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tv   ABC World News Tonight With David Muir  ABC  November 12, 2019 3:30pm-3:58pm PST

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daca, the program allowing now from the televised dreamers to stay. impeachment hearings here in president trump wants it to end. washington. as you likely know, this is only will the court agree? the fourth time impeachment i'm s openfun-loving, finally tonight here, she is proceedings have played out people sometimes would get the the first signs tonight. the man detained and against an american president. america strong. wrong idea. tomorr watching and among the k dolly parton. tonight, from washington, on his sandwich. and she's with our robin the eve of history, the roberts. what we did not know about they think i do all the things i the backlash, and tonight, the questions, was there a quid pro televised impeachment hearings. joke and laugh about. apology. overseas tonight, the quo? did president trump withhold "905."wh i'm at home and just also tonight, the major storm retaliation after israeli air hundreds of millions in u.s. aid >> it had a great message. it was actually -- if you look strikes target. to pressure the new president of back, it was the first feminist now teurning deadly. haddy leaders. movement movie. >> thinking back now, when the 200 million americans feeling your money, and the battle ukraine to investigate the bidens? for your eyes tonight. watching tv and flipping times that we're living in with tonight, the first two witnesses this bitter chill across the country. disney-plus launching today, who will testify tomorrow, and the massive pileup. taking on netflix and apple tv. why they were chosen. and it doesn't matter where it time's up and me too, that movie more than 50 vehicles on this and how some republicans plan to is in the movie, i will stop, disney-plus with all the disney interstate. defend the president, holding temperatures in some areas classics and "star wars" in one sit down and watch it. was ahead of its time in some mock hearings today to prepare. ways. >> it was. dropping 60 degrees. place, and the first challenge jane fonda reached out to you about doing that? and it did a lot of good, but here in washington, the abc's mary bruce up on the hill evidently didn't do enough good because we're going to always televised impeachment hearings because of demand. tonight. >> yes, she did. have the same problems in the and robin roberts tonight >> reporter: less than 24 hours workplace with women and men. just hours away. the first two witnesses, and why with dolly parton. that was actually her -- her but you kind of have to find a what we never knew about "9 to until the first public hearings, project. way to move around that and they were chosen. she produced that as well as the urgent hunt growing acting in it. tonight. 5." what dolly memorized. democrats eager to let their and she's the one that came to there's still work to be done. the u.s. marine wanted for witnesses speak for themselves. i still believe that women me. >> i was driving down the seinro several >> madam speaker, what do you hope to begin from the freeway one day listening to -- should get paid equal and should and you'll see the new be treated with respect. impeachment public hearings dolly's -- a tape of dolly and i an. the vaping gency.nit,he tna nee. tomorrow? i'm all about that, you know. and like i say, i don't get out and good evening tonight pre coerence o from washington. suddenly thought, "she's got to and have to preach it or march and we are here in our nation's do it. in the streets. first two carefully. this has got to be her first i write about it. capital because of the historic bill taylor, the top movie." i wrote "9 to 5." nature of what will play out u.s. diplomat in ukraine, a >> we were a little concerned. here tomorrow. vietnam veteran hand-picked by the president's own secretary of is she going to know her lines, the televised impeachment is she going to be okay, is she >> robin's special "dolly no one is above the law. authorities investigating three state. and george kent, a senior state going to be comfortable? separate cases, three student parton: here she comes and everyone must respect the a moment. department official who has >> i'd never even seen a movie deaths but we do begin tonight with served presidents of both parties. made. and i did a lot of law. we're here to stand up for the
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this massive storm system that's now turned deadly. now feel real humorous, like, right way to do things. a 50-vehicle pileup near i memorized the whole script. democrats believe taylor and kent will reveal the scope of >> emotions run high. >> the whole script. the effort to pressure ukraine the first day. the fate of dreamers goes before to investigate the president's youngstown, ohio. traffic at a standstill in so political rivals. her lines and our lines. the supreme court. many places across the country. and outline the stakes for national security. the trump administration is that was just the beginning. at least six deaths now across taylor has testified it was his seeking to put an end to daca. the storm zone. "clear understanding" that to me man times