store on coffee and other products. colombia fired back, threatening to slap tariffs on american goods. before long, they backed down. agreeing to accept the deportation flights. >> we've made it clear to every country that they will be taking back our people. and if they don't, they'll pay a very high economic price.
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>> reporter: tonight, south of the border, mexican authorities preparing for an influx of deportees. massive tent shelters now under construction. >> david: let's get right to rachel scott, live from florida tonight. rachel, the administration making it very clear, this is a massive multiagency effort. what did i.c.e. officials tell you today about what's still coming? >> reporter: yeah. well, david, i.c.e. officials say they are targeting the most violent criminals first, but after that, they say no one who is in the country illegally is off the table. and it is not just i.c.e. they are getting resources from every corner of the federal government. all with the goal of helping president donald trump axhooef his campaign promise of mass deportations. those officials telling me tonight, expect these operations to start ramping up, david. >> david: rachel scott leading us off, thank you. now, to the pentagon, and sweeping changes coming. president trump moving quickly, expected to sign new executive actions. one calling for an iron dome, missile defense system for the u.s., similar to what israel has. and it comes as pete hegseth
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arrives at the pentagon for the first time. greeted by america's top general. secretary hegseth was asked, with the general standing right there, will he fire him as hegseth has suggested? here's jonathan karl tonight. >> reporter: newly minted secretary of defense pete hegseth arrived at the pentagon today, after a squeaker 0 of a confirmation vote, the senate split 50/50. vice president jd vance breaking the tie. >> good morning, everybody. how we doing? it's an honor to be here. >> reporter: hegseth's first day comes with new executive actions by president trump. a call for what trump dubs an iron dome for america, a missile defense shield similar to israel's. it would likely cost hundreds of billions of dollars that congress would need to approve. another executive action calls for the military to reinstate with full back pay and ben ne fits any service members who were terminated for refusing to get the covid-19 vaccine. trump is directing hegseth to eliminate diversity, equity, and
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inclusion programs, and to change guidance that allowed transgender people to serve in the military. by some estimates, there are about 15,000 transgender troops now serving. about half of one percent. >> lawful orders of the president of the united states will be executed inside this defense department swiftly and without excuse. >> reporter: the new secretary was greeted by the chairman of the joint chiefs of staff, general c.q. brown. someone hegseth said should be fired. writing in his book, "c.q. brown doesn't so much care if quality individuals serve at the air force academy, so long as they all look different or more like him." today, hegseth was asked if he still wants to fire general brown. >> standing with him right now. look forward to working with him. >> reporter: and today, the trump justice department announced that more than a dozen career prosecutors who had worked on jack smith's
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investigations were abruptly fired. these were career prosecutors, some of whom had worked for many years under both republican and democratic administrations. the acting attorney general said they were fired today because they could not be trusted, he said, to implement the trump agenda. david? >> david: john coral livarol, t. now, the news from china today that sent tech stocks tumbling. one u.s. gee, nvidia, had the biggest single day drop in history. amid questions, is china now ahead of the u.s. on artificial intelligence? have they found a way to do it cheaper, fewer chips, less energy? the tech heavy nasdaq down 600 points. nvidia seeing that biggest single day loss ever. president trump speaking on this just moments ago, and here's our chief business and economics correspondent rebecca jarvis tonight. >> reporter: tonight, the biggest single day loss for a stock ever. shares of nvidia, which makes the chips used to power
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artificial intelligence, plunging nearly $600 billion. the selloff triggered by the emergence of a powerful and more efficient new chinese a.i. chat bot called deepseek. its release, a kind of wakeup call to investors, causing them to rethink u.s. supremacy and the costs in the battle for a.i. dominance. deepseek, the app, tonight, number one in both apple and google's app stores, built in china, allegedly at a fraction of the cost, using far less energy than western competitors like openai, google, and anthropic. openai's ceo sam altman, recently named to president trump's new a.i. project stargate, warned about the technology in the wrong hands when we spoke in 2023. >> this will be the greatest technology humanity has yet developed. >> reporter: so, in the wrong human hands, it could be a very different device. >> we do worry a lot about authoritarian governments developing this.
