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Transcripts For KPIX CBS Evening News With Scott Pelley 20150708

>> pelley: this is our western edition. the government says a man who took an oath to do no harm instead turned more than 500 of his patients into victims in a shocking case of medical fraud. today in detroit, the doctor listened as some of these patients and their families told in court how he ruined their lives with unnecessary cancer treatments. here's dean reynolds. >> reporter: courtroom sketches could not adequately capture the anguish of the victims today as one by one they confronted the cancer doctor who prescribed aggressive chemotherapy for patients he knew were not ill and for those who were, ordering treatments that were excessive while billing medicare $34 million. in court, dr. farid fata showed no emotion for a man who prosecutors said would bully and browbeat patients who dared to question his treatment. fata has already pleaded guilty to fraud and other charges. a memo from prosecutors demanding a life sentence said fata would tell his patients they risked death without him, telling one, "your life or your money." from laura stedtefeld, whose father died in fata's care, "you poisoned, murdered and tortured my dad." from maggie dorsey, "even though i am not dead, i am a shadow ofot d my former self." it went on for four hours in federal court in detroit, and it involved only a handful of the victims prosecutors identified people who were physically emotionally and financially devastated. expert witnesses took the stand to describe the overuse ofe st chemotherapy. one drug, rituximab, is typically given eight times for aggressive lymphoma, but dr. fata prescribed it to one patient 94 times. monica flagg, who was falsely told by fata she had multiple myeloma, was too distraught to speak in court. treatments fata prescribed left her continually exhausted and in pain. what do you think of him? >> what do i think of him? i'm very angry. i cannot believe any doctor would betray so many people. and he did. >> reporter: you saw him in court. >> i did. i cried when i first saw him walk in the door. >> reporter: did you see man who was contrite? >> he showed no emotion. he didn't care. >> reporter: how did that make you feel? >> oh, oh, i was very angry. very angry. >> reporter: a good question is how he got away with this. scott, the answer is that dr. fata was a well-respected physician backed up by other well-respected physicians at a prominent local hospital. but it was a doctor who worked for him who ultimately blew the whistle on his actions. >> pelley: and prosecutors are asking for a 175-year sentence. dean reynolds covering the story in detroit. dean, thank you very much. today an f-16 fighter jet broadsided a cessna in the skies over south carolina. two people were killed on the private plane. the f-16 pilot ejected. omar villafranca is following the investigation. omar? >> reporter: the search continues behind me for the two people in the cessna that collided with that f-16 fighter jet this morning. the crash happened just after 11:00 and sent debris from both planes raining down on to a swampy part of south carolina, 25 miles north of charleston. pictures from the crash scene show one of the jet engines resting near a mobile home. the jet was from nearby shaw air force base and was on a training mission when it broadsided the cessna at between 2,000 and 3,000 feet. the pilot, major aaron johnson who has 1,500 hours of flight time and is considered highly experienced was able to eject without any major injuries. the names of the two victims on that cessna have not been released, and, scott, the national transportation safety board is expected to take over the investigation when they get here tomorrow. >> pelley: omar, thank you. tonight, conditions are still too dangerous to recover the body of a hiker who was killed when an ice cave collapsed yesterday in northern washington state. ben tracy is looking at the cause. [screaming]. >> reporter: the ice first began to crumble on sunday. several tourists inside one of the ice caves barely escaped. but when a cave partially collapsed monday, a 34-year-old woman was killed, buried under ice and rock inside. three others were airlifted to a seattle hospital. shari ireton is with the snohomish county sheriff's office. >> it's not illegal to go in the caves, however, we've been saying since mid-may, it's extremely dangerous, with all this hot water. it's weakened the caves themselves. >> reporter: they're known as the big four ice caves and are formed by avalanches that cascade down from big four mountain in northern washington state. the giant piles of snow and ice are hallowed out by run-off during the spring and summer. each year 50,000 people flock to this popular hiking trail. sara soleimani shot this video sunday while visiting from california and says temperatures were in the high 80s. >> the ice was melting and the roof was so thin with so many holes in it, and water was running all over. the weather was so hot, so you could tell that something might be happening very soon. late today officials said they recovered the body of the 34-year-old woman trapped inside the cave. ben tracy cbs news, los angeles. >> pelley: late today, subway restaurants dropped its spokesman jared fogle. this just hours after f.b.i. agents raided fogle's indiana home apparently in connection with a child pornography investigation. computers and electronics were removed from the home. two months ago the head of a charity founded by fogle was arrested on child porn charges. fogle became subway's pitchman after losing 245 pounds while eating its sandwiches. fogle's lawyer says fogle is cooperating. tonight, women who accused bill cosby of sexual abuse are feeling vindication. in sworn testimony released yesterday, cosby admitted he obtained quaaludes with the intention of giving them to women he wanted to have sex with. here's michelle miller. >> the women and myself were very brave to come out and tell our story. >> reporter: '80s supermodel beverly johnson is among dozens of women who stepped forward over the last year, accusing bill cosby of sexual misconduct. she claims she escaped an assault in the mid-1980s after being drugged in the comedian's apartment. >> i think for the women, it validates what they have been saying for a long time, for years. >> reporter: johnson says she spent the night reading through 66 pages of newly released court documents in which cosby admits he purchased drugs to give to women he wanted to have sex with. that testimony came out of a sexual abuse lawsuit brought by temple university employee andrea constand. cosby eventually settled with her, but as more women stepped forward, his lawyers hoped to keep his testimony secret, arguing his right to privacy. but judge eduardo robreno disagreed, saying cosby was a public figure who often lectured the black community on morality, specifically citing a cosby speech in 2004 at an n.a.a.c.p. event. "no longer is a person embarrassed because they're pregnant without a husband," cosby said. given that, the judge said the public should see the "stark contrast between bill cosby the public moralist and bill cosby the subject of serious allegations concerning improper and perhaps criminal conduct." now, these documents were released only after the associated press petitioned the court to make them public, and tonight, scott, there is still no comment from bill cosby or any of his legal representatives. >> pelley: michelle miller thank you very much, michelle. it's now 30 weeks until the iowa caucuses where the first votes will be cast on the way to the presidential nominations. democrat hillary clinton is driving through iowa this week but another candidate is coming up fast in her rear-view mirror. here's julianna goldman. >> reporter: it was another full house for senator bernie sanders. >> in case you didn't notice this is a big turnout. >> reporter: last night in portland, maine, he made his populace pitch to 7,500 supporters. >> we are going to send a message to the billionaire class, and that message is you can't have it all. >> bernie, bernie! >> reporter: with a promise to fight income inequality and take on wall street, the vermont senator is closing in on democratic front-runner hillary clinton. one recent iowa poll showed sanders doubling his support since may. are you surprised to see these numbers? >> frankly, i am. i think the campaign is moving faster. i mean, i thought we would catch on, but we're catching on faster than i would have thought. >> reporter: it comes without the money or the organization of the clinton machine. in the last fund-raising quarter, sanders raised $15 million from 250,000 people, a strong grassroots showing but pennies compared to clinton's $45 million plus more than $23 million raised by super pacs backing her. do you believe you can viably go up against the clinton juggernaut? >> i do. >> reporter: why? >> the american people are saying enough is enough. when that starts galvanizing nothing is going to stop us. >> reporter: today in iowa city, clinton welcomed the challenge. >> this is going to be competitive. it should be competitive. it's only the presidency of the united states we're talking about. >> reporter: clinton's press conference today is part of a new strategy to make her more accessible to the national media and to voters. scott, clinton's advisers say they always expected a primary challenger, but they don't see bernie sanders as a real threat. >> pelley: julianna goldman in the washington newsroom this evening. julianna, thank you. now we have a rare look into the kind of politics that can destroy a civilization. the assad family has ruled syria for 44 years. the last four, bashar al assad has fought a ruthless civil war that has killed more than 300,000 of his own people, 11,000 children. liz palmer has managed to reach the assad's hometown, a place where fealty defies the facts. >> reporter: in rolling hills above lake safraqieyh, qardaha salutes its native sons, president bashar al assad and his father hafez, the previous strong man and president. he's now buried above the town in this elaborate tomb. "we glorify him," maysam ahmed tells me, "because he built modern syria." qardaha's loyalty to the assad's is based in their shared allawite religion. hundreds of young men from here volunteered to fight in syria's grinding war. four years in these are the faces of those who won't come back. syrian television occasionally broadcasts emotional coverage of soldiers' funerals. and this choreographed meeting between first lady asma assad and dead men's mothers. but how many have fallen? the government won't say. so we asked the people of qardaha. are there any martyrs in your family? "many, many," she says. while next to her, a neighbor grieves silently for four of her brothers. everyone has lost someone in the fight against isis and other extremists. so you might think they'd back the u.s. air strikes on isis headquarters in raqqa, but you'd be wrong. how do you see the heavy american raqqa? "it's not real," mohammad mahmous tells me. "the u.s. finances isis and gives them weapons." in qardaha, it's safer to buy into conspiracies than to admit that their local hero might have led them into a costly war it's not clear they can win. elizabeth palmer, cbs news qardaha. >> pelley: is nascar getting too dangerous for spectators? and their matches are just as thrilling, so why don't the women get paid as much as the men when the "cbs evening news" continues. 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make the call and ask your doctor if jublia is right for you. new larger size now available. >> pelley: today, nascar driver austin dillon said he was holding on and praying as his car flew through the air in a fiery pile-up at daytona early monday. he walked away, but not some of the fans. here's jim axelrod. >> reporter: just living through this crash would have been hard enough to believe, but nascar driver austin dillon actually walked away from it. >> oh, yeah, checked out a few times, looked at all the pictures and it's pretty amazing. >> oh, my god. >> reporter: the catch fence prevented tragedy, but 13 fans suffered minor injuries from flying debris. nascar c.e.o. brian france spoke to sirius radio. >> we are all over that to understand what happened. >> reporter: according to "the charlotte observer," at least 46 spectators have died watching races in the u.s. from 1990 to 2010. three in 1999 when a wreck launched a tire into the stands at the charlotte motor speedway. humpy wheeler was then president of that track. >> this scares the daylights of everybody that operates the racetrack. this is something we all are concerned about. because we know that could, if it was bad enough, wipe you out of business. >> reporter: after the crash in charlotte and another in detroit, stronger, thicker cables were installed in the catch fences that were then raised 16 feet higher. wheeler expects similar evolution after yesterday's crash. >> what it didn't keep out of the grand stand was the shrapnel. and that's the thing that i think the industry will attack with a vengeance right now. >> reporter: wheeler says a giant, solid, see-through barrier could be installed at racetracks just like the one scott, at hockey games to keep pucks from flying into the stands. >> pelley: jim, thanks a million. we'll be right back. my blood sugar. today, i'm asking about levemir®. vo: levemir® is an injectable insulin that can give you blood sugar control for up to 24 hours. and levemir® helps lower your a1c. levemir® lasts 42 days without refrigeration. that's 50% longer than lantus® which lasts 28 days. levemir® comes in flextouch® the latest in insulin pen technology from novo nordisk. levemir® is a long-acting insulin used to control