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tv   NBC Nightly News With Lester Holt  NBC  May 7, 2024 2:03am-2:39am PDT

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83 years old. hey, the say hey, kid, the current day giants actually need some of that willie mays magic. let's take you to philadelphia. mason black making his major league debut. he grew up near philly rooting for the phillies. more than 60 of his family and friends were on hand. they're all fired up. pick it up. bottom of the first inning and he looks sharp, striking out bryce harper right there. harper, though, would later get revenge a few innings later. those cheers. not so much later. a three run homer. here, the phillies beat the slumping giants. giants need help 6 to 1. the final. the giants have lost six of their last seven on this road trip at the coliseum tonight. a's and rangers hello to bruce bochy sitting down there. his defending world
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series champs. he's got him back in first place. eighth inning a's had a two to nothing lead. not anymore corey seager with the three run homer over the xfinity sign. rangers win this game 4
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honored 16 luminaries. today, it's part of its 22nd annual latino spirit awards, celebrates the remarkable achievements and pioneering contributions of prominent community members and, among today's honorees, our own paladino, a reporter for our sister station telemundo 48. nino was honored for her achievement in journalism. people are walking the walk. wow. capitol. congratulations tonight, israel launching strikes in rafah after hamas said it has accepted a cease-fire proposal. images of celebrations in gaza following that announcement from hamas, that it agreed to terms presented by
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egypt and qatar. but israel saying there's no deal yet and going ahead with strikes in rafah, the southern gaza city where it told nearly 100,000 people to evacuate. the uncertainty tonight. also this evening, donald trump found in contempt again at his hush money trial for violating his partial gag order. the new threat from the judge to send him to jail. severe storms on the move. millions in the central u.s. under a rare high risk for tornadoes. after the flooding in texas that left a 4-year-old boy dead. the u.s. soldier detained in russia. the crime he's accused of committing. columbia university making a major announcement about its main graduation ceremony after weeks of protests and dramatic arrests. the frightening moments during a livestreamed sermon. a man pulling a gun on the pastor. but it fails to go off. how he was stopped. the final countdown after years of delays. tonight boeing is set to launch its first crewed flight of its starliner capsule.
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and a historic battleship like you've never seen before. visitors flocking for a rare glimpse as it gets a makeover. >> announcer: this is nbc "nightly news" with lester holt. good evening and welcome. the news traveled fast in gaza tonight, where celebrations broke out after word began to spread that hamas had accepted a deal to end hostilities in gaza. but hopes of a pause in the fighting were just as quickly shattered when israel declared the deal hamas was embracing was far from israel's essential demands. and so instead of a deal tonight israel is raising the stakes, pressing forward on its threatened military operation in rafah, potentially displacing 100,000 people who had been told to leave by the israeli military as it increases pressure on hamas. tonight, though, diplomacy is still
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alive. richard engel is inside israel. >> reporter: in gaza tonight they're celebrating their salvation after hamas announced it had accepted a sweeping cease-fire. but it seems they're celebrating too soon. israel says there is no deal yet, that the terms hamas accepted are far from israel's necessary requirements and are not the original offer israel had on the table. but israel is dispatching a delegation to negotiate. while its war cabinet has also unanimously approved a targeted operation against hamas in the southern city of rafah. our crew capturing it starting this morning. >> there has been a response from hamas to the hostage deal. we're currently reviewing that response. >> reporter: while the details remain unclear, a senior arab negotiator directly involved in the talks tells nbc news "hamas's position has shifted greatly over the past 48 hours." and that the deal hamas says it accepts would see it free 33 hostages in exchange for a roughly 40-day
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cease-fire followed by further hostage releases and the freeing of more than 1,000 palestinian prisoners held in israeli jails. but the source notes with israel not at the most recent negotiations hamas agreed to its own terms using its own interpretation of the offer. israel believes 93 hostages captured on october 7th are still alive in gaza and that many of them are being held in rafah, the only remaining city in gaza where israel has not yet conducted major ground operations. israel this morning ordered roughly 100,000 palestinians to evacuate from part of rafah, using leaflets to announce that intense counterterrorism operations were about to begin. president biden opposes a full-scale assault on rafah because it is packed with more than a million civilians who fled there for their safety. >> richard, meanwhile we've learned the white house has
