tv Way Too Early MSNBC November 25, 2015 2:30am-3:01am PST
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because i watch this stuff. you know, i'm like a guy with vision. and we took him out. we'd have two beautiful buildings standing there instead of one okay building, all right? a friend of mine called, who is very political, he said forget that. you're the first guy that really predicted terrorism. i said, in that same book, i said this is what's going to -- because i can feel it. my father always used to say -- >> we'll hear much more from another raucous appearance in south carolina. it is 5:30 on the east coast, 2:30 out west and a windy morning here in paris. this is "way too early." wednesday, november 25th, i'm chris jansing, live once again from the city of light, where we're covering more than 100 indictments in the wake of last friday's terror attacks. we'll have that story and more on the growing tension over the shootdown of a russian warplane in just a moment but we want to begin this morning in chicago. because last night anger spilled out onto the streets hours after officials released disturbing dash cam footage showing a white police officer opening fire on a black teenager, striking him 16 times, and killing him.
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earlier in the day the officer, jason van dyke, was ordered held without bond on first degree murder charges in the 2014 shooting. nbc's stephanie gosk has the details. >> reporter: this dash cam video captures the scene last october, when chicago police officer jason van dyke fired his nine millimeter handgun at 17-year-old laquan mcdonald. >> this defendant's actions were not justified, and they were not a proper use of deadly force by this police officer. >> reporter: mcdonald died on his way to the hospital. more than a year later van dyke was charged with first degree murder. and held without bail. and the graphic dash cam video of the shooting was made public. >> it is graphic. it is violent. it is chilling. >> reporter: mcdonald took pcp that night and was carrying a three inch blade when he was confronted here by police. the prosecutor says officer van dyke fired 16 rounds, roughly a bullet a second, and that for 13
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seconds during the shooting the teenager had already fallen to the ground. the coroner's report shows mcdonald's gunshot wounds. at least two were in the back. officer van dyke's attorney says the cop feared for his life. >> it's truly not a murder case, and we feel that we're going to be very successful in defending this case. >> reporter: six months ago the city paid mcdonald's family a $5 million settlement without agreeing to any wrongdoing. even though there was never a lawsuit filed. the victim's family did not want the video released, and today in a statement urged calm. if you choose to speak out we urge you to be peaceful. >> will we use this episode in this moment to build bridges that bring us together as a city? or we allow it to become a way that erects barriers that tears us apart as a city. >> now last year's shooting wasn't the first time that van dyke was subject to an internal affairs review. the nbc chicago affiliate cites city records that show at least
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20 citizen complaints have been filed against him in his 14-year career with the chicago p.d. although he was never disciplined. four of those investigations may still be open. van dyke now faces a potential penalty of life in prison, if convicted. and protests over the police shooting of 24-year-old jamar clark in minneapolis were mostly calm last night. the march and the concert, came after five people were shot near a black lives matter protest the night before. the group claims the attackers wore masks and targeted them because of their race. >> white supremacists had already begun visiting in the preceding weeks. they have posted videos threatening anyone who believes that black lives matter here. but we will not bow to fear or intimidation. black lives matter exists to fight against this type of violent white supremacy, dangerous anti-black rhetoric, and -- >> yesterday police took two more men into custody for questioning another man is still being held and a fourth has been
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released. the officers involved in the shooting death of jamar clark have claimed clark tried to grab their guns. nato and the u.n. are both seeking calm and warning against an escalation after turkey shot down a russian warplane along the border with syria yesterday. the turkish air force says the plane violated their airspace and ignored ten warnings to leave. a claim the u.s. military confirms. the turkish ministry of defense is pointing to a radar image they say shows the path of the plane as it flew over turkey. after being hit the two russian pilots did manage to eject but they floated down into hostile territory. so-called moderate rebels claim they fired at the pilots as they parachuted to the ground. at least one pilot was killed by gunfire. the russian government says the other pilot was picked up by the syrian army commandos alive and has been returned to russia's air base there. the rebels also fired at a russian search and rescue
