tv New Day With John Berman and Brianna Keilar CNN October 10, 2022 5:00am-6:00am PDT
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the ntsb calling for speed limiter systems. >> it's going to save lives. it's going to prevent more accidents from happening and less families having to go through what i'm going through. >> reporter: a lot of opinions on this, and a lot of action needs to take place brianna before this is in your next new car. the ntsb is putting out this recommendation. it's on the federal government and manufacturers to act to make intelligent speed assistance a standard part of equipment in new cars. >> i have so many more questions, pete. i know you'll be doing more stories on this moving forward. pete muntean live this morning. thank you. "new day" continues right now. ukraine rocked by deadly explosions overnight after a blast severely damaged the only bridge connecting russia and
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crimea which it illegally annexed. it's monday, october 10th. i'm brianna keilar with alex marquardt. john berman is off today. officials say ten people have been killed. at least 60 are injured after this wave of missile strikes across the country. you can see all the different areas across the country that have been hit here. video showing an explosion near a pedestrian bridge in kyiv. a playground was also hit. you can see the crater that missile left. the mayor of kyiv is urging people to shelter in place. ukrainian officials say these photos show a russian missile that was taken down by air defense. president volodymyr zelenskyy releasing this video message after the strikes. >> translator: they're trying to spread chaos and panic. they want to annihilate our energy supplies. they're hopeless.
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>> this morning russian president vladimir putin has been holding a national security council meeting after what he says was a terrorist attack orchestrated by ukraine linking russia and russian-occupied crimea. ukrainian officials haven't claimed responsibility. there are growing concern moscow could resort to nuclear weapons. >> cnn's frederik pleitgen is live in kyiv. just standing there in front of where one of these missiles struck, tell us about the scene where you are, fred. >> reporter: hi, brianna. standing right next to one of the craters of this massive rocket that was launched here into central kyiv. you can see this rocket left this gigantic impact crater annihilating the tarmac here of the road and going several feet deep into the ground. this was just a couple hours ago, really a scene of absolute carnage. this is one of the places where rockets and missiles struck this
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morning here in kyiv. we had a really rude awakening, i'd say about 15 minutes past 8:00 in the morning. that's about 1:15 your time, when several rocks started striking kyiv. that went on for several hours. the air raid sirens were still on. this is actually close to where you were talking about, the playground that was also affected. i spoke to the deputy head of the presidential administration here. five people were killed here and, of course, more than a dozen were injured in these attacks on the ukrainian capital. authorities are saying that number is subject to change because, of course, we're still early in the stages. also, the situation could very well still be on going. right now the air raid alert is not in force. however, the mayor of this city has told people not to go out in the streets if they can stay in shelters. he's urged people who live outside the city and come in here to work to not come into the city. in going around kyiv throughout
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the better part of the day today, it is eerily quiet on the street. not many people out right now. the same thing goes for many other cities in ukraine right now. this is a nationwide attack that's been going on. the ukrainian president has said there's essentially two targets. on the one hand it is the energy infrastructure of the country. again, a lot of towns right now at least partially without power. also, he says, he believes ukrainian civilians as well as -- ten people have been killed across the country so far. of course, you see the authorities right now. they have this cleanup effort. they're still sifting through the rubble. those numbers could change as this large-scale rocket attack, missile attack happening throughout the morning hours of today. the number that i think gets everybody here is that the ukrainians are saying that at least 83 missiles were launched at ukraine territory by the russians. they say 40 of them were picked off. of course, they weren't able to
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pick off all of them. some landed here at this civilian crossing. it's a regular road crossing here. >> many in the ukrainian capital in the heart of kyiv where we find our fred pleitgen. fred, thank you so much for that report. i want to bring in sergei lashenko, a member of the ukrainian railways supervisory board. sergei, thank you so much for being with us. start by describing to us what you have seen this morning, the scene that you've seen. >> i've seen bombs in kyiv just a few meters from the main streets and just on the corner with our university, and it was also bombing one of the pedestrian bridges. it's horrible to see this in the center of kyiv. at the same time, we understand that this is a sign of putin's
