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tv   Ronan Farrow Daily  MSNBC  March 11, 2014 10:00am-11:01am PDT

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34 aircraft and 48 ships from a total of ten nations -- >> comb the oceans for any remnants. >> how much money can be raised by selling legalized marijuana? >> what has happened here is beyond my wildest imagination. >> the huge day in the ongoing bridgegate scandal in new jersey. >> showdown is set to determine whether bill stepien and bridget kelly have to hand over documents under subpoena. >> kerry and putin did not take place. >> u.s. said it was the russians who weren't ready to address basic questions. >> it must kind of stink you can't run three times. >> if i ran a third time it would be like doing a third "hangover" movie, it didn't really work out. did it? breaking news, the cia is under fire today after senator dianne feinstein, accused the
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agency of secretly removing documents from the computer system used by her staff at an agency facility in northern virginia where the intelligence committee was working on an investigation of the cia detention and interrogation program. take a listen. >> without prior notification or approval, cia personnel had conducted a search that was john brennan's word, of the committee computers. i have grave concerns that the cia search may well have violated the separation of powers, principles embodied in the united states constitution. >> cia director john brennan had a chance to push back today at the council on foreign relations as our own andrea mitchell moderating the event asked brennan about those very accusations. >> as far as the allegations of cia hacking into senate computers, nothing can be further from the truth.
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we wouldn't do that. that's -- that's just beyond the scope of reason. when the facts come out on this, i think a lot of people who are claiming there has been this enormous spying and hacking, will be proved wrong. >> beyond the scope of reason. white house press secretary jay carney is currently briefing the reporters and peppered with questions about this just moments ago. >> here's what i can tell you. this is a matter involving protocols established in 2009 for the interaction between committee staff and cia staff and officials as part of the investigation the committee was undergoing. there have been periodic disputes about that process. and as you know, this is under investigation, these matters are under two separate investigations an ig review as well as referral to the department of justice.
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i'm not going to provide an analysis or assessment -- >> joining us now fresh off of her conversation with brennan is andrea mitchell. nbc chief foreign affairs correspondent and host of "andrea mitchell reports." thanks so much and it's so exciting to have you on the show. >> you bet. >> we've been hearing conflicting reports in different publications about the exact nature of where the computers were. did you get a sense from brennan about that and do you have a sense from our sources as to whether they were senator cia property computer snz. >> they were cia property and what dianne feinstein said on the floor today this was a separate facility. they wanted to do an in-house investigation in the safe rooms but at the insistence of the cia, this investigation was launched at the cia facility, stand alone facility with cia computers that they had special access to and they worked every day for months and months with a document dumped from the cia
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which feinstein said was millions and millions of documents that were not properly cataloged and had to go through this painstaking process themself, the senate staff who have top security clearances. the suggestion is that they were slow walking it and throwing up obstacles all along. then the security breach and that is the breach that both sides are accusing each other of. she went public with the fact that she's outraged frankly, that the cia is accusing the senate staff when they were at the facility they were assigned to and went there every day for months and months, went through this investigation and came up with their own conclusions and also with an early draft of a cia report, which was a damning report, she indicated, about the interrogation and detention practices in the bush years. this was report overseen by leon panetta when he was cia director. the problem arose when john
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brennan took over the cia because he was involved in that detention policy. he was at the cai in the covert field back under george bush. under brennan's direction or people under his direction, involved in it, took these -- took this investigative work out of these computers which were under the management. senate intelligence community. >> you mentioned the report that the committee was in possession of. senator feinstein said earlier when their possession of that report was referred to the department of justice for investigation, that constituted intimidation. did brennan shed any light on that charge? >> he denied everything. there is a lawyer at the cia who referred it to the justice department and that lawyer was one of the people who was mentioned, she said thousands of times, 1600 times during the investigation itself. so that lawyer was involved as
quote
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well in the interrogation practiceses, that cia lawyer whose identity is still covert. she said there was illegal and unconstitutional potentially illegal and unconstitutional hacking into those computers and aattempt to stop the senate from overseeing the cia properly. >> andrea mitchell, thanks so much for that update. we'll bring more of your reporting on this story. >> thank. >> and also on "nightly news" tonight, stay tuned for that. we have here more for different perspectives on this, three individuals who are close to this story. first of all, we want them to update us on edward snowden's latest comments just coming in after feinstein's statements saying, quote, it's equally if not more concerning we're seeing another merkel effect where an elected official does not care at all that the rights of millions of oerds citizens are violated by our spies but