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>> reporter: and david, just moments ago, president trump commenting on these new developments out of china, calling them a wakeup call to u.s. companies to compete and win, even after today's selloff. stocks are still up 22% over the last year. david? >> david: rebecca jarvis, thank you. now, to this rare strain of bird flu that's now been discovered here in the u.s. where it's been detected, with egg prices already skyrocketing. and new questions tonight about how quickly americans are ac actually getting the information on bird flu that they need. here's erielle reshef on that. >> reporter: tonight, as a fast-moving bird flu outbreak sends egg prices skyrocketing -- >> $14.99 for eggs? >> reporter: word the u.s. has now detected a different, more rare strain of bird flu in california, according to a new global health alert. that farm was forced to destroy nearly 119,000 birds. last week, a farm on new york's long island had to kill 100,000 ducks after an outbreak. and in illinois, kakadoodle farm
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lost 3,000 hens in a matter of days. >> the next day, hundreds were gone. and we're like, this is something. >> reporter: despite 67 human cases of bird flu and one death, there has been no confirmed person to person spread. just days after donald trump took office, there are questions about missing updates on bird flu. health agencies have been ordered to pause public communications until it's been reviewed and approved by a presidential appointee. fo dr. ashish jha is urging the new administration to take bird flu seriously. >> the biggest lesson from covid is, if you are -- if you get on top of things early, if you do surveillance, if you do testing, it doesn't have to be disruptive. and that is what i'm worried we're going to make the same set of mistakes. >> reporter: and david, multiple sources tell abc news that a new report on bird flu was among those that was not released by the cdc last week because of that communications freeze. david?
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>> david: erielle, thank you. we're also watching a major storm system tonight, after bringing rain to california what's coming to texas and to the northeast. the same system dropping up to an inch of rain on southern california. flash flooding there. mudslides after the fires. cars stuck on the road. let's get right to chief meteorologist ginger zee, back with us on a monday night, to take us through the week ahead. ginger? >> reporter: hey, david. los angeles had more rain than they had in nine months with that weekend rain. now, it's going to twist out of there, over arizona and new mexico and make its way across the country. let's dive in. the mudslide threat doesn't end, by the way. but look at that thing twist over to thursday, early morning. it's wednesday night through thursday, that severe storms blast through. waco, down i-35 to austin and san antonio. that flooding threat, really into the day thursday, from just east of dallas to little rock and memphis, and then, widespread rain by the weekend, right here in the northeast, where we've got significant snow
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deficits. david. >> david: ginger zee back with us. thank you. tonight, the shaky israel-hamas cease-fire is holding, and the striking images this evening. more than 300,000 gazans returning to their homes in the north. emotional moments as families are reunited. their homes flattened. and it comes after president trump considered what might be done right there in gaza. here's our foreign correspondent britt clennett from the lee zwront. >> reporter: more than 300,000 palestinians returning to northern gaza for the first time tonight. massive crowds and long lines walk this main highway along the sea. families, children smiling. singing in the streets as they return to what's left of their homes. this woman grateful to be back unharmed, even though her home is threatened and her family must now live in a tent. what happens to gaza is still uncertain. president trump suggesting to clean out the gaza strip by moving palestinians to another country. >> i'd like egypt to take people, and i'd like jordan to take people. i mean, you're talking about
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probably a million and a half people. and we just clean out that whole thing. >> reporter: just 24 hours ago, the fragile cease-fire deal seemed to be on the brink, after israel accused hamas of withholding a hostage. hamas later agreeing to release three hostages on thursday ahead of a scheduled exchange on saturday. still no word on whether ameri americans are part of that release. david, this cease-fire still precarious. the idf saying they fired on multiple positions in central gaza, after they say their soldiers came under threat. david? >> david: britt clennett live with us, thank you. tonight marks the 80th anniversary of the liberation of auschwitz. you'll remember, we traveled back to auschwitz with survivors. they were just children when they were liberated, when they were saved. they made a life for themselves here in the u.s. children, grandchildren. and tonight, some have gone back. and they've sent us a message about what they're seeing in the world, even right back home here
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in the u.s. the sun rising this morning over the auschwitz concentration camp in poland. it was 80 years ago today survivors were liberated. many of them children. and every year, fewer and fewer of them are still with us. it was five years ago, we traveled back with survivors who made a life for themselves here in the u.s. among them, tobtova friedman. we will never forget what she told us right there at auschwitz. why she went back, after 6 million jews were killed in the lolo cost. more than a million at this camp. >> we didn't forget them. that i remember the little girl going into -- into the crematorium and she wouldn't come back, that i played with. >> david: you remember them? >> we remember. that's what -- we remember. >> david: it was tova who wanted to go back to the crematorium. she wanted to offer a prayer that day to those who did not
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get to leave like she did. tonight, she's now 86 and back in poland. this time, world leaders listening to her story. ukraine's president zelenskyy, king charles, all there today, as survivors, including tova urged the world not to forget. >> that we will never, never, ever allow history to repeat itself. the time is short. the task is great. we may not be able to complete it, but we have an obligation to start. thank you. >> david: and on this holocaust remembrance day, tova sending us this message from overseas. >> you and i, david, we walked together into a crematorium that was still left.
