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tv   Chris Jansing Reports  MSNBC  November 23, 2022 10:00am-11:00am PST

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e best result possible. ♪ the barnes firm injury attorneys ♪ ♪ call one eight hundred, eight million ♪ i'm chris jansing live at msnbc headquarters in new york city. it's happened again, investigators in virginia trying to figure out why a walmart
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employee opened fire inside the store killing six. the attack, the 606th mass shooting in america this year, a rate of nearly two day. we'll go live to the scene in a minute. the supreme court gives the house committee the green light to get its hands on donald trump's tax returns, but with just a month and a half before republicans take over how much can democrats actually get done? if you're traveling for the holidays be ready for lots of company. 55 million people are expected to hit the roads this week. one of the busiest thanksgiving travel seasons in decades and potentially the most expensive ever. we have more on that later in the show. but we begin in chesapeake, virginia, where for the second time in three days there's been a mass shooting, this one in a chesapeake, virginia walmart. officers arrived on the scene minutes after the initial 911 call and entered the store two minutes after that. police say the suspect took his
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own life and they're still trying to piece together a motive. chesapeake city managers spoke about the sense of community there this morning. >> i know it pains all of us to be together today on this day of incredible tragedy and unimaginable sadness. chesapeake's a wonderful place. we come together when times are good. we come together when times are difficult. i know that we're going through very, very difficult days today and in the days ahead. >> the city of chesapeake also confirming that at least six others were transported to local hospitals. the shooting taking place hours before thanksgiving with the last-minute rush to pick up turkeys and pies and just ahead of the biggest shopping day of the year. the night shift there had just checked in. yet again, the safety of a familiar place is shattered. i want to bring in nbc's cal perry at the crime scene for us in virginia and also with us former special agent in charge of the atf jim cavanaugh and
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former u.s. attorney joyce vance. we got new information. bring us up to date. >> yeah. this is coming from the city of chesapeake, and it came in a series of tweets basically a small briefing. i can walk you through it. what it says, it's confirming seven people killed in total including the gunman and it's giving some details as to where the victims were found. police are hoping that this will help point to a motive. at least three of the victims, including the shooter, were killed inside this break room. this is an employee break room. at least one victim found near the entrance and three people actually made it out of the walmart alive. they were rushed to hospitals and they died at nearby hospitals. i say this could lead to motive because one of the first things the city of chesapeake puts in the tweet they are currently, quote, investigating the employment status of the victims. we know from law enforcement that the shooter was an employee here at the walmart. it is not clear the motive, but certainly if these victims worked at the walmart that might
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point us towards some kind of a motive. as you said, the shooting taking place at about 10:15 p.m., just 45 minutes before this walmart would close. you can see behind me police have locked out this parking lot. they are slowly investigating the scene. it gives you an idea of how full the store was at 10:15. we've all been to walmart rushing to do the last minute bits of shopping. you park a long way away and an incident like this happens. >> you were a special agent in charge of the atf. they're there and the fbi is there. what will be the first thing they're doing at the atf and how is that different from what the fbi is charged with? >> well they work hand in glove so the first thing you have to understand is all the detectives and special agents and atf special agents are investigators and all interview witnesses, take statements and back up the chesapeake police doing the general investigative duties. they all do those things.
