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tv   Eva Longoria Searching for Spain  CNN  June 15, 2025 9:00pm-10:00pm PDT

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>> for a. >> few questions. reminder. >> please introduce yourself. >> your media organization. >> if you have a. >> question for one of the specific. >> individuals, please feel free to point. >> that out. >> as well. >> thank. i spoke with abc news. can i ask anyone up here who can speak to it? did the suspect make any key mistakes that you feel like led to his eventual capture? >> you know, the the question is, were there any key mistakes? we certainly at this point, there's a lot of information we can't share right now in this. what i will tell you is there is some incredibly dedicated law enforcement personnel, >> that the public certainly is always of assistance to us in law enforcement and incredibly diligent people in the area that provided us the assistance that we needed to get our teams that were already down there. that last piece over. but they were certainly in the area and working diligently together on
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that. >> what's going to be one at a time? guys? >> jim mcdonnell 11. do you have any indication that anyone helped him? >> the question is, is any indication anybody helped him? we continue to look into that. i don't have anything beyond what we shared earlier today. this investigation, as chief brulee noted, will be continuing to expand at this point in time to make sure that we continue to look at all angles of this. and everybody did help him. we will certainly hold them accountable for doing that in this process. >> drew. >> adrian brought us from nbc news. can you tell us how the hoffman's helped save lives? and what did the suspect say when he was taken into custody? >> the question was how the hoffman's to help save lives and what he. i don't have the specific. and then what did he say when he's taken into custody? i don't have the specifics on what he said when he was taken into custody. you know, we're incredibly grateful that the hoffman's are still here with us at this point in time and that they will be hopefully on a continued path to recovery and that they will
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provide us the information we've been able to talk to them today, and they will be providing key information to us as part of this investigation. moving forward. >> sir, can i from cbs. >> news, did the suspect have a phone with him when he was caught? was he tracked in any way or was he just sightings and tips. >> at the end? the question is, did he have a phone with him? i don't have the specifics on everything that was with him when he was arrested. at this time, i will say he was armed and that he came when he was taken into custody. but we'll be sifting through all of that information from there. what's that? i can't. on the weapons at this time. so. >> i'm just kind of elaborating on that sort of john hoffman question to me, the encounter. at that speaker hawkins house was, i believe, was woodland park police. the gunfire and the tactics that had to abandon that vehicle with several weapons. brian steel. criminal complaint.
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how significant was that in preventing any further tragedy and ending it with him on the ground? and sibley county. >> yeah, the question is, again, expanding on the hoffman's and providing additional what i'll tell you. chief bruley mentioned this yesterday, and his police officers going to check proactively on speaker hartman's home at that time. if that had not had happened, i have every confidence that this would have continued throughout the day by his officers encountering him. at that, it was forced to abandon the vehicle that he had at that time and lead to what we got to today. so by that incident occurring in the law enforcement. communication that was occurring, it allowed the proactive approach that was able to get to the point where they were able to now eventually take him into custody today. >> go ahead. thank you. i just want to clarify, there's a little bit of detail that the ramsey county sheriff has provided. i just wanted to see if we can nail it down. so the detail that he had provided to the star tribune is that for about an hour, boelter had tried
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to evade arrest and that eight teams crawled in a ditch to try to corral him. i don't know if you have that level of detail, but but additionally, because we're able to take him into custody without incident, what did your law enforcement officers say to him to to lure him out and defensively? >> so the question is about the teams and and then what was done to get him into custody. so we don't get into operational details for the safety of our law enforcement going forward in terms of what it is. but what i can say is the incredible teamwork that was done in the large number of law enforcement certainly put us in a position where they were able to maneuver into this area to safely put him in a place where, you know, i don't know what was going through his head, and i wouldn't speculate. but they have incredibly professional teams that are trained on this and how to take somebody into custody. and they provided the commands and he gave up peacefully. >> jonah. superintendent jonah kaplan from wcco and cbs news. first, if you could just speak personally for you and all your colleagues, i imagine this is a
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relief for a lot of you. can you talk about it, what it means to you personally to have this done? only a few hours ago, you weren't sure if he was in the state, let alone in the country yet. >> the question is the relief for all of us. i mean, the relief for us and law enforcement is we feel an incredible amount of pressure to bring a person into custody, bring safety to the community. these professionals behind me and their teams, this is what they do. this is what they get paid to do. and they're honored to do the work on behalf of minnesotans every single day. so the relief is, is that we can bring that sense of relief to communities across minnesota, legislators that were on that list. and that's what we want to do. >> here. at what point did you get the call and from whom? generally that he was in the in that area, in the arena. >> the the question was on the call. and when did we get it? it was happening over the time. i don't have the specific timeline, but we were alerted as soon as there was a spotting of the person in the area for all of the command staff here. and as our teams continue to work and as they worked in and honed
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in. >> can you speak a little more about the technology that was used? you said earlier that you received about 400 tips. yeah, we know there was surveillance footage that was used for pictures you just mentioned. someone talked about the air team. was it a fixed wing? was it a helicopter that was following him? what role did technology. >> yeah. the question is what role? and i can't get into all the technology. obviously just some of it is that we don't share the information to make sure that we protect it. so it's utilized going forward. however, i will say that both uavs throughout the day are incredibly important to our teams. unmanned aerial vehicles that we use that there were numerous ones out there providing that. and then our helicopter in this situation provides an incredibly important bird's eye view that also allows us special views to be able to see individuals such as infrared and others, that we utilize on a regular basis. so technology in cases like this are incredible tools to be able to supplement the great hard work of all the people that were on the ground every day.
