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tv   Erin Burnett Out Front  CNN  April 9, 2024 10:00pm-11:00pm PDT

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where it all began. computable i stopped my nephew. he'll be a lab today, reads >> uncle sitting alongside his father when this happened to my nephew. >> i hope >> the police can understand that this is the same pain that they feel when an officer is killed in the line of duty. >> it's a pain that manifests in memories and pain that manifest as in despair that no. well, i don't know what and i just wish that. >> i could tell tale >> but to >> see him gunned down, i never ever thought that it'd be whom i know thought that it would be hell i've never thought that it would be here. >> now, the chicago police department says is still under investigation and the civilian office of police accountability says they've rommended to the poce superintendent that ofce otheir policing
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powe as that investigation continues, theoocounty state's attorney here ys they are investigati for a potential iminal prosecuon, but they are not there at this poinnd look as peoplwatch this and react to this. reed did fire his weapon first d sohat initial respon from is under questioning. are those inial shot? it is really why this stop happened in the first place and why the shots continue for as long as they did andersen, >> omar jimenez, thanks the news continues right here on cnn >> outright. next, breaking news as trump stares down five days until his first criminal trial hello, new york. the judge in yet another criminal trial, the classified documents case just issuing a separate ruling. this time siding with a special counsel, jack smith and, the unbelievable 180 inside the republican party, the gop running as fast as they can away from a major port ruling today that bans nearly every abortion. the state it of
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arizona. so why are they so afraid of that? isn't that what they said they wanted? hournto one of the sgle on this deadliest events in gaza tonight caing major doubt on israel's ficial versi of the events. >> let's go out front >> and good evening. i'm erin burnett outfront tonight. the breaking news, five days until trump's criminal trial begins in new york. trump denied at every turn tonight as he tries to stall that case just moments ago another key decision coming out in a separate trump trial as well. this in just the past hour, a ruling in trump's mar-a-lago classified documents case, who gave jack smith a partial when signing with his requests to withhold real names of witnesses in court documents, but there are many bots here, but one of them in particular is huge judge cannon still has not announced to trial date for that classified documents, case coming under intense criticism that she's doing exactly what trump wants in delaying the case. now,
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we're going to have worn that breaking ruling in just a moment. paula reid is breaking some more details here at this moment. but again, this is a result of a last-minute hearing for trump in new york today, a very hey, terse rejection. >> today, trump's legal team >> arguing to an appeals court judge that his hush money case should be delayed while the former president challenges a gag order. the decision though was swift moments after the hearing ended, the judge and these two terms pages rejecting trump's argument and at the very end, lots of lines you could have put for your reasoning and she only needed two so this application for an interim stay of the proceedings pending resolution of the article 78 proceeding is denied justice cynthia kim then signing merrily with her initials here cs k, cynthia current, i'm sorry so as of tonight, trump's first criminal trial with 34 counts is full steam ahead to begin on monday trump will become the first us president to face criminal prosecution. and the jury pool in manhattan is already set for this jury selection will begin on monday,
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and one who scheduled to show up on monday has known they're showing up on monday so they know who they are. paula reid is out front and paula the new york case, about to make history tonight, even as judge cannon and florida, again, refuses to set a trial date yeah. >> here are cannon >> did at least decide >> one of the key issues that is created really like a log jam. in this case. and that is whether to reveal the names of witnesses. and she said for now those names will remain secret. but this has caused a lot of tension between the special counsel's office and judge cannon after cannon pushed for more transparency and said she was going to review don't more information in this case. but tonight, she conceded that the special counsel is right. if she were to reveal the names of these witnesses are and we've reported some of these witnesses or low-level employees that trump's club that could potentially subject them to risk and harassment. now, cannon, she has been under a lot of scrutiny for her
