tv Nightline ABC November 19, 2015 11:37pm-12:07am CST
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dine diving out of the line of firere. one of the miracle survivor stories in that paris cafe. and the first female suicide bomber. what she yelled before setetting off her vest. isis makes its newest and third threat at the u.s. in a matter of days. some of the biggest stars in music shining a light using the power of their melody. to heal heavy hearts. sparking a nationwide conversation about race in america after the tragedies of ferguson, baltimore, and charleston. happy 40th! >> it was a family reunion on the set of gma. raising a cup of coffefee to tst the show's 40th anniversary. don't stop the party there. a surprise guest. mr. worldwide himself joining in on the fun. butirst the "nightline 5." >> but grandma, momm says wocause we use charmin ultra soft. gets you clean without the wasteful wadding.
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investigators scrambling to understand how europe's first female suicide bomber was radilized. all white the threats here at home take an alarmin turn. a new message from isis promising to turn the white house "black with fire." abc's matt gutman reporting from paris tonight. >> reporter: that blast spitting flames and debris from the four-storyry window inside, the target of thatt massive french raid, abdelhamid abaaoud abaaoud. the man france accus of masterminding the attacks shattering paris last friday. detonating that suicide vest, a relative, 26-year-old hasna, europe's first female suicide bomber. in this audio obtained by abc news s.w.a.t. teams are screaming at a woman to get her
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moments laterr she'd blow herself up. tonight abc news has obtained these exclusive pictures of her. fingers as a pistol. investigators scrambling to understand how she was radicalized. but taking no chances. arresting her mother and brother in a suburb of paris tonight. those attacks last friday pittingpit g hitting france in its solar plexus. this video obtained by dailymail.com shows the moments isis terrorists blasted away at one of those restaurants. a spray of glass. inside patrons ducking under tables. diners outside pot ingbolting. the gunman casually firing bullet after bullet. you see the star hiding behind the bar. the bartender scurries down the stairs. while the waitress shields one of the wounded. a woman shot in the arm.
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>> i believed it was a gang war. >> reporter: one of the few who survived the shooting unharmed. >> i stayed in my seat watching the men start shooting. and i understand that something was really wrong when i saw that he didn't shoot at one man but he shoots against evybody. >> reporter: ralph and his friend were having a drink, seated in the front of the restaurant. >> i bent over. just when the shooter start to shoot at me, run in the restaurant, then he turn at me. he just shoot at this moment. >> you literally ducked under his bullets? >> yes. >> reporter: he curls up against the bar as the bullets ricochet. the shooter pauses beforore suddenly jogging up right to the restaurant. aiming his ak-47 at women hiding beneath the table, appearing to prepare to execute them. when miraculously his gun seems to jam, ending his killing spree.
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you can see the gunman escapes into a waiting car and speeds off. allowing those two women to flee for their lives. for ralph, seeing the video is difficult. >> makes you feel emotional? >> it's a very shocking moment. for us it was really real. really hard. releaseing this video right now wasn't a good decision. >> reporter: this is one of eight horrific terrorist attacks launched last friday by isis. the body of the alleged mastermind, 27-year-old abdelhamid abaaoud abdelhamid abaaoud, was so badly damaged by bullets and grenades he had to be identified by fingerprints and dna. tonight. according to the fnch interior minister, since last spring, abaaoud has been involved in four coordinated terror plots. one was the train attack in france last summer when three
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taking the terrorist down. abaaoud traveled to syria in 2014 where he was able to train and recruit for isis. how radicalization happens i is european leaders. it's a key reason for isis' success, a sophisticated recruit many campaign used to lure cause. >> it's a simple diotomy, us versus them. they're the enemy, look at what they're doing in muslim lands, look at what they're doing to muslim people, here are the pictures, here of the videos. that creates emotional reaction. >> reporter: sheikh was once a recruiter for islamic extremists in canada. >> we knew they were isolated, we knew they were marginalized from their parents, we knew they would very eagerly and happily join any other peer network, peer groups that would make them feel like they belonged. >> reporter: after moving away from radical muslim he works with intelligence agencies and