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helicopter killing one serviceman. russian president vladimir putin called the takedown of the warplane a quote, stab in the back, and is sending in new air defense systems. russia, of course, has a long history of violating airspace in turkey, including two incidents in as many days just last month. during a news conference with the french president yesterday, president obama addressed russia's role in syria, and pointed out that russia is acting outside of nato. >> we've got a coalition. of 65 countries. who've been active in pushing back against isil for quite some time. russia right now is a coalition of two. iran and russia supporting assad. i think it's important to remember that you've got a global coalition organized, russia's the outlier. we hope that they refocus their
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attention on what is the most substantial threat. and that they serve as a constructive partner. >> meanwhile, france continues its airstrikes against isis targets in both iraq and syria. the french military have confirmed that their jets have destroyed an isis command center just west of mosul. according to the french defense ministry the air assault was conducted jointly with the u.s. air force. france also conducted airstrikes late yesterday on raqqah, syria. the french military released this video showing the strikes, targeting an isis command center and a vehicle storage area. newspapers in belgium are reporting that sunday's raids foiled a series of likely terror attacks targeting brussels. while only one person was charged, authorities say the terrorists network is taken. and the investigation is ongoing. but its main goal now would be to identify as many members of the cell as possible. all this happening as police search for this man, 30-year-old mohamed abrini. police say he was filmed
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alongside suspect salah abdeslam two days before the november 13th attacks at a gas station along the highway to paris. he is considered armed and dangerous. in brussels this morning, some schools and mass transit are back open. let's go to cnbc's julia chatterley, who is live in brussels. julia, good morning. what's the latest on the manhunt there? and also is there a sense that the crackdown has worked or has it gone too far? >> thanks, chris. well, as you pointed out, there are actually two key developments here in brussels. the first is that the ongoing manhunt here has been expanded. the police here now searching for a second suspect. the man mohamed abrini. now, as you said, he was caught on camera two days prior to those terror attacks with the first suspect in this manhunt, the man salah abdeslam. so both men now being sought by the police here in belgium. the other development is that, of course, despite operating
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under this extreme security alert level, the measures that were put down, the lockdown measures that were put in place, are being pulled back. so schools have opened here today. also the subway, around half the subway stations have reopened. i went down there to talk to people just to get a sense of how they're feeling, and very much to your point, actually, one man said to me look this whole thing has been a total overreaction. the police totally overestimating the dangers here. yet, to counter that, one woman said to me she was completely baffled because if we still fear an imminent terrorist attack at this moment, why are the schools reopening and why are the subways reopening? and she quite accurately put it, i think, are we at risk here or aren't we? i think that's a fair question in this environment. it clearly underscores there's still a lot of uncertainty. but the bottom line here is the manhunt is now focusing on two men in particular. we've also got this extreme level of security alert, but at the same time, this is a city trying to return to some level of normality. chris, back to you.
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>> julia chatterley, live from brussels. thank you very much. and now for the latest news on the terror investigations in europe. scores of french police officers raided the home of a man suspected of links to the paris attacks. his name collivier corell. he's 69 years old. officials believe he sheltered the man reported to be the voice on the islamic state's french language claim of responsibility for these terrorist attacks. according to the ap, 70 police officers took part in the raid. referred to in the french press as the white emer, he is said to practice an up extra orthodox version of islam and has been questioned in the past by police. he is also believed to have figured in the religious life of mohammed mira who killed a rabbi and three children at a jewish school as well as three paratroopers in southern france in 2012. a judicial official said that corell was jailed for illegally holding a hunting rifle. he can be held for up to four days. that arrest comes as the french state of emergency increases its
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police power. the french interior minister reported to parliament yesterday more than 1200 searches have taken place, 165 people taken into custody, 124 of them indicted since the attacks, while seizing, quote, weapons of war, like automatic rifles and explosives. and france's leading muslim body has plans to create a permit to preach for imams in a bid to root out extremists and promote a quote, tolerant and open islam. the president of the french muslim council said the country's imams should get a certificate, kind of like a driver's license. yesterday the french interior minister met with the president of the french muslim council in paris, and said they were acting together to protect muslims, quote, hurt by the deflection of their religion. tunisia's president mean time has declared a 30-day state of emergency in his country after a bomb tore through a bus full of presidential guards in the heart of the country's capital of tunis during the evening rush hour at least 12 people were