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stopped a u.s. shipment of military aid to israel. >> reporter: this is a rare move, lester. the white house blocking a large shipment of offensive weapons including 2,000-pound bombs just as israel's intensifying military operations in rafah. two administration officials confirming it but say that it does not reflect a shift in overall policy. the white house isn't commenting. lester? >> richard engel, thank you. back at home, a manhattan courtroom, a new fine imposed on former president trump for violating the gag order in his hush money trial. vaughn hillyard reports on a sharp new warning from the judge. >> reporter: tonight former president trump facing a new threat of jail time at his hush money trial after his tenth violation of the judge's gag order. >> he's taken away my constitutional right to speak. >> reporter: the judge directly addressing the possibility of putting mr. trump behind bars over future violations. "the magnitude of such a decision is not lost on me. you are the former president of the
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united states and possibly the next president as well." adding "as much as i do not want to impose a jail sanction, i will if necessary and appropriate." >> frankly, you know what? our constitution is much more important than jail. it's not even close. i'll do that sacrifice any day. >> reporter: the judge fining mr. trump an additional $1,000 for complaining about the jury in deep blue manhattan saying "it's 95% democrat." the judge saying the former president wrongfully called into question the integrity of the jury. mr. trump has pleaded not guilty to low-level felony charges for allegedly disguising reimbursements to michael cohen for hush money payments to stormy daniels as legal expenses in his company's internal business records. if convicted, mr. trump could face anywhere from four years in prison to just probation. taking the stand this morning, jeffrey mcconney, who oversaw the trump organization's accounting department. striking at the heart
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of the prosecution's case of falsifying business records. testifying about invoices describing the reimbursements as legal expenses, saying he was ordered by another trump organization executive to reimburse cohen $420,000 for the $130,000 payment to stormy daniels, most from mr. trump's personal account. but on cross-examination mcconney said he had not spoken to mr. trump directly about the business records. another trump organization employee, deborah tarasoff, testifying about mr. trump's process of signing checks including to cohen, which were shown to the jury saying "if he didn't want to sign it he didn't sign it. it was signed in sharpie and it was black and that's what he uses." >> vaughn, the prosecution also giving an indication of the timing of this case. >> reporter: yeah, lester. prosecutors said they intend to call witnesses for about the next two weeks. at that point mr. trump's team will be able to present its own defense. and of course the question of whether the former president will take the stand
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himself. lester? >> all right. vaughn hillyard in new york tonight. thank you. there is a new severe weather threat we're following tonight after that flooding emergency in texas led to more than 600 rescues in the houston area alone. officials said two people were killed including a 4-year-old boy. the flooding left homes submerged, cars floating and lives upended. bill karins is here. bill, conditions are really ripe for another tough night. >> lester, we only have these high-risk tornado days about one or two times a year. and the next 12 hours, that's the heart of it for this event. and we're really focusing in here on areas from oklahoma into southern kansas. that's where we have not only the chance of tornadoes but even strong tornadoes. and they could occur well after the sun sets too through the evening. so here's where we're watching for watches. now all the way from omaha southwards we have what we call a particularly dangerous situation, tornado watch till 11:00 p.m. that includes oklahoma city and wichita. already a couple tornado warnings there now. and it should ramp up as we go through the evening. as 11:00 p.m. rolls around, that's when the line of storms will arrive in kansas
