tv MSNBC Reports MSNBC January 24, 2023 8:00am-9:00am PST
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this continues to grow, as does a number of people losing their life in this country. right after this massacre, it happened in half moon bay. seven people lost their lives there. it happened in des moines, iowa. two people lost their lives. that's in the last 72 hours. that's the reality that we are living through every single day it seems like in this country. what a tragedy. what a tragedy. thank you for the privilege of your time. lindsey reiser picks up with more news right now. good tuesday morning. i am lindsey reiser at msnbc headquarters in new york. now a reminder of the gun violence gripping our nation. three deadly mass shootings in three days, claiming the lives of 19 people.
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the officials in the coast town of half moon bay say seven people were injured and one killed. the suspected shooter, a 67-year-old man was arrested within hours, captured on this video surrendering to authorities. the mayor of the small town giving voice to the pain and shock folks are feeling there right now. >> i am in shock. it's horrible. how many people have to die? how many children have to be killed? how many children have to witness their parents being killed? >> hours later, police in oakland responded to a shooting that left one person dead and seven others injured. police describe it as a shooting between several people. meanwhile in southern california, the community of monterey park is still reeling from the saturday night shooting that left 11 people dead. this hero's struggle to disarm
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the gunman may have prevented more deaths. he spoke with lester holt about those harrowing moments. >> what did those eyes tell you? >> they told me he wanted to do harm, like he was a troubled individual trying to do harm to others to make people feel the pain he was feeling. >> we will talk with the lieutenant governor of california with the string of shootings, and what the nation needs to do to take on gun violence. we start with the shooting just outside of san francisco in northern california. jake, what do we know right now and how horrific is this for this small community? >> reporter: well, lindsey, this is hard to articulate how shocking and unusual this is to see a mass shooting in this small 12,000-person town on the coast of california. i'm about 45 minutes south of
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san francisco right now, and it's, of course, in this scene where i am standing now that the first deaths took place, the gunman arrived here at this nursery operation here and seems to have gone just beyond the yellow sign you see behind me to the green houses back there where he killed four people and left one in critical condition, and then got back in his vehicle and drove just about a mile from here to a second location killing another three people there before then reportedly driving himself to a deputy substation, where you see in that video he was brought to the ground by sheriff deputies. there are so many layers of horror here, not least of which is that he seems to have known his victims. that is the report at this hour. we don't know that for sure. it has been reported. it seems to have been for the most part, agriculture workers, people that worked in these
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places, making their living raising agriculture products. what is so shocking is this place is known to anybody that lives around here. i come here with my children to buy trees and shrubs, and to see violence like this in this place is outrageous. and hearing earlier, because it took place in the afternoon, it may have been witnessed by people here at the time, including children. you can't help but reel at the disorienting fact of this incredible kind of -- this incredible violence taking place in such a quiet community. >> ken, what is law enforcement saying about the suspected shooting and a possible motive here? >> the suspect was identified as a 67-year-old, and he was
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believed to have worked at one of the farms, and he seemed to work alone and it's a personal grievance in the area of motive. one described him as a disgruntled worker. they say he's cooperating, but they have not said if he said why he did what he did. mass shootings come in clusters. the intense media coverage surrounding one could motivate another. it's rare to have a mass shooter over 40. now we have a 67-year-old male shooter who followed a 72-year-old shooter, both from the same geographic region, lindsey. >> jake ward and ken, thank you. the community in monterey park holding a vigil for the 11 victims overnight, and while investigators search for a
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motive in this shooting, there's surveillance showing a struggle to disarm the shooter at a second location, and his moment of bravery saving countless lives. erin mclaughlin is in monterey park. what are we learning about this hero? >> the hero is 26 years old. he was at the second location, about two miles from where i am now 20 minutes after a gunman open fire in the ballroom behind me, killing at least 11, he then went the two-mile distance to the second location, and that's where the hero engaged with the alleged killer. there was a struggle and that struggle lasting around four minutes in which he managed to wrench the semiautomatic pistol from the hands of the assailant. he told nbc's lester hold that
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he thought he was going to die. take a listen. >> i had to believe that i was going to die, like, my life was ending here, so i lunged at him and grabbed it with both my hands, holding on for dear life. sort of quickly shouted, go away or i will shoot, get out of here, go. >> reporter: now, he says he did not know the gunman. it's unclear if any of the victims knew the suspect. we are now just beginning to learn their names, and three of the 11 have been named by the authorities so far, including 63-year-old lilan li, and 68-year-old al sraeur yo, as well as 65-year-old, my nhan. and she spent so many years going to the dance studio in