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in a year from now, in two years from now, in five years from now, there will be nobody who will have the memory, who wi will -- who will be a witness, so, i see my role as a witness. >> david: telling us she is concerned over what she is seeing, the anti-semitism here in the u.s. and around the world. >> anti-semitism is rampant. the world has become isolated. people have become isolated from each other. and yet, the hatred has increased. maybe we can reach the younger generation to be not so angry. >> reporter >> david: she is counting on the next generation, including her own family. it's why she felt it was important to take them in while we were there. >> go all the way. >> david: the world needs to know. >> this world needs to know, and
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to be ware of the evil. to stop the evil, before it spreads, and this is the -- this is the end of evil. >> david: we will never forget that trip, five years ago. and tonight, five years later, tova and the survivors surging the world not to forget. when we come back here tonight, the other news this evening. in the northeast, an earthquake, and you're going to see the images in a moment here. also news of a deadly accident on the tarmac. an airline worker has been struck and killed. and later here tonight, the showdown has been set. the chiefs and the eagles. and what we learned already tonight. eczema. touch can make two feel like one. or simply be a helping hand. dupixent can help you stay ahead of eczema as you welcome the feeling of touch. dupixent helps block a key source of inflammation inside the body that can cause eczema to help heal your skin from within. many adults saw 90% clearer skin. some even achieved long-lasting clearer skin and fast itch relief after the first dose.
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tonight, a rare earthquake rattling the northeast. a 3.8 magnitude quake centered off the coast of maine felt from portland to boston. the strong since last april. when we come back here tonight, news of a deadly accident on the tarmac. an airline worker has been struck and killed. and the super bowl, the images you likely haven't seen. ♪ [window slamming] woman: [gasps] [dog barking] ♪ woman: [screams] ♪ [explosion] [explosion] ♪ [lock clicks shut] hank used to suffer from what felt like a cold & flu medicine hangover in the morning. ha ha. haha! then he switched to mucinex nightshift. mucinex is uniquely formulated to leave your system faster,
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before we go tonight, the stage is now set for the super bowl. the rematch, the chiefs and the eagles. kansas city hopes to be the first time ever to win three super bowls in a row. philly fans celebrating, of course. saquon barkley with his daughter amid all the confetti. taylor swift on the field to celebrate with travis kelce and the chiefs. the rematch now on. i'm david muir. i'll see you right back here tomorrow night. good night. right now. >> today there are more. executive officer executive orders coming that we fully support on removing dye inside the pentagon, reinstating troops who were pushed out because of covid mandates. iron dome for america. this is happening quickly. >> quickly and some big changes
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ahead. what it will mean for transgender members of the military. i had a four year old crying, fearing deportation. that is not making america great again. >> new fears about deportation raids. >> and a smash and grab at a cigarette store all caught on camera. good afternoon, i'm kristen sze. >> and i'm dan ashley. thanks for joining us. any minute now, president trump is expected to sign a slew of executive orders affecting the military. one will ban transgender people from will serving in the military. >> abc seven news political reporter monica madden is tracking these developments. monica, this is not the first time trump has tried to restrict transgender people from armed services. >> no, it is not. many will remember president trump implemented this in 2019 during his first term, requiring transgender service members to serve in line with their biological sex unless they had already successfully transitioned. it's a policy some lgbtq advocates in the bay area say is not

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