high blood sugar in adults and children with diabetes and is not recommended to treat diabetic ketoacidosis. do not use levemir® if you are allergic to any of its ingredients. the most common side effect is low blood sugar which may cause symptoms such as sweating, shakiness, confusion, and headache. severe low blood sugar can be serious and life-threatening. ask your doctor about alcohol use, operating machinery, or driving. other possible side effects include injection site reactions. tell your doctor about all medicines you take and all of your medical conditions. check your blood sugar. your insulin dose should not be changed without asking your doctor. get medical help right away if you have trouble breathing, sweating, extreme drowsiness swelling of your face, tongue, or throat, dizziness, or confusion. today's the day to ask about levemir® flextouch®. covered by most health insurance and medicare plans. ♪ [music] ♪ defiance is in our bones. new citracal pearls. delicious berries and cream. soft, chewable, calcium plus vitamin d. only from citracal. ...and the wolf was huffing and puffing... kind of like you sometimes, grandpa. well, when you have copd it can be hard to breathe. it can be hard to get air out, which can make it hard to get air in. so i talked to my doctor. she said... doctor: symbicort could help you breathe better, starting within 5 minutes. symbicort doesn't replace a rescue inhaler for sudden symptoms. symbicort helps provide significant improvement of your lung function. symbicort is for copd, including chronic bronchitis and emphysema. it should not be taken more than twice a day. symbicort contains formoterol. medicines like formoterol increase the risk of death from asthma problems. symbicort may increase your risk of lung infections osteoporosis, and some eye problems. you should tell your doctor if you have a heart condition or high blood pressure before taking it. grandfather: symbicort could mean a day with better breathing. watch out, piggies! child giggles doctor: symbicort. breathe better starting within 5 minutes. call or go online to learn more about a free prescription offer. if you can't afford your medication, astrazeneca may be able to help. >> pelley: soccer's world champs are having a sweet homecoming, but after their big win over japan and record tv ratings, some wonder if the women are getting shortchanged. here's elaine quijano. >> good morning, l.a.! >> reporter: the world champion u.s. women's team was greeted by thousands of cheering fans at today's victory rally in los angeles. star goalie hope solo took a picture of one fan's sign calling for equal pay for the women. recently it was revealed the team will split $2 million for their victory. germany, which won last year's men's world cup, was awarded $35 million. deborah slaner larkin is with the national women's sports foundation. >> we shouldn't keep deciding who is more important: our sons or our daughters, our husbands or our wives, that people should be treated equally. >> reporter: fifa, which runs the world cup, says the prizes are based on revenue. this year's figures have not been released, but four years ago the women's world cup brought in almost $73 million. the 2010 men's world cup in south africa made almost $4 billion. those players got $348 million 9% of the total revenue. the women's team got a higher percentage with 13% but the bottom line was still much less, $10 million. >> we need to have some more male allies who will say, this is not acceptable. >> reporter: two women's soccer leagues have already failed in this country, and the current one, the n.w.s.l., averages only about 4,400 spectators a game. when american stars like carli lloyd return to their club teams this weekend, the question is whether women's soccer can build on the momentum of this world cup victory. the women players have tangled with fifa before. a group sued because they had to play on fake turf this year, which men never do, and, scott outgoing fifa president sepp blatter once said, "women should wear shorter shorts to raise the popularity of their game." >> pelley: elaine, thanks very much. a star was born 75 years ago today. his story is next. ♪ ♪ when you're living with diabetes steady is exciting. only glucerna has carbsteady clinically proven to help minimize blood sugar spikes. so you stay steady ahead. song: rachel platten "fight song" ♪ two million, four hundred thirty-four thousand three hundred eleven people in this city. and only one me. ♪ i'll take those odds. ♪ be unstoppable. the all-new 2015 ford edge. super poligrip seals out more food particles. so your food won't get stuck and you can enjoy every single bite. eat loud, live loud, super poligrip. benny's the oldest dog in the shelter. he needed help all day so i adopted him. when my back pain flared up, we both felt it. i tried tylenol but it was 6 pills a day. with aleve it's just two pills, all day. now i'm back! aleve. all day strong. congratulations. you're down with crestor. yes! when diet and exercise aren't enough, adding crestor lowers bad cholesterol up to 55%. crestor is not for people with liver disease or women who are nursing, pregnant, or may become pregnant. tell your doctor all medicines you take. call your doctor if you have muscle pain or weakness, feel unusually tired have loss of appetite, upper belly pain, dark urine or yellowing of skin or eyes. these could be signs of serious side effects. i'm down with crestor! make your move. ask your doctor about crestor. >> pelley: today baby boomers got a reminder that time is marching on, and a drummer provided the beat. ringo starr, oldest of the beatles, enduring symbol of our youth, turned 75. here's anthony mason. >> reporter: under a giant card on l.a.'s capital records building, the guest of honor seemed spry as ever. as the eagles' joe walsh put it: >> it's ringo's 75th birthday and he's about 35. ♪ what would you do if i sang out of tune ♪ >> reporter: as the beatles' impish drummer, he provided the back beat for a tectonic shift in popular culture. when we first met him in 1964, he already had the nickname ringo. but he was born richard starkey in liverpool, england, and as a boy, young richie got an infection that put him in a coma. on your seventh birthday. >> yeah. >> reporter: you were actually in the hospital. >> i was. >> reporter: and your mother thought you were going to die. >> i didn't, as you can tell. >> reporter: in 1962, an ambitious liverpool group needed a new drummer. john, paul and george picked ringo and the greatest band in history was complete. >> i may be a little square. i don't know what beatles means. >> it means us. ♪ i want to hold your hand ♪ >> reporter: they took "the ed sullivan show" and america by storm in 1964. "i want to hold your hand" would spend seven weeks at the top of the charts. >> it was one of those magic moments. we were number one, and the kids loved us, and we loved the idea of being in america. i had never been to america. >> reporter: that's a hell of a way to arrive. >> it was a hell of a way. ♪ all you need is love ♪ >> reporter: he's been a household name ever since. for his birthday, at the strokee of noon, ringo asked the crowd to shout out his motto. >> peace and love. peace and love, everybody! >> reporter: proving that at 75 all you still need is peace and love. anthony mason, cbs news, new york. >> pelley: and that's the "cbs evening news" for tonight. for all of us at cbs news all around the world, good night. captioning sponsored by cbs captioned by media access group at wgbh access.wgbh.org traces back to a federal agent. now at 6:00, a new twist in the murder of a woman on pier 14. the gun used traces back to a federal agent. this while the man who confessed to the shooting faces a judge. >> in the wake of that shooting people in san francisco want changes made to the sanctuary city ordinance. >> a mystery on a bay area beach. all kinds of mammals found washed ashore. scientists cane seem to figure out why. good evening. allen martin in for ken bastida. >> i'm veronica de la cruz. we begin tonight with a shocking new revelation about the murder on pier 14. the suspect somehow got ahold of a federal agent's gun. joe vazquez with a question everyone is asking. how? >> when the suspect made his first court appearance, there were some awkward moments. he told the judge not guilty even when being asked something else. the charge against him is murder. but his defense attorneys tell the judge a different story. >> he's got an individual that does not know the victim in this case has no interest or desire in injuring her in any way. >> reporter: the attorneys say the fact lopez sanchez didn't have a motive and some other evidence means the crime was a giant mistake. >> there is no witness or anybody that has alleged that there was some kind of crime going on at the time the shooting occurred. this isn't a store robbery. this isn't any kind of assault on the individual person. so this very well could be a completely accidental discharge of a

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Transcripts For KNTV NBC Nightly News 20150709

estate as a devastating drought forces homeowners to dramatically cut back. "nightly news" begins right now. >> announcer: from nbc news world headquarters in new york, this is "nbc nightly news with lester holt." good evening. a lot of us got that uneasy feeling today when within hours of each other separate computer outages grounded all united airlines flights and halted trading on the new york stock exchange. it turns out they were unrelated glitches but they quickly got the attention of homeland security officials, who determined there was no cyber attack. and while that gave us a reason to breathe easier it didn't make the day any better for grounded and delayed passengers or stock traders. and it reminded us all once again of what a razor-thin digital threat we all hang by. we have two reports. first stephanie gosk on the stock exchange breakdown. stephanie, good evening. >> reporter: good evening, lester. well, the new york stock exchange is one of the world's largest. so when something goes wrong here on wall street, the country and the world take notice. and today the exchange came to a grinding halt for hours. when the opening bell rang this morning the biggest concern was the chinese market. but that would change. >> i've never seen this happen. >> reporter: at 11:32 without warning the new york stock exchange shut down. >> what i'm trying to figure out, i don't have the answer, is exactly what's causing this glitch. >> reporter: traders were stunned. >> there was a collective gasp. >> it was a collective gasp. and traders started running around, talking to each other, clearly on the hunt for the information they'd just lost. >> reporter: no access to stock prices. 700,000 orders stopped in their tracks. at 12:09 nyse tweeted, "we're experiencing a technical issue that we're working to resolve as quickly as possible." but on a day when the computer system for a major u.s. airline shut down there was early concern that this may be a large-scale cyber attack. >> there's no indication that malicious actors are involved in these technology issues. >> reporter: while terrorism is ruled out, the cause is still unknown. an overnight upgrade of the software system may have played a part. today's abrupt shutdown is not unprecedented, but it's rare. in 2013 the nasdaq exchange went black for three hours because of a technical glitch. at 3:10 the nyse was back up and running. no one lost money, and trade had continued on other exchanges. >> does this have a knock on people's confidence in the system? >> this was an inconvenience here at the new york stock exchange. but because of quick thinking as far as i know no clients were hurt and nobody suffered a big loss. >> reporter: but what may be damaged is the powerful system of wall street. >> it's a black eye. it's embarrassing. it's not what you want to see from the face of capitalism, which this place is around the world. >> reporter: for nearly four hours on wall street today no one was feeling very bullish. stephanie gosk, nbc news, new york. >> reporter: this is tom costello in washington. from the crowded runways at l.a.x. all the way cross-country to the ramp at newark. >> what was frustrating was on the united website they didn't have any information about the delay. >> reporter: to the gates at chicago o'hare where at 9:00 a.m. not a single plane was backing out. >> they can't even tell us when our flight's leaving, so we have to head through security now. hope for the best. >> reporter: the morning rush went nowhere fast for tens of thousands of united passengers after the nation's second biggest airline suffered yet another computer glitch. the ripple effect stretching to curbside in los angeles to miserably long lines in denver, minneapolis, and houston. >> basically, the late flights are going to keep us from getting to some very important meetings we were hoping to make. >> reporter: it all started just after 8:00 a.m. eastern. united says a computer router failed, taking out flight scheduling and passenger check-in systems. that led to an faa ground stop for all united airlines flights nationwide until 10:00 a.m. the good news, it happened on wednesday, one of the slowest travel days of the week. the bad news, it's the height of the summer vacation season. >> it's always frustrating when there's a delay because we have our vacation planned and travel and stuff like that. >> reporter: in all, says united, more than 800 flight delays, roughly 60 united and united express flights canceled. just the latest disruption caused by computer glitches since united merged with continental in 2010. the most recent on june 2nd affected 150 flights. >> you have redundancy, double redundancy, triple redundancy. these kind of things