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monterey park over the weekends, and unfairly, saturday was her last dance. we never imagined her life would end so suddenly, adding that the family is beginning this lunar new year heartbroken as is the rest of this community. lindsey. >> you can see in the surveillance video, the moment he shouts at the shooter and the shooter leaves. erin mclaughlin, thank you. hours after the shooting in half moon bay, police responded to another mass shooting, this one 40 miles away in oakland at a gas station just after 6:00 p.m. local time. one person is dead and seven others injured. police describe it as a shooting between several people and are calling on the community for help as they investigate. >> we're asking anybody that may have witnessed this incident that may have information or video pertaining to this shooting to please contact our department. >> i want to dig into the gun
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violence in california with the state's lieutenant governor. thank you for being with us and i am sorry it's under these circumstances. >> good to be with you, lindsey. >> our thoughts are with you and your state. i want to ask you how are people doing right now? what are the biggest concerns people are hearing after these tragedies? >> well, the whole state is reeling from this, just as we were coming to grips with the horror of monterey park in the middle of lunar new year celebrations, this attack in the agriculture area, half moon bay of 12,000 people, where people go to buy plants and the big pumpkin patches all along our beautiful coast. these things are highly unusual in these locations that are generally very peaceful, so the
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nature of the attacks have really stunned not just the communities where they have happened but all of us here in what is the most populist state in the country. >> we know the asian community is contending with violence after years of sustained racism. how does your state support the aai community going forward? >> that's a very important point. it has hit the aapi community particularly hard, and after a year the violence against the asian community spurred during the trump administration, we have really come back from that but we are working hard to create crisis centers and resources for people in these communities to be able to deal with this kind of violence. it's very difficult. >> lieutenant governor, you tweeted california refuses to accept this gun violence as the new normal. i spoke with a member of moms demand action yesterday who said
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we are only as strong as our weakest gun laws. we know your state has some of the strictest gun laws in the nation. >> we are very focused in our state on doing what we can at the state level to make it as hard as possible for people to access high velocity weapons and high capacity magazines. we have background checks. you have to be 21 years old to get a gun. we have a ban on assault weapons here in the state. we have things called red flag laws. all kinds of things that we are doing to keep these kinds of weapons of war out of the hands of people who absolutely should not have them. of course, this begs the question why should anybody have weapons of war in their homes, but, again, we have very strict gun laws in our state.
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they are legal, but it's only with background checks and various bans on how -- on the nature of the weapons themselves, particularly the assault weapons. but what we need are laws at the federal level and that's what we have been calling for. we will continue to put these kinds of restrictions in place to the degree that we can. again, that doesn't mean that people can't have guns for hunting, for the kinds of personal defense that some people feel like they like to have in their homes, but the assault-style weapons with a large capacity that we saw in the monterey park shooting, these are the kinds of things we are doing everything to keep out of the hands of californians, and we are calling on a national ban of assault weapons and for congress to do more to limit access to these weapons that can do so much harm in so little
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time. >> we know, senator, from your state, dianne feinstein introduced a bill, a federal ban against assault weapons, which the president supports. we have to leave it there. my thanks to you. again, i am sorry with what you and your community are dealing with. still to come, house republicans push for answers about the classified documents president biden kept when he left office. the white house response so far. plus, will a georgia judge release the grand jury report look into election interference in 2020. seeing red right now. senators are grilling ticket executives for the meltdown during trying to get a ticket to taylor swift's tour.
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we're back now with a scene we know all too well, but this senate hearing is getting a lot of attention today from music fans across the country, especially taylor swift's. live nation along with the music executives are in the hot seat after the ticketmaster debacle left thousands of fans empty when the site crashed multiple times. this is the explanation given to the judiciary committee. >> well, the bots failed to penetrate, and the attacks caused it to slow down. we apologize to the fans. we apologize to miss swift. we need to do better and we will do better. >> joining me, ryan nobles.