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>> can i more? specifics on times? >> let's go here. >> first question is where's he being held currently? >> so right now he is being interviewed at a law enforcement facility. more information on where he will actually be ultimately will be released at a later time. >> when law enforcement agency or facility. >> i can't share where he is currently, but that information will be available soon. >> more about the study which you cited. there are things you can't give away, but we see things like trails and fields. >> are you talking about enthralling? >> so what can you tell? >> what can you tell us about where he was hiding during this time? >> yeah. so this is. where was he hiding? this is in a rural area. these are fields and different wooded settings around. and that's where he was ultimately captured. sibley county, as you know, is a rural county in the state of minnesota. and so it's what a lot of that streams, fields, woods, crops. and so where he was ultimately taken into custody was in a. >> field. >> did the infrared technology help find him? identify him?
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>> i don't. >> the commissioner had mentioned some of that earlier. i wonder if that's something that helped. >> yes, absolutely. it assisted previously and they were out there. the helicopter was out there before the sun went down. but after that happened, yes, that technology did come into play. >> how long did you know that he was there? >> i'll turn that back over to the superintendent here, too. but i don't think that that information is available right now. superintendent. >> mark bruley, police chief, brooklyn park. the question is, is how long did we know that he was there a vehicle that we believe that he was in was spotted? many hours before and had been abandoned? an alert police officer believed that he may have seen the individual running into the woods, and that started a large scale. perimeter that we set up or down in sibley county set up, and we started to deploy resources, including the
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brooklyn park swat team and along with many other swat teams, to contain an extremely large area. knowing that this is a very dangerous individual. during that, we got privy to additional information of an individual that was in the woods, and that search went on for many hours until ultimately we were able to locate him in the woods and an approximately an hour and a half or so, we were able to close the distance. and with the technology and the state patrol helicopter and where we were able to call him out to us. >> abc news reached out during this act of domestic terrorism. >> yeah, it's absolutely way too soon to say that right now. that's where the investigation we have been just solely focused on the manhunt. and the goal was, is to give some calm to the situation of many individuals that were on the list that were worried about their safety. and this is a very dangerous individual for our community. and that's why so many resources and such a great collaboration came together to focus on removing him from society so that we can restore some sort of
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calm and bring some healing to our community and to our state. now begins the hard work of looking at what the motive is looking at putting this case together, and so that that's yet to come. >> i think the people that were on the list, what other i know there are politicians from wisconsin on this. what other states were have kristina korram? >> it was multiple states. i don't have the exhaustive list, but it was multiple states that were on there. >> do you have some states that were on the list? right. >> we can there. there's a few. i don't want to say it because it won't be exhaustive, but you know, wisconsin, illinois, michigan, some others that were on there, there was a variety of nebraska, iowa. we've had contact. what i will tell you, and i will not get into any more specifics beyond that. we are in coordination with our federal partners and our fusion centers in those states to coordinate with local law enforcement and the fbi in those states and the state fusion centers that are there to be able to provide that
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information and notify those individuals that they were on that list. >> are you concerned that there's other people out there that could have been working with them? >> we the question is, are we concerned there's other people out there that could be working with them? we will fully explore that. i've said on this, we are relatively confident. we are confident that the violence that he committed in the murders he committed and the attempted murders that he conducted that activity alone. we will be exploring if there are any broader network. we have not uncovered any of that at this time, but that will be part of our investigation and we will fully explore that. >> thank you. >> thanks. thank you. >> thank you, thank you, thank you everyone. >> hello to everybody watching. i'm brian abel in atlanta. you have been watching a press conference in minnesota announcing the 57 year-old suspect in the killing of a state lawmaker has been caught. he is the suspect in two separate shootings targeting minnesota state lawmakers and their homes. melissa hortman and
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her husband were both killed early saturday morning. she was the top democrat in the minnesota house, and officials say state senator john hoffman and his wife were also shot, but they survived the attack and are recovering. that press conference, beginning with governor tim walz saying that the state of minnesota owes deep gratitude to law enforcement for putting this person into custody and that minnesota state patrol were the ones that put the handcuffs on the suspect. the governor also saying that melissa hortman exemplified what it is to be a minnesotan, that to hit their family, to the family. of all the victims here, he said that every ounce of effort will be made to make sure justice is served. also, provide an update that senator hoffman is out of surgery and his wife, yvette, is healing. he also said that these kind of actions, this quote cannot be the norm, cannot be the way we resolve our political differences. we also did hear a little bit more from law enforcement in the state. one law enforcement official saying that this suspect