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city, tulsa and oklahoma city. and lester, we're not done. we're going to deal with this storm system through the night and then we're going to have the chance of severe storms the next two days right through the heartland. >> what a wild spring we've had. bill karins, thank you very much. there's word tonight that a u.s. soldier has been detained in russia. pentagon correspondent courtney kube has late details. courtney, what do we know? >> reporter: yeah, lester, according to the u.s. army, staff sergeant gordon black was detained in russia on thursday, accused of stealing. now, he was stationed at a base in south korea but was actually traveling back to the united states at the end of his tour when he stopped in russia to see a woman he had a romantic relationship with. officials here say he went to russia without permission from his superiors. now, the u.s. state department currently warns americans not to travel to russia, saying two other americans are being wrongfully detained, paul whelan and journalist evan gershkovich. staff sergeant black is currently being held in pretrial confinement. lester? >> courtney kube, thank you. with campus protests over the fighting in gaza showing no signs of
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easing around the country, columbia university today became the latest school to cancel its main commencement ceremony. maggie vespa now with late developments. >> reporter: the tidal wave of protests including tonight several arrests near new york city's famed met gala now colliding with commencement season. meanwhile, columbia university today canceling its main graduation celebration. >> it's been a tough time, honestly. it's been really i think -- i think it's been demoralizing. >> free palestine! >> reporter: also tonight, emory university announcing it will move its main commencement off campus, citing safety concerns. >> why are you doing this? >> reporter: last month police clashed with demonstrators there. meanwhile, commencement season marked by disruptions. a pro-palestinian protester covered in fake blood stormed northeastern university's stage this weekend. >> divest! >> reporter: while demonstrators marched through the university of michigan ceremony. at ucla today dozens
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of arrests. >> we will not rest! disclose! >> reporter: demonstrators calling on the school to divest from israel, marching and holding sit-ins. the administration saying classes would move fully remote the same day campus was supposed to be back to business as usual after police cleared an encampment there last week. today officers called in to clear tents at uc san diego. police arresting 64 protesters. nbc news now tracking protests at more than 75 campuses nationwide. arrests close to 2,500. protesters at the university of chicago erecting a fence around their camp after negotiations with the administration collapsed overnight. faculty calling on the school to avoid bringing in police. >> our most immediate concern is for the well-being of our students. we don't want them getting beat up just because they're camping on the lawn. >> reporter: the school saying students' demands were inconsistent with the university's principles. >> we're not going
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away. we're not giving up the fight. >> and maggie joining us now from the campus of the university of chicago. maggie, there was a deadline there for students to leave the encampment. where does that stand? >> reporter: yeah, lester, that's right. students back there tell us the administration ordered them out by midnight last night. so at this point they say they're just bracing for police intervention. meanwhile, the school isn't commenting on the next steps. lester? >> maggie vespa, thank you. now to the frightening moment at a church in pennsylvania. a man pulling a gun and about to shoot a pastor when the gun fails to go off. and all of it playing out on livestream. emilie ikeda now with the video. and we have to warn you, it is disturbing. >> a whole different kingdom of god -- >> reporter: minutes into the sunday sermon outside of pittsburgh -- >> and it shows -- >> reporter: pastor glenn germany suddenly found himself staring down the barrel of a gun. the heart-stopping moments captured on the church's livestream. you can make out the gun jamming. >> this morning when i woke up --
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>> reporter: a close call bringing the pastor to tears. >> i'm seeing, you know, what happened and i'm totally grateful but i'm really starting to process it right now. >> reporter: a fast-acting church deacon jumped in to help. the two seen wrangling the gun from the attacker's hands, who allegedly told police that god told him to do it. the pastor's wife watched in horror. >> you ask yourself is this really happening? >> reporter: 26-year-old bernard polite, who told authorities he didn't know the pastor, has been charged with attempted homicide, aggravated assault and reckless endangerment. just hours after the incident at the church polite's family made a grisly discovery less than a mile away at his home. his older cousin, derek polite, had been fatally shot. no charges have been filed in that investigation yet. but germany says it makes his narrow escape all the more surreal. >> this is nothing less than a miracle because i truly seen
