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tv   CNN Newsroom With Fredricka Whitfield  CNN  February 17, 2024 12:00pm-1:00pm PST

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4 9 8, 7 >> lauren fox on capitol hill. and this is cnn closed captioning bronchi by guilt, visit guilt.com today for up to 70% off designer brands, it has a designer's that get your heart >> racing had inside a prices new every day, hurry. there'll be gone in a flash designer sales at up to 70% are shop guilt.com today hello again everyone thank you so much for joining me. i'm fredricka whitfield in washington, dc, and we begin with some breaking news. we're learning that president biden just spoke with ukrainian president volodymyr zelenskyy, the white house says
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biden reinforced his administration's commitment just supporting ukraine and blame the us congress for a significant loss on the ukrainian battlefield. let's get straight to priscilla alvarez here in washington. priscilla, what are we learning about that call? >> well this is a call for that comes at a critical time for ukraine and also for this funding fight that has been playing out here and washington and president biden taking a moment to nod to a withdrawal, a critical one that occurred hours ago in ukraine, and also taking a moment to tie it to congressional action saying this according to the white house readout, this morning, ukraine's military was forced to withdraw from f dka after ukrainian soldiers had to ration ammunition due to dwindling supplies as a result of congressional inaction resulting in russia's first notable gains in months. president biden emphasized the need for congress for us to urgently pass the national security supplemental funding bill to resupply ukrainian
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forces. now, us officials have recently expressed concern about exactly this, that without additional funds and additional assistance to ukraine that they would be forced to withdraw from key areas resulting in russia gaining territory. and that is the fear that they have held. it's one that president biden has tried to convey since introducing this national security supplemental request last october, that includes 60 billion in additional aid to ukraine. now, it has been stalled because of infighting in congress, we saw how some progress this week with the senate passing of foreign aid package that includes 60 billion in aid to ukraine. but it now goes to the house and house speaker, mike johnson has indicated that he has no plans to put this up for a vote on the house floor and not to mention that the house is also out for two weeks. and so this funding in the interim from remains stalled and ukraine is losing ground at least in this
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particular instance, to russia. and so this comes at a time where vice president kamala harris is trying to reassure ukraine and allies that the us stands with ukraine. president biden doing the same and the phone call with ukrainian president zelenskyy and all of this just going to show the fresh urgency from the white house to make sure that pressure is on congress to get these funds to ukraine all right. priscilla alvarez, thanks so much russia's war on ukraine and the death of putin critic alexey navalny are being discussed at a security conference in munich, germany, a growing number of countries, including the us, are blaming vladimir putin for navalny's death cnn's nick paton walsh has more from munich >> fredreka, shelf focus on the death of navalny circumstances emerging now his mother haven't gone to the prison colony in the arctic circle known as polar wolf receiving a telegram neck confirming his death, being told the body had
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been moved to a nearby town called seller hard gone to the morgue, then told the body wasn't there too, so navalny's team clear that the circumstances around his his death, the investigation around it opaque to say the very best here. and while there isn't direct evidence saying that the kremlin killed navalny purposefully. certainly the most generous interpretation is they failed miserably to keep a man in frail health alive in an arctic circle prison area. and so today we're beginning to hear, yeah more strident reaction, particularly from anthony blinken, us secretary of state's, saying how this is another extraordinary example of putin's brutality and really navalny's death as served as a backdrop. here are stark reminder of the threat russia poses to its internal dissidents, but also to the european countries have gathered here to discuss their security. initially, i think comments from former president donald trump that he might reevaluate his us is rolling but in the future, in nato, that pushed aside because clearly of russia's actions
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near the arctic circle, so many statements we've been hearing a clear reminder of how european countries see that as a threat. and to also navalny's death providing useful context, potentially tragic as it was for ukraine's president volodymyr zelenskyy. he took the stage today to say this as another reminder, frankly of how putin cannot be dealt with. he can't be negotiated with. an also, he had to reveal that the ukrainian forces have pulled out of a key town in eastern ukraine, avdiivka start reflection really that the holdup in aid from the united states, 60 million worth really stuck because of republicans and in congress. but he's having a real impact on ukrainian front lines as it lenski said, look, we've lost one soldier in that fight. the russians have lost seven, and what that might tend potentially to better ukrainian tactics are how they've tried to use this app difficult fight to where the russians down at all shows, shows that moscow almost has inexhaustible human
