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tv   ABC World News Tonight With David Muir  ABC  February 24, 2020 3:30pm-4:01pm PST

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ioned by los angeles distribution and broadcasting, inc. tonight, harvey weinstein found guilty of rape and criminal sexual assault. the judge ordering weinstein taken to new york's rikers island, guilty on two counts, not guilty on three others. what does weinstein now face? the lead prosecutor calling this a new day for sex assault survivors. and tonight, harvey weinstein vows to appeal. the stock market plunging amid growing fears of the coronavirus. wiping out all of the gains this year. and news from the cdc tonight, at least 50 people in isolation here in the u.s. testing positive. and communities from california to alabama now saying, "do not bring patients here." while in europe tonight, they are confronting their first major outbreak.
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219 cases in italy. tonight, 12 towns on lockdown, and we're there. back here at home, thousands pay tribute to kobe bryant at the staples center today. michael jordan helping kobe bryant's wife vanessa. michael jordan and what he said about the tears he could not stop. the major win in nevada for beer kn bernie sanders. tonight, he is the clear democratic front-runner. and new scrutiny about what he said about fidel castro and cuba. bracing for a major winter storm tonight moving across the country. it could bring the biggest snowstorm of the winter for chicago. and then, into the northeast. ginger zee has the new track tonight. president trump in india. more than 100,000 people come to see him. the frightening images tonight. the driver accused of intentionally ramming into a crowd. and tonight here, we celebrate the woman long overlo overlooked. a new nasa star remembered tonight.
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good even and it's great to have you with us here to start another week. and we begin tonight with the harvey weinstein verdict. guilty of rape and criminal sexual assault. tonight, he's been taken to new york's infamous rikers island. one of the most powerful figures in hollywood, he's now behind bars. he faces up to 29 yaears in prison. the prosecutor saying they inaugurated a, quote, new day for sex assault survivors. tonight, weinstein's lawyers vowing to appeal. and abc's erielle reshef leads us off outside that kroum here in new york. >> reporter: he was once one of the most powerful movie producers in hollywood, but tonight, harvey weinstein is a convicted sex offender, facing 5 to 29 years behind bars. >> this is the new landscape for survivors of sexual assault in america, i believe. weinstein is a vicious serial sexual predator who used his power to threaten, rape, assault
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and trick, humiliate and silence his victims. >> reporter: the former movie mogul appearing stunned by the verdict, as he was wlifted out of his seat and taken to jail. >> he looked at me and he said, "i'm innocent, i'm innocent." how could this happen in america? >> reporter: but the jury found weinstein guilty of the third degree rape of jessica mann and guilty of sexually assaulting mimi haleyi in 2006. >> i tried to get away, but it was impossible. he was extremely persistent and physically overpowering. >> if you do to women what you did to mimi, you shouldn't be surprised if you have to face criminal consequences for the crimes that you committed against them. >> reporter: jurors acquitting weinstein on two counts of predatory sexual assault with a possible life sentence. those charges hinging on the testimony of "sopranos" actress annabella sciorra, who claimed weinstein violently raped her nearly three decades ago. more than 80 women have
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accused weinstein of sexual misconduct. his trial seen as a watershed moment for the me too movement. >> the trial means so much to so many, but it will mean the most to the brave women testifying and to all of us silence breakers. >> reporter: wine steek picking a high-powered defense team, including an attorney who built her career defending men accused of sex crimes. donna rotunno arguing in and out of the courtroom that weinstein's accusers engaged in consensual sex to advance their careers. >> you have to know that when you make certain choices, there's a risk when you make those choices. >> a lot of people would say what you just said is victim blaming. >> and that's absolutely not true. if you don't want to be a victim, don't go to the hotel room. >> reporter: but tonight, survivors and activists calling the verdict a moment of reckoning for the me too movement. rose mcgowan tweeting, "today is a powerful day and a huge step forward in our collective healing." and ashley judd saying, "this is the way it's supposed to be. harvey's guilty verdict demonstrates how overwhelmingly guilty he was." >> so, let's get to erielle
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reshef with us from that new york courthouse. and you learned he's now at rikers island tonight. harvey weinstein. and when could he face sentencing? >> reporter: well, david, due to his back injury, harvey weinstein is on his way to the infirmary unit at rikers island jail. his attorneys tell me they plan to file his appeal this week. his sentencing scheduled for march 11th and he also faces though additional criminal charges in los angeles. david? >> erielle reshef leading us off tonight, thank you. the other major story tonight, coronavirus. more than 50 cases here in the u.s., and global fears growing. and today, the dow plunging, losing more than 1,000 points. its worst day in two years, wiping out this year's gains completely. the virus tonight now jumping to europe, in fact, a new cluster we're following in italy. at least 219 cases, and tonight, at least 12 towns are on lockdown. they are still trying to figure out who is patient zero, who brought it there. while here in the u.s., growing alarm, and now a number of communities saying, do not bring your patients to our hometowns.
