tv Katy Tur Reports MSNBC July 5, 2023 12:00pm-1:01pm PDT
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11:00 a.m. eastern. and our coverage continues with "katy tur reports" right now. good to be with you, i'm katy tur. there is movement today from the florida judge who approved the fbi search warrant for mar-a-lago. judge bruce reinhart has ordered more of the justification used to search donald trump's private club and residence he made public. joining me now is nbc news investigative correspondent, tom winter. this affidavit was the subject of a lot of debate and conversation leading up to what we saw with the indictment. what could we learn from the affidavit that we have not yet learned from the indictment? >> right. we had a lot of pages that looked like this. that's what we were able to receive last august, as media organizations fought to get access to the affidavit, which is essentially the fbi's
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homework, why they should be able to enter the residence and conduct search warrants, and receive items of evidence they're searching for. 65% of the paragraphs in the affidavit were redacted in full or in part. it's a significant amount of the document. should we have gotten unredacted pieces three months ago, six months ago, nine months ago, now that the former president has been charged, indicted, a lot of the things that have been blacked out previously are either in this indictment or are still being redacted because as we know this is an ongoing investigation. that component of it surely we won't be able to see. >> so much of the investigation is classified, and that's certainly something that jack smith's team is going to have to deal with when they present this case to a jury and present the evidence to a jury. are we going to get any hints about what more could be in this trial in terms of evidence? we got some hints obviously from the indictment about what sort
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of documents there were. nuclear documents, et cetera. anything in this document that we could use to help us paint a more clear picture? >> my sense of it is the indictment, they were able to go back to the agencies that generated top secret documents to say what is the farthest that we can go in a public-facing indictment to share with people what we have, without going too far, to kind of tip or hand to the secret items inside of it. surely this or what will be unredacted does not contain that level of detail. the types of things you could see, additional types of color, nuance and context on the lead up to this search warrant, which was surely unprecedented, what was the fbi thinking, what were they going through at that point. what were people telling them, additional detail, and nuance could be included. we don't know at this stage. >> just in general, is jack smith done with indictments in
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terms o. classified documents or could we be seeing more potentially wrong doing, more people be caught in this investigation, more indictments to come? >> as i say, this is general for any case. up until the moment trial hits this could certainly be additional indictments that come along. you don't know what people will do in the period between indictment and trial. you don't know what type of activity is going on with respect to the grand jury. are they still listening to evidence? are they still listening to testimony? what could walt nauta do? i don't think we rule anything out through there's no indication we're going to get hit with a slew of indictments. nothing imminent as we heard leading up to the indictment of the former president. we continue to make our calls. >> welcome back from paternity
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leave. we have breaking news from the gulf of oman, the u.s. intervened to stop two separate attempts by iran to seize commercial oil tankers after they passed through the strait of ormuz, both took place in the international waters. and at least one of the incidents, the iranian ship opened fire, inflicting minor damage. according to the u.s. navy, in the last two years alone, iran has harassed, attacked or interfered with 15 internationally flagged merchant vessels. joining me in a moment is admiral james stavridis. he's going to tell us what iran is trying to accomplish, and what it means for energy prices. joining me now is courtney kube to lay out the facts.
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what exactly do we know happened? >> there were two separate incidents here, the first occurred 1:00 a.m. local time, when an iranian ship approached an oil tanker. it had gone through the strait of ormuz, and down in the gulf of iran. the iranian ship was apparently trying to get the tanker to stop with the presumed intent of boarding it and seizing the cargo. the u.s. navy destroy e the uss mcfall, came upon the scene and when the navy showed up, ian yan ship took off without any incident. fast forward three hours, there was a separate incident in the gulf of oman, international waters, according to the u.s. navy when another iranian navy vessel approached another oil tanker. the tanker set off a distress signal.