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approach to this case. she still has over a dozen motions outstanding. and as you noted, the biggest decision she hasn't made is where to put this case on the calendar we were in court with her well over a month ago. to your arguments on that issue, and she's still has not set a date. now, earn i get a lot of questions amid this tension, the scrutiny about whether the special counsel we'll move to try to get cannon removed from this case. now, there's no indication in their filings that they're going to do that at this point. >> but if they >> were that's difficult, that's a high bar we need a record of mistakes or missteps. and right now, her record is pretty thin, but you can bet if they do attempt that in the future, this backtrack will likely be part of the record. >> certainly it would it would seem that way. all right. thank you very much. paula and i want to go now to our legal analyst, ryan goodman, sarah chris off former us prosecutor for there's other district here in new york. and robert hirshhorn, an attorney and jury and trial consultant so thanks so much to all of you. so ryan, it's brief
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as i said, terse i mean, it didn't take much. i mean, i'm sure you could add lines if you needed to but she only needed two of the of the roughly ten lines here. so is there anything else trump could do that could result in a delay of a case scheduled to start in five days i can't see anything that he could do. i think we're going to go to trial on monday the only kind of unforeseeable event is if he somehow his legal team fell apart and then he got a call for a rescheduling, but that wouldn't happen. his legal team is in place for him across multiple cases. so there's there's he stuck within their stuck with him and he stuck with this trial sarah, what do you think? >> i agree. i mean, he's done everything he can do here to try to delay this and it's just not going to happen. i think we're going forward on monday whether he likes it or not. >> i mean, it is i said it will be history-making. i mean, that that is the first time a former us presidents facing criminal prosecution robert on monday, of course, a judge said, you can't you can't delay the trial. you've got this jury pool, though, already set,
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right? >> already set. >> they're gonna show up. >> they know who they are. we've gone through that. they've got a long questionnaire with 42 questions that they're going to be asking each and every potential juror so how does the process start from here >> yeah, aaron, thank you so much for having me on the show. so first, we'llee if trump has any more connuance is up his sleeve. him and his team will say, because i won't believe it till monday comes >> so what's >> going to happen is the judge is going to call those jurors and he's gonna put them in panels are groups. as i understand it's somewhere around 500 jurors that he summoned. >> and >> what he's gonna do, what it's fascinating, aaron, what he's doing. he's going to have, he's going to talk to the jurors and basically say to them, look, here's how long, here's how long the trial is going to last just because you might have childcare issues work issues that in and of itself is not going to be enough. so i want to know two things. do you have an opinion about the case and you have a
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hardship, you have an opinion that's so strong that you can't be a fair and impartial juror. and what the judge is going to do is literally have the panel members raise their hand up to see if either they have a strong opinion or they have a hardship. he's going to literally literally line the jurors up, have them come up and talk one at a time and tell the judge what their hardship is or what their why they can't be a fair and impartial juror. it's going to be a fascinating process. >> i mean, it is fascinating to imagine 500 people sort of parading through there. so i mean, the way the system is supposed to work is that all of us citizens as jurors are supposed to answer those questions >> honestly >> and this is your your duty as a citizen >> do >> you think that that is reasonable to expect that people are going to say i have a strong opinion or i mean, among the question since we're checking where you get the newest checking what podcasts you listened to check and what books you've read >> yeah. i mean, looking at those questions, i think they're really fairly designed to flesh out what people's
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views are and whether they have biases or preconceived notions. you would hope that people on answer them honestly, but there may be people who very much want to serve on the jury and there may be people who very much don't want to serve on the jury, and then may adjust their answers accordingly, right we understand that happens ryan at the same time and i think this is very important, so i know robert said, i'll believe it when i see it right. it gets to get to starts on monday as iteems w and then as five day countdown, that it will at t same time, a three-judge panel, if i'm correct.ight. will be listening to trump's appeal on a gag order in the case, which could potentially affect the ming t trial itself how does that happen that these two things are going at the same time parallel paths. >> so think the important thing to think about is that trump's argument for why he should not be gagged and what he says about witnesses and the like. is he saying i have a first amendment right to speak my mind to the public and i'm