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we're live on wall street tonight and overseas. james longman from italy now. >> reporter: fighting an invisible enemy. tonight, the number of covid-19 cases in the u.s. climbing to 53, after tests confirm new cases among those former cruise ship passengers. it comes as towns fight plans to move infected patients into isolation in their communities. frustration boiling over at this city council meeting in aniston, alabama. >> it spreads from here, it's going to spread everywhere else. >> reporter: and a judge in california temporarily blocking the state from using a facility for infected patients in costa mesa. >> i think it's ridiculous. i think it's putting more people at risk. >> reporter: and tonight, italy, the latest frontline in europe's battle with the virus. 12 now dead in the north of the country, 229 infected. about 50,000 residents quarantined in their own homes. this is the police line. beyond here are the 12 towns that are on lockdown. and take a look on google maps.
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you can see, every way in is shut down. as the hunt for patient zero continues, 23-year-old resident rosella showed us her virtual ghost town. >> there are brave people going around here and there. and -- look, you see the face mask? >> reporter: the streets in codogna, where residents are under red zone quarantine, are empty. the refrigerators at the local market bare. >> okay, so you can see there is nothing here. >> reporter: 30 miles away in milan, the country's finance and fashion capital, a sign of growing fear. giorgio armani's models walking the runway in a room full of empty chairs. and the global outbreak continues in daegu, south korea. our ian pannell. >> this hospital is now at the center of the outbreak in south korea. there are more than 200 patients inside, and all of them have covid-19. we've been here about an hour and we've seen almost ten ambulances pull up with ever more patients. >> reporter: hundreds waiting for the face masks they hope will save them. >> let's get to james longman, with us live in italy.
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and i know the real concern tonight, not only about the virus spreading, but really throughout europe. >> reporter: yaeah, that's righ, david. that's because italy shares a border with a number of universitien countries. here in milan, public spaces are on lockdown. libraries, universities, schools. authorities really trying to make sure that the virus doesn't come here. david? >> all right, james longman in italy tonight. ian pannell from south korea. our thanks to you both. and we're going to move on now to those raising fears of a global economic slowdown and what we saw on wall street already today. here's abc's rebecca jarvis tonight. >> reporter: tonight, fears over the spread of the coronavirus sending the dow plunging more than 1,000 points. its worst day in two years. stocks now negative for 2020. china, which produces about 25% of all the world's manufactured goods, an important hub for most major u.s. companies. with many chinese factories now shuttered, american businesses
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feeling the squeeze. including tech companies, like apple, which assembles its iphones in china. warning earlier this month of a temporary iphone shortage. and sales slowing there. and retailers like nike, when produces about 25% of its shoes and apparel in china. also hard-hit, airlines, like delta, united and american. the industry forecast to lose nearly $28 billion this year as consumers cut back on travel. the virus now spreading into at least 32 countries worldwide. creating anxiety over the growing impact it could have on the global economy. >> until we get some clarity, we're going to continue to see this uncertainty and this volatility in our markets. >> could be a rough few weeks ahead. rebecca jarvis live on wall street tonight.rebecca, the fea street to main street. and you've heard from small business owners throughout the country? >> reporter: that's right, david. i've heard from a dozen american small business owners who manufacture their products in china and then sell them here.