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weakness because he has nothing to do with an instrument to help to stop this war but to continue escalation. this is a sign of his angriness because he's not able to achieve any of the results he declared in the beginning of this horrible war because our army is so strong -- now i am in mail hall of tran station. we have some delays, but at the same time we are able to deliver passengers and items to the customers and we'll do this the whole day and night today and tomorrow and every day after the war started. >> this barrage of missiles all across the country like we have not seen in months comes after the attack of the bridge on the kerch strait that did a lot of damage to that thoroughfare that russia uses between russia and
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crimea which it illegally annexed. were you surprised that russia responded, something that ukrainians were so gleeful about? >> we are quite -- they are quite predictable, and we are quite ready for the aggression of russians after the start of this active phase of the war in february. we could expect they'll attack ukrainian territory. at the same time, of course, it was difficult to believe that they will attack the playground of children or the crossroad of two main streets in the center of kyiv or the bridge in downtown kyiv. it has nothing to do even with the critical infrastructure which is the target for putin as he described today in the security council speech. it means he's still not able to understand why his army losing this war, because they have
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no -- because his weapons are so primitive. this is why we continue to support ukraine, to support our army, our government, our president. we need more weapons, more antiaircraft systems, more tanks to stop this war. this moment i think is another crucial moment for our history and for this war to be stopped the victory of ukraine. >> this may be an inflection point yet again in this war. sergii, we thank you for being with us this morning. joining us, former european affairs director for the national security council and retired u.s. army colonel alex vindman. and former ambassador to ukraine bill taylor. i want to start with what we just heard from sergii
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leshchenko. these strikes all across ukraine today, do you see that as a sign of weakness? >> it absolutely is. it's a sign that president putin knows he's desperate, knows he's losing on the ground, he knows his allies are going away from him, both domestically and internationally. he can't do things on the ground. all he can do is fire these missiles. >> what do you think as you're watching this? is it an inflection point as you heard sergeii say it is? >> he had to respond somehow to this completely justified ukrainian attack on russian military infrastructure. that's what the bridge is, built well after the annexation of crimea, to feed the military beast in crimea. frankly to posture this
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large-scale war that unfolded earlier this year. he was going to do this -- these targets we saw being instrument are two categories. one is morale targets. that glass bridge is a beautiful bridge that overwatches the river. the other target next to the playground, next to the university, it's maybe 20, 30 meters away from where i lived when i was assigned to the embassy. these are not military targets. there's also he was telegraphing this is where he's going to go as we get into the winter, trying to force the ukrainian population to compromise, to give up territory by going after this infrastructure, these central hubs that feed the energy for the country. it's different than the way we have it here. we have one thermal plant that might feed half a city as opposed to individual heating. he's going to go after these things just to make life miserable. our role is, as allies and
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partners, is to provide ukraine the air definance and point defense systems that they can harden these targets with. this is not a hard task. some of these are going in. there's much more we can do with regard to capturing these iranian drones. that's where we should be going to next with support. >> ambassador, does anything climate change in terms of their request for weapons? does this move the needle on some of these bigger systems they've been asking for repeatedly? >> i think it increases the determination of the ukrainians to win this war. it makes them angry. they're enraged. we talked to people who are there and this is the response of the ukrainians. they're going to win this war, and they need the weapons. they need the weapons. they need the air defense systems. this is just a further demonstration. they've needed these before. they've asked for them before. we're starting to provide them. they need to come more quickly.