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we just heard live nation's argument said it was the bots' fault and not our fault. what are we learning? >> first off, let me say that i knew to be ready to cover anything on capitol hill, but senators pushing their '80s quoting swift lyrics, i did not have that on my bingo card. it's a symptom of a larger cancer that many of the members of the judiciary committee needs to be fixed. it's the influence that live nation and ticketmaster have over the live concert industry. what they are trying to figure out is whether or not this
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monopoly needs to be broken up, and if that means there should be stricter laws enforcing their broad reach. you know, that's obviously putting these executives in a very uncomfortable position. they are also hearing from actual artists, a member of the band, lawrence, is talking about his experience with his band trying to wade their way through the ticketmaster regime in order to get their tickets out to supporters and fans. this is a tough grilling for ticketmaster, and the broader question is does it lead to any tangible change in policy that so far has been elusive here on capitol hill. >> this is nothing new. pearl jam took on ticketmaster in the 90s, and that was before the merge in 2010 where they control 70% of the ticketing space. >> 70%, you think about how big that is. to have that much power and control over the ticketing
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space, and all the added fees. you know, consumers are the ones -- music fans have been suffering for a long time. they talk about the bots that go in and buy up the tickets, and they should use the fees to do better with their technology from the get-go. literally, you know, be able to -- the problem is with these third party scalping technology that they have, and like i said, pearl jam did it. as a music fan and a kid growing up, as i look back, and ticketmaster was called ticket tron, and my brother would buy tickets to see queen, or david bowie at madison square garden, you could get tickets.
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and now it's out of control with the added fees, and it's the idea that -- it's not good for the artist and music in general. live music is what is a big part of driving not only the artist, but also the fans, and it's the experience they deserve to have to have the opportunity to find tickets for their favorite artists, whether it's taylor swift or hairy styles. whatever it is. for me, i look at it as they have just been coasting on the idea that they have had so much control, and live nation and ticketmaster got together. the price gouging is unbelievable. for some music fans, it could be the only show they want to go and see that year and they can't get on the website and the thing keeps crashing. obviously they have the money
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there and they need to do more with their security and they need to do more and figure out technology. i think it's good that capitol hill is looking at this, because, you know, it's an unbelievable monopoly and a thing that has been pushing concert ticket prices up for a long time. >> that said, is there any chatter here about this potentially impacting other ticketing events outside the music industry, like sports? >> i think that's absolutely right, lindsey. this is not just centrally focused on the music industry. ticketmaster and live nation have a huge say of how tickets are sold. 70% of tickets sold in the nfl, which is the most popular sporting event in the united states, are sold through ticketmaster. this is more about the selling
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of tickets to events in a wide spectrum, and these two entities, they have a lot in that space, and they are trying to make it more competitive and by extension make it easier for fans to get access to the events at a price point that is fair. that's a big part of what they are talking about here today. >> we will leave it there. thank you. up next, a georgia grand jury investigated alleged election interference by trump's team for months. will we see what they found out? what a judge will decide today. and then on the hill, the records they want the white house to hand over and biden's response, next. (vo) with verizon, you can now get a private 5g network. so you can do more than connect your business, you can make it even smarter. now ports can know where every piece of cargo is. and where it's going. (dock worker) right on time.
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age is just a number, and mine's unlisted. try boost® high protein with 20 grams of protein for muscle health versus 16 grams in ensure® high protein. boost® high protein. now available in cinnabon® bakery-inspired flavor. learn more at boost.com/tv this afternoon president biden is settle to huddle with democrats surrounding his handling of classified documents. the white house signaled it plans to cooperate with the house oversight and judiciary
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committees but only to an extent. the secret services have other requests for visitor records where the documents were found. the white house counsel says it's willing to cooperate with the house investigations, but suggested there are limits. what are the limits? >> yeah, these letters to the oversight committee and judiciary committee are something of a stalling tactic. house republicans sent a bunch of requests to the white house over the course of the last year, and in early january the white house responded saying you have to submit it, and now the white house responds with another letter saying they will respond with what they consider to be legitimate oversight and will take into account the
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prerogatives, and that's saying they will hold bacterial on probes that they think are too personal or don't go into what they consider to be legitimate, or into ongoing investigations being conducted by the department of justice. that's going to frustrate the house republicans. they believe it's not up to the white house to decide what is legitimate, and it's up to congress to decide the oversight they want to engage in. this is the beginning of a potential lengthily back and forth between the white house and the committees that they want and the testimony they want from the white house and doj officials. >> let's turn to the secret service request. what do they want to see and what is the agency saying? >> this is something we saw in a letter at the beginning of the week with the house republicans wanting any visitor logs at his wilmington delaware home.