just can't happen in a 24 by 7 full-time system that basically has to be on all the time. >> reporter: united airlines says it's confident this was not the work of hackers, rather it was a failure with a router, that critical component to the computer system, and it says this was completely unrelated to what happened at the new york stock exchange. lester? tom costello tonight. thanks. now to the interview that has so many people talking this evening. donald trump surging in republican primary polls even as he loses business deals. trump doubling down today in an interview with nbc's katy tur, backing up his comments that have sparked so much controversy. >> we are taking mexico's problems. mexico is beating us on trade, and they're beating us at the border. but mexico doesn't want to take these people. so what do they do? they send them to our stupid politicians and we have sanctuary cities and we have all of this nonsense. i've been saying this for a long time, katy, and it's a disgrace. and frankly, if i didn't bring it up you wouldn't even be talking about immigration right now. >> when was the last time you were at the border? >> i've been to the border probably three or four times over the years. and i have many people that live around the area. i'm going to arizona this weekend where they want to talk to me because arizona is -- in some ways i'm the most popular person in arizona because of my stance. and i'm going to be -- >> but when was the last time that you were there? >> probably three years ago. >> so how do you -- if you haven't been there in three years, how do you know that it is such a problem? >> because i know it was bad then and it's worse now. it was terrible then, and it's worse now. it's worse now than it's ever been. you don't even have a border. people are just flowing through like water. there's no border right now. and we're taking them and putting them in our jails and our hospitals and we're paying them money through different sources. it's a disgrace. >> do you think -- >> and by the way, i'm not -- i have great relationship with the mexican people. i have many people working for me, you can look at the job in washington, i have many legal immigrants working for me, many come from mexico, they love me and i love them. and if i get the nomination i will win the latino vote. i will win it because i'm going to create jobs. >> you're for the second amendment. do you have a gun? >> i have a license to have a gun, yes, i do. >> do you own one? >> yes, i do. >> do you use it? gun range? >> it's none of your business. it's really none of your business. i have a license to have a gun. >> gun control. >> what are you asking -- >> stronger background -- >> excuse me. yes, i have a gun and yes, i have a permit to have a gun. >> stronger background checks? what about that? is there any step that you would take to make it harder to get a gun in this country? >> the problem is once you get into that you start getting into a situation, the slippery slope where all of a sudden you're going to really violate the second amendment. >> do you have a plan for isis? >> i do have a plan. >> what is it? >> with isis you kill them at the head. you take the oil. that's where they're getting their money. if you bomb the hell out of it you bomb the hell out of it. you've got to stop their wealth. they have tremendous wealth. >> what about civilians? >> i'm talking about oil. >> what do you think of hillary if she wins the nomination? >> i think hillary would be a terrible president. she was the worst secretary of state in the history of our nation. why would she be a good president? jeb bush will never take us to the promised land. he doesn't have it. hillary will never take us to the promised land. hillary will be a disaster as a president. we need somebody that can make great deals with china, with japan, with mexico. we need somebody that really understands and cherishes the military. i actually think i'll be the jobs president, but i actually think i'll be even better in terms of the military. i will create military where nobody's going to mess around with the united states. >> katy tur along with chuck todd here with us. katy, he's still suffering fallout with his business dealings over all this. >> celebrity chef jose andres has backed out of opening a restaurant in trump's d.c. hotel, and nevada republican senator dean heller says he will be giving back the campaign contributions that trump gave to him and giving them to charity instead. >> and chuck, he said in that interview that we wouldn't be talking about immigration if it weren't for him. is he right? >> he's 100% right. okay, let's put that on the table. we are having a conversation on immigration. not a great one. not the most substantive one. but yes, we're having one because of him and what he's brought to this campaign. and i think another part of this that we can't ignore is that there is a chunk of the american electorate he's speaking for. this is a chunk of the american electorate that does feel left behind. the middle class part of the country that feels as if the middle class isn't the best place to go rise up. and they don't know who to blame. they blame some of washington. they blame some of wall street. so trump is channeling that anger. he's doing it inaccurately. he's believing every conspiracy theory and fact that he finds on the internet and not the ones that are straightforward. but the sentiment is one that people i think are connecting with. so we can't ignore who's following him. he may flame out, as i said before, and i expect him to, but there's still a chunk of voters who believe this. by the way, his comments on hillary clinton will shock i think some people today because at one time he praised her job as secretary of state and he's been a big supporter of the clintons in the past. i think that's going to get him in trouble. >> that's not praise we heard a moment ago. >> no, it's not. and that's how republicans might try town do him. >> chuck and katy, thanks very much. we have posted katy's entire interview with donald trump on our website. you can find the full conversation on nbcnews.com. there's other news to tell you about. a new twist in a murder case that's become a flash point in the fight against immigration. authorities have traced the gun that an undocumented immigrant allegedly used in the shooting of a woman on a san francisco pier. and sources say it came from a very surprising place. nbc's hallie jackson with more on that for us. >> reporter: the gun that killed 32-year-old kate steinle originally belonged to a federal agent with the bureau of land management. the weapon stolen from his car according to the agency. prosecutors say that gun ended up in the hands of juan francisco lopez sanchez, who has pleaded not guilty to shooting steinle, raising questions about why the mexican immigrant was allowed to walk free in san francisco in the first place. after drug convictions in washington and oregon federal immigration officials deported lopez sanchez five times. each time he returned to the u.s. within weeks. twice to arizona and twice more to texas. arrested there as recently as 2009. he was released from a bay area jail this spring but san francisco officials never notified i.c.e. they don't have to. san francisco's considered a sanctuary city, along with more than 7 0 other municipalities nationwide including new york and philadelphia. places that generally don't get involved with federal immigration law unless there's a legal reason. >> these sanctuary city policies were designed to help promote public safety but in fact they undermine it because they make life less safe in the immigrant community where convicted criminals cause harm to all members of the community. >> reporter: but supporters of sanctuary laws say they create better relationships between law enforcement and immigrant communities. >> local government is not in the deportation business. >> would you go back and do anything differently knowing you that know now? >> i would. >> what? >> i would go right downtown to i.c.e.'s door and tell them to do their job. >> i.c.e. says they did as a seemingly random shooting shines a spotlight on what some call a broken system. hallie jackson, nbc news, san francisco. baltimore's police commissioner anthony batts has been fired 2 1/2 months after the the riots overt death of freddie gray. the mayor announced that batts is out just hours after the police union released a scathing report on the depending handling of the riots back in april. gray died earlier that month from injuries he received while in police custody. we are getting an incredible look this evening at the exact moment a flash flood hit. the terrain is dry one second. the next it's covered in a deluge of rushing water and debris after a severe storm. the destructive power captured on video in utah's johnson canyon. we've got a lot more to tell you about tonight. magnum p.i. allegedly caught by a real-life private eye. tom selleck accused of stealing water to use at his california ranch. an uproar amid this drought emergency as millions are forced to cut back. and later, hello mudda, hello fadda, letters from camp going viral. laughter and tears far from home for the summer. we're back now with the uproar involving a hollywood star. actor tom selleck accused of stealing truckloads of public water, having it brought to his estate during the middle of california's historic drought, when so many other people are being forced to cut back. the high-profile figure, the latest face of so-called water shaming. our national correspondent miguel almaguer reports. >> reporter: actor tom selleck may be in hot water, according to a lawsuit a truck routinely hauled water from this hydrant eight miles away from his home onto the actor's 60-acre ranch. >> i can explain! >> reporter: the "magnum p.i." star isn't talking and hasn't responded to our requests for comments. in court documents thes claims a water truck repeatedly tapped a water hydrant for 18 months. during one week alone the truck observed making seven trips into and four trips out of the hidden valley area where the selleck property is located. selleck is being sued for $21,000, the cost of the investigation. the water district is also asking selleck to cease and desist, to stop taking water. the sheriff tells us he faces no criminal charges. >> it's really about doing the right thing and preserving our water supply for our users. >> reporter: with water reserves dwindling across the state the public is doing its part. water use slashed by 29% in may. the mormon temple in los angeles letting its nearly 100,000-square-foot lawn go brown. >> we're picking up the pace. water conservation is setting in. but we're not there yet. and we have to keep at it. >> reporter: so-called drought shaming, neighbors reporting neighbors for water waste. >> do you really need to do that in the middle of a drought? >> reporter: -- has become a trend as water companies threaten fines. tonight it's selleck's turn. after the water company hired a p.i. to catch magnum p.i. miguel almaguer, nbc news, los angeles. we're back in a moment with the lengths some are going to to keep the confederate flag flying in south carolina. ♪ ♪ one day a rider made a decision. the decision to ride on and save money. he decided to save money by switching his motorcycle insurance to geico. there's no shame in saving money. ride on, ride proud. geico motorcycle great rates for great rides. in south carolina the emotional effort to remove the confederate flag from the state house grounds hit a hurdle. dozens of them in fact, as a state legislator from a rural upstate community launched an effort to kill a bill. nbc's ron allen has more. >> representative pitts is recognized on the amendment. >> reporter: representative mike pitts is virtually a one-man wrecking crew in the south carolina house. offering amendment after amendment, at least 25 and still counting, dominating the emotional debate about a bill that would remove the confederate flag from the state house grounds. >> yellow jasmine has a good smell. >> reporter: he wants a bed of state flowers planted if the flag and its pole are removed. or a granite monument with the flag cast in bronze. or the flag in a glass case. what his critics call filibuster by amendment. >> clearly you're trying to thwart is this process. >> no. i am trying to reach a compromise and find one amendment that can do that. >> reporter: he hails from a rural community in upstate south carolina, a manufacturing and farming hub. >> why is this flag so important to you? >> i grew up with that flag. the current flag. being almost a symbol of reverence because of my family's service in that war. it was not a racial issue. >> are you concerned that you're on the wrong side of history now? >> no, i am not. i would like the heritage that i represent also respected in the process. it's that simple. >> reporter: the debate went on for hours with a number of other defenders of the flag adding their voices. all this continues on thursday. most observers expect the bill will eventually pass, with the flag coming down perhaps by the end of the week. ron allen, nbc news, columbia, south carolina. a moving moment from the pope's eight-day visit to south america. an elderly woman in a wheelchair was lifted up to greet pope francis, who kissed her during his swing through ecuador. before he departed that country today a dad brought his son up to say good-bye. the little boy will never remember it because he was asleep the whole time. the pope's tour now continues to bolivia, where he received a warm welcome despite the chilly weather. when we come back, kids saying the darnedest things. the gems from campers practicing the lost art of letter writing. ===take vo=== how law enforcement finally caught him. ===janelle/radar=== plus: