tv MSNBC Live MSNBC August 5, 2016 11:00am-12:01pm PDT
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back. our team is following the breaking developments of this story. i want to go first to tammy leitner live in chicago. we first have to warn viewers. the video is graphic so walk us through exactly what happened on july 28th. >> we just got this video an hour ago. they released nine clips. these clips are from the dash cams of the police cruisers and the body cameras. it really shows you what happened in the moments leading up to the shooting, during the shooting and after the shooting. this first clip is when police identified the suspect paul o'neill in a stolen car. he drives by them, nearly hits them and one of the officers gets out and starts shooting. let's watch that clip. >> so the next clip of
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videoyou'll see is the same thing but from a different angle on a body camera. after that, you'll see the same thing on a different angle from the dash cam. let's watch those. [ gunshots ] get the [ bleep ] down. >> in the next moments the suspect crashes the car. he then gets out of the car. he starts running. that's when the police officers pursue him. a number of police officers start chasing after him. they are jumping over fences, you hear gunfire and multiple shots. that's when the suspect is shot. he's then taken into custody. now what you also see is once he's on the ground and in police custody, police appear to kick
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at him. and his head is pushed to the ground. now this video we have still been going through it. it's been released a short while ago. the attorney representing paul o'neill's family went ahead and spoke this afternoon after watching the video with the family. let's listen to what e he had to say. >> we just watched, the family watched the execution of their loving son. it is one of the most horrific things that i have seen aside from being in a movie. these police officers decided to play judge, jury and executioner. the family was o so distraught and understandably so that they have left. >> as you can imagine, a very difficult thing for paul
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o'neill's family to watch. his mother and sister showed up to watch and couldn't make it through all the video clips. we're told they watched about 15 minutes and then his mother and his sister broke down crying. stephanie, his mother and sister were supposed to talk to us after watching the video clips and were too distraught to do that. >> what's the status of the police officers who were involved in the shooting? >> unlike the other police shoot thags have happened here in chicago, those three officers involved were immediately put on desk duty and stripped of their ability to carry a gun and carry a badge. so that investigation is still ongoing. but like i said, unlike the other police shootings, this happened very quickly. the video was released just eight days after the shooting, which is completely different than all the other police shootings that have led up to this one. >> different how? >> because we saw it immediately after. the other shootings it took about 14 months for the video to be released.
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there was outrage by the community. there were protests. there were a lot of things that led up to that video eventually being released. like i said, this was released eight days after the shooting. very, very different than in the other ones. >> tammy leitner, thank you for joining us. a tragic story. i want to stay on this and bring in msnbc's chief legal correspondent ari melber. when you saw that video, ta graphic video, what stood out to you from a legal perspective? >> the most important legal event is the shooting at the moving car. to pick up on the point you were discussing as well, all of this is new and different because of the outrage over the mcdonald shooting, the 17-year-old shot 16 times, including while laying on the ground. there's a murder case now against the officer. so what we're seeing today, what is different is that chicago city and police responded by putting out a new policy in trying to deal with this differently. that's a sea change in how we
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look at this. before i show a key part of the video, i want to put up the use of force policy of the chicago p.d. so the vehicle is the only force used against the officer. the other person is prohibited. you cannot shoot at a car just because it is driving fast or fleeing the police. which of course, is illegal. if the police want to pull you over for any reason, you have a legal obligation to pull over, but the point is the entire reaction cannot be under chicago police rules. the use of deadly force adds to something else. something like someone pointing a a gun out of the video. now that you understand that's the rules of chicago p.d., they wrote the rules. let's look at the key portion of the video. we can put it up here. we'll see from inside the car. we should see the officer's gun. i want to roll that. you'll be able to see what leads
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up to that shooting into the car, if if we have that. so what you see here is inside the car, they are driving down. you'll see the gun on camera and then hear -- this is the key part. gets out of the car, fires repeatedly into the moving jaguar. so that right there is key because out of what we have on the video is a violation of policy. it's what in police jargon is a bad shoot. that's not a shot you're supposed to take. that doesn't mean it's a murder. obviously, we don't have the shots that ultimately led to the homicide on camera. those occurred off camera. >> i want you to talk about those. we see the chase. we know o'neill is on the ground. but the moments in between the shots fired, what kind of information there that we haven't seen could be crucial? if you look at this video, now the public has seen it. it's a damning video. >> it's a damning video. even the chicago police oversight leaders have said so.