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but atf specialize in the guns, the projectiles, matching those, if that's necessary, any kind of forensic firearms examination, they can plot trajectories, they can help with the crime scene there. and they're going to do all those things as needed. chesapeake pd has their own crime scene unit and vat va state my is very good too. they're all working together and scores people to interview and a lot of evidence to collect. unfortunately, in this case, there's no prosecution. it's a suicide. there won't be a criminal case. we're doing this maybe to hopefully stop the next one. >> as a former u.s. attorney and prosecutor, where the legal aspect comes in, given there was a suicide here, joyce, and what those relationships are, again, and did they even get involved at this point? >> right. as jim says and interestingly enough, jim was my long-time
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special agent in charge when he covered tennessee and alabama and so he knows from far too many tragedies that we worked together, that when you no longer have a live suspect or a live defendant, most of the investigative burden will fall to law enforcement. it's also important to understand how this shooter came into possession of his firearm. that can help us see if anyone else has some legal or some criminal exposure based on how the gun came into his possession and it can also help us in a forward leaning way, think about how we keep guns from coming into the wrong hands. the sad reality here is, that even when there is someone for investigators to prosecute it means we've already failed and the crime has already occurred. increasingly it becomes apparent, especially with this rash of pre-thanksgiving shootings, that we have to find new ways to be proactive, whether that's changes in the law or better enforcement of the
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ones on the books by giving atf and the other agencies the resources they need to be more proactive. we've got to find a better path forward. >> when it happens in a public place like this, jim, in my experience and i've covered far too many mass shootings as you've been part of the investigation of many mass shootings, what could we have done differently? could we have prevented this? from that standpoint, is it important investigatively to be able to share whatever information is found and if it's not something legislatively, maybe it's on a corporate level, community level? >> well, it certainly could be something legislatively. oftentimes these killers, they don't go in the back alley and buy the gun on the black market. they buy it at a gun shop. this is a seminole event, they're going to die in the event and they purchase the guns when they want to do the killing. the simple law that we need is the targeted focus on the
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killers, not to take people's gun rights away. we do a lot of times talk in broad steps, but instead of shooting artillery rounds that land 300 yards from the target, we need these smart rounds that go right to the killers. we can do this. we know that 77% of mass killers leak, leak what they're going to do. they leak their intentions. this is from the latest fbi report. so students, it's worse, more than 77%. tell someone. teacher, friend, a colleague. people, look at these killers, look at the one in colorado springs. a terroristic threat a year ago. the one in buffalo, taken to a mental health professional saying he wanted to commit a mat killing. this is on and on and we don't do anything about it. the model law for, that if some lawmaker is listening, is the lautenberg amendment a federal
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law, what that law says f you're convicted of a misdemeanor crime in he any state, of domestic against your partner, you cannot have a gun, can't possess it, can't buy it, skrant a gun. we need that law, we need a law like that says if you're convicted of a terroristic threat in any statement, convicted of a threat to make a mass killing or to have a bomb or threaten that, and you're convicted of that, you can't have a gun. you can't buy a gun. then we can -- and that's a misdemeanor in many states. let it be. it's a misdemeanor in the lautenberg amendment. we flag the national insta check system and you can't go into the gun shop and buy hundreds of rounds and an assault weapon and go out and do your massacre at will. it puts another obstacle in. then also, law enforcement automatically would get an alert, hey, guys convicted of making a terroristic threat on mass shootings went in to try to buy a gun at the local gun shop.
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all the systems are set if we have the law to overlay that and there could be a better federal law on those terroristic threats. give the tools to law enforcement and the prosecutors like joyce who will step up and do it if you give the tools and don't shoot broadly, shoot with that laser beam on the killers and not just lawful gun owners. both sides of the aisle, chris, should be able to come together to target the killers. >> unfortunately, we're learning of another shooting and we have aerial shots near philadelphia, and i'm reading from the website of our local affiliate nbc 4, that there was a shooting near overbrook high school that sent four students to the hospital just around noon today. it's important to say that none of the injuries appears to be life threatening, but this quadruple shooting happened following an early dismissal. not surprise given it is the day before thanksgiving.
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you can see several law enforcement officers, there are areas cordoned off with police tape as the investigation moves forward and another thanksgiving holiday, where whoever is unfortunate enough to be the investigator on call, the d.a., the assistance d.a. on call is going to be very busy tomorrow. one of the first things as a prosecutor that you look for in a situation like this? >> so in these situations, you immediately need to marshal your resources because your first priority is to make sure that the threat is at an end. in some of these cases you have a lone wolf shooter focused on only one event. in other situations you might have the prospect that there are more people involved that more shootings could take place or perhaps they've left behind a booby-trapped apartment or something else that poses a threat to public safety. that's job number one, to make sure anyone risks are at an end and that's the sort of situation where jim and i would have
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worked with our fbi counterparts and our state and local counterparts immediately following an incident to make sure that the public was safe. once that's past and you have assured yourself that there are no additional problems, then in a situation where you still have a live defendant you begin to build the case against that person. prosecution is really important here. it matters to incapacitate a dangerous person to put them in custody so they can't hurt anyone else, but it's also important for deterrence purposes. something you worry about when you see these incidents there will be copycats and not only copycats in this situation but the other people who have contemplated engaging in a mass shooting will be emboldened and see it happen in one place and it will trigger something in them and send them down that path. it's really a time to think about the importance of the criminal justice system in ending future shootings as well