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expose how the jihadists' recruititing works. >> they might get direct messages, then they'll basically add that account into a database where they can start flooding you with pro-isis messages. you can't escape, sit and watch them over and ov. their message starts to resonatee recruits. >> reporter: 22-year-old canadian damon peermont was killed in syria last year after being recruited to join isis. his mother says it could happen to anyone. >> they seemed to collectively surround that person, enjoy their company, tell them how great they are, how wonderful, give them lotsf attention. their thoughts. >> reporter: she says those who have been radicalized do signs. >> are they cutting off a bit, pulling back, more private, spending more timealone? same idea you'd look for anybody
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suffering depression, perhaps. >> reporter: in three videos released this week isis vowed similar attacks in amera, one threatening the white house will turn black with fire, allah willing. u.s. officials say they have detected no specific threats against the u.s. >> the taxpayers of this country have invested a lot of their money in building national counter terrorism capability since 9/11. and that has built something very strong. we are not perfect but we are good. counterterrorism is what you pay us to do. tell us what you saw a then go on living your lives while we do our work. >> reporter: for "nightline," i'm matt gutman in paris. >> our thanks to matt. we'll have all the latatest developments first thing tomorrow morning on "gma." next, pharell williams, alicia keys, john legend. this all-star lineup lending their talent to shine a light on race in america.
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we're going on a musical journey with some of the biggest names out there. including alicia a keys, phell williams williams, bruce springsteen, john legend. an all-star cast shining a light on the race conversation in amererica. while it's challenging in the wake of the tragedies that have brushed our nation recently, we're reminded music can break down barriers. >> reporter: some of the biggest artists hope their talent can, for these a night, smooth over the color lines so we the people can have a conversation about race i'm powerful i'm beautiful >> reporter: it's part of a three-hour special, shining a light, airing friday night at 8:00 p.m. eastern on a&e. one stop on a three-city tour. i took alicia keys to my hometown, baltimore. with the death of an unarmed black man while in police custody, freddie gray sparked
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unrest and anger. >> do you think the police of your friend or enemy if. >> enemy. >> enemy. >> reporter: one woman recognized her 16-year-old son masked and wielding a rock. >> my son wasn't going to be another freddie gray. >> what are you afraid of?? the police? >> the police. i can send michael to the store and he can get shot. you don't know if he's going to come back. >> reporter: in the kids' safe zone in one of the roughest neighborhoods in baltimore, a call to strive for something better takes on a particular urgency. >> hi. can i come sit with y'all? so there's definitely a lot of things that go on in all of our neighborhoods. what about one of the tough
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killing. >> stab people in the head. >> what'd you say? >> stabbing people in the he. >> oh. pain to the world >> reporter: from baltimore to ferguson. npr's michele norris and john legend traveled to ferguson, missouri, where michael brown's mother recalls the day her unarmed son was shot dead by white police officer darren wilson, august 9th, 2014. >> every hour of the day he pops in my head where i can't think of anything else. >> reporter: more than a year later, a weathered pile of stuffed animals still marks the place where her son died. what strikes me standing here is how out in the open we are. there's a lot of people that are seeing what's happening. for them to see his body there for that long. i think that probably had a lot to do with the ge. >> exactly. exactly.
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>> w why do you think it struck such a deep chord among so many people? >> it was just like a scab being pull observed a wound. it was a situation that you see happening over and over and over again. that upset so many people. >> reporter: a grand jury ultimately chose not to indict officer darren wilson for the shooting. we bring that conversation to charleston, south carolina. recording artist pharell williams and journalist soledad o'brien encounter a community still reeling from one of the deadliest attacks on a place of worship in u.s. history. this past june, 21-year-old dylann roof entered the historic mother emanuel church and allegedly opened fire on a prayer group, killing nine people. >> advising of an active shooter, multiple people down. >> reporter: only three survivors. poly shepherd, felicia sanders, and her 11-year-old granddaughter. >> my son is my hero. >> reporter: her son tywanza died trying to protect them.