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that's there. going back to this question about what is putin doing, all he can do is fire these weapons. he doesn't have the soldiers. so the ukrainians now need also the armor on the battlefield to push them out of the country. the ukrainians need to push the russians out of the country. >> not to minimize what we're seeing by any stretch. rush hour in kyiv, playgrounds, yes infrastructure targets, but civilian targets. at the same time when you look at the damage that is being done, it is not something that turns the tide which speaks to what vladimir putin can or cannot do. to what end? there is no strategic end to what we're watching. >> all it is is a terror campaign. both bill and i have been on the ground in kyiv and ukraine since this war started. russia really is a one-trick pony. it can't do anything on the battlefield. it's getting defeated at every turn. the pressure is going to
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continue to really weigh down on the kherson and eastern campaigns. there may be another attack through the center through zaporizhzhia. the only thing you can do is not on the military battlefield, but terrorize the population, make it a misses rabble winter for the population. he has a dwindling supply of cruise missiles. he has the drones, those are much easier to defeat. the cruise missiles fly faster, have a different profile to defeat. for these other drones that the ukrainians are providing, they're slow. you need defense around the critical infrastructure, city centers, thermal plants. we just need to saturate the environment there and this could easily reduce the pressure that russia is putting on ukraine and make this a much, much more bearable campaign as the military campaign that's far more decisive turns and ends
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putin's -- ends his aspirations for this war. >> it's clear he is trying to ramp up things for now. but how effective it's actually going to be remains to be seen. ukraine is doing extremely well. lieutenant colonel alexander vindman, ambassador bill taylor, thank you for your time. the capitol police officer who suffered a heart attack recording his meetings with republican minority leader kevin mccarthy because it was a, quote, risky op. fiekal fan none released the audio and joins us next. mayor eric adam declaring a state of emergency over the migrants bused into the city from texas: of brain health. to help keep me sharp. neuriva: think bigger. it's the subway series menu! 12 irresistible subs...
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♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ fanone revealing tapes he secretly recorded. saying as i entered the capitol, i did what i always did when i went on a risky op, i hit the record button on my iphone and stuffed it in my pocket. he was one of the officers attacked by one of trump supporters, he was severely beaten, suffered a heart attack as well as a traumatic brain injury. first let's get to cnn's whitney
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wild joining us with this new audio. tell us about this. >> we knew these meetings were happening. there was video of harry dunn, michael fanone as well as sicknick on the capitol that day. in their own words michael fanone bringing us those lawmakers. a secretly recorded meeting with house minority leader kevin mccarthy shows the lengths two officers protecting the capitol on january 6th went to try to persuade limb to take action against members spreading falsehoods about the attack. >> what i found most distressing is the comments made by, unfortunately as a lifelong republican myself, coming from republican lawmakers, specifically people like andrew clyde who made statements about january 6th which were -- not just shocking, but disgraceful.
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referring to january 6th as a regular tour day at the capitol. what i see happening here is i see lawmakers who don't believe that january 6th is politically advantageous to them. nobody buys it. it's crap. it's crap. it's disgraceful. >> -- >> reporter: the meeting was legally recorded in june 2021 by d.c. metropolitan police officer michael fanone. fanone calls on mccarthy to denounce the 21 republican members who voted against granting congressional gold medals to those who defended the capitol. >> what i've experienced since then has been horrific. it's hell on earth. i'm not a political person. i do not enjoy my time here on capitol hill. i would much raegter be sitting at home with my daughters drinking a cold beer, but
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instead i feel an extension of my service on january 6th to be up here righting this wrong. >> reporter: the meeting was also attended by police officer harry dunn and gladys sicknick. mccarthy tells him he wants to see justice served. fanone urges him to take the capitol attack seriously. >> i'm asking you to agree to taking the special committee seriously, appointing serious people to that committee who will not be obstructionists and who will allow the investigation to be done. in law enforcement -- when we get involved in an investigation that we don't care about, we assign the biggest humps to parti participate.
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>> you're an intelligent man. you know what i'm talking about. >> mccarthy appointed five republicans to the committee. house speaker nancy pelosi rejected two because they objected to the certification of the 2020 election. mccarthy pulled the other three. days after the meeting mccarthy said this -- >> it would be shocking to me for anybody, from a party on the other side to come and want to accept a position, democrat for me and it would be shocking for me to have a republican go to a speaker pelosi of all people to accept a committee assignment. >> reporter: in the recording fanone reminds mccarthy how dangerous the day was for mccarthy and his staff. he also brings up the phone call mccarthy had with then president trump urging him to act, a call that other republican lawmakers say dee vol fed into a shouting match. >> the president's statements that day were bs. you know. you were on the phone with him. while you were on the phone with
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him, i was getting the shit kicked out of me, almost losing my life. the way that he -- this is what happens when you steal an election. go home. i love you. what the [ bleep ] is that? that came from the president of the united states! >> reporter: mccarthy defended trump at various points in the moment. >> he wasn't watching tv -- >> he knew what was going on. they were fighting for hours and hours and hours. it doesn't make any sense to me. >> i'm just telling you from my phone call, i don't know that he did know that. >> significant moment there. brianna, it's one thing -- you see mike fanone on our air a lot. it's one thing for someone to come out publicly and voice their opinions.