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as the current one you're investigating. >> thank you both. joyce, you're going to stay with me. any minute now in colorado springs, the suspect in the horrific shooting that left five dead at an lbgtq night club is set to appear in court virtually. the 22-year-old was released from the hospital on tuesday and moved to jail facing murder and hate crime charges. new court filings show the accused identified as nonbinary and uses they, them pronouns. we don't have any information on a he motive. it's also been 142 days since this mass shooting changed the life of our next guest who was right there at an independence day parade in highland park when a good morning gunman opened fire. now she's making it her mission to solve the problem heading to d.c. to go eye to eye to members of congress targeting states that do not support the assault weapons ban. here with me dr. lieberman, a pediatrician and a survivor of
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the july 4th highland park shooting. thanks very much. i was at highland park. i covered that story. to hear there's been another shooting involving potentially teenagers at a high school must give you chills. >> first of all, thank you so much for having me and it's devastating and it's been time after time again in the past couple months since our mass shooting in highland park that we continue to see children perish and people die in very public surfaces and not enough being done to fix this problem. >> so we have seen some major legislation passed this year on gun violence reform, something we haven't seen in a very long time. supporters acknowledge it's just one step. you are going to d.c. with a group of other physicians to target senators that do not support the assault weapons ban. tell us about who is going, why
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they're going and what is your strategy? >> yeah. i have put together along with my husband and a fantastic social worker in this area, a group of physicians, a coalition of physician gun safety, experts and advocates, from 25 states across the country, that we've targeted who senators do not currently support the assault weapons ban but have demonstrated some degree of interest in gun safety legislation, either by being co-sponsors of the bipartisan safe are communities act or being democratic senators, we're there to show this is not political. we are physicians. we are the people who are here to ensure that our community is healthy and to support the health of america. i am a pediatrician, a natural child advocate. it is our job at this point to impress upon senate that this is a public health crisis. the increasing incidents of mass
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shootings in our country are threatening the safety and security of our nation's children. this is not political. the only place that it's political is d.c. we see that people all across america support by and large an assault weapons ban. so now we're leaving it to physicians and bringing physicians to d.c. to gain support of their senators. we have two to three physicians coming from each of our targeted states who, as i said, are experts. they are physicians who have done the research in gun violence and treat gun violence victims every day. these are handpicked physicians from each of these 25 states and they are coming, we are uniting as one telling senate this bill passed in the house, our president is ready to sign this bill. we have until december 31st to take action and have senators
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make the right choice, be on the right side of history and save children's lives. >> let me ask you a blunt question because i have been in d.c. when groups of survivors have gone through. i have been in d.c. when groups of moms and dads and brothers and sisters of shooting victims are gone and talked to members of congress and the frustration they felt when the people from their own states did not respond in the way that they wanted them to. is there something that doctors can say, doctors can do, doctors can explain, you think, that's different and might get through? >> i do think that. i will tell you as a survivor of a mass shooting and mother who has gone too these rooms with lawmakers and seeing testimony from incredible parents from uvalde who have lost their children, or 10-year-old advocates half of their class was brutally massacred in front of her, after hearing these stories and as a human being not
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being able to stop crying myself, it was striking to me to see that many lawmakers are not impacted in the way i would expect as a human by these stories. instead, they do show interest in data and physicians bring an analytical perspective to this and our expertise. we have data that science and science driven backgrounds that show us all of the problems with gun violence in our country. we can come to these meetings and say, look at this from our perspective. look at the data and grotesque images and images between a regular gun that penetrates a human body versus how an assault weapon penetrates a human body with a regular gun we have a clean entry and exit wound. with an assault weapon, you've blown up most of the person. the organs become liquified. it's grotesque.
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these children that have been killed by assault weapons in mass shootings are most often identified by dna, not because you can identify any other part of their body. we show them these images and it's hard for them not to recognize our absolute expert opinion on public health because we are the people who navigate public health in this country. >> well, i'll be very curious and very interested to hear how all of that goes and i hope you'll come back and talk to us again because here we are, you know, we had the 606th deadly mass shooting and now another shooting, no one was killed near philadelphia, but emily, thank you so much for what you're doing and taking the time to talk to us and appreciate it. >> thank you. >> two victims of the parkland school shooting are key figures changing the political tide inside the broward county school board in south florida. lori yale der half whose daughter was murder at marjory
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stoneman douglas is serving as chair of the board, saying, alyssa, may i continue to be your voice and honor you with my work here. her vice chair was an athletic director at the school. she's been on the program a number of times. her husband was killed trying to disarm the shooter. these represent a sea change of the five appointees of governor ron desantis only one remains on that board. a fight three and a half years in the making. what could a house committee discover in donald trump's tax returns. plus a massive test of survival. ukrainians left freezing in the dark. can they withstand the winter ahead. what's that? a surprise that a tsa agent got when it sent this suitcase through the scanner. se through the scanner. (woman 1) i just switched to verizon business unlimited. it's just right for my little business. unlimited premium data. unlimited hotspot data. (woman 2) you know it's from the most reliable 5g network in america?