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campaigning he's not saying i get to say this because i want to influence the jurors so that'why you cahave them two separate tracks. get the jury started, get the trial started, have that happen, and then yes, it's actually important to havbriefing and everything occur very quickly on the gag order in order to potential release to say publicly, but it'not about what he wants to say directed at the court or at the jurors that the trial that's why these two things can happen at the same time. >> and robert, do you think do yoexpect anyone and the these 50i mean, they're gonna be some people i would presume because it's always the case in new york a gng to say that they' not aware the case, but thmarity of them one would thk would be well aware of at least some of the details on this >> yeah, >> absolutely. you'd >> havto be living under a >> rock, not to have heard se, the stoy daniels h money se, everybody would have heard of it r d e vast majoty, but here's the ise. can you take whatever opinions that you have about
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the case or former preside trump and set those aside an decide this case based on the testimon the evidence, a the law. and if the juror say s, they're gonna be on the jury panel, at leahe panel, if not the actual juror, jury. and if they they know the judge is going to cut them loose because the process he set up, aaron, it's designed to ferret out the vast majority of people that either have a legitimate hardship or just can't be fair and impartial. so he's going to wean that group of 500 down to maybe 100 and that's that's the group that's going to be answering the 42 quest's that's going to really answer those questions. it is amazing and i think for people to realize what happens in manhattan if 500 people are going to show up, not the situation, of course, and the vast majority of locations the country. so ryan, the other thing, paula reid breaking the news on judge cannon so several parts to the rolling one. okay. the names are going to be redacted of the witnesses in the actual documents. but trump is still allowed to post things
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about these people or things they've said, and she still refuses a court date what do you take away from that today? >> so think she did the most important thing which is to protect the identity of the witnesses so that the public at large would have a harder time trying to target them, who they are exactly. and it dovetails with what's happening in new york that the gag order is in place because as the judge judgment sean said otherwise, what trump has done with his statements to identifying people specifically is create an atmosphere of intimidation station so that's at least what she has done today. tonight is essentially try to protect some of the witnesses from that atmosphere of intimidation and it could've been awful if she had decided at any other direction. just imagine some of these witnesses dropping out that could have been an easy result, right? >> all right. but thank you. all three very much. and next, the major supreme court ruling from the state of arizona upholding an 18 64 law, bringing a whole new meaning to precedent, which bans nearly every abortion in the state it is a law that republicans like kari lake were once huge fans
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out >> i'm incredibly thrilled that we are going to have great law that's already on the book >> while she's not so thrilled tonight wait to hear what she's saying that she doesn't want to lose her senate race she's not the only one running far, far away. plus president biden offering one of his sharpest rebukes yet of netanyahu as a cnn investigation, you'll see this hour of one of the single deadliest mass casualty events in gaza. cas major doubt on israel's version of events and it looks complicated. >> that's my vision works, organizes our frames by shape and price. >> so it's >> simple to find a pair. you'll love. >> there are the shapes that's the price. >> you get it. >> vision works, see the difference. >> cracked windshield schedule would say flight and will come to you to fix it. this customer was enjoying her morning walk. we texted her when we were on our way and she could track us and see exactly when we derive
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unless necessary to save the mother's life that means rape, incest, all that not included, just the mother's life. the law actually sends abortion providers up to prison, to prison for up to five years >> now that is >> one of the toughest laws in the country. and now some republicans who have claimed to be against abortion rights are doing all they can to distance themselves from today's decision. so let's just start at ground zero on this one in arizona with kari lake who is running for arizona's open senate seat. today, she released a statement which reads, and i quote, i oppose today's ruling and i am calling on katie hobbs and the state legislature to come up with an immediate common sense solution that arizona since can support >> okay. that would be fine if she just was breaking her silence on this issue. you might say, oh, who'd ever heard of a law from 18 64 will kari lake had and in fact, she had ardently supported this very law from 18 64 here she is talking about it two years ago we have a great law on the books right now. i'm incredibly thrilled that we are going to have a great law
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that's already on the books. i believe it's ars 133603. so it will prohibit abortion in arizona except to save the life of a mother. and i think we're going to be setting the paving the way and setting course for other states to follow so she didn't even just say, oh, i support this law in the book. she exactly said what the law did, write, that only in the life of the mother. that's the 18, 64 long she made it very clear she knew what it was and she supported it lakes flip-flopping because she knows that arizona is not paving the way when it comes to the way voters want an arizona as civil war era law is not what voters want. i mean, look at the map. when you see this across the country, ohio, california michigan, vermont, and conservative states, kansas, kentucky, montana have all gone to the polls to protect access to abortion. you had that state that state legislative seat one and alabama by marilyn lands, you are seeing it across this