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suddenly it's a scandal when a politician finds out the same thing is happening to them, quite the allegation. let's dive more into the political ramifications, we have casey hunt, howard fineman and mark halperin, a senior analyst at nbc and "time." what are you hearing from members of congress? >> they are livid for the most part. senator john mccain told me that he thinks that we may need an independent investigation of this because there is indications of by as for both sides and no doubt that john brennan is a political figure. there is take little built-in bias there but lindsay graham said heads should roll if it's true. you have brennan 'denial of this
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so senator saxby chambliss refused to comment and wouldn't say whether or not he agrees with senator feinstein's interpretation of the facts. >> does edward snowden with a point with the comments he made earlier? >> absolutely, those senate staffers and senator feinstein are standing in the place of citizens generally in the middle of what is now a surveillance state. to me the interesting thing here is that the cia -- and i know from talking to some former cia agents who are around in the bush years and around the time of torture and rendition and so forth, water boarding and rendition, they are circling the wagons and they feel beset and abused and on the defensive. they think the rules were changed on them by the president after the fact, after they were operating under legitimate legal authority during the bush years. from what i sense from them and
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these are people who work with john brennan, they are going to resist and have resisted every step of the way the kind of accounting that the president promised the voters when he ran in 2008, that he has tried to implement since becoming president. that's what's really at issue here. it's what really happened during the bush years and who is to blame for it. who has the authority morally and politically to assign blame? that's what's going on. >> mark, i'll go to you for the next one. do you think the underlying issues about tortures and detentions will get more play in the press? they've been off radar for a while. how do you think that will impact president obama's legacy? >> those issues are still important and will get more attention. they are great personalities involved here. when you have dianne feinstein, a huge supporter of the intelligence community making the accusations, that deserves a lot of attention.
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there's a lot of constitutional issues here. the intelligence agencies need oversight by the legislative branch. any time there's an accusation that there's domestic spying, whether on congress or ordinary citizens deserves a lot of attention. the point senator mccain raised is absolutely important. we've gotten away from having independent councils that are statutory. when is it right in our system, spras of powers to have an independent investigation. this case extremes out for it because it is part of the same executive branch as the cia, if i'm in the legislative branch i'm concern about it, even if senator feinstein is not absolutely right. the concern she raised is really important, that it be looked out independently or hand it over to someone else. >> this compromise could be a very big deal. i'll go to you for the next question, howard, director
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brennan scoffed at the notion of stepping down. what should the president do? >> not to be too glib about it. but the justice department and cia are barely in the same branch of government at this point. that's part of the problem. my sense is pretty close to open bureaucratic warfare between the two and deep suspicion and an tag nix, it's a difficult situation. i agree it's the kind of situation where we have to try to find some legitimate outside force who can really look through the whole thing. you have an investigation colliding with investigation and it's a murky situation that developed because of our unwillingness or inability to confront some of what happened during the bush years. that's the difficulty here. >> thank you, all of you, casey hunt, political analyst mark halperin and howard fineman. always a pleasure.
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>> thanks, ronan. >> up next on "ronan farrow daily"", the other big breaking story, a courtroom drama playing out right now and it involves two big figures in the bridgegate scandal plaguing chris christie's administration. a top new jersey democrat will be with us to weigh in. how colorado's reefer revenue could make other states join them in legal iszing recreational marijuana. one of these celebrities you see here is making today's heroes and zeros. find out who a little later on. [ female announcer ] crest presents: crest 3d white whitestrips vs. a whitening pen. i feel like my lips are going to, like, wash it off. these fit nicely. [ female announcer ] crest 3d white whitestrips keep the whitening ingredient in place, guaranteeing professional level results. crest whitestrips. the way to whiten. guaranteeing professional level results. ameriprise asked people a simple question: can you keep your lifestyle in retirement?
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at a company that's bringing media and technology together. next is every second of nbcuniversal's coverage 0f the 2014 olympic winter games. it's connecting over one million low-income americans to broadband internet at home. it's a place named one america's most veteran friendly employers. next is information and entertainment in ways you never thought possible. welcome to what's next. comcastnbcuniversal. all right, that is bridget kelly, the chris christie aide at the center of the bridgegates scandal.