in my life,de b a record november snow in ukraine would not receive good afternoon thank you for detroit. and the record-breaking cold nearly $400 million in military joining us. >> a pivot toll day in settling in across much of the nation. a 60-degree drop in places. aid until they agree to washington for the future of hundreds of thousands of investigate the bidens. an arrangement he described as undocumented immigrants brought and millions are now bracing for to the united states as tomorrow morning. we have the track for you, and "crazy." children. abc's alex perez leads us off hourt. from chicago. >> reporter: tonight, that kent called american/ukraine policy a "snake pit," led by the powerful arctic blast bringing president's personal lawyer, >> protests outside the supreme whiteout conditions and wreaking rudy giuliani, who hmm accused deadly havoc on the roads. court as news emerge the high in ohio, several crashes of running a "campaign of courts conservative majority involving multiple vehicles, appeared to side with president including this pileup on trump. and his right to end the interstate 80 near youngstown. deferred action for childhood arrival program. slander" and "lies." >> what i'm feeling confusion. the highway shut down in both republicans plan to cast the directions for a time. witnesses as "unelected and at least two fatalities on the anonymous bureaucrats." >> neither of these two we d individuals were on the call. piece folks never talked to the state's icy highways. at least six weather-related president of the united states about this call. deaths in all across the region. >> reporter: republicans intend to focus narrowly on the the cold fueling that snow was president's july phone call, saying there was no pressure when trump asked the ukrainian record-breaking in chicago. >> got to keep my face warm. president to "do us a favor" and >> does it do the trick?
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urged him to investigate the >> not really. bidens. but witnesses have testified the st, in ord. muc nembe that call is just part of the story. that ukraine was explicitly told they would not receive the military aid until they announced that investigation. >> all right, so, let's get ls as they boarded school right to mary bruce, she's live up on the hill tonight. and we know the televised hearings get under way 10:00 a.m. tomorrow, and the democrats buses. and then the democrats will have and in buffalo, residents digging out from nearly a foot of snow. long stretches of time to >> most people aren't prepared question these witnesses uninterrupted? >> reporter: david, the top republican and democrat on this warned us about it. committee will each initially it's just too early. >> reporter: abc's rob marciano have 45 minutes to question the in syracuse, new york. witnesses, giving each party a >> it's not the amount o a it's big chunk of time to try and lay out their case to the american people. after that, each member gets five minutes for questions. this snow to be hard packed, slick underfoot and difficult to david, we're told the whole drive in. >> reporter: the freezing temps hearing could last more than six hours. david? >> all right, we'll be here for it all. mary, thank you. see you in the morning. stretching far south. in dallas, where thor the mommer and i'll be joining george and the dropped to the low 20s, the entire team. live coverage of the house sprinklers creating this icy impeachment hearings tomorrow mess. and david, we broke a record low morning, 10:00 a.m. eastern, right here live on abc. in the meantime, to the here, 7 degrees here this other news this tuesday night morning. in fact, we never got out of the and the urgent manhunt widening teens today, but a slow climb this evening for a u.s. marine wanted for murder. towards warmer temperatures is michael brown went awol from
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on the way for us here. david? camp lejeune last month. >> alex perez and rob marciano tonight, the fbi, the u.s. in my hometown of sere use, my marshals have all joined the thanks to you both. search across several states now. and the new surveillance let's get right to ginger zee timing out the cold tonight. tonight. here's abc's chief justice correspondent pierre thomas. ginger? >> reporter: oh, i know you're feeling it, david. the cold is settling in right >> reporter: tonight, in their ch. c over the warm lakvi se is urgent effort to locate a marine deserter accused of killing his mother's boyfriend, authorities releasing these new images as a nationwide manhunt picks up northern ohio, western pennsylvania and new york. pace. the fbi, u.s. marshals and the going into tomorrow, though, i really think it's the wind chill. it makes it all the way through ncis joining the search for the hours away michael alexander brown, described as armed and dangerous. believed to be carrying a high powered rifle and potentially other weapons. the murder in tiny franklin county, virginia, just outside of roanoke, shocking local residents, as police have offered no motive. brown is believed to be driving this black 2008 lincoln town car with north carolina license plates. police noting that he has often lived in the woods and he but it's unclear why.