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betrayed trust, the trust of the uniform that is supposed to represent. we also learned that he was seen in the area. that is what brought law enforcement to this area, area and sibley county that they converged on the area that he is now in custody under state criminal warrant, charged with the murders of melissa hortman and her husband, mark hortman, as well as the shooting of senator john hoffman and his wife, yvette. this was 33 hours after those incidents when this suspect was brought into custody, finishing the largest manhunt in minnesota history, according to law enforcement. we also learned more about how this moment here that you're seeing on your screen happened. the arrest, it was done by the state patrol. it did not result in any injury to law enforcement. there was no force used by law enforcement. in fact, the suspect crawled to law enforcement after he was surrounded. he was armed. he was in a rural wooded area in sibley
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county. i do want to go now to jason park, a retired fbi supervisory special agent. joining me now from fripp island, south carolina. and thank you, sir, for joining us. you're listening to that press conference, just like i was. what stood out to you? >> several things, actually. there was a lot of information in that news conference, number one, and we talked about this for the couple of days that we've been tracking this story. it was a tip from the public who tightened that perimeter for law enforcement by reporting that he was seen in the area that allowed law enforcement to move resources in there. you heard the superintendent of the bureau of criminal apprehension say there were about 20 swat teams in there. they did kind of what looks like a surrounding call out where they'll surround a target. and in this case, he crawled out of a field. also talking about the bureau of criminal apprehension in the state patrol helicopter and some drones and some aviation assets used to maybe look infrared for
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looking in or looking into the ground to see what they could see. and ultimately, they it looks like they found him in a field. so that was one thing. the second thing is the manhunt is over now. and as what they also said is the work is just beginning. so all of those pictures we've seen coming out of the crime scenes at both of the family's residences there, they're going to have to tie those pieces of forensic and digital evidence back to the charges that they have lodged in state. and then you mentioned he mentioned that he was speaking with the federal authorities. they may be looking at charges like hate crime or a firearms charge where a murder happens, discharge of a firearm. so they're trying to see if the elements of the crime, any of the pieces of forensic evidence that they have collected will kind of meet this. and it's going to take a few days or longer to do that. but you can bet that there will probably be state charges. and if the federal charges fit, they'll go after those two, i would think. >> all right, jason peck, please stand by. i do want to bring
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whitney wild now, whitney, you are in minnesota as well. and blaine, there you were in that press conference. what did you learn? >> well, what. >> we learned was that this was a, again, a multi-jurisdictional effort. what we know is that there were 20 swat teams who were engaged in trying to find vance boelter. and what we know is that the list of law enforcement agencies is very long. and it took this real boots on the ground, old school law enforcement working together to try to fan out the area surrounding where a car had been found earlier today. so i'm going to take you to and i believe we have some video from earlier today, sibley county, minnesota. this is an area that is 50 miles southwest of minneapolis, and this is where the bulk of the law enforcement activity happened. and what we saw earlier today was this vehicle, this black vehicle on this basically on the side of the road that had been abandoned. and what we saw was law enforcement combing through that vehicle and then fanning out from that vehicle, marching through these fields and forests. and it was in that area that law enforcement says that they were able to eventually
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take vance boelter into custody. and while we asked for a little bit more detail about what happened in those moments leading up to when he was taken into custody and then how they were able to lure him out, law enforcement would not provide those details, but what they said they did was they basically, you know, situated their tactical units in such a way that once they were able to confront him, they made very clear that he basically had he had nowhere to go that this, that they were, that they had surrounded this area and then they were able to to convince him to come out. and what we know is that, you know, on these swat teams, especially swat teams in a metropolitan area like this where there are so many, they are using their top negotiators to try to bring people like vance boelter out. and so they were able to negotiate him out of that area. he was taken into custody while he was armed. brian, that's a really key piece of information. they took him into custody. no incident. even though he was armed with a gun. law enforcement did not expand upon how many firearms he might have had, what type of firearm he might have had, but it is simply a remarkable feat that relied on