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she left the courtroom moments ago and that's her walking out, looking not stressed, swarmed by reporters right there in new jersey. we're going to be bringing you updates and take a look at what went down in that courtroom today. she had to literally force her way through a crowd. there's a feed frenzy there. we're going to bring in michael isikoff. let's look at the ramifications of that from new jersey politics and the legal issues here. what was your initial reaction to bridget kelly's words in that courtroom today? >> reporter: i have to say, ronan, it was a fascinating legal argument about the extent of the fifth amendment privilege. the committee's counsel argued getting the e-mails and text messages are critical to the investigation, pointing out that it was kelly's e-mail, traffic -- time for traffic
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problems in ft. lee, that sort of started all of this off. and the committee had to get to the bottom of this. but the -- the arguments from their defense lawyers seem to carry some sway with the judge. and at the end of the day, after three hours of arguments, she said that they raised some very serious constitutional issues and it's going to take me a while to review. it's pretty clear at a minimum that the committee is not going to be getting these e-mails and text messages in any short period of time. this is going to drag on for a while. she's going to make -- she's asked for more information, going to be more legal argument and this is going to go on. the core issue here is everybody understands that kelly and stepien have the right not to testify. the question is by producing documents, by identifying documents that might be
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responsive to the committee subpoena regarding those traffic lane closures, are they in effect testifying by picking out and saying, yes these e-mails and those text messages were about the lane closures. and that's -- none -- as i said, the judge said it raises really important constitutional issues. >> let's talk about those constitutional issues real quickly. there were 32 subpoenas issued and only two of the targets resisted, that's kelly and bill stepien, who was the former campaign manager for christie. they are both rest their argument for existing subpoena on invoking the fifth amendment and in particular on the right not to produce documents when the production of those documents themselves would prove incriminating, usually again producing documents is not protected by the fifth amendment. can you explain the case that they are resting that argument on? it has an unexpected link to
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clinton era scandals. >> it rests on a supreme court involving the former law partner the hillary clinton who was convicted by water -- white water prosecutor ken starr and supreme court said in that case that the subpoena from starr was so broad it required hubble to identify documents and therefore testify himself. that's the supreme court precedent here and what they were arguing about in that new jersey courtroom. >> all right, thank you so much. michael isikoff. we'll come back to you as this develops. first, i want to turn to bill pass quer el. >> ronan, how are you? >> doing well. i wanted to get to a few questions here. in addition to the news that sampson and another figure tied to this was nearly subpoenaeded in manhattan, michael isikoff
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told us they were digging into bill stepien's record and we learned that includes everything including rent payments. how consuming has this investigation come for your state? >> i think it's going to drag on as was predicted. you have different bodies, legislatures looking into it. the u.s. attorney is investigating, port authority is looking into this as well. but the fact of the matter is, the longer this goes on, does not necessarily help the governor. it may help the witnesses that were in the court today, whether it be bridget kelly or whether it be mr. stepien, and the more they do not put on the record what they know and what they can produce and at the same time protecting their own rights because that's critical in all of these cases, it's going to take a long time. i think it erodes the trust in
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the administration that presently exists in trenton. >> very quickly, congressman, to what extent are you feeling the effects of this investigation being a distraction? you mentioned wanting to move on from this. that seems unlikely as you just described. do you think this is damaging to the other very important policy needs that new jerseyite should see attended to? >> absolutely. it moved into the area of sandy dollars and how they will be spent in the future. there's no question that various law firms that have been connected with the governor, some of those law firms have people within the administration or connected to the administration. so this goes on and on. i've always said from the very beginning as damning as this situation is, regardless whether the governor is directly involved or not, it puts his administration under a new microscope that people looking
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at the more you get into other issues, the more damning it becomes. i think the worst thing that's going to happen is when people see how many issues are involved or connected to this administration. i think that's the tell tale thing. we want to follow the constitution but people have a right to know these things. >> bill pass cell of new jersey. appreciate you joining us today. >> all right, ronan. >> a new report is causing a lot of waves, it highlights the impact the syrian war is having on its youngest victims. that is the subject of our call to action and you'll hear more much about that report and what you can do to take a stand right after the break. stay with us. if i can impart one lesson to a
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gate state of colorado. the first numbers are in since recreational pot became legal and the marijuana industry is making a lot of money. from the $14 million spent on recreational pot use alone in january and recreational and medicinal pot, the state raked in more than $3.5 million in taxes and fees. that is a lot of green. in line with expectations but at the high end and there are reasons to expect once licenses are in place and awareness of shops increases that that number could go up. are other states inspired by the gold rush, medical marijuana is legal in colorado but jerry brown said that he's worried about the larger effects of a pot head population on society. >> all of a sudden if there's advertising and legitimacy, how many people can get stoned and still have a great state or great nation? world is pretty dangerous and very competitive. we need to stay alert, if not 24