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resource, is willing to throw it. this war have a callus that indeed is so minds here, very much focused on the threat of putin for loss of navalny and how ukraine it's already deeply suffering on the front lines because of a slowdown or stoppage to some degree in western a fredreka >> all right. nick paton walsh. thank you so much. we're also getting exclusive new details about russia's nuclear plans for space. sources familiar with the us intelligence, say the kremlin is attempting and to develop a weapon capable of knocking out a large network of critical satellites orbiting the earth. cnn's katie bo lillis is here now with more of her exclusive reporting. katie bo, what have you learned about this mystery weapon? >> yeah, fred, so what we've learned about this, this mystery russian nuclear anti-satellite weapon that has caused such alarm in washington for the last few days, is that it is what military space experts refer to generally as a nuclear emp. this is a nuclear weapon that would be parked in
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earth's orbit that if detonated, would send out a massive no energy wave that would potentially cripple other satellites that are surrounding it. so think of this less like a nuclear missile or a nuclear warhead that's being fired at a specific target. and more like a directed energy weapon that's going to blanket a bunch of targets, sort of spreading outward from from the weapon itself. now, really important to emphasise size here, fred, that us officials have said that this is not something that russia has already developed. it's not an orbit. this is just something that russia wants to do. the word that we keep hearing from us officials is that it is aspirational, but if russia were to successfully develop and field a nuclear emp, what would that look like? it wouldn't endanger people? on directly on the earth's surface. but what it could do is have massive damaging impacts on the communications networks that people use to go about their everyday lives to do everything from sending a text message to paying their bills online, to call an uber
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to shop in on instagram. it could also experts say have a big impact. it could take out these large constellations of commercial satellites like like, like spacex satellites that have been used so successfully by ukraine in their fight against russia to both communicate on the battlefield and to direct their fires what we don't know at this point, fred, is what impact this weapon could have on gps satellites and on america's nuclear command and control satellites, those satellites operate at a higher orbit. and in theory are designed to be battle-hardened at nuclear heart. and i should say for it >> okay, i >> gotcha. and then how close is russia to trying to develop this weapon? >> yeah, it's a really good question. the concept of a nuclear emp has been around really since the cold war. and this is something that us officials, this general threat is something that us officials say that they have been tracking for months, if not years. we know from our own
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sources that the pentagon has been watching for the past few months, a stream of intelligence reporting about russian efforts to advance their nuclear powered anti-satellite technology, which is a related technology, but sort of less alarming. president biden said yesterday that what was so concerned turning to the intelligence community was that they realized that russia had the capability to launch this kind of weapon, which of course is not the same thing as saying that they actually have a working nuclear emp. and in fact, the russians have had a number of high-profile setbacks in their nuclear development program, even just a few years ago number of russian scientists were killed in the wake of a failed test launch of a nuclear powered cruise missile. so for some of the sources that i spoke to fred there a little skeptical that russia is actually going to be able to make this work in the long run, but it is certainly something that intelligence officials are watching very, closely and now debate how do we respond >> all right? katie bo lillis.
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thank you so much. >> a>> all right. for more on a of this. now let's bring in former cia officer bob baer. he is also the author of the devil we know, dealing with the new iranian superpower, bob great to see you so you just heard katie bo, her report on russia's development of a nuclear space weapon. so how vulnerable our satellites to a weapons such as that >> they'd been vulnerable for a long time when i was in the cia course, decades ago, the russians were working at interfering with our satellite communications. we will warrant several times they could cut them off at any time how much they've advanced. i don't know, but i think the russians are capable of taking out or satellites emps, laser, laser pulses, and the rest of it. technology is very advanced. they're very good at it. but what worries me is what is, what is putin's intentions? he keeps on looking like these
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bringing us back into the cold war. and with a confrontation, a military confrontation with the united states. and you look at the way ukraine is going as of yesterday. and the rest of the threats to eastern europe and the baltics andres intentions with all this he's breaking treaties as well. it looks like he's trying to gin up that the cold war again, right? because we hear from >> katie bo's reporting there that this kind of effort would interrupt communication, your wi-fi signal for folks at home or even government wi-fi signal, your communications via cell or otherwise, what would be happening with the cloak of that interruption. and while that's the big question mark how would the us combat this effort? what's in place, or what has to be developed in order for the us to protect itself from something like this.