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country. kayla tausche is out front, live outside the white house to begin our coverage of this tonight. and halo the white house tonight, ready to fight on this issue? they believe that this is key to biden's reelection >> how much? are >> the republican >> flip-flopping attempts though? complicating things of biden in that. >> well, erin, there is still republicans who are flip-flopping in the other directions, swing-state republican candidates who have been a little bit more circumspect on the issue. and now are siding with the policy position that president trump, the former president, has laid out this week, we're, he had he said to let the states decide and it's that position that in conversations tonight, senior white house officials, senior biden campaign officials say is going to be the galvanizing issue for voters and it's going to help them establish a very clear contrast between what their candidate will do and what former president trump is outlining one campaign official we'll described it to me as a state level dobbs referring of course, to the case in 2022
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that helped the supreme court overturned roe v. wade, sparking protests across the country and giving democrats a strong showing in the 2022 midterms and campaign officials site pulling in arizona that show that 62% of arizonans believed that abortion should be legal in all or most cases. but the challenge for biden in that state is going to be how many other issues voters will have to consider that are there. take what the wall street journal found just last month when it pulled voters across swing states, including in arizona, abortion was actually the only issue where biden bested trump. you'll see in other cases like on the economy, immigration and fitness for office, president trump was about 20 points higher than president biden even so they're going full court press on this issue alone. vice president harris will be in tucson later this week and they're gonna be many more surrogates visiting arizona and other swings states to talk about this. >> all right, kayla, thank you very much. let's bring in cnn political commentator and the
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host of pbs firing line, margaret hoover. >> okay. so it's amazing to look at how arizonans view the issue of abortion is kayla lays out those polls? no surprise then that kari lake's running away from it maybe the surprise is how much she knew about it that she had a down accurately and she so stridently supported it before, you know, it bears repeating as you've said, this is a civil war era law that was on the books in arizona 18, 64 arizona wasn't even a state. aaron when this law was on the books. so the supreme court in arizona has just ignored a 2022 ban on abortion that was 15 weeks in favor of a territorial law there wasn't even on the books and it was argued and this is the key and this is why kari lake took this position. she was running for governor in 2022, and she was defending an argument from a far-right extremist group called the alliance defending freedom. >> this is >> a deeply conservative, litigious group. they argue
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that there they're doing the thing they accuse others of. this is lawfare using socially conservative ideology to fuel their arguments and this group, the alliance defending freedom, is responsible for the most onerous anti-lgbt laws and anti-trans laws that are being passed in state legislatures across the country. they are responsible for the argument the state supreme court in arizona accepted >> so she is i guess, and then she had felt like she had to pander to them or to be on their side galvanizing that narrow niche of support in order to try to get her over the finish line for her gubernatorial race. now she's running away from it because guess what? actually, erez donna republicans and a statewide race, arizona republicans, remember, think barry goldwater, barry goldwater, who may have been sort of this pillar in the conservative movement, but arizona conservatives are libertarians on social issues and they always have been, it was barry goldwater's family who actually helped establish the first planned parenthood in
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arizona wow, this is not a state that is going to want the government to impede your personal liberty. >> it is amazing to see whether she'll be able to get away with such a direct flip-flop though. i mean, they don't, they don't always come as clear as this one. i have spoken to >> stay elected in the last hour republican state electrodes and they believed that this will absolutely flipped the legislature. this will absolutely impact the presidential election. this has republicans now on their back feet. there is no way donald trump is going to carry the state. >> trump said, trump has said that he put it to the states yeah. well, put it to the states. that's what you get an arizona while how's it going? it's not going to go so well for him in arizona. and truly this is actually they said 65% of arizonans are in favor of this i mean, this is the most draconian law. now, we have in all the states and all the books no exceptions for rape, no exceptions for incest only in the case of the death of the mother. i mean, this is truly i mean, this is a civil war era