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what fanone did was he told those people in this private meeting to their face how he really felt. he had the nerve to do that which you don't always see people do. he took them to task. what he's trying to do over the last 18 months or so is show where people are flip-flopping on a really important issue and making it a core value for him to call people out when their narrative is changing and hold them accountable. >> trying to right a wrong as he said in his discussion with kevin mccarthy. whitney, thank you for taking us through that. joining us now is the author of "hold the line, the insurrection and one cop's battle for america's soul" which is out tomorrow. cnn law enforcement analyst michael fanone. mike defended the capitol during the january 6th attack and paid a huge personal price for doing so. mike, thank you so much for being with us today. we're listening to these recordings.
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you sound a lot on them like you do just on tv or in person. it's certainly the same thing, the same guy. what did you make of the response that you got from kevin mccarthy in that meeting? >> it wasn't surprising to me. i saw how he had deviated from his original statements immediately after january 6th, to seize upon the politics of the moment. it's ironic in that he was -- he wanted to ensure that january 6th was not politicized, but in a way he's politicized january 6th the most. it just wasn't surprising. but i'm glad i recorded it. that's why i recorded it, was because i didn't expect kevin mccarthy to, number one, tell the truth; number two, recount the conversation accurately, and
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number three i wanted to show people how indifferent lawmakers are, not just republican lawmakers, but all lawmakers to the actual american people that they are representing. >> in that conversation, one of the things that you tell mccarthy is that some of the people that you and your mother know who don't think that what you experienced happened have said that footage from your body-worn camera, which is horrific for anyone who hasn't seen it. it is horrific. they think it's faked. what do they think? do they think you're part of some conspiracy? >> unfortunately, rhetoric from these politicians combined with some of the alt right or right wing propaganda, people believe that stuff. there have been a whole slew of
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conspiracies that have kind of popped up about me. the hardest thing to accept is people that have known me for in some cases decades buying into a lot of that crap, the idea that i work for the fbi and i've been a plant in the metropolitan police department for two decades waiting for this moment, or that i was somehow spawned from a petri dish and am the love child of nancy pelosi and god knows who else and actually believe it. >> you voted for trump in 2016, right? >> yes, ma'am, i did. >> obviously this is someone who at one point you supported. certainly you don't anymore, and i know you had some issues with him even prior to january 6th. what was it like for you, not just from the general public, but from fellow police officers
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including ones that you had known for so long after january 6th, after testifying? >> the criticism that came from the law enforcement community hit me the hardest. if you read through the book, i talk about some criticism that i got pretty early on after one of my first interviews from a detective named yari babich who accused me of being an attention seeker and felt this was only done in my own self-interest. i wouldn't wish this experience on my worst enemy. for people that know me, there's not much i wouldn't wish on some of my worst enemies. it's a difficult experience to navigate, putting yourself out there, subjecting yourself to
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criticism from not only those in your immediate circle, but really from everyone in the world. that's been the hardest part about the process in preparing this book, is knowing that i'm now subjecting myself, my career in law enforcement and my activities since january 6th to critique by anyone and everyone. >> you also have some incredible blessings. you've had some major challenges and to ride about them is heartbreaking. but you have some incredible blessings as well in your life, your children. and i wonder, as you think about the future, what does the future hold for mike fanone? >> to be honest with you, i really don't know. my children are everything to me. they have been the most important part of my recovery
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from january 6th, but also from a two-decade career in law enforcement. i look forward to spending as much time with them as i possibly can, but as far as a career, i don't know. i have no idea. >> well, mike, it's really something to read about your experience, and i know that this has been quite a path for you. i know it's been really difficult for you. i'm sure some people have some idea about that, but this is essential reading so that people can really understand how this day and also just the lack of truth in the wake of it has turned your world and so many people's worlds upside down. i encourage people to check out your book. "hold the line: the insurrection and one cop's battle for
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america's soul" which does come out tomorrow. mike, thank you so much for being with us this morning. >> thank you, ma'am. we are tracking the latest developments in kyiv where multiple deadly explosions rocked the city this morning as well as across the entire country. multiple cities targeted. we'll speak to a former leader of ukraine next. try this robobitussin honey. the real honey you love, plus the powerful cough relief you need. mind if i root through your trash? rorobitussin. the only brand with real honeyand elderberry. myoderate to severe plaque psoriasis... the tightness, stinging... the pain. emerge tremfyant®. with tremfya®, most people saw 90% clearer skin at 16 weeks. the majority of people saw 90% clearer skin even at 5 years.