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>> well, it's also the fiber optics that go into the ocean that go into the atlantic or even east asia. the russians could take those out as we saw with nord stream. but this would be an active war. and it depends parallel communications we could set up the military does, but civilian communications worst-case scenario, he could take them out for a very long time >> okay. on friday, president biden emphasized that there's no nuclear threat to americans or anyone else in the world with what russia is doing with this potential weapon. but how concerned are you about? the potential implications of this weapon >> well, the fact that putin has pulled out of so many treaties the fact that he has reorganized the soviet union so many ways and intelligence the military the fact that he's
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been able to sustain this offensive on ukraine and here europeans complete warning us all the time that he's going to prudence, going to be going after the baltics next. >> and >> it's going to move into a confrontation with europe there's so many signs of that. and the fact that he clearly killed navalny is he has no limits so as it pertains to navalny, what are your concerns about whether his family will ever receive his body? what's your thought as to what is happening right now while family members were told it's at one location, it turns out it wasn't at the morgue what would russia be doing with his body or what are they obviously trying to conceal his cause of death. but what do you expect is happening right now? >> i speculate that he was killed with a poison in the last thing the russians want is to give the body of the family to do an independent forensics
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the investigation on how we died because would prove that he was assassinated >> putin light >> when he kills people, likes to leave ambiguity uses proxies, he uses a poisons rare poisons in the rest of it and he has a long history of killing of former intelligence officers and oligarchs and this is just another one. anybody that stands in his way, he'll kill. >> and >> there's a case in florida where the fbi believes that he tried to kill a defector living in miami. so there are no borders for voting. and he'll kill his own citizens. and i do believe, and this is proof. there's died months that he will kill people on our soil is it your feeling that the family will never retrieve anything the likes of navalny's body >> i don't think we'll ever see it. i think a lot he'll put the lie say he died of natural causes, which they've started to do that and so if they give
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the body over, it'd be the way that the family can't can take control of it so that they can avoid a proper autopsy >> yeah. all right. bob baer, we'll leave it there. thank you so much. all right ahead on cnn, a special encore of the oscar winning cnn film that follows alexei navalny's life as an outspoken opposition leader and assassination target navalny airs tonight at nine eastern right here on cnn and still ahead, one virginia volunteer firefighter is dead and several more hurt after an explosion levels a house outside nation's capital, plus police in tennessee are releasing bodycam and dashcam video that shows two deputies being shot during a traffic stop. one of those deputies he's died next >> vegas. the story of sensitivity premiere sunday, february 25th. they ten on cnn and then see idp disrupts cid p
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>> and this cnn an investigation is underway after a catastrophic explosion at a home and sterling, virginia outside of washington, dc. the blast happened last night as emergency crews are responding to gas leaking from a 500 gallon underground propane tank on the side of the home one firefighter, 45 year-old, trevor brown was killed and 13 other people were injured, including 11 first responders. during a press conference earlier today, loudon county fire officials say they assume the explosion was propane related, but no official cause has yet been determined. and new today, police in tennessee have now released body and dashcam video from a deadly traffic stop that led to a five-day manhunt. the driver, kenneth dehart, was charged this week with first-degree murder and attempted first-degree murder. and being a felon in possession of a
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weapon to heart had evaded capture for five days after fleeing the shooting scene, where authorities say he fatally shot deputy greg mcallen and injured deputy shelby eggers. like to bring in now cnn correspondent dianne gallagher, who has been following the story for us. so dianne, i do want to warn viewers at some parts of the story are very hard to watch on this newly released video. so what are you learning? >> that's right, fred, there are two things that we should warn people about this video. number one, it is extremely difficult to watch and to also here at certain points of it. and also that it was released and edited by the blunt county sheriff's office. now, we see at the very beginning of it deputy shelby eggers observing through her dash cam the vehicle that was driven by kenneth to heart crossing the center lane several times. she stops him on suspicion of driving under the influence and at the beginning of the video, she's just talking to the heart about this, says that she