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the white house doesn't maintain those and neither does the secret service because it's a personal home for joe biden, and that's the case at his beach home and anywhere else typically where presidents have private homes outside of the white house, and that's not out of the norm for presidents dating back decades. and what the secret service has been clear to say is that, again, we screen potential people that come to these properties in terms of a background check, and we run their names and date of birth and basic information to make sure they can come and visit with the president and first family, but we don't retain that kind of information, so there are not logs they can hand over, and they are saying we are reviewing this request for information, and if there's something that we can, perhaps provide, we may be able to do
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that. it's going to be a lengthy process, and the secret service saying we want to cooperate but don't have what you are asking for in the detailed records. there's no log of when and how often of visitors. >> and let's listen to this. >> the justice department is to reach appropriate decisions in a nonpartisan and neutral way without regard to who the subjects are. that's what we have done in each of these cases and that's what we will continue to do. >> pretty unusual here to hear from merrick garland about this, but it's a tightrope they are essentially walking and he's trying to show they are operating independently from the white house. >> which is the exact messaging
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of the white house, and that's a key point from the top senior officials we have heard from in the last couple of days. not much they can say except to say we are cooperating fully with the department of justice. that's the strategy because they want to, they say, make a distinction between what the sitting president is doing when it comes to classified documents, and his predecessor. president trump kept documents at mar-a-lago and he did not cooperate. when we found these initially at the biden center here in washington, d.c., we did the right thing. that's what you are going to continue to see and hear from the president and his press secretary. they can't go into much more detail, they say, because of the ongoing probe, but it's clear they want to say that this white house is able to act completely independently of the department of justice, and that's something candidate biden ran on and now
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the president said he is proud it's true now that it comes so close to his own investigation. surrounding efforts to block some democrats from committees. what can you tell us? >> this is a statement from victoria sparks. she is out with a statement saying she doesn't want to take part in the bread and services kind of government that will force ilhan omar off a committee. republicans vowed to retaliate, and speaker mccarthy said he can and intends to unilaterally remove adam schiff and eric swalwell from the house of select committee intelligence, but it has to go to the floor to remove ilhan omar to the foreign affairs committee. we are up to two house
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republicans that say they won't support that. as we learned in the speaker's fight, with a narrow majority like this, mccarthy needs basically every republican vote to move something even as simple as something like this, which he made a point to run on. not clear if he wants to spend the political capital on a floor fight to kick a democrat off of a committee because of something she said years ago. >> thank you. in the next hour, a judge is georgia is set to release information on election meddling. she has not said publicly whether she wants the report released, and we won't be hearing from trump's lawyers. they are not participating in today's hearing. blayne is live. this all gets started at noon
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eastern. why aren't trump's people taking part? how soon is the judge going to make a decision. >> reporter: they put out a statement overnight, his attorneys in georgia, and they said up to this point they have not been involved in the process at all. the former president was neither subpoenaed nor asked to come voluntarily and testify before the special grand jury here, so as for today's proceedings, they say they will not be present or participate or be involved in any way in this hearing. there are a number of other people we could hear from that are involved, and many of them within the former president's circle. at the top of the list we know we will hear from the d.a. or somebody from her team. this is the first time we will hear from the d.a. on whether or not it should be public. she knows what is in that report. it has been in her hands for the better part of two weeks. watching which way her argument goes or her team's argument goes, it will be notable.