we're tracking summer storms. the unusual weather that could hit your neighborhood. ===next close=== the news is next. ==janelle/take live== we begin with breaking news in finally tonight, for kids today nothing is ever more than a text away. but what happens when a generation raised on the instant gratification of the digital world collides with the old-fashioned customs of summer camp? here's nbc's rehema ellis. >> reporter: the sounds of summer sleep-away camp. even in this digital age the tradition of sending handwritten letters endures. at camp louemma in northern new jersey the kids right home at least twice a week. >> dear mom and dad, i'm having the best time ever. >> i miss you so much, but camp is amazing. >> reporter: it's a way for them to express themselves, whether they miss home or not. >> no offense to them, but i'd much rather be here with all my friends than talking to them. >> reporter: or maybe it's for parents everywhere who've taken to posting the letters on social media. >> dear family, i must write you a letter even though nothing important has happened. >> reporter: life's lesson of the day -- no pain, no gain. often funny, sometimes even a tad dramatic. one camper writes, "i want to go home now. these wet spots are my tears." we caught up with doug and joanna goldoff whose two children write every other day. >> i love you. i miss you. you're da best. >> reporter: 12-year-old zachary and 9-year-old danielle are away at camp for the second week. >> oh, mommy, i cried five times already. you know, it kind of pulls at your heart a little bit. but then the next letter is i'm having the best time ever. >> reporter: we were there when they received a letter. >> to whom it may concern. >> i'm not going to lie. this is a little anti-climactic. >> reporter: it's nice to know some things haven't changed. >> to see them actually writing the way we used to, which was the norm, is actually nice to see. >> reporter: letters from summer camp. sure to become precious family mementos, and reading them over and over never gets old. rehema ellis, nbc news, roslyn, new york. >> absolutely priceless. that's going to do it for us on a wednesday night. i'm lester holt. for all of us at nbc news, thank you for watching, and good night. nbc bay area news begins with breaking news. >> breaking news happening right now in sacramento where crews are battling two fires just miles apart. good evening. thank you for joining us. >> let's take you outside and show you the live picture. you're seeing that big, thick, white plume of smoke seen from miles. it is coming from a raging fire at a dump that is in sacramento. the dump is south of sacramento state. now, earlier we could see flames shooting into the air as firefighters battled the fire. they're also dealing with another blaze just south of the dump, that one is a brushfire that broke out on a field on the edge of a neighborhood east of highway 99. you can see in that fire the flames were moving fast. at one point, that fire burned through a fence and right up against the home. but this big flumplume of smoke coming from a dump fire south of sacramento state. happening right now in the south bay, firefighters are mopping up after this brushfire in gilroy. it broke out before 5:00 on monterey road at highway 101. quick work by firefighters knocked this out in less than 30 minutes. no homes ever threatened but railroad tracks in the area had to be shut down briefly. no word on how this fire started. all the fires, we're getting something we don't see a lot of in the summer rain drops. dark clouds hovering over the bay. there is a chance of scattered showers overnight and tomorrow. we have team coverage for you, robert honda is stand by in the south bay. we begin with chip ranieri here to tell us who might

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Transcripts For CNNW Anderson Cooper 360 20150707

our knowledge of that comes not from sources however reliable they may be but from mr. cosby himself in records of testimony he made in a case which has been settled out of court. randi kaye joins with us the details. >> reporter: what we are learning tonight is that bill cosby testified in 2005 that he got quaaludes with the intent of giving them to young women that he wanted to have sex with. not only, that but he admitted giving the sedative to at least one woman and other people according to the court documents we just got. here's is what the documents say. koiz is asked, when you got the quaaludes was it in your mind that you were going to use these guy ludes for young women that you wanted to have sex with? and his respond, anderson is simply this yes, period. >> where are these documents coming from. >> from documents unsealed. the ap "associated press" pushed the court to release the documents. cosby's lawyers fought it. the testimony is of cosby under oath and it's related by a lawsuit filed by former temple university employee andrea constand who went to police saying cosby drugged and molested her in 2004. the district attorney did not bring charges. years later he explained that andrea constand waited a year before going to authorities and that hurt her case they had lost the ability to test her blood for the agents. tonight we know from the court documents that the 77-year-old comedian testified and admitted those years ago that he gave that employee three half pills of ben drill. but we can see from the testimony we have been going through her lawyers didn't buy that since he also admitted in that testimony to wanting to use quaaludes to get women to have sex with him. the documents show on the night in question cosby offered andrea constand three blue pills saying quote, i have three friends for you to make you relacks. her lawyers argue that ben drill as cosby claims it was would not produce the immobil mobilization she claimed she suffered. and cosby did settle that lawsuit for an undisclosed amount in 2006. >> 24 does fit into the narrative of other past allegations? >> absolutely it does. he has been accused by more than two dozen women. here's just a sampling of what some of the women have said. >> i never saw any drugs. but i would wake up completely confused half dressed, and knowing that my body had been touched without my permission. >> we went up to his bungalow afterwards. he made me a drink. and very shortly after that i just -- i passed out. i woke up or came to very groggily with him removing my underwear. >> he had gone from helping me to groping me and kissing me and touching me and handling me. and you know take off my clothes. >> has cosby ever talked about these recent allegations? >> sort of. in 2005 he told the national enquirer this i am not going to give in to people who try to exploit me because of my celebrity status. cosby has never been criminally charge medicine and for most of the allegations the statute of limitation has run out. >> joining me is an attorney and internal affairs commentator and drew opinionski. areeva for you, is this proof that bill cosby is guilty of at least swhoochl his many many accusers said he did to them? >> absolutely. anderson he makes an admission under oath. i think it's important to put the context here. he was being deposed because he was being sued civilly by someone who said that he gave her a drug and then he raped her. and under this you know -- under oath statement he makes an admission, which is why when you look at his lawyers' arguments about why these documents should not have come out they are really laughable. they said that this would embarrass bill cosby but the judge himself said why would he be embarrassed by giving his own account of what he did. i think this is vicinity indication for the more than two dozen women who said something similar happened to them. he can no longer continue to hide behind the denials. >> doctor droou, let's talk about quaaludes, what do they do to a person? >> very much like what the woman described. they cause sudden and severe kbroks induce sleep. and they call it a floppiness that people aren't able to propagate through the world. their musclesback become severely limp that they almost can't lift their limbs up or come to their defense. some of the women describe that kind of thing which is consistent with quaaludes. >> does it make sense that if somebody's motivation to give somebody guy ludes is it to inkpats capacitate them to be able to sexually assault them without their permission or without asking or is it an interesting where he wants to have sex with somebody who is incapacitated. >> there is such a thing, a fetish of having sex with people who are asleep. you don't know whether it is that or just to have your way with someone. whatever it is it is the same affect. you heard in the tapes that some of the women didn't remember anything. when combined with alcohol, quaaludes cause a lot of people not to be able to recall what happened. >> this civil suit could it not have been used against him in a criminal case? >> that's what puzzling when we hear that constand did go ahead and file a claim with the district attorney. but they said there was not physical evidence because she waited a year. but we have this admission in the deposition. you have to wonder did the district attorney drop the ball? did something go wrong with the prosecution because you have an admission. what more with would a prosecutor need to go forward with charges someone? i think this is a case someone needs to go back and reevaluate and figure out how come there weren't criminal charges brought against him because the statute of limitation had not run in this case. >> doctor when you add this to the allegations out there, dozens and dozens does it fall in line with the behavior of some sort of cereal sexual assaulter? >> i personally have never seen anything like this. but yeah. if you remember there is all this footage with with him talking about men being preoccupied with looking for a pill that would make women aroused. this is not a way of explaining or dismissing what he did. my understanding is he had a very, very traumatic childhood. it would be interesting to know what happened to him growing up. it may be some insight of what it created in the present. >> to be frank a. lot of people have traumatic childhoods and don't end up doing this sort of thing. >> absolutely. this is not dismissing -- it's so hard to get your head around. how could this man do this? the average person normal person cannot understand what this is? i can't understand what it is i need to understand what circumstance might have set this up. it's something i have never seen and it's astonishing and awful. >> i want to bring in mark o'meara. what do you make of this deposition? >> it's amazing. it happened ten years ago and now it's sort of finally come out -- the truth is coming out after his ongoing denials in the past six or eight months. what areeva said about reopening the criminal case i'm not sure it is going to be that easy to do. and i have to believe that the prosecutor ten years ago did not have this information available to him or her because it was part of a confidential settlement and i'm sure part of it was that she would not cooperate or go forward with cooperating testimony with the prosecutor. >> you can make that part of a confidential settlement between two people? >> you sort of can but you are not supposed to because you are not supposed to interfere with the proper administration of justice and convincing a victim of a crime not to testify might be argued to be obstruction of justice. but in confidential negotiations this does happen, where people -- you buy silence. and i think that's what happened ten years ago. want to talk about this more. we've got to take a quick break. stick around. as always a quick reminder, set your dvr to watch 360 whenever you want. up next another woman who says bill cosby raped her. also dunld donald trump adopting a woman's killing in san francisco by an undocumented immigrant as a political cause and doubled down on what he already said about illegal immigrants coming across the border. fact. advil is not only strong it's gentle on your body too. no wonder doctors and patients have trusted advil... for their tough pains for over 30 years. relief doesn't get any better than this. advil. the next great trip. got to study those tripadvisor reviews carefully. and now the tripadvisor you've always trusted for reviews, checks over 200 websites to find hotel savings up to 30%. book! book...book...book! over 200 sites checked to save up to 30%. so don't just visit tripadvisor... book at tripadvisor. breaking news bill cosby on record admitting to obtaining drugs to give to women he wanted to have sex. his testimony part of court records in a case he settled with one of his accusers. joining us patty masston, this is a picture of her with mr. bill cosby. she enkournt countered him when she was a manager of the playboy in 1979. your reaction to what mr. cosby admitted to under sworn testimony? >> complete validation across the board for all of us complete validation. >> to you it tells the story of what happened to lots of women? >> absolutely. to me and many of us. my facebook has been lighting up all afternoon. and i can tell you, anderson there is more women coming out now. >> really? >> yeah, absolutely. absolutely. >> what -- tell me a little bit about what happened to you. you met him in 1979? >> well i was a playboy bunny and great gorge. and koibds was often the employ boy circuit. he performed in all of the clubs. i knew him for five years before this situation happened. i was in chicago as the bunny director bunny mother they called it. and he was being interviewed by maggie daily, who was a famous columnist at the transcribe at the time. and afterwards he asked me if i wanted to have lunch. again, i knew