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suspects this. he denies it. she says she smells marijuana. he tells her he didn't realize he was in the other lane. he was just trying to fix his hair and wasn't paying we attention. he denies smoking marijuana throughout the entire video she tells him to get out. he refuses when her backup, deputy, greg macau and arise, he tries to get to heart to leave the vehicle as well to heart continues to refuse. that is when macau and deploys his taser three separate times. now, i want you to see this part. we're going to show you right now. this is the final taser deployment followed by the shots fired now the video pauses when the shots are fired, but mckellen's body cam does show him just falling to the ground there and on the dash cam, you can see eggers
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limping away after she has been shot. the vehicle with the heart takes off and, that is when to heart appears to continue firing back at the officers. eggers tries to fire at the fleeing vehicle. eggers began screaming for macau and to respond to hershey flags down, some other drivers who get out to help her. she asked them to go and check on deputy macallan, one of them comes back and says they don't think that he is breathing. they help get her assistance other officers do arrive there on scene to help her as well. now, you mentioned there was a five man hunt for the heart. he was then eventually arrested and does face first-degree attempted murder, first-degree murder. and those weapons charges. fred, deputy macallan was laid to rest on valentine's day oh, my goodness. >> all right. dianne gallagher. thank you so much >> all right. even one year later, >> life for residents in east palestine, ohio is far from normal summer still without
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we've offered a free book about missile filial month for over ten years called >> 1808724901 are going to msal book.com i'm quoting now an act of greed that's what president biden called the norfolk southern train derailment >> that sent toxins into the soil, water, and air of east palestine, ohio. biden blasting the rail company during a visit to the side a year after that toxic accident? cnn's jason carroll tells us more about biden's visit yesterday and how people there are feeling >> president biden burst order to thank first responders who battled the blaze during the norfolk southern train derailment and to make a promise, his administration would not abandon the people of east palestine many here angry. it took the president a year to visit saying it's too little too late his motorcade met with
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jeers as it traveled through towns some shouting, obscenities. later, the president reaffirmed his promise to see this through, no matter how long it takes. >> we're not going home. no matter what to this job is done. and it's not done yet. we have an obligation. >> biden will have to convince residents such as cathy reese. >> i don't know what took him so long to get here. maybe he's afraid to come to. i don't know i wouldn't want to. be here if i didn't have to be re saw the contamination up close last february, we found dead fish in a creek that runs through her property recess. she no longer sees fish dying in fact, she says she doesn't see many fish at all. >> what would your message to the president be? >> give us more information, do more testing >> the president made a stop at this candle shop in town during his visit where he sipped tap water and met with the shops owners. >> told >> us earlier if they ever had a chance to meet the president, part of their message, do more to get their rail safety act
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passed. >> we see our own senators working together and we can't seem to get once it gets to washington, dc to get everybody on >> the same page, biden reiterated his support for the act while in east palestine, the bipartisan legislation created in the wake of the derailment calls for tougher regulation it's on the industry, but it has been stalled in congress. >> we need action, >> mr. speaker, frustrating law makers such as congressman chris deluzio, whose district in pennsylvania borders. he's palestine he's a co-sponsor of the house version of the bill and says it's all being held up because of rail industry lobbyists trying to keep things just as they are, love these guys pedal the same. i think bad ideology that we can be trusted to regulate ourselves the can, the industry is spending millions to influence congress according to open secrets a non-profit that tracks lobbying efforts. the
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rail industry spent more than $24 last year on lobbying norfolk southern spent more than 2.3 million in 2023 up from the year before when the company spent 1.8 million. >> there are a lot of people from east palestine who are frustrated by this. and so am i. >> the real safety act would be new inspection and new safety requirements for railroad norfolk southern pointed to reductions in its accident rates. >> also saying >> in a statement to cnn, our industry can make real, even safer, but it will take railroads, car owners, and manufacturers and our customers from day one, we've shared these views directly with oleg did officials, we see a real opportunity for us to advance policies that will prevent accidents and improve collaboration with first responders while the battle continues in washington back in east palestine, the epa says it's tests continued to show the air, soil, and water are
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safe we're continues on local creeks. they can keep working. cathy reese says, shall wait to see if the president keeps his word and keep drinking her bottled water. >> i want trunk anything but for how long? i don't know i wish i know. >> jason carroll, cnn east palestine, ohio joining us right now, east palestine resident and member of the environmental group moms clean air force, misti allison misty, what's it been like for you in the past year >> hello. thanks for having me on the show. it has been such a whirlwind year and i will say from the very beginning, it's been a very anxiety-ridden situation. and while a lot of progress has been made hey, there is still so much work to do. and as you saw from jason anxiety is still very real and east palestine in the surrounding area