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19th century law. now on the books in 2024 pretty, pretty incredible. all right, margaret, thank you very much. and outfront next, cnn investigates one of the biggest mass casualties events of the gaza war. what cnn uncovered is raising questions about officials, israel's official timeline events, plus republican marjorie taylor greene dialing up the pressure to oust speaker mike johnson. but if trump told her to back down, would she will. you're going to hear because manu raju just asked her in a one on one interview from meat free monday >> to sizzle pans sunday so many ways to save life, ready while it happy, that's 3605 by whole foods market >> so i can take all these trips because priceline has all these amazing deals and that's when i said deal on your right is our infinity deal >> deals deals are me 30 or
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next goal as 700 credits, four join me at time.com. >> how would really happens. >> sunday, april >> 28 did nine on cnn closed captioning is brought to you by you, cora, help maintain a healthy urinary tract with you, cora, i can having utis four, ten years. >> you, cora. we make uti relief product we also make proactive urinary tract health products. you korea is a life stage right today at you core.com >> breaking news, president biden with some of his harshest criticism, yet of israeli prime minister benjamin netanyahu's handling of the war in gaza including the israeli strike on the world central kitchen aid convoy in which seven workers were killed, were delivering food to gaza >> i think what he's doing, his mistake. i don't agree with
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his i think it's outrageous that those forged through three vehicles were hit biden drones and taken out >> this comes, as cnn investigates another fatal incident involvi defense forces. this one, the single deadliest mass casualty into one of the single deadliest cash casualty events in gaza. and cnn's report tonight cast serious doubt on the official israeli version of events that happened on that day warning that some of the images that you are about to see in this investigation are graphic. katie polglase is out front it's early morning on february 29th on al rashid road in northern gaza. thousands of starving people have gathered here to receive food but as the aid trucks arrive, this happens the night would become known as the flour massacre by morning, over 100 would be dead. in one
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of the single biggest mass casualty events of this conflict seen uninvestigated this incident obtaining never seen before videos of that night, collecting evidence from 22 eyewitnesses and tracing the aid itself, all the way to a muslim charity in the uk it was the idf that was then responsible for safely delivering these vital supplies. >> but >> we found they opened fire on unarmed starving palestinians at close range as the aid arrived there explanation for the tragedy using this drone video was the stampede that causes soldiers to fire a warning shots in the air. they later admitted to firing some shots directly. its so-called suspects who approached them the idf footage is incomplete. it cuts between crowds surrounding the trucks and bodies lying on the ground. even this reveals they were firing in a densely packed area, likely to cause severe bloodshed cnn requested the full footage from the idf, but it was denied jihad abu watfa
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was amongst the starving palestinians and started filming as the trucks crossed into northern gaza. >> hello non-white was up telling man has him >> indicated gunfire started earlier than the idf claimed the idf published this timeline saying the trucks arrived at the checkpoint at 4:00 a.m. they've been crossed it and only after that did the idf fire shots that the crowd yeah >> but in >> billows video filmed seven minutes earlier at 4:22 a.m. gunshots ring out. he warns there was a tank the idf claim the convoy was still stationary at the checkpoint at this time
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next jihad begins filming it's now for 20, 8:00 a.m. and there's a barrage of gunfire on the shots. are close analysis by weapons experts of the births indicated heavy automatic gunfire at 600 rounds per minute jehad keeps filming >> not learn more hospital a tank is beside me, were now under siege. he says, moments later you see a truck driving along the road. we spotted traces from the gunfire here one can be seen ricocheting up here according to weapons experts >> dan chill ju then i use often that's too bad if one safe blossom, hello >> story jar >> not luck. shahid >> as david broke the number of dead and injured that emerged was staggering interviews with survivors at hospitals afterwards, found some people had been shot in the upper body
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>> when this amidst the devastation, cnn found a clue as to who had delivered this aid. >> this box with the writing ummah welfare trust. >> this was the first time that the aid had regional than gaza and we were very, very excited and happy that finally we have gone through they received the terrible news as to what had happened via whatsapp or walk up to some photos with cardboard boxes of our logo, my >> welfare first with blood on them. and it came as a shock. this is the first time in 20 years where i've actually seen blood being mixed with aid in all at least 118 died that day with the un struggling to access northern gaza, the idf are responsible for ensuring aid >> arrives safe flee despite this, the un has documented two dozen attacks on palestinians awaiting aid in the last three months alone for. those like,