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>> they was a protector. till the end. he was a protector. >> reporter: just two days later, felicia forgave her son's alleged killer. >> may god have mercy on you. >> reporter: we invited community to join us at mother emanuel that night for a town hall. >> this past year has been crazy for south carolina. t as far as the police violence against blacks, you can't even go to church without getting shot. you think, wow, i cou be next. >> reporter: a call to tox all those across the racial divide. >> i am the descendent of slave owners on both my parents' side. so i have slavery seeped inside of me. when i see people who have suffered for over 300 years, and i know that is on my shoulders. i want every white person to
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that burden and admit, we are the problem. >> reporter: back in baltimore alicia and i are driving through streets of my childhood. >> one-third of the people who have been incarcerated are currently incarcerated, one-third of the population. >> crazy. it steals childhood, it steals dreams, your adulthood, it sets you back. >> reporter: children of incarcerated parents are seven times more likely to end up behind bars, something felicia new pearson know is personally. >> this is my house right here. 2405. they just put the boards up three years ago. >> reporter: she starred as a ruthless hit woman in "the wire." >> are you contracting? doing work around the house? >> we work all over. >> reporter: snoop says she was born addicted to crack. to parents who were both
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incarcerated at the time of her birth. at 14 she was sentenced to eight years in adult prison for second-degree murder. >> at that time when i was young and i didn't know no better, i didn't care about myself. i didn't care what i did. i hurt you or you hurt me. >> reporter: she says the violence depicted on "the wire" was much more reality than fiction. the onscreen backdrops almost distinguishable from the streets we walked ourselves. how pul on this block do you think did time in prison? >> when i was growing up? hike like five. there's not a lot of choices. i'm from baltimore city. if i didn't have a choice to get on tv and be an actress i'd probably still be right here. >> reporter: these were not easy conversations. guilt. anger onon both sides. the facts are the divide between black and white in america are deepening. the truth is, good and decent
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to build a bridge. pain is all around >> reporter: be sure to watch the three-hour special friday at 8:00 p. on a&e. >> when we come back, a toast to 40 years of "good morning america." phil! oh no... (under his breh) hey man! hey peter. (unenthusiastic) oh... haa ha! joanne? is that you? it's me... you don't look a day over 70. am i right? jingle jingle. if you're peter pan, you st young forever. it's what you do. if you want to save fifteen percent or more on car insurance, you switch to geico. you make me feel so young... it's what you do. you make me feel so spring has sprung. constipated? trust number one doctor recommended dulcolax use dulcolax tablets for gentle overnight relief
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despite the early wakeup call a special guest got the crowd rocking. my "nightline" cochor juju chang was right there for all the action. >> reporter: those faces you've woken up to for years. >> good morning. >> good morning, everyone. >> good morning. >> reporter: all back and ready to party. >> it's like a high school or college reunion on steroids. >> what's up, "nightline"? >> reporter: a massive homecoming celebrating four america." >> one direction! >> reporter: capping off a 40-hour nonstop lilivestream event. safe to say it's a very good morning on set. > good moing, america! >> we're so connected. it was, it was a familial kind of relationship. >> i mt say everybody always coming out of this program saying it's the best job i ever had. pitbull. a fireball on stage.
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even the control room. i'm a fireball it's a great party, i'm nice and sweaty. you can't g to a party and not get swea. >> reporte a champagne toast. >> you know you're blessed when family are your friends and friends are family. it's a great gift to know when yo are living the time of your life. >> reporter: cheers, gma, to the past and present and another 40 years to come. >> a toast to everybody who has been a part of gma these past 40 yes. here's to you. >> reporter: for "nightline," i'm juju chang in times square. >> it's been said having a macee to go is a home. having someone to love is the family. having both is a blessing. thank you for watching. tune into "good morningmerica" tomorrow rning. as always, we're online 24/7 on our "nightline" facebook page
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good night. the "insider" from hollywood, your 24/7 celebrity conversation. i'm very honest, very real. >> playing a love interest, how could you not be upfront about hiv? >> jenny mccarthy puts charlie sheen on blast. but is her anger justified? >> there is this myth that hiv can be transmitted through kissing and it can't. >> inside a new controversy. >> and george lucas is breaking up with "star wars." >> if i get in there, i'm just going to cause trouble. >> why he nothing to do
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