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this morning. the official death count has already reached ten people, all of them civilians. russian missiles, air strikes and drones also targeting the western city of lviv. this all coming as russian president vladimir putin is holding a meeting with his national security council after declaring the explosion on a bridge that links russia to crimea which it illegally annexed to be a terrorist attack orchestrated by ukraine. let's bring in cnn international security editor nick paton walsh. he is in dnipro, ukraine. there's a huge crater behind you where one of the strikes hit. tell us about this, nick.
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>> reporter: you can see the crater behind me. just moments ago there was a civilian bus sat here on the road which we're told was hit in the explosion. miraculously nobody killed. the size of the crater, you can basically get a feeling as to the kind of lethality moscow was willing to send here. this seems to have been their target. the most startling thing about it, its seems to have been an old telecoms building. there are no windows in most of it. that looks like the case prior to the blast. so extraordinary choice of target here. you can see the damage all over the floor and still people already starting the cleanup to get back to reality, but also here the potential civilian cost. windows blown out across these enormous apartment building
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blocks lear. in the area in which this is, the death toll is now four and possibly somewhere in the high teens of people who have been inj injured so far. concern among the locals that there could be more rockets. one saying they were stark that ordinary people would be targeted. it's the ferocity of the blasts and when they began these missiles to come in, there was a sense amongst many people living here that the whole country was under attack. now it's subsided. the wreckage is being cleared up. it's clear that it seems energy infrastructure was some of the target. but also the standard blatant disregard for the possibility that other people could be hit and also it seems here civilians targeted, too. back to you. >> what is the mood like, nick, when you're speaking to people.
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how would you describe their emotions? >> reporter: anger i think. there's a man quite angrily talking to somebody else here about how this is just simply ordinary people being targeted. there's no military objective around here. even if you were to try to justify this telecoms building being targeted, it looks like it's been abandoned for quite some time. the roof is entirely caved in. there is a sense of shock here because this has been a war where russia has shown a blatant disregard for civilian lives. at times targeted, hospitals and civilians, too. the multiprong nature of this attack hitting every major city in ukraine with some exceptions, trying to take out power it seems. we think there's about 80,000 people in this region who have no power as a result of some of the strikes here. i think that's got people deeply concerned about a new level of callousness from russia, but
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also tinged i think with a sense of resilience, too, that regardless they will carry on. >> nick, thank you so much. let's discuss with former ukrainian president petro poroshenko. mr. president, thank you for joining us this morning. are you afraid these strikes we've seen across ukraine today, do you believe this is just the first step in a wave of upcoming strikes that will continue to strike cities that have been relatively spared for the past few months? >> first of all, this was not a strike against kyiv, and i'm standing exactly in the place where a child, where russian missiles attacked a couple hours ago. you see we try to rebuild, to restore, take all the glasses here. this is just 100 meters from here, my university where i