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and they're worried, because those factories in china have been shut for weeks, with no signs of reopening. and they say that could ultimately cost u.s. jobs, if this continues to last. david? >> all right, rebecca jarvis live in lower manhattan tonight. thank you. we're going to turn next here to the stirring memorial for kobe bryant and his daughter gianna today. 20,000 mourners at the staples center in l.a. vanessa bryant delivering a heartbreaking eulogy to her husband and daughter. our tom llamas is at the staples center tonight. >> reporter: today, in the house he built, the crowd cheering his name one more time. >> kobe! kobe! kobe! ♪ >> reporter: more than 20,000 friends, fans and legends of the game gathered to celebrate kobe bryant's life and the life of his 13-year-old daughter, gianna. the crowd growing silence as
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vanessa bryant took the stage, speaking public for for the first time since her husband and daughter's death. >> i won't be able to tell her how gorgeous she looks on her wedding day. i'll never get to see my baby girl walk down the aisle, have a father-daughter dance with her daddy. kobe was the mvp of girl dads. >> reporter: sharing how she's coping with this unimaginable grief. >> god knew they couldn't be on this earth without each other. he had to bring them home to heaven together. babe, you take care of our gigi. and i got noni, bibi and coco. we're still the best team. >> reporter: nba legend michael jordan, walking vanessa down from the stage in tears, as well. drawing laughs at his own
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emotion. >> now he's got me, i'll have to look at another crying meme for the next -- i told my wife i wasn't going to do this, because i didn't want to see that for the next three or four years. >> reporter: then, recalling the young star he mentored, who eventually became like family. >> when kobe bryant died, a piece of me died. i promise you, from this day forward, i will live with the memories of knowing that i had a little brother that i tried to help in every way i could. >> reporter: los angeles and the world tonight saying good-bye to the numbers 2 and 24. ♪ ave maria >> reporter: david, the even here sold out. 20,000 tickets sold. all the proceeds will promote the ma'mba and mambacita sports foundations. it's how he and his daughter
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gianna. and the bryants want other families to benefit from that, as well. david? >> tom, thank you. we're going to turn next here to the race for 2020 and bernie sanders wins nevada over the weekend. now, the clear front-runner on the democratic side. and now, the showdown in south carolina next. the primary, just five days away. joe biden, who has long believed south carolina would be his firewall. but tonight, bernie sanders, the front-runner, facing new scrutiny. and abc's eva pilgrim from charleston, south carolina, now. >> reporter: joe biden in south carolina today. a state he must win to have any shot of stopping the bernie sanders juggernaut. do you think you can win here in south carolina? >> i know i can. >> reporter: by enough? >> by plenty. >> bernie! >> reporter: sanders gaining on him here, fresh off a dominating win in nevada. >> well, you know, i am a u.s. senator and i got a big ego and i appreciate the "bernie." but it ain't bernie, it is us. >> reporter: but now that he's
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the front-runner, the self-proclaimed democratic socialist coming under fire like never before, and giving opponents fresh fodder by defending the late cuban dictator fidel castro in an interview with "60 minutes." >> we're very opposed to the authoritarian nature of cuba. but you know, it's unfair to simply say everything is bad. you know? when fidel castro came into office, you know what he did? he had a massive literacy program. is that a bad thing? even though fidel castro did it? >> reporter: the comments triggering an avalanche of criticism, including from south carolina's most powerful democrat, congressman jim clyburn, who spoke with abc's byron pitts. >> what did you make of sanders comment on sunday about the virtues of castro's communist cuba? >> i thought, when i heard that, i shivered. that reinforced the fear that south carolinians have about his so-called democratic socialism. i think that was an unforced
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error. >> reporter: sanders also on the defensive about the cost of his sweeping plans, including medicare for all and free college tuition. >> do you have a price tag for all of these things? >> no, i don't. we try to -- no, you mentioned making public colleges and universities tuition free and canceling all student debt, that's correct. that's what i want to do. we pay for that through a modest tax on wall street speculation. >> but you say you don't know what the total price is, but you know how it's going to be paid for. how do you know it's going to be paid for if you don't know what the price is? >> well, i can't -- you know, i can't rattle off to you every nickel and every dime. >> some of the questions from "60 minutes" last night. eva, as you know, the big debate tomorrow night. mike bloomberg taking most of the incoming fire. but tomorrow night, bernie sanders could face new heat, now that he's the true front-runner, and the moderates deslide up the rest of the vote, sanders now moves forward. >> reporter: that's right, david. no question, bernie sanders will be the big target, but michael bloomberg still has a lot to prove. he's been off the campaign trail, prepping. he canceled an event that was