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the u.s. navy responded. heading in that direction. by the time it got there, the i iranian ship had fired on the tanker. no crews were injured or killed in the incident even though some of the grounds struck the crew living areas. the ship was damaged. the uss mcfall, approached, arrived on scene, the iranian ship took off. >> this firing on a tanker, i mentioned the u.s. navy has said there's been now 17 incidents in the last two years ago but has there been incidents the iranian ship opened fire. >> this is what sets this apart. there have been cases where iranian ships will come upon commercial vessels, military vessels, but the actually firing of shots that actually impact one of the other ships, that's a
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real escalation from what we generally see in that area, and i should point out, they did hear from iran not long ago about this. they're denying they were trying to board or seize the vessels, calling the u.s. claims false. >> courtney kube, thank you very much. retired admiral james stavridis, an msnbc chief international analyst. this is something you know about. you wrote an op-ed in the "washington post" last month or two months ago in may about what iran is doing. as we were talking about courtney, 15, 17 attempts in the last two years. what is the goal here for iran? >> there's a tactical and a strategic goal in play here, courtney. the tactical goal is to inflict harm on the united states, which iran feels is unfairly, unjustly
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seizing iranian oil in other instances. that's the short-term. but longer term, katie, the strategic goal is for iran to dominate what they call the persian gulf. this is the arabian gulf, and they are sending a signal to the international community that they have the opportunity to control. >> they're attempting this. so far, at least in these two incidents, it has not been successful. for them to take the escalating stance of firing on a ship. what does that indicate to you? >> it indicates extreme displeasure on the part of the ayatollahs, and couples with the ongoing unrest in iran. protesters led largely by women and girls. there's a lot of instability inside iran.
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typically an authoritarian regime will lash out. >> if they shut down the strait , what does that mean for the rest of the world? >> 35% of the world's oil passes through the strait. it wouldn't be the first time they attempted it. 35 years ago, they mined the strait, which caused the u.s. navy to react, sinking warships. let's not get to that point. >> is there anything diplomacy can be. we're not at the greatest footing with iran. that's putting it mildly. is there an open channel there, ways to calm this down? >> i think they are. as we know, the trump administration walked away with a nuclear deal with iran. tony blinken and his team are
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working hard in the back channels. >> another international story, happening in israel, the military says it's withdrawn troops of its biggest incursion into the occupied west bank in two decades. let's get a little bit from nbc's matt bradley caught in the fire fight on tuesday. >> reporter: he says the israelis are firing missiles, using armored cars and live ammunition, using everything they have. during our interview, israeli forces pushed toward our position to clear the area. israelis coming in with armored vehicles and an armored bulldozer. >> at least 12 palestinians and 1 australian soldier were killed, targeting quote militant infrastructure, it says, and weapons. again, according to the israel defense forces, the idf,
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israel's attention has moved to the gaza strip where the israeli military says it struck an underground weapons manufacturing facility. they say the strike was a response to militants firing rockets into israel. admiral, you're still with us. we saw reaction to this, an incident in tel aviv, a car ramming and a stabbing. benjamin netanyahu said this is not the last of what is to come from the idf. what's happening? >> we ought to keep in prefr, perspective, this is the largest military operation by defense forces in 20 years in the gaza strip and the west bank. i take him at his word, netanyahu, he's playing to the hard right in his government. this flows from the internal turmoil. >> is this political? >> it has a political component
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and response to the terrorism that the israelis consistently see coming out of the west bank and missiles and rockets are responding to violence with violence. the political opponent is pouring fuel on this fire. >> there's so much unrest both politically and defensively. politically speaking with israelis who do not like the government taking to the streets day in and day out to protest what the government is trying to do with the judiciary, and also the moves the governor is making. is your expectation as these protests continue, that netanyahu will double down on aggressive maneuvers in order to maintain his grip on power. >> i think that is at the heart of the analysis i'm seeing who are deeply concerned about the
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visions in their own society, and about exactly the scenario you paint. finally, the palestinian authority itself in the west bank is extremely weak. there's no leadership coming from that side. it's a witch's brew. >> should people across the country be concerned about retaliatory attacks, more car rammings, stabbings. are we heading into potentially another antifada? >> let's hope not. guess who else is interested in stoking this fire. it will be iran. they will use their proxy, hezbollah, encourage strikes from the syrian side of the border. it's going to be a long hot summer. >> ukraine and nato, you were not among the signatories to expedite ukraine's membership in nato. is that a good idea or bad idea. >> it's an idea whose time has
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not quite come. by definition, it would be in a state of war against russia. let's get to an armistice that pushes the ukrainians to the top. at that point, yes, open the doors, bring them into nato. >> admiral james staph referee -- stavridis. 17 shootings over the fourth of july weekend, what happened and where. plus a federal judge blocked the biden administration's exact with social media companies. what the judge ruled and what it might mean for the next election, and disinformation. also, what scientists discovered in a canadian lake that could define a new gio logical era. we are back in 60 seconds.