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jihad living on the verge of famine, it has led to a desperate fight for survival. >> hey, and the man-made i'm i could hey, there laugh, todd >> and now that fight becomes more challenging than ever well, are in the idf, have not yet responded to cnn's questions on these findings. we've also asked for that full unedited drone footage, but those requests have been denied. and really this investigation is calling into the question the idf's ability to safely deliver, distribute aid when it's clearly most desperately needed. >> aaron reich, kitty. thank you very much. again for another outstanding report in vet katie and her investigative team. i want to go now to the democratic senator chris of delaware, member of the foreign relations committee senator, i appreciate your time after the world central kitchen airstrike, you had said conditions may need to be put on us aid to israel. now you've been able to see the cnn
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estimation. i know you just saw it here for the first time yourself, but it contradicts the idf's official account of how at least 100 people were killed after they lined up for food aid in gaza shows that the gunfire started at least seven minutes earlier than the idf actually said heavy automatic gunfire and calling into question their full account. what what's your reaction center >> erin, what's clear both from the reporting. i just saw on cnn and from dozens of previous incidents. is that far too many? any civilians have died in the six months of this conflict against hamas. and far too many aid workers have died. nearly 200 of the world central kitchen incident riveted the attention of many here in congress because jose andres is known to many of us. but frankly, many other incidents like the one you were just documenting in which more than 100 died also have shown that the chaos in gaza of the civilian deaths in gaza and the
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difficulty delivering humanitarian aid has gotten to a point where there needs to be changes made. in the last few days, more aid trucks have gotten into gaza than at any point in six months. i think more than 400 today. and the netanyahu government has announced an intention to open the erez gate in the north, which if that's done could make a significant impact on the hungry sure bordering on famine in the north of gaza, as well as the ashdod port. and a route through kerem shalom, four trucks from jordan this is long overdue. and i think it's time for us to see some significant changes like this. senator, to the extent that this report calls into question, though the official aversion, a very specific timeline that had been put out by the idf. it just raises a crucial question for you and your colleagues, but you and in dealing with israeli officials, do you trust what the israeli prime minister benjamin netanyahu says right now? >> well luck, it's been an
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important, but a challenging relationship. the united states and israel are close and longstanding allies. we are committed to defending israel against any attack by iran. and it's important to remember how this entire six month war and conflict began with the horrifying terrorist attack by hamas i've met with prime minister netanyahu many times and i raised with him in person six weeks ago when i last met with them, the urgency of addressing deconfliction, the number of folks who were being killed in an attempt to deliver hey that deconfliction clearly did not get fixed. so clearly there is more work to be done and no. and your fellow democratic senator elizabeth warren, she was asked if she thought it israel was committing genocide in gaza. she answered and i quote, or if you want to do it as an application of law, i believe they'll find that it is genocide. and they had ample evidence to do so that day she's referring to as is international courts, she's talking about a quarter rev law
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but when you talk about, you've had conversations with netanyahu and then clearly things still need to be addressed. it was i believe how you still put it. >> do you agree with her? >> is >> this genocide >> i don't think that's a legal conclusion that i can or should reach tonight. but i think president biden and many of us in the senate have been pressed pressing for changes in policy and practice. we've been clear that a large-scale attack on rafah, even though there are still hamas battalions, there is not i'm justified without providing for civilians to move out of the way and that there has to be a change in terms of the humanitarian relief that's getting into israel i'm wearing a small note that says 1806 on it as a reminder that there are still hostages being held by hamas underneath gaza i met with a hostage family earlier today with her goldberg, poland's mother, rachel and my hope is that we are seeing progress in negotiations in cairo, that