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hours a day, more than some of the pot heads might be able to put together. >> how many people can stay stoned and still have a great nation? i don't know, i think that's probably a lot. lieutenant governor gavin newsom disagreed and sees incentive for legalizing pot as states to the north and south of california have already done. take a listen. >> for almost 20 years now we sat back admiring our accomplishment while the world, the nation and states like colorado and washington have passed us by. it's time to legalize and time to tax. time to regulate marijuana for adults in california. >> so exactly how much money are other states losing by not following colorado's model? joining me is nathanty vert, a
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pro pot lobbyist, described as the don draper of pot. does he look as good in a suit? you judge. a state like california netted up to $105 million in 2012 on taxes from medicinal marijuana alone, which is already legal. are they missing out on a big opportunity to legalize recreational marijuana and benefit from potentially hundreds and millions of dollars more? >> without a doubt. you know, this is an incredibly popular product. right now it's being largely sold in an underground market where it is going to cartels and other criminal enterprises when it could be going to legitimate tax paying businesses creating legal jobs and really putting that money back into our community. >> let's talk more about that. in colorado, that money is going to schools, big chunk of it. specific earmark for building of schools and what kind of economic could you see it
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having? what would you like to see earmarked for benefit from those revenues? >> well, ultimately this going to come down to each state and how they feel is most appropriate when it comes to distributing the taxes and what the tax rate should be. it's obviously important that we don't overtax this product to the extent that the underground market persists but at the same time we are going to see things change and start to see people treating marijuana more like alcohol where the cost is simply the cost, that they grow accustomed to. whether that money goes toward public school construction or transportation and roads or drug treatment from people suffering from alcoholism and other substance abuse, there's really a whole lot of things we could be doing with the money as opposed to just flushing it down the toilet quite frankly into the underground market. >> this thursday denver will roll the first ever marijuana themed job fair called
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cannisearch, what kind of effect is the pot legalization movement having on job numbers? could that be a positive impact of this? >> without a doubt. you're talking about hundreds of new businesses, each of them having from three to 50 employees, this is a lot of people who have jobs who are perhaps no longer receiving unemployment, who are now paying taxes and it's really a huge benefit. this is not to mention the amount of business that's now being generated for ancillary industries, things like contractors, the construction industry, real estate, financial and acting services, all of these new legal marijuana businesses require those services just like any other business. and as a result it's really a much bigger impact for our economy than just the tax revenue itself. >> all right, mason tvert, thanks for joining us. >> three new public service
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announcement started to air this week in colorado, driving under the influence of marijuana and come with a little dash of humor. take a look at one. >> look, installing tvs is hard. the legalization of pot is reshaping state finances in colorado but also reshaping family finances in some cases too and not just tv installation. we want to introduce you to one family among the first americans to become millionaires in the legal pot business. discovered them thanks to our collaboration with a media startup company whose technology penetrates the deep web, the hidden part of the internet that conventional search engines cannot reach and that's where we found colorado's first family of pot. take a listen. >> this is a normal night after
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work in my family. >> become more silly when we're smoking a bowl. it doesn't intox indicate or debill tate us in any way. feed rubbed and hair pulled. it's not weird. she's my daughter. >> we are the first family of weed. >> medicine can i help you? i'm kayla williams, i'm a front door pit bull. >> have you changed anybody since you got your red card? >> i've been smoking since i was 13, constantly, i can smoke snoop dogg under the table. >> i do quality control at
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medicine man. >> he's hip. he knows the lingo. >> both of my kids live with me and work with me. i'm coo, coordinator of operations. i do the least out of all three of us. i bring lunch. here we go into the warehouse. a site very few people get to see. we've gotten it down to more of a science. in this room we have where we'll make all of our babies from. lockers and uniforms for all of the growers. they change their uniforms twice a day so we don't cross contaminate our rooms. it's real important not to carry molds or bugs from room to room. it's just beautiful. >> i remember sitting around the fireplace making drawings for these different pieces of equipment. and everything is hand watered. they'll take a piece of wire and bend this plant over here so it
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fills up the spot. we'll have continuous carpet of buds, which is a sea of green. plants need co2 which yields a 20% increase in output so it's very much worth it. >> it's crazy, i never would have thought my dad divorced my mom and started growing in our basement and that's where it started, just him with his little ideas tinkering around. we thought, this could make us some money and we should ask grandpa about that. >> what has happened here is beyond my wildest imagination. the five or six of us started out around that little table trimming and thinking how are we ever going to make any money. >> i haven't told everyone. it's kind of a touchy situation because some people don't believe in marijuana. >> old ladies who thought, pot, pot, oh, my arthritis, maybe i should try that. it's like a pharmacy. it's safe and it's discreet and everything like that, even
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though it doesn't have to be. colorado is out, we're open. >> we have the 20,000 square feet and we have another 20,000 square feet and we're going to more than double what we're making right now on this new site. >> i feel very proud and happy, this is my family business. >> we all do it together. pot brings people together. >> they are going to be owners of this place once i'm gone. i'm very proud of my kids. >> pot in the back is so beautiful. >> so beautiful. we want to thank our friends for that work on that story. you can see more reporting by logging into vok tif.com or staying with us for future episodes. that leads us to the battle of the day. should we legalize marijuana nationwide? is it time? weigh in by choosing rfd weed yes or hash tag rfd weed no.