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this isn't something that just affects the victims. as i said to the d.a., the bullets really don't care. they don't care what faith you are, what party you belong to. they cause damage, not only to the victims but to the families who we then have to go talk it in the family rooms, and the wider community as you saw where the streets are now empty because people are scared to go out in the street. >> there were 17 mass shootings over the july 4th holiday, taking the lives of at least 18 people according to the gun violence archive. anyone of theme, including two children were killed in washington, d.c. three others in fort worth, texas. in boston, five people were wounded and so were a yet to be released number of victims in hayward, california. meanwhile in philadelphia, the
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city's mayor is set to announce litigation after a person opened fire at random on a city street, was arraigned on murder charges. joining me now is nbc news correspondent rehema ellis. this litigation on gun violence, what do we expect it to be and to accomplish? >> well, they hope it accomplishes something that brings about change. whether it will do that, there's no way that we can no. from the mayor yesterday, one of the things he was saying is this has to end. this is something we have heard many times across this country, way too many times, when this kind of violence comes down on a community, people are calling for change and gun safety of legislation. the mayor says there's a need for that. there's no need, he says for someone to have an ar-15, that they can then arm themselves with, and create havoc and harm, and dismay in a community, so,
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yes, they were going to try and make certain that there's some legislation that would be meaningful to try and stop the flow of guns in this community and others across the country, whether it will lead to that is anyone's guess. >> tell me about the suspect in the philadelphia mass shooting. opening fire on a random city street, and shooting at random? >> it's interesting, a random city street, but the history. he didn't live far from this community. he was a member of the community. he appeared via closed circuit television. he didn't say thinking except yes or no answers to the judge when he was asked questions regarding these 11 charges. no bail is allowed for this person. the judge said this was a heinous crime, there would be no opportunity for bail. even if it was, the bail would be set at 7 1/2 million dollars.
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there's way this person we believe would be able to come up with that kind of money. heavily armed, an ar-15, a handgun, he was wearing a mask, a body armor, a police scanner. he was armed and ready to do harm and he did. >> ehema ellis, thank you very much. and coming up next, orwellian, what a federal judge said the biden administration it no longer do and how it could affect 2024. plus, what is up with the cocaine found in the west wing this weekend. what we know about the substance found and who it might have belonged to, coming up next. mi belonged to, coming up next. a month, each lasting 4 hours or more - can be overwhelming. so, ask your doctor about botox®. botox® prevents headaches in adults with chronic migraine before they even start. it's the #1 prescribed branded chronic migraine treatment. so far, more than 5 million botox® treatments have been given to over eight hundred and fifty thousand
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orwellian, that is how a federal trump appointed judge in louisiana described the biden administration in a lengthy injunction yesterday. judge terry doty ruled the white house likely violated the first amendment over the course of the pandemic by pushing for the removal of social media posts with vaccine and election misinformation or disinformation. he then blocked key administration officials from communicating with social media companies about protected free speech. joining me now is nbc news justice reporter ryan reilly. i hate this practice of ours of saying a trump-appointed judge
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or obama-appointed judge, clinton, bush, et cetera, whatever, is there a reason that we are saying this is a trump-appointed judge in particular. is this ruling out of sorts? >> i think you would be able to tell that from just reading it. but you would be able to correctly guess who this judge was appointed by by reading the opinion. that said, it's important to make sure the government isn't going beyond and violating first amendment rights. they're talking about two situations, they are very different. they're talking about the communications around covid-19 and misinformation, and the fbi side of this, counter terrorism, and threatening posts online. the fbi side is something i followed closely, and there's just not a lot of evidence that the fbi was encouraging social media companies to take down posts. and the argument, especially in the wake of january 6th, that the fbi was too synced up with twitter or facebook or social media companies flies in the
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face of reality. obviously we saw what happened on january 6th itself. the covid misinformation stuff is a little bit more complicated, but i think that, you know, in reading this opinion overall, i think it's important to remember that, a, it is this trump-appointed judge, and it was put out to send a message on the fourth of july. it's not often you get injunctions sent out on the date, the way the 155-page, sort of judicial filing reads, it's not necessarily something that you think, oh, if you happen to finish it on july 4th. >> i had not considered that. that's a very good point. i think it's safe to say the administration will eventually appeal this? >> i think that's safe, and that's where the worry is in communicating with social media companies about ongoing threats. it creates a carve out for that. essentially what a lot of these allegations have to do with is the government flagging posts that violate the standards that these social media companies have independently set up. so if they find something, they're flagging this post, they're not explicitly saying
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you need to take this down. often there's an implicit implication, bringing this to your attention, and the social media company can decide independently whether or not that violates ongoing standards. it's a new area and a complicated one and one there should be close guardrails on to make sure the government is not overreaching. the idea that they can't have any communication is world we don't want to live. >> no joining us now is msnbc political contributor, jake sherman, and former rnc chairman, and political analyst, michael steele. punch bowl was about a kind of rocky stretch the biden administration has had. run me through the examples. >> sure, it's important to say, katy, let's start with the caveat, i mean, the economy is improving, inflation is getting better, but there's just a couple of discreet instances i guess is the word to use that
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show that the biden administration is having some rough rowing. that decision you just referred to, number one, julie su, the president's labor secretary is on the rocks, and unlikely to be confirmed. a number of people in the biden administration, alejandro mayorkas, the dhs secretary, merrick garland, et cetera, are all likely to be impeached, at least could be impeached in the next couple of months. we're heading into a summer in which the biden administration is getting a lot of incoming from capitol hill, not all of it positive, most of it negative. >> cocaine found in the west wing doesn't help, does it, jake? >> we don't know where it came from. the president did not answer a question about it. "the washington post" is reporting that it was found in an area highly trafficked, not using a pun by tourists and guests of the white house.