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the coordination and cooperation of a very long list of law enforcement agencies. you know, from brooklyn park, local police, all the way up to the u.s. marshals, the fbi, the atf, the minnesota state police, the list goes on and on. i mean, you know, it's important to point out that people who were involved in this. so there's also, you know, there's tri-cities south, metro, swat, richfield police department, the sibley county sheriff, the the list of agencies involved in this is truly remarkable. and it took that amount of effort to try to bring this man into custody after a very complex investigation that lasted 43 hours and what law enforcement called the largest manhunt in minnesota history. brian. >> it's a local county, state, federal, all of those agencies working together. that was certainly applauded in that press conference. i do, for our viewers, want to quickly point out that we are using the last name of the pronunciation of boelter, because that's what we've heard. the suspect say in previous videos. some law enforcement are saying a boelter just so that people are not confused. we are talking about the same individual here,
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whitney, from that press conference, did you hear anybody ask or did law enforcement in any way provide any information? i know they're holding things close to the vest about whether he said anything to law enforcement. when he was captured. >> yeah, that question was asked. they declined to provide any more detail on that. and, you know, additionally, we asked how law enforcement was able to coax him out. i mean, sometimes we hear law enforcement, you know, appeal to certain elements of their personal life, their wives, their their children, and, you know, make sure that the suspect understands that the totality of their actions are affecting their loved ones. sometimes that's an effective strategy to lure people out. so we ask law enforcement tonight, what did the negotiators say to convince him to come out? and they would not provide those details? again, they would not say if he said anything when he was taken into custody, but that is information that we're certainly hoping to hear when he makes his first court appearance. we don't yet know when that's going to happen, but we're keeping close watch on that. but at this moment, we know that he is in custody and
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we're going to keep combing through those court records to try to bring the very latest from there, because it's really in that first court hearing where we actually sometimes can get quite a bit of detail. brian. >> wilde, a very long day for you. i know we really appreciate your reporting. thank you. all right. let's bring back jason pack now. and jason, you heard whitney there mention that some of this information law enforcement are not giving right now, including where this suspect is at the moment, though he has been charged apparently under a warrant. why is that the case? what does that tell you? >> well, it says a couple of things. they're trying to protect his rights and do things by the book because now they have a prosecution on their hands. and so they want to make sure they do this case very methodically. and by the book. so they're probably have read him his miranda rights since it's a custodial interview, and whether or not he's agreed to talk to them is remains one of the unknown questions, since the
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questions that we would like answers to. but and law enforcement has their their priorities. so we may not know that what we may find more information also is in this affidavit supporting the criminal complaint there in the state of minnesota. those will outline the probable cause, you know, most of it from being in the public eye. but we may learn some additional details from this affidavit. in the criminal complaint. >> jason, in the 33 or so hours that this manhunt has been underway, we have learned a fair amount about this person's background. given that, where do you believe investigators will begin questioning the suspect? >> well, i think it's a multifaceted investigation still, because you've got the intelligence analysts and the agents and the bureau of criminal apprehension, the local police, all these teams together looking at associates, interviewing people that may know them as far as neighborhood canvasses and those types of things, but they're also going to be looking into the digital
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forensics and piecing together any social media. or was he on the dark web anywhere? any types of information that could help them prove the elements of the crimes for which he's been charged, and possibly for any crimes that they're considering charging? so they're going to take a deep dive into that. and, and just kind of look very, very closely with microscopes, fine detail to see what they can find out about that. >> we heard multiple times, it was mentioned in that press conference, jason, the coordination between all the various agencies in your career, have you seen that always be the case, especially with how long this manhunt went on for? >> yes, and i was at i saw you had commissioner davis on earlier. i was at the boston marathon bombings with him. that was probably the largest one i was a part of that was seamless. there. obviously, people have what we call competing priorities and agencies, but the number one goal is to get folks safely and incarcerated and
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arrested and mitigate that threat. and so that's happened here. people come together no matter what badge you wear. the goal is the same, and that's to protect and serve the public and bring those who commit crimes to justice. so i would say, like a lot of people may not realize that there are people just like mr. boelter here on the pathways to radicalization and violence. the pathways to violence, as we say, are paved with grievances. so every day, law enforcement around the country gets tips from various sources, from online tips, from phone calls, from people calling in themselves. and they have to go assess these people every day and have to be right 100% of the time. so sometimes we see in cases like this that it's not just one day that you snap. it's several things that happen, stressors in your life. marital stresses, financial stresses, loss of jobs, a loss of something. and that just reinforces the grievances until one day that they act on it. so hopefully that's one of the things that they're looking for to i'm sure the fbi's behavioral analysis unit will