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we could hear from legal counsel from other people who were witnesses and perhaps, more specifically, people who are targets of the investigation. we are talking about the fake electors. a third party, lindsey, that we will hear from, members of the media. there's a large media coalition that came together and put fort a motion that said there is an extraordinary public interest in making sure the report is seen by the public. they point to the fact that the grand jurors themselves wanted to see this thing come forward, and so they are making arguments as well. as for the timing on this, lindsey, you asked how soon we could see a decision. we could see the judge rule on this in a couple days, but that's not where it will end. there will be an appeals process
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whichever way it goes. we will likely see redactions and the process around that as well if it's released. >> thank you. up next, it's supposed to be a time of celebration. instead the aapi community spent this lunar new year in mourning. how the communities are grappling with mass shootings just days apart. >> rage, i want to say, that it happened on a day where folks are supposed to be celebrating.
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we just learned authorities in half moon bay are set to give an update on the mass shooting there in about half an hour. right now the motive is still not clear. we do know the gunman open fire yesterday at two separate agriculture businesses. at least seven people were killed. another person is seriously injured. while the victims have not yet
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been identified, the mayor tells nbc news all the victims were agriculture workers. the 67-year-old suspect was arrested hours later after surrendering to authorities at a sheriff substation. i want to bring in the vice mayor of half moon bay. thank you for being with us, and i am sorry we are chatting under these circumstances. how are you and how are members of your community doing? >> not doing well. our community is not doing well. this is something that we were hoping would never come into our yard, into our community. it's a tragic event, you know. seven farm workers lost their lives and one is still in danger. families are still waiting to receive news about their relatives. it's difficult times. this location we visit often, at least once a week, and we know the farm workers that live there
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and work there. the children, we provide services. it's difficult to learn about incidents like this, tragedies like this in our community. we were just there at the end of the year celebrating christmas with them. >> i am so sorry. we know the alleged gunman is believed to be a worker at least at one of the locations. do we know anything about him or anything police are telling you about why this happened? >> i know who by the images of the news. i knew the person, like i mentioned, we go to the location to bring resources and services for them, the farm workers, and so we at one point -- it's just difficult. we have not heard much from the law enforcement about the motive of the shooting, but we just know that the families that live there, the children, are being
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affected by this, and the community overall is being very affected by it. >> sorry, vice mayor, did you say you know the shooter? >> correct. we go into this farm at least once a week, sometimes twice a week to bring resources, so we communicate with the workers and people that live there. i know the shooter may have provided information, and maybe resources for him. >> is there anything you any the public should know about any of your previous interactions with him? >> it was always a pleasant interaction. never a negative interaction with us. like i mentioned, we celebrated christmas with these workers, including the shooter. we brought gifts and food for them for the celebration. yesterday part of my team
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probably had been there a few minutes prior to the shooting to bring some items for the families, for the farm workers. >> can you tell us, vice mayor, about these families that are either displaced or affected by the tragedy, or even these kids who the mayor of half moon bay tells nbc news witnessed this horror? >> at this location, there were at least eight children under the age of ten. there were some young adults, some teenagers that seemed to be the ones mostly affected. some of the people probably witnessed the shooting, they were just in shock. as we gathered yesterday at that location before they went into the hotels, i mean, i could see, you know, how they were feeling.