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hamas will accept the latest offer from israel and we will see both a hostage release and a ceasefire center cones. thank you very much. i appreciate it. >> thank you very. >> next, marjorie taylor greene ramping up per threat to oust the speaker, mike johnson tonight is trump's morning her crusade. you're going to hear the details of what she's telling are manu raju, he just spoke to her. he's going to share what she said with you and costco cannot keep gold bars? yes, they have real bars made of gold. what else? they've got everything costco, they can't keep them in stock. so should you be buying them it's a big question here. suzi orman is outfront next of a guy lost ben and my dignity. of watching my team lose wasn't punishment enough >> where do you look at home? what do you it's a one screen
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pain, or parasitic infection. don't change or stop asthma medicine without talking to your doctor >> so >> off to the world ask your child sex and with specialists about the pixels from pep in their step to shine in their coats. and people switch their dogs foods, the farmers dog, the effects can seem like magic. >> but >> there's no magic involved it's just smarter, healthier pet food. >> it's amazing what real food can do. >> file 100% free with turbotax free edition, roughly 37% of taxpayers qualify form ten, 40, and limited credits only see how a turbotax.com that's me all right breaking news, republican congresswoman marjorie taylor greene, just telling are manu raju, that speaker >> mike johnson has quote, completely betrayed his party. or comments coming just hours after she sent a scathing five-page letter to house republicans pushing for his ouster writing in part quote,
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he is throwing our own razor-thin majority into chaos by not serving his own gop conference that elected him. well, manu is out front on capitol hill and mana you just had a chance to speak to congresswoman greene, who could be the one to oust the speaker here it only takes one, she's been saying she's going to do it. and you had a chance to talk to her about that and whether trum's supporting our efforts. what did she tell you? >> she made clear that she is not backing off. she would not detail exactly what would trigger this vote. the call that you could call it any moment really, to seek mike johnson's ouster, but she didn't warn him not to move forward with ukraine aid package, just as mike johnson is at the moment trying to cobble it together. ukraine aid back and she told me that you did not speak with johnson on friday, even as they were planned to speak because she declined to do so saying that you needed to speak to her constituents first, and she plants to speak with them this week if he's willing to do so. but aaron, he she did speak to
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donald trump earlier today and i asked her whether or not trump is supporting her effort. >> well i absolutely loved president trump. i have a great to him elier today. i w't d speafor prident ump and i'm i don't think this is really a problem. >> y don't think you do you ink he'll way in one way or the other? is he dissuading you? >> i will never speak for president trump about. he will or won't do. he is the leader of our party. and i always leave that up to him respectfully. but i think president trump is far more focused on winning his campaign to become president of the united states in 2025 i definitely don't think he wants a republican speaker of the house that will fund the department of justice assess that's trying to put him in jail for the rest of his life >> if he called you and said marjorie backoff, would you listen to >> he hasn't called me and said that yet, so yeah, i don't work for president trump that's totally at the him to weigh in if he wanted to. i
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think he's focused on his election and he shut me but aaron that are still a lot of questions about how exactly this would play out, not just the timing, but where the votes will be spended lot of time >> today talking to republicans, many of them either noncommittal or just a flat out opposed to this effort and will democrats come to speaker johnson's defense if he moves forward on ukraine aid, that is something that democratic leader hakeem jeffries won't weigh in on tonight >> and obviously at the heart of all of this manu thank you very much. at the heart of it. the election and americans deep fears about the economy that brings us to what really is a new gold rush in america people regular americans, not just investors, big investors are big banks are rushing to buy actual gold, physical gold amid inflation concerns. >> look at costco. costco, so only started selling gold bars last year for proof. okay, so this is the situation they start selling. we are go and wells fargo is now estimated that costco is now selling up to $200 a month and gold bars
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now i. just want to it sounds enormous. it is by comparison, costco sold $100 million in gold bars for the entire quarter that ended last november. so when entire quarter 100 million and now running at 200 million a month bank of america now projecting that the price of an ounce of gold budget seven straight record highs lately, we'll hit $3,000 by the end of the year for now, suzi orman, one of the world's best-known personal finance advisors and the founder of secure, save. and the host of the women and money podcast. >> so susie, i lay all this >> out because it comes from a place of a lot of very real fears of inflation and prices going up and feeling like your money doesn't go as far and people are rushing into gold are you shocked when you hear things like this? $100 first of all, they weren't even selling them a year ago, then they sell them one-quarter hundred million dollars. now they're running a $200 million a month and gold bars, is that something anybody should be fine?