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this video shows essentially violations of the rules of bad policing in the pursuit. this video in and of itself tells us very little about these shots that were the homicide that led to this 18-year-old's death. we don't have enough. to be clear is audio. we have the off site audio of the multiple shots. we have an autopsy he was shot in the back. that looks bad for police. having said that, we don't know what happened in it that moment. we don't know the video of seeing that and seeing that could go in the cop's favor. then still after that there was a shot in the back or against the cop's favor if it e showed, again, what we see in the lead up which is someone e fleeing. you can't use deadly force against a fleeing suspect absent a deadly threat. >> i think we still have tammy leitner with us. why don't we the footage of the shots fired when paul died? >> at this point, we know that
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there are dozens of video clips. they are still going through all of these clips. one important thing to note is that the three officers that were involved in the shooting only two of them had body cam video that actually worked. the third officer we're told his video did not work. it's important to point out this district only got these body cam cameras about a week prior to these shootings. so they are say iing it was simy an accident that this officer did not roll his body cam video. it's very important to note that to start these body cam videos, you have to click it twice. to stop it, you click it once. so what they are saying is that the officer made a mistake. the video was new. he wasn't exactly sure how to use it. that's why one of those video clips possibly a crucial one is missing. >> so tammy leitner says a crucial video is missing, but cloerly the world has now seen this video, very rare to see a video like this released eight
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days after it happened. will it be possible for these officers to get a fair trial assuming that they are charged. can they get a fair trial now that the whole world has seen this? >> i think they can. we have seen many instances paints one picture and if anything what we generally see is judges and juries alike if officers are given the benefit of the doubt. there wasn't video of freddie gray's death but video of him being dragged into the car. but in several trials the officers were acquitted based on the evidence. i don't think -- there's no data that suggests that public transparency about police shootings increases the likelihood inning ing ning a gry of police being found guilty. people necessarily are not likely to convict officers unless there's overwhelming evidence of wrong doing and
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there's good reason. we ask officers to protect us. benefit of the doubt goes to the officer. if something is way worse, then people start to have a rethinking. so again, the broad picture for folks at home going this feels different, it is different. we are look iing at essentially the results of in chicago the mcdonald controversy, which now has a murder case attached to it. but that was a rare first-degree murder charge and more widely the debates over policing in black lives matter are leading to more transparency. it's certainly changing the way we hear about these incidents of police shootings. >> i don't want to hear about anymore incidents. we never want to see an 18-year-old lose his life. ari melber, thank you, and tammy leitner in chicago. just a short while ago, hillary clinton addressed the national association of black and la e tee know journalists in washington, d.c. she was asked about a recent interview where she asserted
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that fbi director had declared her public remarks about her e-mail server, quote, truthful. take a look. >> what i told the fbi, which he said was truthful, is consistent with what i have said publicly. so i may have short circuited and for that, i will try to clarify because i think chris wallace and i were probably talking past each other because of course he could only talk to what i had told the fbi and i appreciated that. >> kristen welker was one of the moderators at today's event and joins me now via phone as she makes her way back to the white house. a rare opportunity to ask some questions of hillary clinton. help me understand. do you feel she answered your questions about the e-mails? because there's so many questions. there's to so many answers. yet we still don't feel like we know exactly what happened. we need clarity here. >> i think she did try to clarify that interview that she did with fox news in one way
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which is that she did separate her testimony to the fbi to what she had told the american public. in that initial interview, she made the point she may have combined those two thoughts. so in that sense, she did try to clarify and she still maintains what she told the american public was consistent with what she told the fbi. the director said the e-mails were marked classified. that's what continues to be challenging for secretary clinton. this all plays into the trust issue. voters saying they are struggling to trust her. she was asked about that issue of trust as well to one of my colleagues, take a listen. >> the nation where a majority of americans mistrust you. what extra responsibility might you have to show that you're up to the task. >> well, let me start by saying every time i have done a job, people have counted on me and
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trusted me. maybe, just maybe, when i'm actually running for a job there is a real benefit to those on the other side in trying to stir up as much concern as possible. >> she also touched on a numb of other issues including immigration reform, the first 100 days going through detail about how she plans to do that. she was also asked what her most meaningful conversation was with an african-american said she has a number of friends and she's blessed to have a great crew. and everyone laughed when they said they helped to expand her taste in music. a light moment there, but very serious interaction where she got a number of questions about a number of pressing topics speaking to the african-american journalists associations. donald trump was also invited to this event and as far as we