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we'll update and share your responses throughout the show. stick with us. and up next on ronan farrow daily, the call to action on syria's children. a shocking video and important call for you to get involved with. still more questions than answers on today's news about the malaysian airliner that disappeared. we will have the latest right when we come back. stay with us. your first breath, your first grasp, your first smile... we were there. your first roll, your first friend, we were there too. and swaddlers blanket-like softness, that you've loved since day one, is now available through size 5, for many more firsts to come. ♪ wishing you love, sleep & play. pampers. you raise her spirits.
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the rest are struggling to treat hundreds and thousands wounded in the fighting. the report finds syria's health system is in such disarray we have heard reports of doctors using old clothes for bandages and patients opting to be knocked unconscious with metal bars because there are no anesthetics. save the children released a startling video and we gave you a sneak peek yesterday. now we want to show you in full, take a look. >> happy birthday to you! >> make a wish. >> grammy. >> have you done your homework? >> here he comes. >> have a nice day at school.
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>> rebel position. >> what's happening? [ sneezing ] >> where are we? daddy! >> happy birthday to you. make a wish, darling.
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>> the most arresting thing about that ad, these are from actual case studies collected. tell us how to make sense of this and when you can do to get involved. michael closen, someone i've worked with over the years, we go back to afghanistan. good to see you. it's been a busy hour with a lot of breaking news so we don't have as long as i like on this. i did want to ask a few questions. this conflict in syria devastated the health care infrastructure, how many children died as a result? >> 10,000 children that have died from bullets and bombs and then there's -- we don't have a precise count of how many died as a result of the health system collapsing. as your statistics show, half of the hospitals damaged or destroyed, those still standing, very few doctors left. what we're seeing is reemergence
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of childhood illnesses long irradiated. polio is back, and we've seen measles come back. there's a lot of suggestions that children are very much at risk for acute respiratory diseases and polio and measles. in a war zone it's difficult to collect precise statistics so i think the number that i've seen, there's a syrian american medical association that estimated about 200,000 people have died from preventible causes were the health system not collapsing. and i think certainly a significant portion of that are children. >> and you mentioned polio, which was irradiated in 1995. it has affected more than 80,000 children, my own brother is paraplegic from polio, i can speak personally about this disease. do you think it poses a threat to the national spread of polio? >> there's very dire and 25
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confirmed cases and up to 80,000 children affected. fortunately there ab ha move afoot, able to go door to door and provide the oral vaccine that children need. but to immunize a child against polio is not the one dosage, you need multiple dosages. so that is very difficult to accomplish in circumstances such as this. and i think we're already seeing reports of possible spread of polio outside of syria. i think i saw on your news a little while ago that there was a suspected case of polio in lebanon. it's children are very much in risk in syria. we need to see a much more organized immunization campaign, not only for polio but all of the other childhood illnesses that are appearing in the fighting zone. that also needs to be dealt with in the region as a whole. >> that is work that save the children is involved in. you can go to their website to
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get involved, thank you for everything that your group stands for and thank you for joining us today, michael. >> thank you, thanks for focusing on this important story. >> as a reminder our call to action is to fade out your avatar on facebook or twitter and go to the quts roen an far row daily web pages. we're learning more about the two men boarding that missing malaysian plane. they had stolen passports and we have the latest on the investigation into what they were up to. life's an adventure when you're with her.