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look at the manifesto there, and as well as the other evidence recovered in the vehicle. i would say, brian, that one important point here, too, is we heard at the top of the news conference, and that's the actions of the police officers on that midnight shift. i don't know if you've ever worked a midnight shift. that's when a lot of things happen, and not a lot of people are around to do anything about it. and he mentioned in that press conference that those actions likely disrupted boelter plan to keep going, or it could have been a lot worse. so i think that's an important point. it gets talked about a lot, but just knowing what goes on on a midnight shift in law enforcement and how there's not that many resources there, and the forethought that they had to send the officers to the other address and encounter boelter at that scene really made a huge difference in this situation and definitely saved lives. and he said that as much in the press conference. >> could have made all the difference. now, we've had this image for a little while that's been on our screen here for a moment now. we also hear some
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more details about how he was captured as well and where based on this image, we don't see him looking too dirty. what's your takeaway about how he was apprehended? based on the information we just heard in that press conference combined with this image here? >> well, it sounds like he abandoned his vehicle and he was on the move. there was some information or earlier that he may have been familiar with that area. i don't know if that's true or not. a lot of times people who feel pressure and are on the run will go to places they are familiar to them or they feel safe in. so that might be the case. but ultimately it didn't look like he was. he was not dirty. as a lot of your other folks have mentioned tonight. there's no dirt on his face. it didn't look like he was down in the mud or dirt hiding, but he did hide in a field in the 20 or so swat teams surrounding him with the assistance of the aviation units, and called him out, and he came to them. so he had to feel the weight of the world and the the thin blue line of law enforcement closing in on him. so he did the right thing. and i also think it's remarkable.
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this is a very volatile situation. it could have been a lot worse. he had nothing to lose by going and taking somebody hostage. and so kudos to law enforcement out there for apprehending mr. boelter before something terrible happened as a result of him trying to flee and get away. >> and to your point, this was the largest manhunt in minnesota history, according to law enforcement in that press conference. i do want to hit on jason real quick, something that the governor said. he was speaking to the family and said that every ounce of effort will be made to make sure that justice is served in your role. when you were with the fbi, is that something that you could feel while you were doing your work, that you felt that this is what you needed to do for families? >> 100%, and it's hard to see through that hard shell of law enforcement. but the ones, the men and women i worked with both federal, state and locals, you
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can see the empathy. and that's the whole reason they sign up to do the job that they do. sometimes it's hard to see that when we see the pictures coming out of los angeles or new york or some of these other places where these battles are taking place, or these skirmishes are taking place. but the men and women i worked with, and i know the people that get up every day and put the badge on, they are super empathetic, and that's why they sign up. certainly they don't do it for the money. and so the empathy and just what governor walz said there, they want to do the very best job that they can to impact the maximum justice that can be had in this situation. >> former fbi special agent jason pack, thank you very much. >> thank you. >> ahead. casualties are mounting now on both sides as iran and israel widen attacks. after the break, a report from tel aviv following multiple strikes there. >> have i been given what i planned for gladys, i would have finished up queen of the world. father, what does this mean? >> i won't remind you why i
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have the right to give orders. >> when the shoe was on the other foot. did i ever question you? >> yes. >> i'm trying to protect her future. won't you help me? >> this is poppycock. what sort of a person are you? >> i'm the sort of person who gets what she wants. >> you know what you don't. >> see in psoriasis commercials. cut the thousands of real people who go undiagnosed. people who? psoriasis can look very different depending on their skin tone. as the makers of tremfya, we understand that everybody's moderate to severe plaque psoriasis doesn't look the same. so we undertook a first of its kind study of plaque psoriasis in every skin tone. like hers and his and yours. >> serious allergic reactions, an increased risk of infections and liver problems may occur before treatment. your doctor should check you for infections and tb. tell your doctor if you
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>> when i was ten years old, my mom and dad said you were kidnaped from a hospital. i had no idea. >> i declare to be your only savior. come on. >> poisoned? seriously? >> every weekday morning. >> here are the five things you need to know to start your day. >> cnn's 5 things with kate baldwin, streaming weekdays on max. >> the boeing 747 has crashed in the lockerbie area. >> it was the largest act of terrorism on the united states before nine over 11. >> there are a number of anomalies. >> trying to find. >> out the why of it became everything. >> you could look at the iranians, the libyans. >> the cia, hezbollah. >> nothing is what it seems. >> in the lockerbie story. >> lockerbie, the bombing of pan am flight 103, now streaming on