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graduated. we now have an -- this is just mentioning that this is the new russian missiles. this is an attack against the whole free world, against freedom and against democracy. this is attack not only russia. this is attack russia, bell russia from the territory where we have an attack and iran because russia use iranian drones which is killing ukrainian people. we have already more than ten definitely ukrainian civilians killed and more than 60 which is definitely wounded in the absolutely center, without any military object, in the center of civilians. this is a demonstration where we should be extremely decisive. today we have an extraordinary
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recession from the united nations and we definitely need to launch the process to throw russia away from the united nation and from u.n. security council, same like soviet union for attack on finland. on the 12th we will have a group meeting. definitely with that we should rename it as an anti-putin coalition and we need to be supplied anti missiles, antiaircraft and anti drones, weapons that urgently should be delivered to ukraine. >> do you think today's strikes -- again, more than 80 missiles all across the country, do you think that will make it more likely that ukraine will get the weapons you need, the air defense systems, the long-range rockets? is this going to change things in the eyes, do you think, of
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nato? >> definitely the ukrainians count on that. more weapons we receive, and particularly -- not the armed jacket, but antiaircraft, anti drone, anti missiles. this definitely is the only way to peace. we have another argument how we can get closer to peace, and this argument is in nato for ukraine. to repeat the same scenario like we have for sweden and for finland. with that situation, the fast that happen, the faster there would be peace. third position, today we have a very important discussion in united states for recognize russia as a country sponsor of terrorism. we have many countries already to implement this initiative. baltic states. today i speak with polish. the global leadership of the
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united states should be confirmed with an urgent decision to recognize them as a sponsor of terrorism with the necessary results of these decisions by the international law. >> a very dangerous and scary day all across ukraine. our thoughts are with the ukrainian people. former president petro poroshenko in the ukrainian capital, thank you for your time. appreciate it. >> thank you. new york city is now under a state of emergency over the influx of migrants being bused to the city. who the mayor is blaming. that's next. iberty mutual custos your home insurance, here's a pool paparty. look what i brought! liberty mutual! they customize your home insurance... so you only pay for what you need! ♪young people having a good time with insurance.♪ ♪young people.♪ ♪good times.♪ ♪insurance!♪ only pay for what you need. ♪liberty liberty. liberty. liberty.♪
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and automatic ekg sharing. what next? let's get some fresh air. been cooped up for too long. yeah... ♪ kardia mobile card is available for just $99. get yours at kardia.com or amazon. fanduel and draftkings, two out of state corporations making big promises. what's the real math behind prop 27, their ballot measure for online sports betting? 90% of profits go to the out of state corporations permanently.
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only eight and a half cents is left for the homeless. and in virginia, arizona, and other states, fanduel and draftkings use loopholes to pay far less than was promised. sound familiar? it should. vote no on prop 27. naomi: every year the wildfires, the smoke seems to get worse. jessica: there is actual particles on every single surface. dr. cooke: california has the worst air pollution in the country. the top 2 causes are vehicles and wildfires. prop 30 helps clean our air. it will reduce the tailpipe emissions that poison our air kevin: and helps prevent the wildfires that create toxic smoke that's why calfire firefighters, the american lung association, and the coalition for clean air support prop 30. naomi: i'm voting yes on 30.