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the marines tell us he was under investigation. they are declining to offer specifics. david, brown faces second degree murder charges and police are warning the public to use extreme caution if encountering brown. authorities concerned the young man is in a volatile state. david? >> pierre thomas, thank you. and next, to the major case before the supreme court tonight. president trump wants to end daca, the protections for 700,000 undocumented immigrants brought here as children. oral arguments held today and thousandses demonstrated outside the supreme court. their fate now in the hands of the nation's highest court, and emotional scene. >> home is here! home is here! >> reporter: thousands of protesters and some dreamers hoping for a ruling that will let round and i see my friends, my community, and everyone is here to fight to be apart of the country we love.
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>> reporter: at issue inside the courtroom, president trump's 2017 decision to end the daca program begun by president obama in 2012 that allowed 700,000 people who came here unlawfulfully when they were 16 or younger to stay. today, president trump defedning his decision to end daca with a falsehood, tweeting, "many of the people in daca, no longer very young, are far from angels." some are very tough, hardened criminals." in fact, the daca program bars anyone with a felony conviction from participating. the court's liberals suggested for ending daca. justice sonia sotomayor blasting the president, noting he once promised the dreamers "that they were safe under him and that he'd find a way to keep them here. and he hasn't." conservative justices argued that the president has the power to end the program, just as obama could start it, and that he had done so properly. but even justice neil gorsuch, a trump appointee, acknowledged the wrenching emotions at the heart of this case, saying, "i hear a lot of facts, sympathetic
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facts you put out there and they speak to all of us." >> and terry moran live at the supreme court tonight. another major headline out of the court today, as you know, clearing the way for the families of the victims in the newtown massacre, clearing the way for those families to sue the maker of the ar-15-style rifle used in that shooting that killed, as we all know, 20 children and six adults? >> reporter: that's right, david. those families suing remington arms, the maker of that rifle. they allege that the company knowingly marketed that weapon to civilians for offensive combat-style operations against their perceived enemies. the company wanted this court to squash that suit. the justices refused. so, it will go forward, a big step for gun control advocates. david? >> terry moran live at the court again tonight for us. thank you, terry. and we turn now to the vaping emergency. tonight, doctors are now talking about the teenager who needed a double lung transplant. the patient was just 16 at detroit's henry ford hospital and doctors saying today the teen was near death. one adding, what he saw in the
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teen's lungs was an evil he hadn't faced before. here's abc's linsey davis. >> reporter: after rushing to the hospital, days away from death, tonight, detroit doctors life-saving measures to keep this teenager alive. >> this young patient would have died. there is no doubt about it. >> reporter: his family says he was an otherwise healthy 16-year-old high school athlete, admitted to the hospital with pneumonia-like symptoms after vaping. his is the first known double lung transplant on a vaping patient. the teen asking doctors to show pictures of his damaged lungs. the white indicating scarred and inflamed tissue. >> this is an evil that i haven't faced before. i expect him hopefully to be an advocate to stop this madness. >> reporter: 15-year-old zane martin experienced similar damage. >> don't vape unless you want to end up in the hospital. >> reporter: just last week, the cdc announced vitamin e acetate is a potential culprit in their investigation into the more than 2,000 cases of severe