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has begun. so, it's time to expect more. more space. ♪ more leading-edge technology. ♪ and more style. the lexus es. get great offers on your favorite lexus models, now through march 31st. this is the pursuit of perfection. the president has great confidence in john brennan and confidence in our intelligence community and in professionals at the cia. >> that was white house press secretary jay carney responding to questions moments ago about
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allegations that the cia was spying on members of congress. john brennan denied those allegations earlier and brennan also weighed in on the mysterious disappearance of that flight in malaysia. he told this to nbc's andrea mitchell. >> we are looking at it very carefully. we are working with fbi and tsa and others and malaysian counterparts are doing everything they can to put together the pieces here but clearly this is still a mystery, which is very disturbing. until we can find out where that aircraft is, we might have an opportunity to do some of the forensic analysis that will lead us in the right direction. >> at this point you're not ruling out it could be -- >> no, not at all. >> that was director brennan telling us he is not ruling out terrorism, but authorities in malaysia say the two men who boarded malaysian airlines flight 370 with stolen passports have no link to terror groups. four days after the flight went missing with 239 people on board, we're learning more about
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those two passengers who boarded with stolen passports. one of them was a 19-year-old iranian trying to migrate to germany and reported him to authorities when he never arrived. the other man is identified as a 29-year-old also with an iranian passport, ip ter poll released this picture and confirmed their identities with iranian authorities. they described several scenarios that could have happened aboard the flight that caused it to vanish. they are expanding the search to the gulf of thailand and to the strait of malacca. we'll continue to follow that as the story develops. a lot of mysteries here. which is making the zeros and heroes. stay with us to find out after the break. no expert. that would be my daughter -- hi dad. she's a dietitian. and back when i wasn't eating right, she got me drinking boost. it's got a great taste,
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welcome back, folks.
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it's that time. today's heros and zeros. here at "ronan farrow daily" we're lucky to be surrounded by what are called alpha women. hi to say that or there would be no more guests on this show. some people and not just men still tell young girls not to be bows, and that is why facebook big wig sheryl sand derg is work with the girl scouts and lifetime tv to create a campaign that says bossy little girls may be showing leadership. between elementary and high school, girls' self-esteem declines more than boys' self-esteem. i don't know, mine is still going down pretty fast. the group's psa spells out the impact. take a listen. >> i want to ask the questions that change the whole conversation. >> here's where i'll start to doubt my level? where's where i'll start being interrupted. >> her's where i'll stop raising my hand. >> and here's where my voice was getting called the. >> being called stubborn. >> aggressive. >> know it all.
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>> bossy. >> being smart operators the group pulled in famous types and someone who grew up with seven sisters and now works under the iron fist of our lovely executive producer kathy "bossy pants" o'hearn i know a thing or two about this subject, bossy, i mean rather assertive rather, women, are our heros of the day. first up, next up, i'll turn to a different character, a young man i'm hesitant to judge but in new tapes is showing a petulance and a failure to use what could be a huge platform for good and merits a little discussion. let's take a lill listen to this individual in court this week. >> sir, i -- >> don't ask me about it -- don't ask me about her again. don't ask me about her again. don't ask me about her again. >> we'll take a break. >> the press is now describing him as petulant. they are describing him as entitled. look, when an impressionable teenager becomes a superstar it is a recipe for a human time
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bomb. i spent a childhood getting rammed through paparazzi on the way to school. i understand as much as anyone how difficult it is to grow up in the spotlight. so i have sympathy for mr. bieber, but, still, a great big platform comes with great big responsibilities, and he could be making a lot of good happen for all of those young girls and boys that look up to him. so, he gets a provisional zero, and we hope that he'll improve his behavior. >> let's check in for the last time today on the battle of the day. the question, legalized pot or not? and the winner, rfd weed yes with more than 90%. everybody wants to get high. rocky was one of the few who picked rfd. sooner or later the usa will be known for its drug use and not its freedom and rights. it should not be legal. mittens, on the other hand tweeted yes and said we should legalize having a joint or bowl at home should be legal. i am 60 and i love pot,
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medicinal or not. thank you to everyone who weighed in today. all right. that wraps things up for today's "ronan farrow daily." the reid report" is up next.
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♪ see what's new at projectluna.com
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happy tuesday, reeders. this is "the reid report." immigration reform and why some of its biggest supporters in the hispanic community are taking aim at president obama? and later florida and the first election of the 2014 mid--terms. more than $10 million spent in total on just one house race. we'll explain why. but, first, a story that exploded on to the senate floor this morning. did the cia spy on congress? specifically the committee designed to oversee the activities of the spy agency. that's the charge senate intelligence committee chair worm dianne feinstein leveled today against the agency. while the intel agenc a

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