him for five years. we had lunch at bayne banquet on a bun. later that afternoon he called me on a private number in my office. i didn't understand how he got that number. but he asked if i wanted to have dinner the next night. i said sure. he called me that afternoon and said meet me at the white hall hotel. i didn't think anything of it. he was in touchblt he was doing a comedy show doing interviews. i met him at the white hall. i called from downstairs. he said come up to this particular suite. when i went up to the room there were four other men in the room and they were playing cards and smoking si gars and watching sports. and cosby asked me if i wanted to have a drinks. it was 7:30 in the evening, i wasn't much of a drinker and i said well i'll have a little grand marnier. that's an afterdinner drink and he sent a bellman out to get the bottle. he brought the bottle behind me. i took two since and that's the last thing i remember. >> really? >> two since. at 4:00 in the morning i woke up in bed naked, brews bruised and battered. and i looked over and he was there naked. and i slivered out of the bed because i didn't -- didn't want to wake him, and i gathered my clothes. and i got dressed and i went downstairs and i got a cab, went to my apartment, took a showers shower. id to go back to work at playboy. i had to get the girls on the floor and i went back to work -- >> do you have a memory of what happened between that drink and -- >> i don't have any memory at all of what happened. but i knew -- i knew that i was brutally raped. i knew it. >> and you -- he reached out to you the next day, i understand? >> yes. and he said why did you leave so early? and i was so startled by that conversation i said i had to go back to work. and he says i'm sending you a gift. and about four hours later a four-foot ficus tree shows up in my office and a note on there, and it said you have to groom this free like you do our friendship make sure you cut the leaves and prune it and this whole big dissertation of how to take care this plant. naturally, i threw it out. he kept calling and calling. i guess he got the message i wasn't going to see him again. then he kept calling and asking for different bun east bunny michele, and i kept writing the notes down and throwing them out. i refused to im give them to my girls into what made you come forward? >> i came forward when i heard it was a 15-year-old that he drugged and raped. and a 15-year-old, anderson is a child. that is an innocent child. and for this monster to rape a 15-year-old child, and at playboy mansion. >> this was somebody else who later came forward. >> yes. and after he raped me i told my bosses at playboy what he did to me. and playboy said to me well you know bill bill cosby is heavyner's best friend, right? i said yes, i know that. well, nobody is going to believe you. i suggest you shut your mouth. >> that's what you were told? >> that's what i was told. >> the fact now that he testified that he did until fact get quaaludes in the 70s i guess with multiple prescriptions, you feel it's complete vindication? >> absolutely. >> and do you think -- >> it's the tip of the iceberg, ands an. it's the tip of the iceberg. trust me when i tell you. my facebook is blowing up. i work with hundreds and hundreds of playboy bunnies. it's blowing up right now. >> from people who used to be playboy bunnies to said they had -- >> that is correct. >> we're going to take a short break. we'll have much more on this story and others. we'll be right back. power kale chicken caesar salad is rivaled only, by the goodness felt while eating one. panera. food as it should be. i can't find my discover card! wait, i can freeze my account. 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[touch tone] freeze it, only from discover. get it at discover.com. my lenses have a sunset mode. and a partly sunny mode. and an outside to inside mode. transitions® lenses automatically filter just the right amount of light. ask for transitions xtractive lenses. extra protection from light... outdoors indoors and in the car. we're back with patty masten one of bill cosby's many accusers. before the break, not only were you recounting what happened to you in 1979 but you also said you were in touch with many from playboy who have reached out to you saying they had similar experience. are these women that have not come forward. >> we are up to 48 that have come forward and there is probably another 506 that are jane does. >> real lesion you believe up to 50? >> i know. i know. and my facebook is lighting up. we have private facebook pages just for playboy bunnies, lately. it's lighting up. if he did me too, it's coming out. it's happening. >> why do you think somebody would drug -- this was a guy who at the time was at the height of his -- incredibly popular, incredibly well liked could have probably met women. do you think this was something he particularly liked to do the drugging aspect? >> he is a sociopath. they have no remorse. they don't have feelings about people. they don't have any feelings at all. if he wanted to have sex, believe me he could have had sex with anybody at any time. he was a very wealthy man, a celebrity. spresh up at heavyner's mansion. there were enough girls that hung around there that he could have easily had sex with. but to drug a person and then to violate them like, that that's a sociopath. he will definitely be known as the most prolific cereal rapist in the united states of america. no doubt. dr. huks taliban will be. >> and you believe more women will come forward? >> i know. i know they will. >> patty, i appreciate you being on tonight. >> my pleasure. >> back with the panel, dr. drew being one of thechlt dr. drurks what do you make what have patty just said? >> it's breath taking when you hear her state those allegations and lay it out the way she has. she could be right. that's certainly a possibility. if what she is saying is accurate she will be proven to the right. i found it interesting that she had only two since of the grand marnier she ordered with the quaaludes allegedly in it. that suggests -- first of all she may have forgotten what happened after the initial dose. people's memory gets erased going forward. she may have eventually drunk more than she remembers. but in any case even to induce that degree of memory problem that quickly suggests he put rather high concentrations -- potentially high traegss -- you can easily overdose on quaaludes, i'm surprised nobody was hurt. >> you say that a legal team had to petition a judge to answer questions. is that normal? >> normal in this case of this nature where you have a high-profile individual like bill cosby. the deposition is likely to be contentions lots of objections being made by both sides. when they got to the difficult questions about the drugs and giving the women drugs and whether the women knew they were taking drugs bill cosby's attorney refused to allow him to answer those questions and the plaintiff's attorney had to go into court and get an order compel pg him to respond. anderson the concept of people not believing that bill cosby would do this -- and what we've heard time and time again from all these women is that when they tried to come forward people didn't believe them. even when we think of the constand lawsuit and the privacy clause and the private settlement agreement, sometimes women have to file civil suits because when they go to the criminal justice system they are not believed and it's very difficult to prosecute. these are difficult cases for women to come forward with and then for prosecutors to prove against people like bill cosby. >> also it's indicteding what she has said about how we treated women. if we still treat women like this shame on us. that in 1979 she steps forward to her boss and said i've been raped and he says shut up that needs to be taken seriously. the feminist literature should get a hold of us. >> could this affect more civil suits against bill cosby? the statute of limitations for most of these alleged crimes has expired? >> that's the be pro. most of the statute of limitations have long since done. there is nothing that states are going to be able to do against him. civilly, they also have statutes of limitations. there are some exceptions when you intentionally hide information. but it's very difficult. unfortunately because it's all coming out now and we get an insight into sort the psychopathy of what seems to be gathering evidence of a cereal rapist it may be he is only tried in the court of public opinion because there is not many courts that still have jurisdiction over him. >> could i -- >> go ahead. >> i agree where mark but i think the importance of this is that more women will be empowered to come forward now that they n.o.w. know he has gone on record and admitted he has raped and drugged women. we may get case that are not barred by the statute of limit nations. just ahead, the more breaking news. the undocumented immigrant accused of shooting and killing a woman in san francisco has been charged. and donald trump has issued a new statement on the killing and appears to be trying to make a political point about what happened. a young woman shot dead while taking a walk with her father. how immigration factors in. why mr. trump says the killing proves his point about undocumented immigrants from mexico. steady is exciting. only glucerna has carbsteady clinically proven to help minimize blood sugar spikes. so you stay steady ahead. if you have moderate to severe plaque psoriasis. isn't it time to let the real you shine through? 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[sfx: bell] [burke] it's easy to buy insurance and forget about it. but the more you learn about your coverage, the more gaps you may find. [burke] like how you thought you were covered for this... [man] it's a profound statement. [burke] but you're not even covered for this... [man] it's a profound statement. [burke] or how you may be covered for this... [burke] but not for something like this... [burke] talk to farmers and see what gaps could be hiding in your coverage. [sfx: yeti noise] ♪ we are farmers bum - pa - dum bum - bum - bum - bum ♪ look at that beautiful hotel on tripadvisor. wait. why leave the site? don't you know the tripadvisor you've always trusted for reviews, book! now checks over 200 websites to find the best price? book...book...book! over 200 sites checked to find the best price. so don't just visit tripadvisor... book at tripadvisor. there is breaking news tonight in the apparently random and totally senseless shooting death of a woman along san francisco's water front. the man who admits to killing her, an illegal immigrant from mexico who has entered the country and been deported many times has been charged with her death. he will be arraigned tomorrow. catherine's killing has focused attention on the city's policy where that is concerned and her case has been taken up by presidential hopeful done trump n. a moment the breaking news on that. he is doubling down on his statements. also tonight i'm going to talk to the victim's brother about his sister and her life. firps the story from sarah siden. >> reporter: a father reacts to the searing pain of losing a loving daughter at the hands of a stranger. >> this is evil. evil personified. >> jim and his daughter 32-year-old catherine steinle were taking a stroll on pier 14 in san francisco. at the same time this marngs juan francis so loep sanchez fired a gun he said he found in a wrapped in a t-shirt. >> did you shoot the woman on pier 14? >> yes. >> you did shoot her. >> reporter: the man says the killing was an accident but it mass sparked an immigration firestorm. he has been deported from the u.s. five times. it would have been six but his case got caught in a local versus federal policy fight. let me ask you, from a lay person's standpoint looking at this it looks like san francisco's sheriff's department messed up here. what do you say to that? >> they are completely wrong about that. as sheriff, i adhere to the laws that govern our land and san francisco is not alone. in fact well over 300 municipalities have similar laws like san francisco because what has not been reconciled on the federal lovelyr level local governments and state governments are devising new laws that help direct the relationship about ice. what is troubling is that this word detainer has ice put out in a that they had sktd our department -- they have known for a long time that what we require in san francisco like the 299-plus other cities is that we need a lawful court order, a warrant, or a court order that helps the trfrs transference of somebody in our custody to ice. this has been in practices for some time. >> lopez sanchez had just been in federal prison and would have been put in deportation proceedings but because of a decades old outstanding warrant in san francisco immigration and customs enforcement handed him over to local authorities. but san francisco declined to prosecute the old drug case. and the sheriff's department let him go free even though immigration officials asked san francisco's sheriff's department to notify them if he was to be released. but they did not. >> do you feel guilt or responsibility -- >> it's horrible. this is absolutely horrible. it is a senseless traj deechlt it i think does spotlight the fragmentation of how law exists between a local, state, and federal level, and how it is sort of patchworked around the country. but you can't deny that over 300 cities now in a very short period of time have adopted laws like san francisco meaning something that suspect working on the federal level. >> reporter: the reason the sheriff's department declined to notify ice officials is san francisco is a sanctuary city. generally speaking it won't hand over nonviolent nondocumented