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>> let's play karine jean-pierre addressing this at the white house. >> where this was discovered is a heavily traveled area where white house, west wing visitors come through this particular area. i just don't have anything more to share. it is under investigation by the secret service. this is in their purview, and so we're going to allow certainly the investigation to continue, and we have confidence that the secret service will get to the bottom of this. >> michael, you can imagine somebody just sweating right now about what they may have left behind. you know, that's all i could think about this weekend, who must be sweating, thinking, oh, my god, what did i do. to have the secret service have to come in and test it at a lab and be part of the news cycle for multiple days. gosh. >> i know they're sitting there going, you know, i just thought i would get a little lift at work. well, yeah.
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not so much. >> it's ridiculous. i know there were issues in the carter administration, but certainly nothing recently. >> nothing recently that we know of. we act like this a sacrosanct space. donald trump has disapproved us of the notion how sacrosanct the white house can be at times, whether, you know, it's individual behavior or the president's behavior itself. all of that makes for the news cycle. >> i think we have a long history of presidents not using the white house in the most -- the most, you know, upstanding ways. >> this is true, but my point is about the news itself and the fact is that it is one more piece that's added to an emerging narrative that sets up the conversation that the president's opponents want to have this fall.
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everybody wants to link the cocaine to his son. everybody wants to link, you know, the incompetencies of his secretaries to the administration and therefore we're going to impeach them. you have narratives, political studying up, even to the extent it's manufactured in the case of impeaching the president himself and a member of his cabinet. certainly this story line does not help, to jake's opening about everything else, the administration is on good footing. the economy, jobs, et cetera, day can't get out of their own way in terms of the narrative. >> in terms of that, economy and jobs, things are going in the right direction. inflation is going down. is there any strategizing between the white house and democrats on the hill about how to get this message out so that they're riding a wave into 2024 instead of trying to climb up a hill. >> it's a really good question, we recently did an event with
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steny hoyer, democrat of maryland, the house majority whip for many years, a long time figure, his points is democrats do so much good and have so much to talk about, that they talk about everything and the message gets lost. listen, i think that democrats have tried to infuse more, talk about the economy ento their messaging but there's a lot of democrats that want them to be more. what michael said is this is absolutely right. this is a narrative the republicans can't get out of the way of in a sense. embarrassing details are going to come up, even if republicans overreach. it's important to keep in mind all of that going into the election season. >> what do you think of the biden white house's -- and biden himself has clapped back at the polling to say my polling was bad in 2020, and look what happened. the polling was bad in 2022, and look what happened. this idea that the polling is
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not adequately representing the actuallyport the -- the actually the president or white house has going into 2024. >> he misses the mark of the other sense, the reflection of what the people know or what they thing. you can talk about polling, you know, not being balanced or well placed or designed, all of these features, but the people they're asking questions of two tuned in to some stenlt over what's going on with the mrks, and -- extent over what's going on with the administration. that's going to get reflected back to them how people view the administration. with low unemployment, high, you know, job growth and opportunity, growing economy, inflation coming down, people
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feel like things suck. and that's because there is a counter narrative that's more effective at telling them you really shouldn't feel good about low unemployment because, fill in the blank. and that fill in the blank is what happens to them every day. >> when republicans come back in session are we going to see republicans put legislation on the house floor or will it be stopped in the rules committee? >> i think a little bit of both. i don't think people on the hill adequately understand it. this is going to be a mad legislative rush. there are a number of critical deadlines ahead of september 30th, including the faa. we have seen all the problems with the air with the delays and cancellations. the faa has to be reauthorized in the next couple of months. the government shuts down september 30.