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>> are you still only drinking bottled water just like the woman that jason just talked to? oh, misty, can you hear me i think >> water system. okay. and >> yeah. go ahead. >> that and they are in the process of installing like carbon filter is now not ever. >> people in the >> are on private wells that don't. water testing as frequently as the city water. and so i definitely understand the fear and anxiety from those residents you were actually able to talk with president biden yesterday. what was that meeting like? what did he say how does this you know, add hope for you >> it does and hope for me, i
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honestly am very pleased that president biden did come to east palestine and fulfill that commitment to come to our area. i think it's so important to put a face on this train derailment and connect go disaster so he can realize firsthand that this has been such a disaster and has really impacted families like mine. i was quite pleased with his remarks and wanting to hold norfolk southern accountable and also mentioning that the government will fill in the gaps when norfolk southern doesn't do everything that the area needs. so i think that's a good step. one other thing too. i was pleased that he did announce those health care research grants from the national institutes of health. that is a great first start. but there is still so much more work that needs to be done. so i hope this is just the beginning of continued conversations with his administration >> do you believe it's safe to continue living there in east palestine? do you see yourself
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staying there? >> my family loves these palestina, my husband is a fourth-generation native and we move to east palestine to raise our children and small-town america. so many different community sadly have went through similar disasters and they have been able to recover and thrive. so i am optimistic that it's palestine can do that too. we are very strong and resilient people, but we need all the help that we can get an order to make sure that that is able to happen. so yes, my family does want to stay in east palestine, but we are closely monitoring the situation and we are very committed to being part of the solution to what's going on here. >> you testified in a senate hearing back in march of last year. has anything changed since you gave that testimony? >> so sadly, what i've learned in the past year is everything takes longer than you think it
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should. i am quite disappointed that the railway safety act has not come to a vote and it has not been passed, as was mentioned, we have bipartisan support from our ohio senators brown and vance and that is quite remarkable. i don't know how anybody could argue that there needs to be more common sense safety legislation in place for railway safety and for the transportation of all of these dangerous chemicals. so i really help that everybody is able to come together and find a way to get this passed instead of continuing find excuses, installing the apa says it removed more than 174,000 tons of contaminated soil. and official say they're confident there is no risk to residents through the water or soil or air contamination. do you buy that? >> i think that this is still an ever evolving situation and east palestine and for
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instance, the creeks are still contaminated and that is something that, that work to tenure to clean up the creeks is going to be going on for some time so while a lot has been done, that is true. we need to continue to clean up the area and i am still strongly advocating and pleading for more long-term health care monitoring the research grants that were announced yesterday is a great first start, but we desperately need long-term health care monitoring and the area from a primary care perspective, the providers and the area are not equipped and don't have a framework in place to be able to know exactly the testing that we need and the treatment that we would potentially need for toxic chemical exposures. and that is something that we desperately need more help with and guidance with in order to make sure that families like mine are taken care of and a proactive way instead of a
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reactive way? >> all right, misti allison, all the best to you, your family, and your entire community. >> thank you. >> all right, the fight between the biden administration in the state of texas over the southern border is growing, will tell you what the state of texas wants to do now stop migrants from entering the us illegally >> the story of sensitivity premiere sunday, february 25, day ten and on cnn >> i am an unholy terror. but lately it's just a ruse i can't let them see. i'm happy >> it's prime video all my shows and movies are here. it's nonstop joy boundless math convulsions of frivolity >> so nice >> boston. >> all your streaming in one app with one password prime
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audi q4 e-tron oh, crap >> that's a really good gift. >> now, we got to get france something >> we could use. these new gift mode. >> yes. >> what are the french like? >> anyone? >> cheese. they like cheese >> brilliant, done let's? do. four more we? >> don't >> plan it, would give new >> anderson, cooper 360 week today on cnn texas governor greg abbott says he plans to build an 80 acre base to house up to 1,800 >> texas national guard members on the us mexico border. he says the base will be built in eagle pass, the border city epicenter of the contentious few between texas and the biden administration cnn's camila bernal joining me now with more