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six weeks to get through six years worth of trump's tax returns. that's the challenge for the house weighs and means committee now that supreme court has cleared the way for the returns to be handed over, rejecting the former president's request to keep them under wraps. the decision ends a legal war that has gone almost as long as some real ones, more than three and a half years. i have two political analysts with me, "new york times" chief white house correspondent peter baker and "boston globe" columnist kim her by
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store. joyce vance is back as well. i can only imagine the committee members and staff have been chomping at the bit to see these returns. that said they have only six weeks, obviously, that's when the republicans take over. what can they get done? >> they will have the opportunity to excavate the tax returns in great detail in only six weeks, given how complicated they probably are, but i think we can preview what they will see because my colleagues a couple years ago actually managed to get a lot of these tax returns themselves and "the new york times" published and the tax returns show how little donald trump has paid in taxes. even in the first years of the presidency, paid $750 in the first year and second year of his presidency and any number of years leading up to that he paid as little as $0 in federal income taxes. that's one thing we'll continue to, you know, captivate i think the committee and other
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americans about how the tax system works. in some cases it may be a result of abuse of process and some cases the way the system works, a system that donald trump promised he would fix when a candidate in 2016 and then made no effort to once he took office. >> obviously, time is going to run out because we're going to have a new congress that comes in. there's going to be gop house leadership. could, though, this then get handed off to the democratic senate to one of the committees there? >> he yeah. it's unclear under the rules whether the house committee that won this legal battle can simply hand it off to one of the other two committees that have the same authority to obtain these records from the irs, but what we do know for sure is that now that the supreme court has declined to take up the challenge that donald trump has brought, that opens the door that if the senate finance committee or the joint tax committee, the other two committees that have the power to do that and that have members
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of the senate, one is a senate committee, one is joint, if ron wyden, the chair of both, wants to seek the same path, that the chairman of the house weighs and means ritchie neal did, that should be a clear legal way to go forward and shouldn't take three more years of legal battling to get to them. there is a way for democrats to continue this scrutiny. it's important to he know this is a part of investigating the audits of presidents and how they are done is part of the function of the judiciary. that's the standard here that lawmakers will have to show in order to obtain and use these records. the question remains open as to whether they will ever be made public. they have to show a reason why to do that. more likely we'll see a report that outlines some of the contents of them, especially if there are -- if there's any wrongdoing is found. >> is that likely, joyce, to turn into a legal challenge? i mean, obviously, what donald trump thinks is the only reason the committee wanted these is
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not for legitimate oversight reasons, but because they want to make them public. could that go outside then the realm of what we see within the walls of congress to some more legal fights? >> so it will depend on the path forward, but kim is absolutely right when she points out that congress has oversight and legislative functions that make it important for them to review these taxes. now by sticking it out for three years the house has made the path for the senate committee chaired by senator wyden very easy, very accessible if they would like to replicate the exercise. it's important to figure out whether, for instance, a president exposes himself to blackmail by underpaying taxes or whether or not there's indicia that a president is receiving interest rates that complicate. there's that clear purpose to entitle the senate committees to
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access them. as far as making the documents public, kim is right when she says it's more likely that there would be more summary revelation than an outright release of the returns. when the court of appeals considered this case, they explicitly contemplated in the course of congress' work sometimes materials they obtain that can contain highly personal information become public domain. while the three-judge panel acknowledged that could be difficult for individuals involved, they also said it was part of congress' work and it was implicit in the process. whether or not trump would bring a separate lawsuit, i think we know he will sue, he's very litigious, if that were to happen, there's nothing that requires congress to seek the court's approval or to seek anyone else's approval before it released a report that might contain some of this information. >> no surprise, trump came out