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to avert a shut down or stopgap measure. there's a ton of critical registration between now and the end of september and a lot of work to do in a couple of month . >> he was sounding the debt ceiling after republicans narrowly won the house. jake, thank you very much. michael thank you as well. coming up, what this lake in canada, this one right here is telling us about the impact that we humans have had on this earth, and they have actual evidence that they can show you to prove it, this lake does. plus, what closed shipping docks in british columbia have to do with you. british columbie to do with you my active psoriatic arthritis can make me feel like i'm losing my rhythm. with skyrizi to treat my skin and joints, i'm getting into my groove. ♪(uplifting music)♪ along with significantly clearer skin...
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it is a scorching day for most of the country after the world marked its hottest days on record two days in a row. and every time an extreme weather event dominates a headline, a debate is reignited. is this caused by us, by human kind or has nature always been this unstable? well, the answer to that question or at least the amount that we as humans have contributed could be found at the bottom of a quiet lake in canada where some scientists argue they have identified a new gio logical epic. the anthro, this is a
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fascinating article. i have read twice now. it was just as interesting the second time. tell me why this lake is so interesting. >> crawford lake is this unassuming lake. it's unique chemistry found pretty much nowhere else on the planet. it has a capacity to capture the past, to sort of keep an annual record of what's happening in the environment through the sediments that accumulate on the lake floor, and scientists have been able to dig into the sediments and uncover this thousand yearlong record that starts with indigenous people during the middle ages and continues through colonization and logging and industrialization, and then it showed around 1950 what happened when people, human impacts started piling up around the planet and potentially have, you know, pushed the earth into a
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new chapter of geographic history. >> here's one of the argues, and this is what lake looks like, and part of what makes it so interesting, you write, is this lake is extremely deep for a small lake, and there's a top player and a middle layer, which is still kind of warm and gets mixed around, but this bottom layer of sediment you described, it's very deep, doesn't move at all. so whatever falls down into the water basically just adds another layer to the sediment down beneath. and when they did a core sample, and we'll show you the an pags of the core sample, you can take out individual layers and go back more than a century, right? >> yeah, almost a thousand years. this record is like incredibly pristine because, as you said, there's basically nothing going on at the bottom of the lake. there's nothing living down there to rustle sediments and
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shake things up. you can count year by year, and literally go back through time starting in the present, and going deeper and deeper into the past. >> when you look at the core sample, things were stable. there was a predictable what would jump down to the pot, and it obviously changed with what was happening around the world. then in 1950, something dramatic happened, and the core sample changed. what happened in the 1950s? >> yeah, so 1950 marks what scientists call the great acceleration, a simultaneous worldwide surge human activities that changes the planet in a fundamental way. one of the markers you can see in the crawford lake core is plutonium, that doesn't occur naturally on earth. it was showing up because of nuclear weapons testing that was happening on the other side of the world and being transported
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through the atmosphere to show up in the little lake. you could see evidence of pollution and chime change. >> when climate scientists argue we have changed things, how does this core sample prove? >> the epic that we exhausted in before was a stretch of pretty stable kems, and we are getting to the point where the planet's average temperature exceeds anything. the way life gets distributed around the planet, advocates say these are now outside kind of the realm of natural variability that existed. the planet is playing by a different rule back and it's because of us. >> what's also interesting is there are examples when we realized things are bad, acid rain is bad, and it shows the
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way we have been able to mitigate. it's acknowledging there's a problem and take steps for them. again, the piece is fascinating. i suggest everyone go and read it on the "washington post." the interactions with the graphics are also very cool. coming up next, what $19 billion worth of cargo is doing stranded off canada's west coast. and how much longer it's going to be there. coast. and how much longer it's going to be there. when you smell the amazing scent of new gain flings... time stops. ♪ (music plays) ♪ your heart races. ♪ ♪ your eyes close. and you realize you're in love... steve? ...with a laundry detergent. new gain flings. seriously good scent. and now, 50% more fresh. that's love at first sniff. - i got the cabin for three days. it's gonna be sweet!