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that gun being pointed at me. >> reporter: a relative tells me the suspect has a history of mental illness. but the family is shocked by sunday's violence. it's unclear if he has an attorney. lester? >> emilie ikeda, thank you. in 60 seconds the new investigation into boeing over one of their popular jets following inspection concerns. plus, counting down to tonight's crucial test flight of boeing's crewed starliner spacecraft. right after this. opd things changed for me. breztri gave me better breathing, symptom improvement, and reduced flare-ups. breztri won't replace a rescue inhaler for sudden breathing problems. it is not for asthma. tell your doctor if you have a heart condition or high blood pressure before taking it. don't take breztri more than prescribed. breztri may increase your risk of thrush, pneumonia, and osteoporosis. call your doctor if worsened breathing, chest pain, mouth or tongue swelling, problems urinating, vision changes, or eye pain occur. ask your doctor about breztri. t-mobile “savings”, take one. focus. here's the line... “at t-mobile, you get tons of benefits,
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documents. boeing says this is not a safety of flight issue. it will inspect the fleet. in the meantime, breaking news. the starliner flight to space is on hold. years behind arch-rival spacex, boeing's starliner spaceship is tonight perched atop a powerful atlas 5 rocket. high stress and high stakes as two astronauts become the first to ride starliner into orbit. >> this is where the rubber meets the road. >> reporter: pilot sunita williams and commander butch wilmore, navy test pilots and nasa veterans, have been training for years. but starliner is over budget and years overdue. and like its commercial aircraft, quality control at boeing is in the spotlight. during a 2019 uncrewed test flight starliner's internal clocks were misprogrammed, off by 11 hours. mission control forced to abort. later learning starliner could have crashed into the space station. last june more delays. engineers discovered flammable tape inside
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the capsule and parachute straps that might not hold. >> you know, that adage you've heard since apollo 13, failure's not an option. >> reporter: the good news, an uncrewed mission did reach the station in 2022. >> does this spaceship feel like it's ready for prime time? >> i feel like we're ready to go and the spacecraft is ready to go. >> reporter: the launch is on hold because of an engine valve problem. they'll try again tomorrow night. lester? up next the massive car company you've never heard of in china and why they're out to lap the rest of the electric vehicle field. will we see them on the road here soon? it was one thing when my mom got alzheimer's, but then we started noticing things that seemed...off. she developed agitation that may happen with dementia due to alzheimer's disease. sometimes she'd fidget with her fingers, get suddenly overwhelmed, and even throw things. and that was just never her. so we asked her doctor what else we could do. rexulti is the only fda-approved medication proven to reduce agitation symptoms
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we're back now with our series "the future of the road." in the battle for the electric car market one company in china is leading the charge with cheaper models. but could it disrupt sales here in the u.s.? let's get more from janis mackey frayer. >> reporter: in the competitive world of chinese electric vehicles -- >> it's looking for a spot. >> reporter: -- that are going further and costing less than ever before, no company makes or sells more than byd, the chinese giant taking on tesla, offering cars for as little as $10,000. >> let's drive. >> reporter: along with higher-priced luxury models. >> zero to 60 miles per hour in about three seconds. >> anything like this in the u.s.? >> nothing i've drove. >> reporter: but don't look for electric cars from byd on american roads anytime soon. >> u.s. government need to be more friendly.
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>> reporter: stella lee is the ceo steering byd's expansion in the americas. in an exclusive interview she said the u.s. is not part of the plan. yet. >> they are not ready. but for byd, we are ready. >> reporter: what conditions would need to exist in order to consider an entry into the u.s. market? >> that's a good question. you should go back to ask d.c. >> reporter: byd faces stiff hurdles in the u.s., including a 25% tariff on imports and pushback from u.s. automakers who see chinese competition as a major threat. >> i think it's going to require trade restrictions for a limited period of time, which will allow the western automakers and the u.s. automakers to catch up. >> reporter: even tesla's ceo, elon musk, who just made a surprise visit to beijing to meet officials -- >> it's good to see electric vehicles making progress in china. >> reporter: said that without trade barriers
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chinese evs will, quote, demolish other car companies. byd began as a battery manufacturer, and with the help of government subsidies now controls every mile of its low-cost supply chain from parts to shipping. among the concerns of u.s. automakers and lawmakers, that byd's plan to build a factory in mexico could allow the company to skirt tariffs under free trade rules. byd denies that's the goal. and u.s. officials say there are growing fears china could use smart car technology to spy on american drivers. >> what did you make of the biden administration opening an investigation into smart car technology because of national security concerns that this technology was coming from china? >> i don't understand. there is no data like to prove that. >> you think national security concerns are overblown? >> overblown. oversensitive. and misleading. >> reporter: byd alone