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and criticized the supreme court in truth social why would anybody be surprised the supreme court has ruled against me. they always to. it is unprecedented to be handing over tax returns and creates terrible precedence for future presidents. it has become nothing more than a political body with our country paying the price. let's point out this is a conservative super majority. three of the members of the court were appointed by donald trump. so, i guess the question is, what does this tell you, more of the same i guess? >> yeah. so a lot of what we're seeing, what he's saying, can't be fact checked. that is nothing new. this was an emergency order that supreme court declined to take up. things we don't know, we don't know what vote was, whether it was unanimous or not. we don't know who voted. we know that more justices who considered this than not said that they did not want to take
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it up. we don't know which justices did what. we know in the past, donald trump actually has a mixed record before this court. when he's trying to stop legitimate investigations like those going on in georgia and in washington and to the events around the election the supreme court has declined to stand in the way because those prosecutors do have authority to carry out those probes. on the other hand when it came to his administration, this court has also ruled in favor of his administration more often than it did not. this is certainly not a court that is either for or against the president blatantly, but it's certainly understand the authority of congress and the authority of prosecutors, and it declines to get in the way if it's not a reason for them to. this is an example of that. >> kimberly store and joyce vance, thank you so much. peter you're going to stay with me. we have breaking news because right now, the first court hearing is under way for the suspect in the colorado mass
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shooting. the 22-year-old is appearing virtually from jail after leaving the hospital just yesterday. they face possible murder and hate crimes charges connected to the killing of five and injuring of 19 others at an lbgtq night club. prosecutors have not yet filed formal charges. we will continue to monitor the proceedings and bring you new information as we have it. republican leader kevin mccarthy with a new warning for the homeland security secretary. step aside or face impeachment. is that about secretary mayorkas or about mccarthy trying to win the speakership? e speakership? . 12 irresistible subs. the most epic sandwich roster ever created. ♪♪ it's subway's biggest refresh yet! (woman 1) i just switched to verizon business unlimited. it's just right for my little business. unlimited premium data. unlimited hotspot data. (woman 2) you know it's from the most reliable 5g network in america?
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. in a sign of what's likely to come in the next congress house republican leader kevin mccarthy is amping up the pressure on homeland security secretary alejandro mayorkas, bluntly calling on him to resign and threatening to impeach him if he doesn't. >> we'll start the investigation, we'll look at every order, look at every means of what he has done. he has lied to the american public. this investigation could lead to an impeachment inquiry. >> now, mccarthy had previously been more hesitant to embrace
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impeachment but his new remarks show he's likely feeling the heat from the extreme right wing of his party trying to prove he can deliver for them if they'll support him to be the next house speaker. senior congressional reporter scott wong writes about this for nbc news and back with me "the new york times" peter baker. walk us through the threat as we know mayorkas is one of many democrats who republicans have threatened to impeach or investigate in some way. >> that's right, chris. kevin mccarthy, the gop leader, down at the border in el paso, texas, yesterday, flanked by some of this republican colleagues, basically telling mayorkas to resign over his handling of the border where we have seen a record number of 2.75 million undocumented border crossings just in the 2022 fiscal year alone. mccarthy saying that if mayorkas does not resign by the start of
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the new congress on january 3rd, that republicans will launch investigations into his department, into mayorkas himself, which could and i repeat could, lead to an impeachment inquiry. so mccarthy actually being very cautious about the language that he's using. he's not only being pressured by conservatives on his right flank whose votes he needs to be able to be elected speaker, but he's also considering those moderates in his caucus because of that very narrow majority. he'll need moderates to hang together with him, and so i think mccarthy is also being cognizant of that and not wanting to alienate some of those moderates as well, which is why you saw him using very precise language when it comes to the impeachment discussion. chris? >> we have heard from the white house on this. we know, peter, they think this is just a political stunt.