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know, he's not going to attend. >> i'm kind of interested. i'd like to hear hillary clinton's spotify play list. >> absolutely. that's for the next press conference we have with her. >> she opened the door to say she's got sort of a diverse music mix in there. next interview, i want that spotify mix. >> i'm going to get you all the details. >> i want to know what's in there. >> i couldn't agree more. we'll get to the bottom of it. >> thank you. kristin welker in d.c. the trump campaign working to recover from its rough week. rallying voters later this afternoon. this as new polling shows where the race stands and who mr. trump needs to win over to claim the white house. you're watching msnbc, the place for politics. stay right here. ♪
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you are watching msnbc. we are just 95 days until the presidential election. on the left side of the screen is hillary clinton's vice presidential pick senator tim kaine. he just wrapped remarks about the economy. on the right is the scene in des moines, iowa, where donald trump and mike pence will be in just a couple hours. before they head on to green bay tonight. this as new numbers show even more trouble for donald trump. clinton is up by 9 points. plus a a new op-ed by former cia chief keeps vladimir putin squarely in the conversation for 2016. more on that cia chief's comments and how his support for hillary clinton changes the scales for november. first, we have to go to des moines where jacob rascon is. donald trump and mike pence have not been on the same page this week as far as their support for
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paul ryan. i think it's interesting because they are both going to wisconsin tonight. let's talk about what we could hear from them tonight. >> it may be difficult for them to be on the same page at all times and we seen they haven't been. this week was a great example of how trump said he's not ready to endorse paul ryan, but mike pence said he would do so enthusiastically. yesterday mike pence told nbc news he would stand shoulder to shoulder with trump through the election. that's going to be difficult to do. we've been talking to voters here in des moines. we want to bring one of them in now. her name is nancy young. you have been a supporter since the start. this is new territory for trump to be so down in the polls. what do you make of that? >> i think it has to do with the mainstream media. they are looking for everything they can to do harm to him, to make him react, give him sound
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bytes. he needs to stay on course and ignore the press. >> so that's the case. for arguments sake this continues, he continues to give the media sound bytes. how does he win? >> he just has to ignore them. he cannot react. they are trying to get him to react. when he reacts, he gives them a sound byte. he's not politically correct. he will not understand what he says can be used against him if it's taken out of context. >> what does it say that e he hasn't been able to do that? he hasn't been able to ignore, for sake of argument, the press. he can't seem to do that. >> it's very much his own person and wants to defend himself. he's got to learn not to do that. >> can he do it? >> i hope he does. >> either way you're going to support him? >> either way,ly support him. >> thank you so much for your time. we hear that a lot from trump
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supporters. even the most passionate supporters, it's time to get back on message, they say. and she doesn't know was her answer that he can do it. we'll see today with trump and mike pence. how will they play off each other and can he stay on message. >> it's our fault. it's all our fault. the media. we made him do it. jacob rascon joining us in des moines, iowa. henry barber is mississippi's committee man for the committee. thank you for joining us. i want to start with the jobs numbers. more than 250,000 jobs were added last month beating expectations. donald trump's core message is that jobs need to be created. the country is suffering. people are under duress. this jobs number is a good one. the unemployment number is nice and low. does this not undercut donald
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trump's message. >> i think if you talk to people in mississippi where i live and iowa and other places, i think middle-class families are hurting. this is the slowest expansion that we have had since world war ii. 1.2% gdp growth rate in the last quarter. we have stagnant wages. we have underemployment. people having to work part-time. middle-class families are strugg struggling. they are looking for change in washington. and hillary clinton is only going to provide the same old thing that barack obama has given. so donald trump has an opportunity to make this a big issue. that he can help provide jobs, job security, a stronger country and those are the types of issues that donald trump will focus on he can win in november despite being down in the polls right now. >> those are massive issues. when will we know what that plan is in terms of bringing all
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those corporate dollars overseas back to the u.s., getting corporations to create jobs here, when is he going to tell us how he will do that given his business ak man one would think this is his lane. we haven't seen it. >> you'll have to ask the trump campaign when he's going to lay out the specifics. we do know this. hillary clinton is going to continue where obama has gone. and that's given us 1.2% growth in the last quarter. it's not working. isis is running rampant. even though the president says we have control of them. we have big problems in the country. most people, republicans, democrats, white, black, hispan hispanic, are concerned that washington is broken. we have to do something extraordinary to fix it. that's why donald trump won in the primary. because americans and republicans certainly are tired of washington. it's not working.