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supposed to happen tonight. his campaign has spent more than a billion dollars in advertising, but tomorrow night, once again, he will be on that debate stage and he has to turn this one around. david? >> yeah, a lot on the line for mike bloomberg, as well. have a, thank you. president trump is in india tonight, greeted with enormous crowds on his first official visit there. a crowd of more than 100,000 people cheering for him at the world's largest cricket stadium. introduced by the prime minister there. afterward, the president and first lady taking a tour of the taj mahal. also overseas tonight, a frightening scene from germany this evening. a driver accused of intentionally ramming his car into a crowd during a carnival parade. at least 30 people hurt, including children. the man was taken into custody, his car with a smashed windshield there at the scene. there is still much more ahead on "world news tonight" this monday. bracing for a major winter storm tonight moving across the country. in fact, it could bring the most snow so far in chicago and other places for the winter. and then moves toward the northeast. ginger times it out in a moment. the driver plunging her suv
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to the index of other news. the injured runner crawling for nearly 11 hours to get help in washington state. he broke his leg on a remote trail in olympic national forest. he crawled for hours just to get cell phone service and then for four more hours before reaching help. doctors tonight say he's going to be okay. and the driver rescued from a sinking suv in boca raton, florida. bystanders jumping into the water and through the passenger side window to undo her seat belt. when we come back, her life story was portrayed in the movie "hidden figures." "hidden figures." we remember a true nasa pioneer. y (man) we weave security into their business... (second man) virtualize their operations... (third man) and could even build ai into their customer experiences. we also keep them ready for the next big opportunity. like 5g. (woman) where machines could talk to each other and expertise could go anywhere. (woman) when it comes to digital transformation,
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and you feel like this. aveeno® daily moisturizer get skin healthy™ i am totally blind. and non-24 can throw my days and nights out of sync, keeping me from the things i love to do. talk to your doctor, and call 844-214-2424. finally tonight here, america strong. an american pioneer who, for so
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long, was a hidden figure at nasa. katherine johnson was from west virginia, she was a mathematician, a pioneer. part of a small group of african-american women hired as mathematicians at nasa. breaking gender barriers, racial barriers in the '50s and '60s, she worked on the first manned space flights. calculating the precise trajectories that would allow apollo 11 to land on the moon. >> that's one small step for man. one giant lead for mankind. >> reporter: her role was long overlooked. katherine, on the far right. her daughter would hear the stories. >> momma got there '53. the engineers came and asked for some specific skills. the supervisor said, oh, well that's katherine. >> reporter: and what was her role? >> the work was to take a calculator and do big equations, which could be a page long. >> math is always dependable. >> reporter: johnson's role portrayed in the film "hidden
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figures." >> you have someone? >> oh yes, ma'am. katherine's the gal for that. she can handle any numbers you put in front of her. >> reporter: she would own her role. >> we can calculate launch and landing, but without this conversion, the capsule stays in orbit. >> reporter: you'll remember the movie was nominated for best picture. >> a true nasa and american hero, katherine johnson. >> reporter: she was also awarded the presidential medal of freedom. and when her daughter asked all those years later, what if someone questioned you? >> what happened if somebody questioned your work? >> tough. >> reporter: tough. and so was she. a true american pioneer. katherine johnson was 101. and an american original. i'm david muir. good night.
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try to win by attacking, now, we know the trump strategy- distorting, dividing. mr. president: it. won't. work. newspapers report bloomberg is the democrat trump fears most. as president, universal healthcare that lets people keep their coverage if they like it. a record on job creation. a doable plan to combat climate change. i led a complex, diverse city through 9-11 and i have common sense plans to move america away from chaos to progress! i'm mike bloomberg and i approve this message.
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now news to build a better bay area from abc7. >> only about two weeks ago, the mayor was introducing me as her fabulous police chief. >> a fired police chief fires back. ann kirkpatrick talks to abc7 news days after her abrupt dismissal. good afternoon. thank you for joins us. i'm ama daetz. >> i'm dan ashley. that story in a minute. but first, in san francisco, there were at least four side shows. police report no arrests or injuries. >> but as luz pena tells us, she spoke to a man who says he was badly beaten when he left his house to see what was happening. she is live at geary boulevard and 30th with a story you'll see only on abc7. luz? >> this is one of the locations where neighbors woke up to the sound of rubber and also the smell of smoke. take a look. you can still see the skid marks over here. four miles away