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max. >> i've decided to take on a very ambitious feast in my new home of marbella. with these dishes, the party should be a slam dunk. it's always sunny in marbella. no. >> eva longoria searching for spain next sunday at 9:00 on cnn. >> the whole story with anderson cooper. next sunday at 8:00 on cnn. >> major breaking news. also in israel, where at least four people have been killed and dozens injured in the latest round of missile strikes launched by iran. israel's national emergency service says multiple locations were hit monday morning. cnn crews captured this video here as strikes were heard around the tel aviv area, along with warning sirens. central israel's power grid also damaged in the latest of the back and forth strikes over the weekend. and here is what we know iran's state affiliated news agency confirmed an israeli strike in tehran on sunday resulted in the deaths of two high ranking officials. the
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intelligence chief of iran's revolutionary guard and his deputy general. at least 224 people have been killed in israeli airstrikes since friday, according to iran's ministry of health. israeli officials say at least 18 people have been killed there since iran's retaliation began. the idf targeted multiple weapons production sites in iran on sunday, including a site that produces navigation and missile systems, one that makes fuel for various types of missiles and another that produces missile engines. israel's military chief of staff says strikes will only get more intense from here. >> we will continue to intensify our operations and in doing so, strengthen our security for years to come. defending our home front is a critical component of this campaign. as i told you from the beginning, there will be difficult moments. we are in the midst of a challenge, unlike those we have faced in the past. we knew there would be a price, and it underscores why we act now
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before it became too late. >> iran is responding, in turn, with its own strikes aimed at israel. iran's president says their response will escalate, threatening more innocent lives. >> israel knows no boundaries. they intrude wherever they want with permission from america. we are by no means seeking to expand the war. but naturally, as our army, our powerful irgc and our dear people have shown, appropriate responses have been given so far, the more they try to escalate naturally, the responses will become tougher and more severe. more innocent people may lose their lives. >> jeremy diamond was at the scene of one missile strike in tel aviv, and filed this report just a short while ago. >> i'm at the site of an iranian ballistic missile attack in central tel aviv. this ballistic missile struck this area in the early hours of this morning, severely damaging three
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residential buildings right behind me. as you can see in this whole street is littered with debris. as rescue crews move in and out, still trying to assess the damage to find anybody who might be trapped under the rubble, and also to get people out of their apartments. there are also folks who have arrived here to try and get back inside, to get some of their belongings, and to make sure that their loved ones are okay. this is one of four ballistic missile attack sites in central tel aviv alone. in addition, there was a ballistic missile attack in northern israel in haifa as well. more than 70 people were injured in these attacks, according to magen david adom, israel's national rescue services. and of course, we are seeing that these attacks are continuing to escalate and concern is rising here in israel about the number of casualties and how many more may come. jeremy diamond, cnn, tel aviv.
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>> and our other major breaking news. the suspected killer of a minnesota state representative is caught. what officials are saying just ahead. >> come with me. because you look so fine that i really want to make you mine. are you gonna be my girl? >> visit your audi dealer and lease the all new 2025 audi q5 quattro premium for 6.99 per month? >> pear shaped like replacement.
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>> i can feel the winds of change. >> i get chills just thinking about it. >> is this really true? >> come on. poisoned. seriously? >> eva longoria searching for spain next sunday at nine on cnn. >> closed captioning is brought to you by page publishing. if you've written a book, we'll publish it for you. >> if you've written a book, page publishing can help you through the process. we cut through the confusion of the publishing world to make it easy for you. >> call 805 630741. >> a quick update on the breaking news from minnesota, where the manhunt for a suspected assassin is now over. authorities have caught 57 year old vance boelter, the suspect in the fatal shooting of a state representative and her husband. he's also been linked to a separate shooting that left a
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state senator and his wife wounded. police say boelter crawled to law enforcement when the search team closed in on him. minnesota governor tim walz and other officials speaking just a short time ago. >> after a two day manhunt, two sleepless nights, law enforcement have apprehended vance boelter. that's 48 hours that law enforcement involved in a complex and dangerous manhunt spent father's day away from their families to deliver justice for melissa and mark hortman and their children who spent this father's day alone. to the law enforcement who stand here and the hundreds who are involved in this, the state of minnesota owes you a deep debt of gratitude. thank you. you ran towards the danger, and you served the state of minnesota. this is a great example of coordination and collaboration. multiple agencies federal, state