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and they are ready to give somebody fresh a chance and hillary clinton certainly is not fresh. donald trump certainly provides strong, fresh leadership that can get the country turned around. >> donald trump is certainly fresh and new. you know politics better than donald trump does. with the exception he's a strong voice, he wants change, what is it about his plan that makes you support him? >> well, look, number one, he wasn't my first or second choice in the primary, just to say it plainly. but i'm going to support our nominee. and our nominee is immeasurably better than hillary clinton. i disagree with hillary clinton on so many different policy issues whether it's my pro-life position or whether it's jobs or whether it's failed leadership abroad that makes it a more dangerous world. all of those are reasons that it i think donald trump is
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stronger. part of it is i, like most americans, do not like, trust or want hillary clinton. and i think that's where most americans are. that gives donald trump a big opportunity. he's got to make her and policy issues the issue that we're talking about. if he continues to make himself the issue, that's where he's going to stay in the ditch and struggle. that's where his campaign has got to get things focused on hillary clinton and how we get the country back on track. >> you might not like her, but why do you think he can do the job today? we saw the former cia chief, who has never shown his side one way or the other, has said he's clearly supporting hillary clinton and will do everything he can from now to november to make sure she gets elected because he says donald trump is simply not fit to do the job. >> sure, good for him. that's certainly his prerogative. most americans don't care about
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endorsements. people care more about what their neighbor -- >> you as an american who understands what the director of the cia knows, what he's done for a living. it doesn't give you pause? >> no, that doesn't give me pause. i don't think most americans care what some washington insider thinks about this race. people are concern ed. they are not looking to washington for answers. and that's why trump is the answer for a lot of americans. and i think that donald trump, while he is proven himself in the business community, he's new to politics. he's going to ruffle some feathers and he's said some things i certainly disagree with and called him out on that. he's got to stay focused on the issues that matter. jobs, job security, national security, and the weaknesses of hillary clinton and that so many americans don't like, trust or want her. if he can do that, then i think
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he can be successful and he'll have an opportunity to govern and show the former cia director he is up to the task. >> henry barber, thank you for your time today. we appreciate it. for you out there. we're asking our pulse question. do you think vladimir putin is trying to secretly influence donald trump in this election? the pulse is live. so weigh in now at pulse.msnbc.com. we'll be right back. you're watching msnbc, the place for politics. he difference between life and death. for partners in health, time is life. we have 18,000 people around the world. the microsoft cloud helps our entire staff stay connected and work together in real time to help those that need it. the ability to collaborate changes how we work. what we do together
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or have symptoms such as: fever, sweats, chills, muscle aches or cough. always tell your doctor if you have any signs oinction, have had cancer, if you develop any new skin growths or if anyone in your house needs or has recently received a vaccine. alert your doctor of new or worsening problems, including headaches, seizures, confusion and vision problems these may be signs of a rare, potentially fatal brain condition. some serious allergic reactions can occur. do not take stelara® if you are allergic to stelara® or any of its ingredients. most people using stelara® saw 75% clearer skin and the majority were rated as cleared or minimal at 12 weeks. be the you who talks to your dermatologist about stelara®. you are watching msnbc. we're continuing to follow breaking news in chicago this hour. you're locking at that video. the independent police review authority in the city just showed police involved shooting of an 18-year-old paul o'neill.