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there was -- you know, the children were unaware. they are children. we provided as much as we could, toys, games, food, snacks. it was the parents and the young teenagers that were very quiet, very distant, not knowing what was going to happen. >> is there anything else you think we should know? >> one of the things that we need to understand, and this is from a survey that was done among the farm working community, in the pandemic, during 2021, there was a three or four month survey that happened asking about how the farm working community was affected by mental health. the housing, where they live, their salaries, very low salaries, and we are talking
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about farm workers making 17,000 to $20,000 a year. the mental health -- we have to understand that. it creates a lot of stress. 98% of the farm worker community suffers from depression and anxiety and high stress levels. >> 98%? >> 98%. this came from a study from the survey that we had, where it was given to us. so that is a high percentage of farm workers suffering from depression. we have to address that. the position i work with has connections to go into the farms to provide the resources and provide the mental health support. the farm community has been neglected for decades. now during 2020, it gave us an opportunity to learn more about the farm community. they are the ones that feed us and kept us alive with fresh
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fruit. you know, this is a mushroom farm. so we have to understand that, you know, that the farm workers need our help and we need to provide them with a lot of support, you know, including mental health. >> half moon bay vice mayor, thank you for your time. we're sorry. and then unfathomable loss coming on the heels of racism and attacks directed towards the aapi in that state and across the country. kathy park has more. what are you hearing from people? >> reporter: as you can imagine, residents stunned from the tragedy. the common theme i hear on the ground is that this is a safe space, a safe community, and therefore they felt violated. they are taking the attack very personally because it happened during the lunar new year
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celebrations. perhaps one of the most important holidays among asian americans, and yesterday we had a chance to speak with an aapi advocate, a leader in the community, and he also calls monterey park home. take a listen. >> do you think this shooting will change the community? >> i think it has already. the aapi community is strong, but as with all the shootings we have seen in america, which happen way too often, we have seen it change the fabric of the community. hopefully we can come together and be stronger. to live in a place to be able we're just not getting that. >> reporter: lindsey, in the wake of this tragedy, the festivities here in monterey park, obviously, lunar new year celebrations have been canceled. the celebrations a few minutes away from where we are where the gunman tried to enter that
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second ballroom, we have learned that the lunar new year celebrations set for this sunday will carry on as scheduled. >> kathy park, thank you. this morning, new earnings data from some of the biggest companies in the country. what companies like verizon at 3m are warning about the future and what it means for the health of our can economy. i'm down with rybelsus®. my a1c is down with rybelsus®. in a clinical study, once-daily rybelsus® significantly lowered a1c better than a leading branded pill. in the same study, people taking rybelsus® lost more weight. rybelsus® isn't for people with type 1 diabetes. don't take rybelsus® if you or your family ever had medullary thyroid cancer, or have multiple endocrine neoplasia syndrome type 2, or if allergic to it. stop rybelsus® and get medical help right away if you get a lump or swelling in your neck, severe stomach pain, or an allergic reaction.
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this morning the stock market is struggling following weak earnings reports from key companies. verizon and 3m showed disappointing earnings. 3m plans to lay off 2,500 employees. we are awaiting a report from microsoft. also this morning, trade agent the new york stock exchange resumed after a technical issue halted trading for dozens of listed stocks. joining me now is morgan brennan. what can you tell us about the technical issue? what are some major findings in the earnings reports? >> it has been a busy day. let's start with the trading issue. dozens of stocks were affected. showing abnormally large moves. in some cases up. in some cases down. when the market opened. that triggered halts in trading. the new york stock exchange says it's investigating. things are back to normal for now. as for earnings, if there's one
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theme that's emerging this morning across companies, across industries, it is caution. plenty of cautious outlooks for 2023. that ranges from health care to weapons maker to railroad. i spoke to the ceo. he talked about uncertainty in the economy and what that will mean in terms of impact this year. after the bell, we do get microsoft. that is going to be closely watched not only because it is such a big name but also because it sets up what we can expect to hear from other tech giants in the coming days when they report their earnings. nonetheless, if you look at the major averages, the dow and s&p both relatively flat right now. the dow in particular moving between gains and losses but hovering near the flat line. >> thank you. before we go, a big morning in hollywood. nominations for the academy
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awards were announced. "everything everywhere all at once" led nominations. for best actor, we have austin butler, collin farrell, brendan fraser. best actress race, cate blanchett. that it for me. "andrea mitchell reports" starts next. eports" starts next a private 5g network. so you can do more than connect your business, you can make it even smarter. now ports can know where every piece of cargo is. and where it's going. (dock worker) right on time. (vo) robots can predict breakdowns and order their own replacement parts. (foreman) nice work. (vo) and retailers can get ahead of the fashion trend
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right now on "andrea mitchell reports," tragedy striking california again. this time in half moon bay, a northern california coastal time where at least seven people are dead in two separate shootings. the suspected gunman arrested by police in a parking lot. >> this kind of shooting is horrific. it's a tragedy that we hear about far too often. today, it has hit home. also this hour, a georgia judge hearing arguments on whether to let the public see what a special grand jury recommends on
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