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killed, 20 others wounded. there was no immediate claim of responsibility for the blast which is just the latest in a series of brutal attacks to strike that north african country. the islamic state has claimed credit for two of those deadly attacks just this year. including one by a gunman who killed 38 tourists at a beach resort in june. speaking at a televised address last night the tunisian president told the nation it was at war against terrorism. and as we mentioned the presidents of france and the united states met at the white house yesterday for the first time since the attacks in paris where president obama praised america's oldest ally. both spoke about their resolve against terrorism. >> when tragedy struck that evening, our hearts broke, too. in that stadium and concert hall, in those restaurants and cafes, we see our own. in the face of the french people we see ourselves. we've never forgotten how the french people stood with us
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after 9/11, and today we stand with you. [ speaking french ] as americans we all have a role to play in how we respond to threats. groups like isil cannot defeat us on the battlefield, so they try to terrorize us at home. against soft targets, against civilians, against innocent people. even as we're vigilant, we cannot and we will not succumb to fear. nor can we allow fear to divide us. for that's how terrorists win. americans will not be terrorized. >> translator: it is true at 9/11, we all felt americans. but after the 13th of november, americans felt french. our two peoples, together,
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merged as one, sharing the same emotion, and also the same willingness to fight for freedom, to stand for our values. >> president obama also saluted the people of paris for their resilience and he invoked the french while trying to calm the political uproar around the refugee crisis in the u.s. >> i want to note that under president hollande france plans to welcome 30,000 additional syrian refugees over the next two years on the statue of liberty, a gift from the people of france, there are words we know so well. give me your tired, your poor, your huddled masses yearning to be free. that's the spirit that makes us americans. that's the spirit that binds us to france. >> still ahead on "way too early," donald trump brings the family along for a campaign
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swing through south carolina. and those aren't the only people who joined him onstage. >> i'll tell you what, this is what i call a real supporter. wow. >> we'll show you how that moment came about. plus, bill karins is here with the weather forecast for the busiest travel day of the year. that and much more, when "way too early" comes right back.
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donald trump is sticking to his story that thousands of people celebrated in new jersey as the twin towers fell on 9/11. and last night, at a rally in south carolina, he again read aloud from a september 2001 "washington post" story that referenced reports of people celebrating the attacks. trump used that article as evidence, despite the fact that the new jersey attorney general at the time says definitively reports of people dancing on
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rooftops and in the streets are false. and that the celebrations never happened. >> i took a little bit of heat, carson said yes he saw it and then he said no, no, his mind wasn't thinking right and he took back. i took heat because i said in new jersey and in jersey city, i said very -- you know, very strongly and very correctly, i said there are people over there, and they were dancing in the street. and they were dancing on rooftops. so what happens is "the washington post" writes an article. and they're talking about northern new jersey, draws the -- written by a nice reporter now the poor guy you got to see this guy. oh, i don't know what i said. oh, i don't remember. he's going like i don't remember. oh, maybe that's what i said. this is 14 years ago, he's still -- they didn't do a retraction. >> and in an interview with breitbart news, trump's campaign manager blames the media for suppressing the truth saying, quote, for the mainstream media
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to go out and say that this didn't happen is just factually inaccurate. we know it happened. and for the first time on campaign members of trump's family joined him onstage at one of his rallies, his wife melania addressed the audience briefly but after her husband took over it quickly turned into the kind of trump spectacle we've grown to expect. >> i just want to thank my family. and i have other members of my family that aren't here. but they have been so supportive. it's incredible. and i just want to thank you, and melania, i want to thank you. and i want to thank barron for all of your support. would you like to say hello? come on, say hello. >> good evening. isn't he the best? he will be the best president ever. we love you.