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3:00 p.m. eastern and they were too emotional to speak after the viewing of the vid crow earlier. it is a graphic video. but they are expected to speak at the top of the hour. we're going to be watching that and bring you updates in this case. we're also watching reaction to hillary clinton's remarks a short time ago in washington, d.c. she was addressing the national association of black and hispanic journalists and took questions from reporters. i'd like to bring in now william barber, national chair of the naacp legislative pac. good afternoon, thank you for joining us. hillary clinton spoke just in the last hour and spoke about jobs and her plan to create jobs in urban and rural centers. today we're looking a at the jobs number. people are cheering saying 250,000 looks great. but the unemployment number for african-americans still stands at 8.4%.
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is your community feeling these gains? >> thank you for having us on. i think in this political season, the reality is we had to pull out of the worst recession that we have seen since the great depression. that's what president obama has been up against. surely and clearly, we continue to focus on economic stainability, living wages, and how we deal with the issue of poverty in and out of our community. what we do know is that the offering that mr. trump and many republicans are offering is just not the right recipe simply to cut taxes, deny living wages, undercut public education, to deny health care and to be concerned about criminal justice reform. in fact, what they have done is they have been the biggest road block into implementing the very things that president obama has tried to do over the last eight years to ensure that all communities were lifted.
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what is important that hillary clinton is doing is that she is raising these issues and talking about them and has a plan to fail plans that we have seen often used by extremists who called themselves republicans. >> the income inequality divide has only grown in the last eight years. what about hillary clinton's plan gives you confidence that we're going to see that 8.4% jobs number go down? >> in fact, when i talked at the dnc and as a clergy person, what we clearly understand is that if we're going to close the gap, and the gap is a problem that we have been battling 30 years because the war on poverty is a war that was undermined and was torn apart. e we didn't follow through on it. we have to remember that in this country there were assassinations, deaths, underlining of our plans. we know we have to have living wages. we know we have to have strong
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safety nets for the poor. we have to have infrastructure development. we know we have to have fair tax policy for the poor and the working poor. we know we have to have immigrant rights and we know all of those things are important in order for us to begin to close the gap in this country. what we know we don't need more of is simply tax cuts to the wealthy, who are already wealthy. undermining public education. undermining health care and denying living wages. >> 48% voters believe hillary clinton will be better equipped to deal with the racial problems between police and the black community. you have said there are issues out there that should not be left versus right, liberal versus conservative. do you see this as one of those issues? >> i see all of those issues. i think economic stainability, addressing poverty, i think healthcare, education, criminal justice reform, lgbt rights, immigrant rights, expanding
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voting rights are all issues that we have to wrestle with our deepest moral values. that's why i believe mr. trump is really off message when people say we get back on message, his message is i and i alone. the other message is not just his message, but the message of his party. that is to basically deny the racism that exists in the criminal justice system, deny the access to health care. those are many of the things that african-americans are concerned with. even down to denying voting rights. we have just been in a a fight with republicans in north carolina who have literally intentionally suppressed the vote in the court. so i don't think hillary clinton or any one person, but what a president can do as teddy roosevelt talked about is use the bully pulpit to bring people together. the fact of the matter these are issues that at some point we
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have to decide they are moral issues and constitutional issues that all of us have to come together. what she offers is someone willing to work on unity and division. >> thank you for joining me today. when we come back, new numbers out providing a new view of how things could go down in november. hillary clinton widening her lead over donald trump taking key voters away from the gop nominee. we'll break it all down, next. h. uh, i live right over there actually. you've been to my place. no, i wasn't...oh look, you dropped something. it's your resume with a 20 dollar bill taped to it. that's weird. you want to work for ge too. hahaha, what? well we're always looking for developers who are up for big world changing challenges like making planes, trains and hospitals run better. why don't you check your new watch and tell me what time i should be there. oh, i don't hire people. i'm a developer. i'm gonna need monday off. again, not my call.