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>> well, here's the thing. aaron is that people always have this herd mentality and the fear of missing out to happen with bitcoin. that coin is going up. it's going up, it's going up. all i have to buy it. oh, go never even thought about gold before. now here you're in pascal and people are in line and they're running out of it and they're only he let people buy five apiece and all of a sudden this, this frenzy starts and everybody wants to be a part of it, especially when they see the price going up and the price has gone up 13% so far this year, what they are not thinking about, however is that it's one thing to buy gold and get a physical bar. it's another thing to have to sell it. and that is not what they are thinking about. you have to have it surveyed all these things. where do you go? where do you keep it? is it ensured, is it not and so there's a lot of things that i think people really need to think about when
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you're buying physical gold less. and if you want to be invested in gold, you can do it through an etf. you can do it many ways. but to buy the actual commodity, i'm not sure is something that people should be doing, that, which is a crucial point, the point you make of if you who do believe that, that gold is a good thing to buy, right? as a sort of a hedge, as against inflation, that there are other ways to do it, as you mentioned, exchange traded funds and other ways do you, susie right now, have fears about where inflation is going though. those fears that clearly is where a lot of americans are getting this anxiety from i do, have fair about it, but for different reasons than before. now, i'm afraid because commodities are going up, not just gold. look at the price of oil, oils at 86, $89, right in there, depending if it's wti or brent and as oil goes up, what else happens the price of gasoline
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starts to go up. so people start to feel it every single day as they're filling up their tanks then everybody starts to talk about it again. and also the news is saying, what's going to happen tomorrow with the cpi is inflation going to go? oh up, is it not? and so then you see people getting coming out of stocks, possibly going into bonds and vice-versa i think everybody needs to just come down i think they need to see really where is it at? and not be investing according to inflation. and they need to be investing according to what's going on in their individual lives. are they older and do they need fixed income? so should they be buying a 20 or 30 year treasury bond and locking it up? or are they younger and should they be in the stock market? so i think everybody is just freaking out right now, but i don't think we need to be freaking out as much as they are, and everyone is freaking out. i mean, that's
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the reality. i think it's more macro than even the economy, right? it's sort of the soul searching moment of great anxiety when you talk about politics and democracy and what's at stake. and then the economy. the context here, you've got to zillow analysis. i know you were looking at this susie 550 cities in the united states where the typical value of a home is $1 million or more at the same time as a new cnbc survey? but you lead found that 65% of americans are living paycheck to paycheck and say that they only have what, $400 of emergency money credit card debt is surging >> yeah, wondered urine of emergency money >> so you >> have two sectors really going on which are the rich people are getting richer and richer. they have the money to be investing in stock in ai, taking advantage of everything, want to know what's really sad is 25 hi percent of the real estate that people could have bought themselves were bought by investors. people who wanted
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to make money. the big people, which left little are inventories for those people who just wanted to buy a home so it's getting really difficult, not just because of interest rates and mortgages, but because of insurance and everything. but there's always help out there and there's always a way to find your way to that pot of gold. >> all right, well, you know what susie, i like talking to you because when i feel anxiety about all of these things and i i think everybody watching does like i said, on an existential deep level it is good to be confronted with you're always optimism, so thank you so much. good to talk to you next, the mother and father of the teenage gunman who shot and killed four students in michigan, have now been sentenced. as of tonight. we have an update for you the full details and the 33 year-old woman from la us angeles who is being held in a russian prison tonight for boyfriend is just received new information from her and he's going to tell us
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one 3636 called now blue carbon a cnn. >> sunday, april 21 at nine tonight, the maximum sentence for the parents of school shooter, ethan crumbley. uh, judges ruled that james and jennifer crumbley will spend ten to 15 years in prison the parents were convicted of involuntary manslaughter after their son shot and killed four of his classmates. the judge's ruling coming after heartbreaking impact statements from the families of the victims, whitney wild is out front it is a sense of this court must crumbley that you serve ten to 15 years. james crumbley is a sense of this court that you serve ten to 15 here's what the michigan department of corrections >> ten to 15 years that's how long the parents of the teenager who shot and killed four students in 2021 at an oxford, michigan high school using a gun. they gifted him, were sentenced to spend behind bars both convicted of involuntary manslaughter in
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separate trials. it's the first time a parent of a mass shooter has been held criminally responsible >> this tragedy is taken carotid a toll on our family. >> emotions ran high as parents and family members of tate, mirror hana st. juliana, madison baldwin, and justin shilling spoke directly to the crumbleys about their loved ones who were killed in the november 2021 shooting when you texted ethan, don't do it was texting madisyn, i love you. >> please call mom you have failed your son and you have failed us all this failure had deadly consequences that can never be undone, that can never be made, right >> your mistakes created our everlasting nightmare. our 10-year-old little brother had to learn how to write a eulogy for a sister for heav'n learn how to write essays. >> the crumbleys son pleaded guilty to 24 charges, including first-degree murder. he was sentenced to life without parole. and well, jennifer
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crumbley apologized in court. she continued to place blame on the school now, over you left in the dark about previous concerning behavior but in the counselor's office that morning, none of those previous issues were brought to our attention. >> james crumbley, who did not take the stand during his trial apologizing for the first time >> i am sorry for your loss as a result of what my son did i cannot express how much i wish that i hadn't done what was going on with him or what was going to happen >> but the judge said these convictions were not about poor parenting >> these convictions confirm repeated acts our lack of x that could have halted an oncoming runaway train opportunity knocked over and over again, louder and louder?