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and local, coordinating together in a way to protect the public and close this hunt around. multiple agencies were there as fbi laid hands on it. and minnesota state patrol put the handcuffs on. one man's unthinkable actions have altered the state of minnesota. melissa hortman was the core of who our values were. she had a hand in so many things that happened. the building that we stand in. she helped usher through so that we could respond from the state emergency operations center with the professionalism and giving the tools necessary to law enforcement to do their job, to melissa and mark's family. i cannot fathom your pain and the grief that you're going through. we'll take solace in the memory and the work that melissa did, and you can rest assured that we will put every ounce of effort that the state of minnesota has to make sure that justice is served, and the
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individual responsible for this serves the time for the unspeakable act. state grieves with you. mark hortman. the latest news is senator hoffman came out of surgery and is moving towards that, towards recovery. a vet is is healing. and i think when the story comes out and i'd like to say on behalf of the state of minnesota, the heroic actions by the hoffman family and their daughter, hope saved countless lives. and we are grateful. bureau of criminal apprehension will continue to investigate. we will keep you informed. we'll spare no expense and no work to make sure that that happens. a moment in this country where we watched violence erupt. this cannot be the norm. it cannot be the way that we deal with our political differences. >> steve moore is a cnn law enforcement contributor and retired fbi supervisory special
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agent. joining me from los angeles. and, steve, you and i, before that press conference were going back and forth dissecting that image, speculating about how this suspect could have been brought into custody. now we have more information. what's your takeaway now that that press conference is finished? >> well, it appeared to be just good police work. somebody found the vehicle in a rural area. the law enforcement was deployed. fbi, swat is is highly trained in getting into rural wooded areas and searching. and it appears that they were able to locate him in a position where they could call him out. they said he crawled out. that usually means the fbi or whoever it is is saying, get on your hands and knees and come out towards us. so it was, i think, a coordination between several law enforcement agencies, state,
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local and federal. and i think it worked out very well. >> over these 33 hours or so. it was estimated in that press conference that the largest manhunt in minnesota history was conducted. there was a lot of incriminating evidence, at least it seems, from outside of the prosecution and us not being a jury. it seems incriminating. what do you think that investigators will find moving forward? now? >> well, you know, after a plane crash, you're always looking for the black box, you know, because that will tell you the things that happened right before the crash in law enforcement. what we're looking for are things that kind of a black box that will tell us what was going on in the mind of the killer beforehand. and this is usually his social media, his writings, his communications with others. so they're going to try to crack this black box, open the
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legal black box and find out what was motivating him to go through this. so that's the next step. and then that's going to go obviously towards prosecution. >> do does anybody else around this suspect, if they knew anything, is there any culpability there. >> yeah. yeah there is. and that's that's part of this dissecting what happened many times. there are people who didn't even know what he was doing beforehand but assisted afterwards. that's an accessory after the fact. there are potentially people who are simply accessories and then accessories after the fact. and that's one of the things that occupies the investigators time after this is determining, is this the only guy we're going to prosecute, or are we going to go after people who knew about this
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and did nothing about it, or worse, assisted him either in the act or in the escape? >> steve, we see, at least in school shootings and some other incidents, there's this idea of copycats of potentially other lone wolves, people wanting to pick up this torch of. violence. is there that possibility here in this in this case. >> brian? yeah, there is a possibility of this. but in this case, it's a little bit better. believe it or not, what we see in school shootings and these, these horrible mass shootings is these people tend to want to end their own lives. they don't want law enforcement to have that privilege to end their lives. when you get a guy like this who is captured alive, it actually kind of puts a chill into those
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who would otherwise think that this was a success. and i and please understand when i say success, i'm using it in a macabre way. so him being captured actually reduces the possibility that anybody would try this again. it doesn't eliminate it. certainly there are people who are just looking for something. but i believe this it was a negative, a negative inference for them. >> all right, steve moore, appreciate your expertise as always. thank you. >> thank you. >> still to come for us. casualties are mounting on both sides as iran and israel continue launching attacks against one another after the break. cnn's clarissa ward reports from an israeli town where four women were killed. that's next. >> the billionaire boys club was a bro club full of rich white guys. >> johan was the puppet master. >> he was chasing wealth and power at any cost, even murder.