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hillary clinton gained on trump among other constituencies as well, not just men. >> absolutely. there's a lot of bad news in these head to head numbers for donald trump. hillary clinton up by 9 points overall. one of the big sirens for republicans should be that hillary clinton is eating into the lead of white voters. hillary clinton has been dominant among minorities, but donald trump's base was violent voters and hillary clinton has cut that lead to just 5 points. there's one group i want to center on here. in july, the two candidates were just about tied when it came to white voters with a college education. they were just about even. now hillary clinton has in just the space of a month opened. a 7-point lead among those voters. that is a big change. this is a group that mitt romney won in 2012. now donald trump finds himself in a deep hole there. hillary clinton has improved her position on some of the big issues that matter to voters. donald trump is still leading when it comes to which candidate
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would be better to handle the economy, but hillary clinton has eaten into his lead there. and on the question of who would be better to handle terrorism and homeland security, the candidates are now tied. donald trump had an advantage a month ago and that's been erased. >> i want to talk about another poll. hillary clinton leading in georgia by 4 points. could we see other traditionally red southern states be in play here? >> i think that we're going to start seeing other state polls that may raise alarm bells like that georgia poll that you menaced. there's going to be states that have a makeup that are similar to georgia. for example, georgia has a high minority population and especially in the suburbs, they have a highly educated populati population. places like arizona where you see a similarly large minority population, that's a state that has been out of reach for democrats. the democrats are trying to make a play there. utah is another state to keep an
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eye on. while that's a red state, there's a high mormon population. 6 in 10 are mormon and donald trump has taken square aim at mitt romney for his mormon religion and you may continue to see those voters turning against donald trump despite they are socially conservative. those are a couple states to keep an eye on. >> thank you very much. have a great weekend. >> you too. after the break, back to politics and the former cia director taking aim at donald trump. calling the dprks op nominee unfit for office, a threat to national security, and a puppet for putin. an expert on world policy joins me to discuss how a trump presidency could play out across the globe. you doyou'll see whatet but in you're really made of. after five hours of spinning and one unfortunate ride on the gravitron, your grandkids spot a 6 foot banana that you need to win. in that moment, you'll be happy you partnered with a humana care manager
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no. >> that was a portion of a new advertisement from the clinton campaign using prominent republican voices to paint donald trump as unfit for the presidency. a new op-ed from a former cia chief who says donald trump has unwittingly been played by vladimir putin. that op-ed also says he's endorsing hillary clinton. nina is a professor of international affairs at the new school here in new york. please help us understand this. michael moral hasn't been a surrogate for a candidate. when you see a statement like vladimir putin using donald trump as a puppet, do you see that as a reality? >> trump offered himself as a puppet. putin is a very clever user of other people's mistakes. he's a judo masters, he was a shadow operative, so he knows
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when advantage comes and how to become a splinter in various relationships. he did this before. he did it with barack obama redline in syria. so when trump offers himself as an opportunity to really make a fool out of the united states, putin can't pass up this opportunity. >> knowing as much as you do about vladimir putin, when you hear a candidate like donald trump say that vladimir putin is a a strong leader, what do you make of that? >> last year republicans were screaming how and barack obama
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is wearing mom jeans. republicans who value strong leadership offer the leadership and foe what to do and how to do it. they do admire putin, even if they disagree with trump. others disagree with his poli c politics. it's not really that unusual once again in the republican party. >> you have made the point that vladimir putin might not want donald trump to be the president in the end. why not? >> i think trump does know what he's going to do. putin is going to use him. i have to say america always refers to rush as anned adversal power. you really need to welcome this kind of development because you become the world leader or you can see america isn't fit to lead the world anymore. i also think vladimir putin