people without a court order. but the family wants nothing to do with the political debate saying their sole focus is on remindsing the world of what a wonderful person steinle was. >> it's not going to bring kate back. again, they will find the guy and whatever you know, the justice will work its way through the system. but our focus is on kate. >> sara sidner joins us now. the shooter, he told a local station he intentionally came back to san francisco because it is a so-called sanctuary city right? >> that's exactly right. that has heightened the frustration that people have of this case, the anger, the outrage, the fact he had been deported five times and he had come back here negative he wouldn't necessarily be deported again if he was picked up by local authorities. >> coming up we'll talk to catherine steinle's brother about his sister. the breaking news not only has donald trump latched onto this tragedy and doubled down on his remarks about illegal immigrants. he is also facing new consequences. espn announced today they will be moving the network's celebrity golf tournament from a trump course. the reason those remarks he said about illegal immigrants from mexico. today he put out a restatement. it reads in part the mexican government is forcing its most unwanted citizens into the united states. they are for the many cases criminals, drug dealers, rapers et cetera: the fact that donald trump is pointing to this tragedy in san francisco to double down on his statement, what impact do you think that has on the campaign? >> he did double down. he released a statement tonight pointing to the of the suge. he said there are thousands of these incidents across the country. that is exactly how donald trump gets in trouble. that's almost certainly an overstatement. that is what worries republicans, he is a loose cannon in their view on some of the issue and they believe that he is not going to stop talking about this. all this comes politically speaking with the first republican presidential debate only a month away. that's why they think it is a political problem. >> there is also who will point to him and say just forget about the politics of this just the decency of this that they believe it may be inappropriate. this is a tragedy for this family for anybody who knew this woman. and he runs the risk of seeming to try to be scoring some political points off it. or make a political point based on a human tragedy. >> i think he runs the risk and in fact across the linea i think a lot of people would say -- i mean when there are tragedies occur presidential candidates often comment, but not like this. i'm not sure i remember something so quickly being seized on in the middle of a debate. frankly, the traffic in san francisco has little to do with his speech. he was trying to seize on it to amplify his point but i'm not sure that the most voters would like that. george pataki the former governor of new york who knows him well he said it was outrageous that they connected these two. so i think it -- he may have crossed the line here by blurring these two issues. >> if you look at the early states iowa new hampshire, south carolina they are not states with huge latino populations. the republican establishment is worried about the general election. that is not necessarily done trump's calculation? >> you are right. his calculation is appealing to some members of the conservative base some people who are so fed up on immigration. a lot of these people are in these early states. iowa has had an early complicated immigration debate going on, complicated in the sense that republicans think it's too harsh. same in south carolina. but republicans are worried about the general election debate. there is no path to republicans winning the white house if they do not get a bigger share of the hispanic vote. and it's comments like this that worry party leaders and party elders that will block them from doing so. >> jeff thanks. let's dig deeper with anna navarro, who is an adviser to a number of presidential candidates and a jeb bush adviser. anna donald trump points to this san francisco murder and says look this is exactly what i'm talking about the system is broken this guy shouldn't have been in the country, the other gop candidates don't they have to agree with him whether they like it or not? >> i don't think so. i don't think anybody feels compelled to agree with donald trump. i think most of the gop candidates certainly the serious ones see him as a carnival barker. they don't see him as a real genuine candidate. that's why it has taken a while for folks to respond to him. >> he is number two in the polls. >> yeah part of it is nis name id, the celebrity status. it's the fact that people like the spectacle and reality show he is bringing to politics. i don't think they have to agree. i think that george pataki is right. and it's -- you know a lot of people are going to see it as exploitings a tragedy. and we should focus on where the system failed this woman, where the system failed the citizens of san francisco in lilt letting this man out on the street. but let's not exploit it for political purposes. >> sheriff, you are in law enforcement, mrs. a politician you are running for office what do you make of what donald trump has been saying? >> he is talking about a very real issue. it isn't just san francisco's problem. this is america's problem. and there isn't a state that's not affected by the criminal element of the -- >> are the people. >> of the illegals who are here. >> are the people you are seeing coming across the borders rapists? >> there are some. he paints with too wide of a brush here. i don't agree with his comments. to make that clear, 30% of the 400,000 residents of my county are hispanic. many of them of mexican decent good decent hard working americans. yet there are thousands of criminal illegals that are released every year. 30,000 last year alone. and that's what i think he is tapping into this anger for americans. because you and i have to follow the law, but there are 193 convicted murderers who are not from america who were released into our communities, 400 that were convicted of rape and sexual assault, 300 convicted of kidnapping. and when it appears -- and it is very real that there is a lack of consequence or punishment what do we think is going to happen? you don't have to be the sheriff to figure out that these people are going to commit serious crimes again and again and against american citizens. so even though i don't agree with him he is tapping into this anger that exists because of the failures in our system when we have to follow and abide by law but it appears that there is no law when it comes to illegal immigration. certainly when it comes to these most dangerous criminals. and here we even have ice that is out attacking san francisco for this. i'm shocked they are so outraged. i'm glad that they are. >> anna, you hear what the sheriff is saying. maybe donlt donald trump isn't the right person to be bringing this conversation he is painting with a wide brush. but maybe it is a conversation that needs to be had, tougher enforcement, tougher penalties, that's part of it right? >> i think people are having that conversation. people who are advocates for immigration reform all talk about having zero tolerance for illegal aleerngs undocumented immigrants who come here and commit crimes. the problem is that this guy had seven plens felonies and they let him loose without turning him over to ice. that defies logic and i think that san francisco's bleeding heart liberalism and compassion went too far in this case and the system is broken. definitely. definitely. look i'm i'm an immigrant to this country. there are some people who are bad apples in every single group, every ethnicity, nationality, race, et cetera. we just saw this weekend, what 40-some shootings in chicago. almost ten deaths in chicago over the weekend. those were not immigrants committing. there is bad apples and good people in every group. that being said, yes we have to address the border yes we have to address the fact that if you come here as an immigrant, come to this country and commit crimes there should be no tolerance and no welcome mat for you. >> domd trump says there needs to be a great wall how realistic is it to build an impenetrable wall. people have been trying to build walls for a long time. billions have been spent on border security. is that feasible? >> one i don't advocate for that. i mend build border fence south of san diego. not all 2,000 miles need a fence. we are not building the great waufl mexico. we need 700 miles of this barrier on areas proven to be smuggling corridors and we need the technology to compliment it cameras, infrared lighting sensors. and more important than a fence or that technology we need enforcement of the law. the laws that already exist that literally have just been with a wave of the hand -- that's why we are arresting in my county who who are committing crimes in my state that have been deported eight times, 15 items. heck last month we arrested a man that almost proudly proclaimed he has been deported 20 times. don't scratch your head trying to figure out why they keep coming back i'm talking about the criminals, it's because there is a lack of consequence. what do we think is going to happen. >> sheriff, i appreciate you coming on and anna navarro. a programming note we have secured the first major sit down interview in the kpain of hillary clinton. you can see it tomorrow night right here on the program at 8:00. just ahead we will revisit the part of the san francisco story that can never be corrupted bipartisan politics. we will be joined by catherine steinle's brother to learn more about the sister he so desperately misses. about treatment with xarelto®. xarelto® is proven to treat and help reduce the risk of dvt and pe blood clots. xarelto® has also been proven to reduce the risk of stroke in people with afib, not caused by a heart valve problem. for people with afib currently well managed on warfarin, there is limited information on how xarelto® and warfarin compare in reducing the risk of stroke. i tried warfarin before, but the blood testing routine and dietary restrictions had me off my game. not this time. not with xarelto®. i'll have another arnold palmer. make mine a kevin nealon. really, brian? 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[ chuckle ] you wouldn't expect an insurance company to show you their rates and their competitors' rates but that's precisely what we do. going up! nope, coming down. and if you switch to progressive today you could save an average of over 500 bucks. stop it. so call me today at the number below. or is it above? dismount! oh, and he sticks the landing! we have been reporting the political fallout from the killing in san francisco because one of the leading presidential hopefuls has adopted it as a talking point. the risk is seeing it only through that kind of lens. the clearest and most enduring view of what happened on that pier comes from those who knew and loved the victim catherine steinle and will love her for the rest of their lives. joining us by phone her brother, brad. brad, i'm sorry for your loss i can't imagine what the last few days have been like for you and your family. can you talk about catherine, what kind of person she was, what kind of person she is? >> my sister was -- she was my best friend. she was the person i called for advice. she was the most amazing, outgoing loving person. and i was lucky enough to have her as my sister for 32 years. and we're devastated. and we're lost. but we want her to memory and her love and her soul to live on. and she was very strong person. she traveled the world. she lived in -- for a year. she travelled to africa. to china, all over europe. you know, she posted something on her facebook the day before she died that says whatever is good for your soul do that. and that's how kate lived. and we just want to spread that message. and in a time like this, it's easy for some -- for us -- it would be easy for us to hate and be angry. but kate wouldn't want that. so we're just -- we're trying to spread the message -- a message of love and -- and that's -- that's what kate would want. >> that's an incredibly hard thing to do, i imagine. i mean at a time like this to not be angry, to not feel hate. >> yeah. yeah. i mean in my wildest dreams i could never imagine having this conversation. and if you would have asked me a month ago if i would be angry if somebody killed my sister i'm sure i'd tell you yes. but the unthinkable has happened. and we're focusing on the good. because kate was a good person. she was a great person. you know the circumstances are horrible. and we've lost a person we cherished more than anything. but all i feel now is love and i'm thankful that i had the time that i had with her because she was the most amazing sister. if i was able to talk to kate right now she would say, hey, brad it's okay. just spread my memory and spread love. and then i know that would make her smile. >> and i know we're not going to talk about any politics or how this has become a larger issue because i really want to just focus this on your sister. and i imagine part of your concern is that who she is will get lost in all of that. i read a story that your neighbor told about her coming over to his house when she was little to give flowers to her daughter -- his daughter who just broken her arm. it sounds like that's the kinds of thing she did a lot. >> yeah. yeah. kate had the biggest heart. kate called my momma a incumbent months ago -- she called my mom daily. she said to my mom, hey, i hope you are not mad at me but that jacket you got me a couple weeks ago, i was out to dinner in san francisco and saw a homeless person who had a t-shirt on, and it was super cold outside and i gave it away. you might need to buy me a new jacket. that's just how kate was. you know? in the worst time in the worst imaginable of circumstances, we are all staying strong because we have so much love for kate. and this is what she would want. so this is what we're giving her in her memory. >> brad i appreciate you talking to us tonight. and just telling us a little bit about your sister. thank you so much. >> all right. thank you. >> catherine's family set up a go fund me page in her memory. that is the link below. you can find it on our website. that does it is for this edition of 360. thank for watching. my heart... beats 100,000 times a day sending oxygen to my muscles... again! so i can lift even the most demanding weights. take care of all your most important parts with centrum. now with our most vitamin d three ever. ♪ the goodness that goes into making a power kale chicken caesar salad is rivaled only, by the goodness felt while eating one. panera. food as it should be. my lenses have a sunset mode. an early morning mode. and a partly sunny mode. transitions® signature™ adaptive lenses... are more responsive than ever. experience life well lit®. ...upgrade your lenses to transitions® signature™ look at that beautiful hotel on tripadvisor. wait. why leave the site? don't you know the tripadvisor you've always trusted for reviews, book! now checks over 200 websites to find the best price? book...book...book! over 200 sites checked to find the best price. so don't just visit tripadvisor... book at tripadvisor. newly released court records reveal a stunning admission from comedian bill cosby. and greece is looking for a solution to its debt crisis as it prepares to face european creditors today. and we look at the san francisco pier shooting how immigration factors in and how donald thump isbp is using it as political collateral. want to begin with some