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>> eyes forward. don't drive. distracted. >> i'm kara scannell with the diddy trial in new york. and this is cnn. >> a day of death and destruction in tel aviv and tehran due to the conflict between israel and iran. four people were killed in israel, according to emergency workers, after a barrage of missiles fell in multiple sites around tel aviv overnight. residential areas were among the locations hit. explosions and fires seen and cnn correspondent saw one residential building that partially collapsed. it comes after israel carried out a series of strikes on iran on sunday. iran's state affiliated news agency confirmed that two high ranking officials were
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killed. the intelligence chief of iran's revolutionary guard and his deputy. at least 224 people have been killed by israeli airstrikes since friday, according to iranian authorities. even before these last strikes, we learned four women from the same family in tamra, israel, were killed when an iranian missile hit their home. cnn's clarissa ward reports from the site of the strike. >> four members of the family were killed in this strike on their family home. a mother and two of her daughters, the youngest just 13, and a relative who was visiting. you can see the scale of the destruction as a result of the impact of that missile hitting, and it really extends down the block. and in many ways, this strike, it really gets to not just the tragedy of this conflict, but also the. complexity. this town, tamra, is a palestinian israeli
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town, and there was social media video online last night, verified by cnn, that showed people from a neighboring town actually cheering as they saw those missiles coming down onto tamra. they could be heard rejoicing. may your village. >> look. >> ava. >> and it's important to mention as well that we've also seen videos on social media of palestinians cheering as missiles rained down near the city of tel aviv. we spoke to a priest, father khoury, who told us that he believes innocent people are losing their lives because of the actions of bad leaders. >> we want all of them to sit on the same table and to sit like brother, sons of abraham, and to say it's enough because violence cause violence and blood caused blood. it's easy to know how to
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start wars, but only god knows how it's going to finish. >> shortly after we finished talking to father khoury, the sirens went off again and we were ushered into a shelter in the house across from the khatib family home, and the woman who lives in that house, who witnessed and lived through what happened last night. visibly shaken, crying, trembling, deeply fearful for her life. the all clear has been given. people are getting back to the work of cleaning up, and it's going to be a big job. clarissa ward, cnn. tamra, israel. >> elsewhere in israel, an iranian missile strike hit a residential building in bat yam sunday, killing several people and injuring dozens of others. cnn's nic robertson shows us the aftermath of that attack. >> an iranian missile. this
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fireball, its deadly impact. it's two fifty five a m minutes later, rescue crews scrambling to save lives. dozens injured, some trapped under the rubble, others dead. daybreak revealing destruction beyond recent memory. a civilian apartment building sheared off. homes opened like tin cans. lives disgorged atop a mountain of crushed concrete and twisted rebar. rescuers crowding forward, listening for any signs of life. just listen. everything's gone quiet. and that's because those rescuers, they're there shouting into the rubble. they're shouting to people they believe are still trapped. if you're there, send us a sign. that's what they're saying. it's eight hours after this iranian missile strike on a civilian building, and there's a huge effort now to find the people that are unaccounted for that they believe are trapped. this is a race against time. if
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they're injured, the clock is ticking. and this is a desperate move here right now. hours later, heavy lift equipment brought in officials saying three people known to be trapped for missing 12 hours. now, since the strikes. lives potentially still to be saved. almost 100 injured. the death toll likely to climb. but according to the police, it could have been worse. >> it's honestly a miracle, but it's due to the fact that the public is listening to the instructions to find protected shelter, to stay there. and we all pray for a peaceful and quick end to this. >> israel's prime minister, president and defense minister who all came to see the vast scale of destruction, gave no hint an end is in sight. the reverse, even ramping up their rhetoric. >> no one will bring us down on our knees. we will hurt the snake's head and will peel off the snake's skin and will
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target the nuclear facilities. we'll target the aerial defense systems will target the missiles, will target the regime. >> destruction here, ripping through an entire city block. hundreds forced from homes. not all of them as forward leaning as their leaders. this man salvaging what he could. >> and i think it's the government and the people that. >> are in power that really want. >> the war to go to continue. we have hostages. we don't want this war. we didn't start this war. we want it to end. but he's impacted by it. yeah, israel has been in war since the beginning. so we're going to be all right. >> reporter. this neighborhood unlikely to be the last ripped up. according to israeli officials in the prime minister's office, more than 1 in 10 iranian missiles getting through israel's defenses. nic robertson, cnn, central israel.
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>> thank you for joining us. i'm brian abel and we are back with more news in just a few moments. >> eva longoria searching for spain next sunday at 9:00 on cnn. >> sometimes it takes a different approach to see the possibilities all around you. a capella university you'll learn relevant skills like developing a.i. solutions when you earn a bachelor's. in it. >> people love how the new homes.com helps them get quick answers about any property by connecting them to the actual listing agent. >> i'm getting great exposure. >> speaking of exposure, can we get him a hat? >> ooh, what about a beret? >> oh! >> ding dong! >> homes.com, we've done your homework. >> who doesn't love tracking the value of everything? now you can track the value of your car with carvana value tracker. sign up and we'll give you the current
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belongs. find your why for a better us. >> what's it like to hear from the people actually living the headlines? i'm audie cornish. my cnn podcast will talk to the people behind the trending stories. i've got a lot of questions. >> the assignment with audie cornish. listen, wherever you get your podcasts. >> the boeing 747 has crashed in the lockerbie area. >> it was the largest act of terrorism on the united states before 9/11.
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