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on this. camila, what are you learning? >> hey, fred, this really is just the latest in this feud that you mentioned between the state of texas and the biden administration over federal immigration policy and health should be handled at the border. now, the base will house up to 1,800 texas national guard members but it could expand to 2,300. if there is a surge in migrants. now, the governor is calling it a military base to amass a large army in a very strategic area. but it's also an 80 acre base that appears to be in direct defiance of the federal border control. now, according to abbott, the base will help them consolidate and it will give them flexibility and speed because of its proximity to the border. but he also highlighted the ability it will give them to expand that razor wire in the area something that's already been a huge point of contention between the two sides. here is what the governor said our goal is to make sure that we expand the effectiveness of that razor
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wire two more areas along this border, having the soldiers located right here wrought by the river. they're going to have the ability to more quickly be able to construct that razor wire barrier and this will reduce the travel time and costs of current living conditions now, last year, texas officials sued the biden administration for cutting that razor wire at the border. >> but last >> month, the supreme court ruled that border patrol agents could remove that razor wire while the state's legal challenge plays out and it's not just the razor wire and the border patrol's access to the border. that's playing now in court. >> the >> legality of that texas decision to implement a series of buoys on its border and the river with mexico that's still in question. to an appeals court is set to reconsider an earlier court's ruling, declaring that barrier illegal and don't forget, abbott continues to send migrants from
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the border to democratic controlled cities. he's across the us, which has been at the center of this showdown between the state of texas and the federal government. now the administration has said plenty of times that this is a federal issue, but abbott, of course, showing with this latest announcement of this new base that he's just not backing down fred all right. >> camila bernal. thanks so much. thank you >> all right. from the trial to the trail in just a few hours, donald trump will address voters at his first run. rally since being ordered to pay nearly $355 million. in his civil fraud case >> remember? remember when rivals beginning all star 2024, tempur-pedic design, the ergo postmarked base to help you fall asleep more easily. it's the only smart base the
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now, former president trump will hold a get out the vote rally in michigan. this will be the first time he'll directly address his supporters since a new york judge ordered him to pay nearly 355 billion in dollars in a devastating fraud ruling. cnn's steve contorno joining us now, steve michigan is a critical battleground state. what are we expecting to hear from trump today? hey, on what was a devastating ruling for him >> well, fred, we're just ten days away from the michigan republican primary, so extensively this video, as it is to rally his supporters here ahead of that primary and of course, as you mentioned, michigan is going to be a critical battleground states this fall as well this is the first of many trips he is expected to make here this year. >> but of course, these >> legal challenges and troubles are looming over the campaign trail. while and certainly over his events today. and that we certainly got a taste. this week of this dynamic of trump. the defendant
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and trump the candidates. clashing against each other. thursday and friday. we had these monster rulings in these legal challenges that trump is facing. and that today he is out in the campaign trail. this dynamic is something that one of his opponent, nikki haley lee, has been drawing attention to as she campaigns in south carolina, listen to what she had to say earlier today >> he's going to be in court in march and april. he's going to be in a different court in april and may he himself has said he's going to be spending more time in a courtroom than he is on the election trail how do you win an election? that way? >> you >> can't win an election if you're spending more time in court, then you are on the campaign trail. you just can't do it drop >> respondent's nikki haley, otra social today, taking a shot at her, say nikki haley is getting absolutely clobbered by crooked joe in the polls. of
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course, many polls actually to show nikki haley performing well against joe biden, especially a critical swing states about trump has also been searched for social all day talking about these legal challenges responding to what captain yesterday saying it was a quote, witch on resharing clips of his son and others defending him today. he also spent some time and philadelphia, he's at seek sneaker con where he is unveiling a new line of shoes. the biden campaign, fred poking fund at that a little bit saying, quote, the closest so get to any air force one's ever again for the rest of his life >> my goodness. all right, steve contorno. thank you so much >> all right >> lies corruption, bribery, prostitution, sometimes the goal of upholding ideals like truth and justice in american politics goes awry. and the stranger than fiction situations that result can leave the voting public's heads spinning in the new cnn original series, united states of scandal, cnn anchor and