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the mayor of new york city eric adams has declared a state of emergency over immigrants bused in from states like texas. mayor adams is insisting new york cannot immediately accommodate the number of people who are arriving. he said this. >> this is a humanitarian crisis that started with violence and instability in south america. it is being accelerated by american political dynamics. we are at the edge of the precipice. we need serious partnership and realistic solutions. as i have said before, we need help. we need it now. >> joining us is the spokesman for nyc i.c.e. watch, one of the groups organizing the arriving migrants. thank you for taking the time to
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speak with us this morning. >> good morning. >> i want to ask you how much of the work of settling these recent arrivals is being taken care of by the city versus groups like yours? >> we have to say the city strategy seems to be getting the migrants to be out of sight and out of mind. when they arrive on buses, they tend to be told to go to the shelter system which are prison-like conditions. the abolitionist mutual aid groups of which i.c.e. watch is a part of have been helping migrants get settled, get identification, get medical treatment, clothing, metro cards, all the things necessary to live. >> the city has said that they may set up a program for new yorkers to volunteer to host people. do you think that that would work, and is it enough? >> well, it would be the least that they can do. we've had individuals opening up
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their homes temporarily. we've slowly seen churches opening up their doors to migrants who have literally run from the shelter system because conditions are so violent in there. we demand what the sweeps campaign has been demanding since adams took office which is good, clean, safe, community controlled housing in new york city. the city has the budget. the state and federal government have the budget to buy out vacant housing and underutilized how tells to house every unhoused person in new york almost immediately. that's what we want to see. >> are you getting the support that your group needs? >> unfortunately not yet. from the beginning we saw the mayor's office of immigrant affairs handpicked a few select non-profits with million dollar budgets to work with and literally pushed out the mutual aid that was trying to greet the migrants coming off the buses. our line is open. if they understand that our strategy to help out the
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migrants is the same that for an calling for. we need the rent to go down and that means challenging the city's strategy of sucking up to big real estate interests and funding the nypd over everything else. >> i want to play a little bit of sound from mayor eric adams. he said this to the biden administration. take a listen. >> we need a realistic decompression strategy at the border that will slow the outflow of asylum seekers. we need a coordinated effort to move asylum seekers to other cities in this country to ensure everyone is doing their part. and, congress must pass emergency financial relief for our city and others. >> what's your reaction to that and do you agree that more help is needed from a federal level? >> more help is absolutely needed from the federal level and we need immigration reform that allows entry to anyone that
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wants to come to the united states. we need to make it so that immigrants can legally work because they are going to work anyway, the first thing out of their mouths when i greet them off the buses is where can i get a job? these are people that help make the city run. our concern is, you know, republicans, let's be honest, may be too far gone to care about the migrant crisis but we know what democratic mayors have done in new york, chicago, l.a., d.c., which is take money meant to solve these crises and fund them towards law enforcement and surveillance. we can have money coming from the federal government but we need community controlled enforcement of housing policy and where this money goes to. >> yeah, a very complex and a very dire situation. sergio in new york, thank you very much for your time this morning. >> thank you for having me. a new round of russian strikes across ukraine, missiles pounding cities that have been relatively quiet for months. we are on the ground ahead. ant kitchen tool?
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our top story this morning, deadly explosions rocking ukrainian cities across the country, kyiv, lviv, zaporizhzhia, as well as this blast in dnipro in the most extensive attack on the country since the start of russia's invasion. officials say ten people have been killed, at least 60 so far injured, those are the numbers as they stand right now. here is video showing an explosion near a pedestrian bridge in kyiv, a playground also hit in the capital. ukrainian president volodymyr zelenskyy says he's speaking to the g7 group of nations during
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an emergency meeting on tuesday. we will continue to cover this all day today. cnn's coverage continues after this break. life... doesn't stop for diabetes. be ready for every moment, with glucerna. it's the number one doctor recommended brand that live every moment. some days, it felt like asthma was holding me back. but asthma has taken enough. so i go triple... with trelegy. with 3 medicines in 1 inhaler,... it's the only once-daily treatment for adults that takes triple action against asthma symptoms. trelegy helps make breathing easier,... improves lung function,... and lasts for 24 hours. go triple... go trelegy.
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naomi: every year the wildfires, the smoke seems to get worse. jessica: there is actual particles on every single surface. dr. cooke: california has the worst air pollution in the country. the top 2 causes are vehicles and wildfires. prop 30 helps clean our air. it will reduce the tailpipe emissions that poison our air kevin: and helps prevent the wildfires that create toxic smoke that's why calfire firefighters, the american lung association, and the coalition for clean air support prop 30. naomi: i'm voting yes on 30.
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good morning, everyone, i'm bianna golodryga in new york. breaking overnight, russian retaliation. this morning at least ten people are dead and dozens more injured after russian president vladimir putin ordered several strikes across ukraine. in the capital city of kyiv a major blast struck a pedestrian bridge, a ukrainian official tweeted this picture which appears to show the aftermath of a strike on a children's playground. the russian military bombing several other parts of ukraine, including kharkiv,
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