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actually wants international relations. he wants to sit if at a main table, but i don't know if he wants to stabilize the world to the point trump may bring it in. he wants to rule the world with the united states. he doesn't want to take over and actually be responsible for all the problems that it trump is going to create. >> wouldn't it seem he would most definitely want donald trump to be the president as another world leader who he could manipulate? >> i'm sure, as i said, as an adversarial power you really have to want donald trump. but for somebody who doesn't want the world to collapse tomorrow, probably vladimir putin doesn't want it. i think he wants to divide and conquer the world with the united states, but taking responsibility for the collapsing world, we don't know what donald trump is going, what it's going to lead to. that nuclear button that we're
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so afraid of. what he's going to do with that somebody will attack him and there will be a small slight and what if somebody goes in pieces. i don't think putin wants that responsibility. >> how complicated is russia in terms of foreign policy. >> we just heard last week that donald trutonald trump doesn't that russian troops are in ukraine already and taken over by pro-russian forces. so clearly he's very unprepared. this is also something that putin on one hand welcomes. on the other hand he would want can really be underpar with each other. >> thank you so much for joining us today. we got to do one thing. i never got to do this. i'm excited about it. we have to check on the
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responses from the pulse question. do you think vladimir putin is trying to secretly influence donald trump in this election? here's how your votes have gone thus far. 94% say yes, 6% have said no. there's still time to weigh in. go to pulse.msnbc.com. >> putin loves that. it's a kgb dream. >> you hear that? the place for politics, time for a break. ♪ (vo) making the most out of every mile. that's why i got a subaru impreza. (avo) love. it's what makes a subaru, a subaru. get zero percent on select subaru models during the subaru a lot to love event, now through august thirty-first.
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we are just four hours away from the official kickoff of the 2016 olympics in rio. i have olympic fever. there's going to be an estimated 1 billion people tuning in for the opening ceremonies tonight where we will see athletes competing for the gold. our own ron mott is live in rio. you and i spoke this morning.
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things were getting exciting. you're excited because gisele is going to be part of the opening ceremony. >> reporter: the music is still blaring. so we know everybody is ready to party here and getting ready for the opening ceremony tonight. they are calling this cool. they want that to be the takeaway. so gisele obviously fits that mold. we have been talking about who is going to light the cauldron. the soccer stud and legend apparently got word we were talking about him. he issued a statement. only god is more important than my health. i have had injuries, passed by surgeries, different kinds of pain, victories and defeats. i am responsible for my decisions d never meant to let my people down. i have no physical conditions to be part of the olympic opening ceremony at this moment. so if this is to be believed, he
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will not be lighting the kal dron or a part of the opening ceremony tonight. that will be a huge smohock and disappointment. >> i look as surprised as the next girl. if you put out an official statement, you're probably not going to be there. >> reporter: it's probably the case. it's going to be a surprise. we don't know. >> i'm going to be tuning in. you said it yesterday. have you seen a mosquito yet? >> no mosquitos yet. i think my deet has worn off. i'm feeling a a little open there. nobody is nibbling. i have a couple more hours to stand here. >> my mosquito control in rio continues. time to reload, but no mosquitos. ron mott in rio four hours from now is all kicking off. be sure to catch the opening
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ceremony on your local nbc station. i'm so excited. . let's feed him to the sharks! squuuuack, let's feed him to the sharks! yay! and take all of his gold! and take all of his gold! ya! and hide it from the crew! ya...? squuuuack, they're all morons anyway! i never said that. they all smell bad too. no! you all smell wonderful! i smell bad! if you're a parrot, you repeat things. it's what you do. if you want to save fifteen percent or more on car insurance, you switch to geico. it's what you do. squuuuack, it's what you do. this dog treat called max and dentalife.covered it's really different. see? it's flexible... ...and it has a chewy, porous texture, full of little tiny air pockets that gives dogs' teeth a clean scrub all the way down to the gum line.
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that wraps us up for this hour on msnbc. kate snow is picking things up. >> you are excited mm i'm excited for the olympics tonight. >> i'm so excited. i have a sweat band to put on. short shorts, i'm beginning to rock out watching. >> great to see you. have a good weekend. >> we are turning to news in chicago this hour, because police releasing dramatic body camera footage in connection with the fatal police shooting of paul o'neill just last week. the head of the chicago police oversight agency described these videos as disturbing and scary. the videos do not actually show o'neill being fatally shot, but they show the events leading up to it including the officer unloading on a moving vehicle.
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