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there is roughly $19 billion sitting in the waters off of canada's west coast, stranded there because of a port strike. more than 7,000 union workers are holding out for a new labor contract, leaving 29 of canada' busiest ports at a standstill. joining me now is cnbc lori an. thank you for coming on. it is not actual physical dollars floating in the waters as it is $19 billion worth of goods. how long is it going to be stranded. >> it is indefinite. the talks are on pause and and what you're looking at is the british columbia and the long shoreman and the wear workers over in canada. so what happened is there was an impasse yesterday over the disagreement in terms of hiring
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like third party workers to do additional jobs. the unions do not want the pores to do that. and so both of them have broken away from the table. and both of them are pointing fingers saying it is each other's fault. that they're not being realistic with their demands. and so i did reach out to both sides individually, and both sides did tell me, just a few hours ago, that they are speaking with mediators one-on-one but not sitting at table directly. so at stake, like you said, it $19 billion of product that includes auto parts and manufacturing parts, as well as, you know, the items that are hitting the store shelves for the holiday and back to school. >> if this doesn't get resolved soon, what are we going to start feeling the impact? is there a drop dead date? >> the drop dead date from a supply chain standpoint, the logistics managers say if this continues through the end of the week, that is when you'll see
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supply chain problems of products coming in. vancouver and prince rupert, they bring in 20% of our trade and that is why it is so important for us americans to be aware of what is going on. >> what are these -- those union worker want? >> they want a fair wage. we talked about not to long ago when it came to the west coast and california. they want to get paid what they deserve. they worked through covid and they have members who died and got sick and they want to make sure when it comes to the maintenance jobs so to speak, that they're given to the long shoremen and not the third party contractors. >> they want a fair wage. who doesn't. thank you very much for coming on. appreciate it. coming up, just when you thought it was safe to go back in the water. many might not be. what is causing the spike in shark attacks and sightings along the east coast. ghtings along the east coast and now she has myplan, the game-changing new plan
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be careful it the water. sharks have been spotted along beaches from florida to maine. in new york, there were five suspected shark attacks just since monday off of new york's coast. robert moses beach on long island was closed when 50 sharks were seen floating around off shore. here is nbc's sam brock. >> reporter: while millions of americans were enjoying the fourth of july, the sharks were not taking a break. in florida, it is the pensacola area as a shark was darting around swimmers, the dorsal fin was bopping up and down as people were running to the stand. there was a trio of attacks on july 4th making that five incidents in two days. shark sightings along the east coast. sending shock waves. a shark in the pensacola area darted around swimmers and sent them rushing to dry land earlier
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this week as folks on the beach were screaming get out of the water. >> it looks like we have a hammer shed shark. >> reporter: another fer oesh fish spots off the coast of surfside in miami. a hammerhead crashing independence day celebrations swimming feet from the busy shore. and farther north, three suspected attacks as people pack the beaches on long island for the holiday. officials say two men in their 40s and a 50-year-old woman are the latest victims from separate shark bite incidents. all three were taken to nearby hospitals and treated for nonlife-threatening injuries. just hours earlier, new york state park officials temporarily closed a nearby beach to swimmers after spotting a school of sand tiger sharks in the water. this 40-mile stretch of long island coastline now the site of five suspected shark attacks in just two days. that comes less than a week after another closen -- close
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encounter. paranoia for beach-goers. >> that is a great white and somewhere a tara dakt i'll. >> despite the rise in fears. >> i don't go more than up to my waist because of the sharks. >> reporter: unprovoked shark attacks are rare. according to the university of florida international shark attack file, florida still reports most unprovoked bites in the u.s. but nationwide, both fatal and nonfatal shark bites are less common than they've been in the past. still, those running the parks in new york say more sharks have recently been swimming closer to shore. putting lifeguards on high alert, ready to raise any red flags, all to revent a potentially pailous attack, the governor has been -- last year they had eight reports six of which were confirmed and prior to that there were only 12 historically in new york state. so something is going on.
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and shark sightings are up. in miami, sam brock, nbc news. >> no thank you for that. sam brock, thank you so much. that will do it for me today. "deadline: white house" starts right now. ♪♪ hi there, everybody. it is 4:00 in new york, i'm in today for nicolle wallace. special counsel jack smith and his team of investigators as you might expect have so far move with relative secrecy. there are no daily press conference, no tweets or fan fair surrounding significant developments so it does take a few trained ears to the ground and the american public's attention to recognize how unrelentless the investigation has surged forward. that is as clear as ever this afternoon. the "wall street journal" is reporting smith's team has taken ow
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