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having said that, we did learn yesterday that south carolina republican ralph norman, a member of the freedom caucus, says he's a no vote. i mean this needle that speaker -- that kevin mccarthy, who wants to be speaker, has to thread if he's going to get that gavel is very, very thin, right? >> it's very, very thin. there's no guarantee he's going to be speaker at this point. and we said he might be speaker. the question is what kind of compromises and tradeoffs he needs to make to secure those votes? what are the concessions that will be required to get everybody to stick together on the floor? he has little margin for error, and that's why you see, of course, him saying what he said yesterday, that the idea of impeaching mayorkas is, of course, you know, red meat for the caucus, the likelihood of that happening is pretty low. to get to 218 votes to impeach him and keep every republican together just for that is seemingly hard to imagine at
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this point. of course, he would never be convicted with the senate with the democrats in charge there. having said that, oversight is an appropriate, you know, tool of congress and we saw in the trump era how oversight was frustrated by an administration that refused to participate, saying we don't want to participate because it's only political. the question for the biden white house is a tough one. do they take that precedent that president trump set and say we're not going to participate in oversight, whether it's, you know, because we consider it to be political, which, of course, it certainly is, or are they going to say we're going back to the normal standards prior to trump and even in political situations, we do believe that congress has the right to oversight which, of course, you know, is a fundamental part of the separation of branches of government. it's going to be an interesting thing going forward in terms of mccarthy's future, his ability to secure the speakership and more broadly how does the congress over the next two years interagent with the president and the administration when it
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comes to issues like oversight, investigations and possibly things like impeachment. >> peter baker and scott wong, appreciate that. breaking news on the walmart shooting. authorities have identified the alleged gunman as 31-year-old andre bing of chesapeake, virginia. they say he was armed with a handgun and multiple magazines. six killed in the attack. officials say the shooter appears to have taken his own life. we heard from the attorneys alongside the suspect in the colorado springs shooting. let's bring in steve paterson. what more can you tell us? >> yeah, chris, this was a very to the point, straightforward, first appearance that was meant to serve as an advisory hearing. we did see the suspect appearing by video link. the thing lasted for maybe all of a few minutes or so. the purpose to make sure the suspect understood the charges, understood the rights. i will say, you know, it's very hard to see some detail on the face of the suspect but it
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appeared that the suspect was in pretty rough shape. the suspect was, you know, beaten during or after that shooting, you know, as something that police say unequivocally saved lives due to the bravery of people inside there. even when the judge asked for a name, the suspect had a hard time speaking. gives you color as to, you know, why the suspect was in the hospital for so long. it was to set the next court date, establish for december 6th at this point so far, but there was debate about that for now that's the latest very quick hearing as we understand. chris? >> thank you so much. appreciate that update. russian bombs raining down on ukraine killing a newborn baby, particularly cruel casualty in putin's war. we're live in kharkiv next. we're live in kharkiv next
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the eat fresh® refresh just won't stop! now, subway® is refreshing their catering with easy-order platters and lunchboxes perfect for any party. pool parties... tailgates... holiday parties... even retirement parties. man, i love parties. subway keeps refreshing and refreshing (woman 1) i just switched to verizon business unlimited. it's just right for my little business. man, i love parties. unlimited premium data. unlimited hotspot data. (woman 2) you know it's from the most reliable 5g network in america? (vo) when it comes to your business, not all bars are created equal. so switch to verizon business unlimited today. two explosions near rush hour in jerusalem killed one
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person and injured 18 others early this morning. they happened about a hafr apart. canada confirmed the person killed was a canadian teenager and the u.s. ambassador to israel has confirmed two u.s. citizens are among the injured. israeli police believe palestinian militants are to blame. today's attacks were the first since 2016. a rocket attack left a mother without her newborn baby after it struck a hospital maternity ward in southern ukraine. less than 24 hours later rockets are continuing to reign down -- rain down throughout the killing killing an 11-year-old girl. devastating winter is just around the corner. nbc's ellison barber has more on this from kharkiv. ukrainians facing this massive test of survival, a brutal winter coming. i know temperatures can plummet
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below negative 4 fahrenheit. what you hearing on the ground? what's happening there? >> reporter: yeah. right now in terms of the missile strikes this afternoon, we're hearing that u.n. security council is going to have an emergency meeting tonight. it's supposed to take place around 11:00 p.m. kyiv time. we're told that president zelenskyy will address the council. ukraine asked for this emergency meeting in light of the attack that happened today. the attack this afternoon was a massive attack with dozens of missiles seemingly targeting critical energy infrastructure. civilian infrastructure that provides millions of people with access to electricity and heating. ukraine's military, they say, russian forces fired 70 missiles and five dive bombing drones this afternoon. they say that the air defense systems were able to intercept about 51 of those, but they didn't intercept all of them. we're still getting a sense of the toll of this attack today,
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but we know on the power front it led to blackouts for a large portion of the country. ukraine's energy minister saying this is a terror attack that it led to a temporary blackout of all nuclear power plants and most thermal and hydro electric plants in kyiv. we're hearing that 11 people at least have been injured. a residential building was struck there. three people died, one of them a 17-year-old. this is not just impacting ukraine. the attacks today have also impacted neighboring countries. in moldova the deputy prime minister says they are seeing massive power outages because of the attack this afternoon. a lot of ukrainians spent their day in shelters just like this one trying to get some semblance of safety. chris? >> ellison barber, thank you so much. well, it's been a very down day, but there is some good news. 700 clowns, 12 marching bands, 56 balloons and inflatables and
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santa claus is coming to town. how organizers are getting it all into shape less than 24 hours before the macy's thanksgiving day parade. well would you look at that? ♪ ♪ jerry, you've got to see this. seen it. trust me, after 15 walks it gets a little old. i really should be retired by now. wish i'd invested when i had the chance... to the moon! [golf ball bounces off rover] unbelievable. ugh. [ding] (woman 1) i just switched to verizon business unlimited. it's just right for my little business. ugh. unlimited premium data. unlimited hotspot data. (woman 2) you know it's from the most reliable 5g network in america? (vo) when it comes to your business, not all bars are created equal. so switch to verizon business unlimited today.