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vaping-related illnesses and at least 40 deaths. doctors say the teen is doing well. a full recovery is expected to take several months. david? >> linsey davis, thank you. and to another alarming headline tonight. this evening, authorities are ae cases, three fraternity-related deaths, at three different schools in just a matter of days. san diego state, arizona state and now washington state university tonight. here's abc's kayna whitworth. >> 710 linden, alpha tau omega. >> reporter: this morning, paramedics racing to an offcampus frat house near washington state university to find fraternity brothers performing cpr. >> patient is a 19-year-old male. he's not conscious, not breathing. they believe it may be alcohol poisoning. >> reporter: a preliminary investigation indicating a possible alcohol-related death. coege atnie st death iol ree daysgo staversity, paramedics called to the dorm of 19-year-old dylan hernandez. >> he had fallen off of his
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bunkbed, about a six foot drop. and we later found out that he fractured his skull from that fall. >> reporter: the school says he had attended a fraternity event the night before and has suspended all 14 fraternities on campus. and at arizona state, police are investigating the death of a male student whose body was found just yesterday in greek housing. and as for that washington state case, david, the national alpha tau omega fraternity saying tonight they're mourning the loss of their brother and they're working with police and investigators on the case. david? >> kayna whitworth reporting tonight. thank you, kayna. and overseas tonight, the chaos in hong kong reaching a desperate new level tonight. violent clashes in the business district there and the chinese university. the police warning the city is, quote, on the brink of a total breakdown. pro-democracy protesters pushing to eliminate china's heavy hand. and a deadly escalation tonight. an israeli air strike killing a senior commander of the
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palestinian islamic jihad. the targeted attack killing the man's wife, as well. at least 50 r za no one was hit. anthebacklash tonight. video showing a man handcuffed by an officer, detained after being told to stop eating his sandwich. well, the outrage that followed, about tonight, the apology. also, news tonight about google. is the company collecting your personal health information? millions are being effected by this in 21 states, we'll have more. and your money tonight. the battle for your eyes, disney-plus launching today, taking on netflix, apple tv. disney-plus with all the disney classics, "star wars" in one placement and the first challenge because of demand out of the gate. a lot more news ahead here tonight. stay tuned.
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from our parent company. it's called disney-plus. here's our chief business correspondent rebecca jarvis. >> at long last. >> reporter: tonight, what could be disney's biggest bet yet. launching disney-plus. a treasure trove of content including more than 500 movies. ♪ hi ho >> reporter: from the original "snow white" to "the avengers." plus, 7,500 tv episodes, including the new "star wars" series, "the mandalorian." >> they said you were coming. >> reporter: now all in one place. >> it's not only a big swing, but it's a big swing for a reason, because it's a big deal to disney fans worldwide. we've never had this before. >> reporter: last year, subscriptions to video streaming services surpassed cable subscriptions for the first time. disney-plus, priced at $6.99 a month, costs about half that of netflix, the biggest streaming provider currently. according to disney, the parent company of abc, initial demand
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for disney-plus exceeding "high expectations," causing disruptions for some customers. the company promising to "quickly resolve the current user issue." analysts predict disney-plus will reach as many as 90 million subscribers in the next five years. david? >> rebecca jarvis tonight. rebecca, thank you. and when we come back here, is google collecting your personal health information? this we exs millions. and robin roberts with dolly parton tonight. what we never knew about "9 to 5." saturpain happens.
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patients. the company says they designing software to improve patient care. and a surprise tribute alex trebek. a contestant didn't know the answer to final "jeopardy!." >> let's look at your response. did you come up with the right one. no, what is, "we love you alex." that's very kind. thank you. cost you $1,995. you're left with five bucks. okay. >> trebek battling pancreatic cancer and he was clearly moved by that. when we come back tonight, robin roberts with dolly parton and what surprised us. he when you prepare for retirement with pacific life, you can create a lifelong income... so you have the freedom to keep doing whatever is most meaningful to you. a reliable income that lets you retire, without retiring from life.
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