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>> oh, no. come here. this is what i call a real supporter. wow. thank you, man. are you married? are you happy with your husband? she said yes! she fantasizes that he's really the real donald trump. can you -- >> bill karins is back in the studio with the weather. serious stuff, a lot of people are traveling. but maybe on this remembering from my childhood is that donald trump hair or dennis the menace hair? >> yeah, it kind of did look like that. a bad donald trump wig, right? the rallies are entertaining, chris. >> is there any other kind? >> i know, exactly. all right let's talk about the storm system that's going to plague a lot of us as we try to go through our travel weekend. if you're on the east coast,
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fine, no problems at all. probably the best travel you've had for a thanksgiving in awhile. a storm that's in the west, that is going to push across the country. that is the one that's going to be giving us the issues today in areas of idaho and eventually some of that snow is going to push into wyoming. the heaviest snow totals here possibly from jackson hole. interstate 15 will be one of the worst drives north of salt lake city today and then denver southward will also be a problem. also pictures in of these huge waves yesterday, they call this the king tides. they happen occasionally and they were up yesterday. look at the waves crashing on the shore. pretty amazing stuff. and some homes had some minor damage. but look at that. wouldn't want that to be your deck. as far as the travel weather goes, thursday is the really bad today. today's minor problems. but we could see an ice storm or actually should see on ice storm from amarillo to wichita to omaha just north of kansas city, just south of minneapolis. that's where you're going to be dealing on thursday with driving in very icy conditions, chris. middle of the country is going to have the problems. airports, possibly dallas, houston and chicago dealing with
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rain and delays, too. today is fine. thanksgiving day, not so easy to travel. >> all right. well, good day to stay home, watch football and eat a second helping of turkey. thank you, bill. and still ahead, some of the biggest names in movies, music, sports, politics, all of them honored with this nation's highest civilian honor. that's when "way too early" comes right back. it takes a lot of work... to run this business. i'm on the move all day long...
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at the white house yesterday president obama awarded 17 great americans with the presidential medal of freedom. from entertainers like barbra streisand, james taylor and steven spielberg to politicians like senator barb were mikulski the longest serving woman in congressional history, athletes like willie mays and the late yogi berra, as well as the oldest recipient, 97-year-old mathematician katherine johnson who helped chart the first nasa space flight. >> this is an extraordinary group. even by the standards of medal of freedom recipients, this is a class act. we are just reminded, when we see these individuals here on the stage, you know, what an incredible tapestry this country is. they represent what's best in us. and we are very, very proud to be able to celebrate them here today.
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>> the white house is usually not that crowded. not surprising, though. that does it for me and "way too early." coming up on "morning joe" we'll have the latest on the stepped up measures in europe to track down anyone else connected to the attacks here in paris. plus russia reveals new information on the fate of those fighter pilots, whose jet was shot down by turkey. also the latest from chicago where tensions are threatening to boil over, after police release dash cam video that shows an officer repeatedly shooting a black teenager. all that, and much more, coming up next on "morning joe." ♪ ♪ [ girl ] my mom, she makes underwater fans that are powered by the moon. ♪ [ birds squawking ] my mom makes airplane engines that can talk.
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i don't plan on slowing down any time soon. stay strong. stay active with boost. now try new boost® compact and 100 calories. i said, osama bin laden, gotta watch him. bad guy. because i watch this stuff. i'm like a guy with vision. if we took him out we'd have two beautiful buildings stands there, instead of one okay, building, all right? a friend of mine called who's very political. he said forget that you're the first guy that really predicted terrorism. i said, in that same book, i said this is what's going to -- because i can feel it.
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my father -- >> good morning. it is wednesday, november 25th. welcome to "morning joe." with us on set, we have former communications director for presidents george w. director president george w. bush nicole wallace and former treasury steve and in washington columnist and associate editor for the washington post, david. that was donald trump tripling, quadrupling down on some of the stories that concern me. should we get to the latest news overnight? >> yeah. i'm sure your father is now off of trump, right? >> no. >> i'm being sarcastic. >> i think he's won arguments in the eyes of the supporters. i don't think any of the supporters were unsatisfied when we waived around that paragraph. >> i think we've been talking
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