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(woman 1) i just switched to verizon business unlimited. it's just right for my little business. unlimited premium data. unlimited hotspot data. (woman 2) you know it's from the most reliable 5g network in america? (vo) when it comes to your business, not all bars are created equal. so switch to verizon business unlimited today.
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roughly 200 bucks on gas and 900 mile drive to get home to his parents' home in milwaukee for thanksgiving, with a dog in tow. >> it is nice to go back to my childhood bed. >> one of 55 million people expected to travel 50 miles or more this holiday according to aaa and a heads up for drivers, it will cost you, according to gas buddy, the average gallon of gas is 30 cents higher than last year. if you're flying, things are going smoothly. just ask the passengers we caught up at reagan national in virginia. >> we got here two hours early thinking we would be in a long line and i don't know where everybody is. >> i decided to come early to avoid the traffic. here i am. >> i decided to need extra time but it didn't turn out that way. >> pretty smoothly in new york for anyone who is flying in for tomorrow' parade.
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already, spectators, marchers, singers, dancers around the world have descended on manhattan for the annual thanksgiving day parade by macy's, the world's largest department store and the world's second largest consumer of helium which brings us to kristen dahlgren with an upclose view how all of that helium is fueling the stars of the parade. it looks like a beautiful sunny day out there. >> yes, it really is. people are having a great time. a lot of helium go can -- going into this guy and it is sometimes to tell how giant these things are, when you're watching the parade but people get to be back here and get this close as everything is filled, a great crowd out here, really excited about. so newer balloons. we've got new, diary of a wimpy kid, a new bleuy, a new stuart from minion and mama and baby dino. those are the new additions, and
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the pillsbury dough boy, he needs a little bit of helium in the hat there before he is ready to go. they have the nets on them to stop them from flying away, they will be here all night until the parade gets going at 8:45 tomorrow morning. and i'll be out there, and it is an exciting time. >> i'll be here to introduce you. kristen dahlgren, thank you so much. finally, if you're an animal lover and looking for one more thing to be thankful for, perhaps it's this. see anything suspicious in this luggage x-ray? a perfectcally alert tsa agent avoided what could have been a catastrophe at jfk. spotting the outline of a stow-away. a stealthy cat made a move when the suitcase was cracked and wait for, it check it out, a tuft of orange fur was seen poking out from the zipper. the cat's owner the traveler's roommate reportedly didn't know the cat was missing until airport officials gave him a
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call. tsa says the feline fiasco has a happy ending though. owner and kit i have have been reunited but the travel her to rebook his flight and i'm sure if cats could talk, he or she would try to brush it off and didn't mean it, i was just "kit-ing," nothing from katy tur over there. not even -- all right, a little smile. that's going to do it for us this hour. have a happy thanksgiving. thank you, katy tur, she said i'm funny, she's up next. business. unlimited premium data. unlimited hotspot data. (woman 2) you know it's from the most reliable 5g network in america? (vo) when it comes to your business, not all bars are created equal. so switch to verizon business unlimited today.
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(woman 1) i just switched to verizon business unlimited. it's just right for my little business. unlimited premium data. unlimited hotspot data. (woman 2) you know it's from the most reliable 5g network in america? (vo) when it comes to your business, not all bars are created equal. so switch to verizon business unlimited today.
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