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Transcripts For CNNW The Situation Room 20150706

republican on the house foreign affairs committee, congressman darrell issa. our correspondents and analysts standing by as we cover all the news breaking right now. first to our pentagon correspondent barbara starr. >> the president talked at the pentagon after he came out of that briefing with top wartime commanders. he talked about the fact as you said that the fight against isis will take a long time. and he repeated several times that it is going to take more than just the u.s. military that there will have to be partners on the ground, local forces in iraq and syria to make all of this work. that the u.s. can't take responsibility for the success on its own. and he also pinpointed exactly what he expects to see happening in syria. have a listen to what he had to say. >> indeed we're intensifying our efforts against isil's base in syria. our air strikes will continue to target the oil and gas facilities that fund so much of their operations. we're going after the isil leadership and infrastructure in syria. >> so if they're going to go after the isil leadership and infrastructure in syria, how do you do that just from the air with no u.s. troops on the ground? the u.s. is intensifying its efforts to work with kurdish forces on the ground and stepping up its own air reconnaissance those flights overhead looking and searching out any isis targets they can find. >> barbara, what is the goal behind this current raqqa campaign? >> it's really interesting. on july 4th alone, the u.s. conducting 18 air strikes in raqqa, destroying 16 bridges controlled by isis. raqqa, of course the capital, the self-declared capital of isis. what they're trying to do one can probably fairly assume is strike as much as they can in raqqa and get that isis leadership moving around. if isis has to reposition its troops its weapons, its top leaders, its command and control, if they have to move around to get away from u.s. air strikes, that's the kind of movement that those u.s. reconnaissance planes overhead can see, the kind of targets they may be able to pick out in the coming days. but all of this again, being done in conjunction with those kurdish forces on the ground which are now just less than 50 miles from raqqa's northern edges. >> barbara starr, thank you very much. president obama says the u.s.-led coalition is going after the "heart of isis." including its self-proclaimed capital in syria. for more on this let's bring in our chief national security correspondent jim chute co. explain to us isis' hold how important is raqqa? >> it's the capital of the caliphate which spans syria and iraq. mosul, the stronghold inside iraq but raqqa the capital of the entire caliphate. the ypd, syrian kurds in opposition have been putting pressure on that isis stronghold from the north and east. as they've gotten closer this has given the possibility of more targets to the u.s.-led coalition. that's what we're seeing with air strikes. ypg took back a border town that's now contested. but in addition to getting closer they're taking back some of these key towns particularly along the border. why is that important? that's where they get their fighters isis gets their fighters many from overseas. it's also where they get a hot of their weapons. >> we heard from the president today. bring us up to speed what the current u.s. strategy is. >> the strategy right now has been to expand the u.s. footprint with these lily pads as they call them. u.s. bases outside of the strongholds of ear bill kurdish areas in the north and baghdad here. you have two lily pads the newest one here, al assad, u.s. advisers training in anbar province training iraqi forces, also more and more the sunni tribes. this is key, get the sunnis in this battle so it's not a shiite-dominated battle make it a national battle rather than a tribal battle. there's talk of expanding to here between baghdad and tikrit. another key city. and here between mosul and kirkuk. most sell really the prize, that is the stronghold for isis inside iraq. we were talking about a mosul offensive in the spring of this year that's pushed back to the fall first, now really pushed back to next year because iraqi forces haven't shown the ability to take back territory, even of more minor towns, let alone an isis stronghold inside iraq. >> hard to think that a year ago, president obama was calling isis the jv team. tonight, a frantic final push is under way to reach a historic agreement aimed at preventing iran from developing nuclear weapons. with hours to go before the deadline there are new warnings about the possibility of failure and new warnings about the dangers if a deal is struck. let's go to our global affairs correspondent alize, they have a lot of work ahead of them. >> and it's crunch time. tuesday's deadline looming, there are major differences on key issues like iran's past nuclear weapons program and the lifting of sanctions. with time running out, the u.s. is warning years of negotiations could fail at the 11th hour. with the clock ticking down towards tuesday's deadline world powers and iran, together for the first time in vienna put their cards on the table. but the white house warned nothing is certain, and the deadline could slip. >> i wouldn't set any expectations at this point. i would say that it's certainly possible. >> reporter: secretary of state john kerry is hedging his bets. >> at this point, this negotiation could go either way. if hard choices get made in the next couple of days and made quickly, we could get an agreement this week. but if they are not made we will not. >> reporter: in a youtube message, iran's foreign minister says a deal has never been so close. but he said the ball was in the court of the u.s. and its partners. >> they still need to make a critical and historic choice. agreement or coercion. >> reporter: now a new wrinkle. iran wants to end a u.n. arms embargo once a deal is reached. negotiators are working around the clock. mindful that the deal must reach congress by thursday. but a warning from capitol hill -- don't rush. >> it's amazing to me that as we come to the end of this deal the biggest issue of concern to these countries right now is that congress would only have 30 days not 60 days to review the deal. make sure these last remaining red lines that haven't been crossed, they've crossed so many do not get crossed. >> reporter: in israel today, prime minister netanyahu warned a similar agreement helped north korea go nuclear. the talks, he said are not a breakthrough, but a breakdown. >> every day, more concessions are made. every day, the deal becomes worse and worse. better no deal than this very bad deal. >> all sides seem to be suggesting they will likely work past tuesday's deadline. but it's far from clear there will even be a deal this week. secretary kerry's warning there will not be an agreement at any price, he will walk away if the deal does not meet u.s. standards. iranian officials say they too are prepared to go home empty-handed if their red lines are not met. a nuclear game of chicken going on right now. >> alize lab bot, thank you very much. let's discuss the iran nuclear talks and more with a leading republican on the house foreign affairs committee, congressman darrell issa of california. congressman, nice to have you on with us. as we heard from elise, she's reporting the deadline for a deal with iran is becoming less and less firm. in your view is it time for the u.s. to walk away? >> i don't think it's time to walk away. it's time to at least make sure that we don't give any greater concessions than the president told congress he was going to get. very clearly this is a deal that may have difficulty getting approved even if the president got everything that he said he was going to get. if he gives further concessions, it won't be the time the 30 days versus 60 days congress has to respond, it will be the deal itself that kills any kind of a resolution. >> are you concerned that concessions are being made just so that the deal will get done just so that they can end these negotiations? >> you know in the beginning of a presidency their legacy isn't what people are thinking about. they're thinking about making a difference. at the end of a presidency often they're thinking about legacy. and that does concern me. we don't need the legacy to look good as the president leaves office and end up like north korea. i think when bebe netanyahu likened this to north korea he did so accurately. we never made north korea fully abandon its nuclear ambitions, as a result it became essentially the ninth country to have nuclear capability. and the delivery capability to threaten its neighbors. >> as we heard elyseesise say, this can be a game of chicken going on. are they the ones holding the power in these negotiations? >> pamela i think they're in the driver's seat and i think they know it. they are calling the shots on the ground in iraq. they have the relationship with the iraqi government that we're supporting over the sunni and kurd minorities. they recently returned jets back to iraq as a show of good faith. it had been in -- russian-made jets that had been there a long time and the iraqis are using those. they obviously have a relationship with both assad and hezbollah. as we speak, those forces are on the ground being supported in syria. sometimes fighting in a direction we'd like sometimes very much fighting in a direction that simply is killing off the so-called free syrian army. continuing to make advances real advances in solidifying this caliphate. >> congressman issa stay with us we have a lot more to discuss. more of our interview ahead after this break. if you have moderate to severe plaque psoriasis. isn't it time to let the real you shine through? introducing otezla apremilast. otezla is not an injection or a cream. it's a pill that treats plaque psoriasis differently. some people who took otezla saw 75% clearer skin after 4 months. and otezla's prescribing information has no requirement for routine lab monitoring. don't take otezla if you are allergic to any of its ingredients. otezla may increase the risk of depression. tell your doctor if you have a history of depression or suicidal thoughts, or if these feelings develop. some people taking otezla reported weight loss. your doctor should monitor your weight and may stop treatment. side effects may include diarrhea nausea, upper respiratory tract infection, and headache. tell your doctor about all the medicines you take and if you're pregnant or planning to be. ask your doctor about otezla today. otezla. show more of you. we're back with congressman darrell issa. a top republican the house foreign affairs committee. congressman, stand by. we are getting a rare look inside new efforts to fix troubling problems within the secret service. our cnn white house correspondent jim acosta is in the training facility outside of washington. jim, you interviewed joe clancy the director of the united states secret service. what did he tell you about changes that they plan to make? >> pam, secret service director joe clancy was adamant to us telling cnn there bill never again be another fence-jumping intruder who gets inside the white house. we talked to clancy at the training facility for the secret service in maryland just outside the nation's capital about some of the recent embarrassing episodes for his agency and what he's doing about it. he told us he's focusing on training but he also pointed to changes made at the white house, including the white house fence. those new spikes attached to the top of the fence to thwart jumpers. the director conceded in that interview it's not a perfect solution. >> spikes were installed along the white house fence last week. are those spikes going to be a deterrent, do you think? >> we're hoping it will give us some time to react. a little more