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is producing more than 3 million cars a year, with capacity for more. and few signs of slowing down. janis mackey frayer, nbc news, shenzhen. when we come back, extreme makeover, battleship edition. inside the country's most decorated warship like you've never seen it before. inside the country's most decorated warship like you've never seen it before. i just gave birth. i was under a lot of stress. i started taking nutrafol. we test our formulations with the highest rigor of clinical trials and we're the number one dermatologist recommended hair growth supplement. i noticed it becoming... stronger and thicker. nutrafol has taken me back to the hair i was meant to have. i am back to me. start your hair growth journey at nutrafol.com breathing claritin clear is like... [♪♪] feeling the breeze instead of feeling congested. [♪♪] fast relief of allergies with nasal congestion,
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here's joe fryer. >> reporter: the word "underbelly" often suggests something sordid. but viewing the underside of this ship is simply breathtaking. >> the average person never gets a chance to see something like this. >> reporter: after floating down the delaware, battleship "new jersey" is now like a duck out of water, dry-docked for maintenance in philadelphia, where she's getting three fresh coats of paint, nearly 3,000 gallons. that hasn't happened in decades. >> she's 887 foot 7 inches long. >> reporter: ryan szimanski is curator of the ship, which is also a museum. right now there's a lot more of her to see, like the exposed propellers. >> one of the most common reactions is can i touch it? >> reporter: the answer is yes. >> i actually can. there we go. >> reporter: visitors are coming from all over the world to go under the 45,000-ton vessel, which is propped up on keel blocks. >> it's incredible. >> and when you do get to see it? >> it takes your
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breath away. >> reporter: she's the nation's most decorated battleship, the only one to see service during the vietnam war. kenneth kerr served aboard as a navy machinist back then and is now a volunteer here. >> vietnam veterans come aboard, and i've actually seen this, where they get down and kiss the deck and say that if it wasn't for this ship they wouldn't be alive today. that just touches you. >> reporter: when the work's done, the ship will return to the water and to camden, new jersey where that history will live on. joe fryer, nbc news. >> that's "nightly news" for this monday. thank you for watching. i'm lester holt. please take care of yourself and each other. good night. good night.
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[cheers and applause] ♪♪ hey i'm your life ♪ ♪ i'm the one who takes you there ♪ ♪ hey i'm your life ♪ ♪ i'm the one who cares ♪ ♪ they they betray ♪ ♪ i'm your only true friend now ♪ ♪ they they'll betray ♪ ♪ i'm forever there ♪ ♪ i'm your dream make you real ♪ ♪ i'm your eyes when you must steal ♪ ♪ i'm your pain when you can't feel ♪ ♪ sad but true ♪
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[cheers and applause] ♪ you you're my mask ♪ ♪ you're my cover my shelter ♪ ♪ you you're my mask ♪ ♪ you're the one who's blamed ♪ ♪ do do my work ♪ ♪ do my dirty work scapegoat ♪ ♪ do do my deeds ♪ ♪ for you're the one who's shamed ♪ ♪ i'm your dream make you real ♪ ♪ i'm your eyes when you must steal ♪ ♪ i'm your pain when you can't feel ♪ ♪ sad but true ♪ ♪ i'm your truth telling lies ♪ ♪ i'm your reasoned alibis ♪ ♪ i'm inside open your eyes ♪ ♪ i'm you ♪ ♪ sad but true ♪
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♪ sad but true ♪♪ [cheers and applause] >> kelly: welcome to the kelly clarkson show, give it up for my band! that was my first ever cover of metallica on the show. that was sad but true for the 1991 self-titled album also known as the black album. we want to give a special shout out to one of our producers megan berry, she's a hard-core metallica fan, seen them seven times in concert. we all love metallica come i never thought i would sing metallica in daytime television, we did attend it was awesome. we are a week out for mother's day and every day i'm going to give you a little reminder lest you forget to celebrate your mama. if you haven't picked up your
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card, the clock is ticking. it's your card, write something sweet. we are giving people in our audience a chance to shout out love for their mamas with a weeklong segment called dear mom. anyone have a mama they want to surprise? okay, in the yellow. all rights. what was your name? >> my name is pam and my mom is -- [laughter] [applause] and tell us about your mom. >> my mom is my best friend but also she is incredibly selfless and kindhearted to. she immigrated to this country over 20 years ago and devoted her life to the nonprofit sector making this crazy world a little bit brighter. [cheers and applause] >> kelly: yeah.

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