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chief washington correspondent jake tapper dives into some of the most sensational political controversies we're here to get your side of the story >> where are the weapons of mass destruction? >> how do you view your time as governor? >> i had 2896 days in prison to ask myself 1,000 questions, including that for 30 or so years, i've shined a bright light fight on the inner workings of american political power. >> it never occurred to him that extorting a hospital might harm people by engaged in a consensual affair with than other man. >> it was shocking. >> how did you end up with a sex tape? and john edwards and rielle hunter, these a good old fold bonds have picked late. >> what? >> you, can't write this stuff. >> looking back, i can't help but feel that we were also quick to embrace the headline that we may have forgotten to dig a little deeper. >> this guy who was a christian state are against human sex trafficking is actually a customer. >> someone at the white house blow the cover of a cia
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operative. this is horrifying. she's >> still endings the south carolina hi governors missing staff said he was hiking the appalachian trail >> the bottom line is this. i've been unfaithful from ally >> why do we keep ending up here? i never truly understand it. you've always been on the reporting side of things. welcome to the hell we all have a little knighted states scandal with jake tapper. >> i've got to get a therapist if they're having an interview with jake tapper >> back-to-back premieres tomorrow at nine on cnn could one hour change how you see the world when >> it to the bottom of the world >> every sunday night, cnn's best journalist the whole story. >> first, the risks they take every >> night, stories they deserve more time. >> we >> add more angles. how do you deal with >> the loss? have to us? >> heading east was the only way to try to get out immerse yourself in deeper storytelling
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the whole story with anderson cooper tomorrow at eight on cnn would chase freedom and limits or you can catch back through for sin on danny included takeout jazz, back on flat jets, maybe back for tacos at the takao scheckner. >> i'm working on my sixth well, good luck with that. >> aren't they would chase freedom unlimited was no annual fee. how did you catch back >> fisher do want you >> one. barbus was to turbotax. >> i broke for generations of family tradition with five little words. i want to make perfume getting my business off
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his staff i got back to my roots we've come from a long lag accountable my grandfather, my great-grandfather, my aren't being rode horses when i see all of us at illness ranch i see how far our legacy can go >> even the most chilling parents know when it's time to go into protect mode nothing kills more viruses on more surfaces than lysol disinfectant spray >> how long have you been tracking the value of our car? should we sell it? we hold our low mileage is paying off. you think we should already sold to i'm daniel lurie and i've spent my career fighting poverty, helping people right here in san francisco. i'm also a father raising two kids in the city. deeply concerned that city hall is allowing crime and lawlessness to spread.
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now we can do something about it by voting yes on prop e. a common sense solution that ensures we use community safety cameras to catch repeat offenders and hold them accountable. vote yes on e. 8, 8, 5, 2, 3, 4, 9, 8, 7, 1, 8, 5, 2, 3, 4 9 8, 7. >> and jeremy diamond in tel aviv. and this is cnn all right, welcome back i two
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teenagers remain detained on gun-related charges and resisting arrest following the mass shooting in kansas city, gunfire broke out at a super bowl parade last wednesday, killing 43 year old lisa lopez-galvan. injury 22 well, others, law enforcement officials tell cnn they believe the shooting was not a response to the super bowl celebration, but the result of a personal dispute. missouri court officials expect additional charges to follow in the ongoing investigation. in the meantime, patrick and brittney mahomes visited two sisters, ages 8.10 who were shot on wednesday and they are currently recovering several donors, including taylor swift, travis kelce, the chiefs, and the nfl have made sizeable contributions to support the victims and fight against violence. this historic moment, as east carolina university's parker bird became the first nc
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doublet division one athlete to play with a prosthetic leg the sophomore infielder and pitcher lost part of his leg in a boating accident two years ago. byrd underwent 22 surgeries in 45 days and ms the entire 2023 season, but he said he is thankful for the people who helped him a long way. >> those guys are really everything to me and my brothers. they'd been there the whole the hallway and made some of the guy thrown the boat when he saw me, it says phenomenal just to see that support i have for me and i can't really it truly thank them enough for a second along the way. >> he's phenomenon a bird's head coach said it was one of his proudest moments ever as a coach. the east carolina pirates beat the rider university bronx six team to, to and rationalizations >> all right, thank you so much for joining me today. i'm fredricka whitfield smerkonish starts right now

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