time. it won't stop every jumper. >> one of the things i say to myself it too is low. >> yes. >> almost anybody could jump that fence. >> yes. >> do you feel the same way? >> i do. we're working very closely with our partners the national park service, the fine arts commission and others to look at a long-term solution. >> clancy said he's focused on some of the modern dangers facing the bhouls. his agents are training with isis threats in mind. we asked about the drone incident that occurred earlier this year when a drone flew over the white house grounds. clancy did not want to go into specifics in terms of what they're trying to do to prevent that type of thing from occurring but he did say the agency is working with what he called new technology to deal with that issue. >> and also jim, we see in this video you actually witnessed secret service drills. tell us about them. >> that's right. i didn't go through all the drills but we did get to witness some of the drills that they have here at the train facility for the secret service. one of those is very important to the mission of protecting the white house from jumpers. we saw those k-9 squads in action the belgian dog hot can take out an intruder in seconds. we saw that. in addition to that there was a drill that involved evasive driving techniques. i got to ride in the back of one of those vehicles. that was pretty thrilling. although i don't think i want to do that again. it goes to show you how they have to really be on their toes in terms of thwarting an attack on a presidential motorcade. finally, perhaps the most poignant moment of the day came when we looked at the ambush exercise when they tried to train for preventing ambush attack on what they call a principal, like the president or vice president. the drill took place in a mock village on something called clint hill way. for viewers who don't know who clint hill is, he is the legendary secret service agent who served on president kennedy's motorcade in 1963. it's a reminder as to what's at stake when their jobs are ought here. they have to protect the president. it's the most important job that they have of course. >> absolutely is. jim acosta thank you very much. i want to bring back in congressman darrell issa to discuss what we just heard from the director joe clancy congressman. you heard him say he thinks the white house needs a taller fence. do you agree with that? >> well you can have taller fences and that would take care of one problem. but as you know the president and other protected individuals have a vulnerability far greater when they move. so the problems that clancy's dealing with at the secret service, and this is something my committee, my former committee, dealt with my entire chairmanship is low morale turnover questions, the difference between uniformed and nonuniformed personnel. a lot of other of those sort of problems. in an organization that has an almost impossible mission. remember they never get to be on offense. they have to be on defense. they don't get credit for the thousands of hours in which nothing happens. it's the times something goes wrong. and so what clancy has to deal with is keeping an organization sharp and at the top of its game at all times, and modernizing how they deal with new threats. you mentioned drones. but there are lots of other threats. and it is something where, quite frankly, what you know today and you're taking steps on is not where the next problem will usually come. and the perimeter protection of the white house, as we all know if they'd just lock the door. basic principles followed. that jumper would have gotten over the fence but he never would have gotten anywhere beyond the grass. and so i think we have to be a little careful not to overreact as we did years ago when we closed pennsylvania avenue. we did so without a plan to really justify what it was all about and go forward. i do work with the secret service historically. they are a great group of leaders and individuals. but as i say, they're a little bit like a football team that never gets to be on offense, is always on defense. and they don't get to know when the ball's going to be snapped, they have to be ready at all times. >> and he did not mince words, the director when he said there will not be another white house fence jumper. do you buy that? >> there won't be another one that gets through the front door. they are making -- taking steps to be much more vigilant to redo their procedures to have more senior management really making sure that the team is doing their job and is always in position. that's important. but again, when you look at an organization that training field, the questions of alcoholism, of extracurricular activities, how people view their careers, what the espirit de corps is like that's where you win and lose. it's not necessarily a spiked fence that's going to make all the difference in the world although it is important to have those staggered defenses to protect the building of the white house. let's remember a jumper is a very small threat compared to a pack of explosives on an unmanned vehicle or a manned vehicle. and those are real threats that could happen at any and we know that the threat is responsible evolving. what do you see as the next threat to the white house, to the president? >> i don't know where the next threat will come from. and i don't think anyone really does. let's understand when the president is moving or the vice president or other protected individuals, they are more vulnerable. and that's generally where the possibility will occur. many years ago, the late ra feet ka rearry was assassinated in beirut. he was in a vehicle every bit as good as president's car. the problem was they had thousands of pounds of explosives and had been able to bury it underneath a street. that level of explosive, the only way to win is to make sure the president never goes over that location. and when you're talking about all of washington or any other place that a protected individual including the president, goes they have to be able to detect in advance activity that could lead to a large explosive charge or something else that could be devastating beyond human beings' ability to react. remember the kennedy assassination in dallas. that was an exception, that was a long-range sniper. that has historically not been the threats. when they wanted to get truman they walked right up to the front of blair house and would have gotten truman if he'd answered the door. each time there's been an attack we've created greater setback. but at some point the president cannot have absolute setback. he goes to hotels. he goes to foreign countries. and in this day and age, an unmanned aerial vehicle could carry explosive. they've got to be able to take that down proactively. we can't have aircraft flying into the washington space. if they can carry a man on a gyrocopter they could have carried 200 pounds of explosive on that same aircraft. >> director clancy talked about how concerned he is about isis. how much of a threat do you think isis poses to the secret service? >> well the secret service are ready and prepared to take those threats. but the protected individuals, which in washington, d.c. is not just the president and vice president and the families. it's also up in northwest, all those embassies and residents. isis could look at one of those as a softer target. and the impact of any loss in washington, d.c. of any protected individual or building would be pretty devastating for people's view around the world. so there's a large area to protect. here and abroad. very clearly, isis would love to get one of those. they'd like to get a lone wolf to drive hundreds of pounds of explosives or thousands of pounds right up massachusetts avenue and look for an embassy to blow up in front of. so these are real threats. isis has been able to recruit people. we have to be vigilant. we have to be able to find explosives and plans before they happen. and it's not easy. >> and that's growing increasingly harder with the way the threat is now with isis to know about an attack before it happens. congressman darrell issa thank you so much. and just ahead right here in "the situation room," more on the isis threat. and the u.s. strategy to fight terrorist forces. plus a convicted felon deported from the u.s. five times admits to shooting and killing a woman on a crowded san francisco pier. fueling the uproar over immigration and so-called sanctuary cities. a new season brings a new look. a chance to try something different. this summer, challenge your preconceptions and experience a cadillac for yourself. ♪ ♪ take advantage of our summer offers. the 2015 cadillac srx, a crossover with space safety, and style. lease this from around $339 per month. ♪ ♪ thanks for calling angie's list. how may i help you? 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>> well we're upping our ante. we're responding, i assume to the vicious isil attacks in three countries that preceded this. but what i worry about is this military strategy won't get us there. where is there? there is really a political solution not a military solution. but air strikes without adequate intelligence on the ground can't succeed. and in addition to that our strategy in syria's confused. the president today said something important. he said he wants a transition to a pluralist government with bashar assad out. that's important. bashar assad out. but the folks we want to train and are asking to help us want him out now and have thought that our strategy so far it has been true has not been focused on him. >> you talk about the fact that we don't have an adequate intelligence. what would the solution to that somebody what more can we do in syria in terms of the intelligence gathering? >> first of all you have to put folks down range. we don't currently allow u.s. special forces or other capable soldiers down range with units that can i think facilitate better intelligence. remember 75%, according to centcomm, of all those planes flying over to drop bombs or ordnance don't drop that ordnance. they can't find targets, they're not getting targets, or they don't have permission to drop. so what you're seeing this long campaign is because there's a bit of confusion here between the folks trying to get the job done and i think policymakers. i think hopefully today, this was a first step i didn't see a lot in that press conference that gave me confidence they're going to change that policy. but they've got to change that policy. we've got to get more folks down range. we have to offer them better logistics package, command and control packages intelligence packages and we have to be clear on the command and control structure here so they can get those targets. >> i want to bring in bob baer to talk about what's going on in raqqa with air strikes. we've heard reports isis' leader al baghdadi was in raqqa. do you think these air strikes were ordered in part to take out baghdadi? >> well i think we'd like to take out baghdadi no question about it. if we could find him. he's clearly not going up on a cell phone. he's not getting on e-mail. and i think what we have to look at these air strikes that are in response to the expansion of the islamic state. today they took an important strategic town in the north, on the turkish border. major attacks in haditha against the iraqi government and the islamic state is moving on aleppo. we are stuck in this policy which is failing. these air strikes. i think we've all said that the military's said it from the beginning. it's not enough. to go back to the intelligence question our intelligence is terrible because we can't get out and actually talk to people. if these people are going off the air, we really -- it's a black hole and we don't know what to hit out there. >> it's hard to believe that just a year ago, isis was barely even isis. we heard president obama calling the group the jv team. now look how much ground they have gained. jane in your view what more specifically needs to be done? >> again, i don't think this is a military fight. i think that's a piece of the fight. but i think it's a political, diplomatic and messaging fight. i think we're losing the messaging because we're not out there on social media in the way isil is. how embarrassing is this? the country that invented the internet and all of these cutting-edge firms can't find a way to get ahead of the messages by a small number of people that are causing many people in all countries, including ours to leave educated households and become part of the foreign fighter corps. >> no doubt about it. creating a counter narrative has been something that the u.s. has lacked in the fight against isis. they've talked about the social media machine. but what is the solution there? the u.s. government fighting back against isis online isn't exactly going to deter those who would want to join the group, right? what's the solution? >> you have to have a multi-faceted approach. the first thing is not -- yes, it's a political solution has to happen. but we have a military problem right now that needs solving. you will not get to any disruptive activity until we do something about their capital in raqqa, the fact that they have land and space and time and money to recruit, to put these very sophisticated propaganda messages that are regrutting our kids, american kids, british kids european kids. you have to have a more robust effort. i'm glad to see that the president went out but that in and of itself won't do it, out to the pentagon today. we need to step up our game. we need to coordinate better with our allies that are looking for help. we need to engage again in a more robust way. congress needs to act, they should give authorization for force. i think it's sad that they haven't done that yet. and i think that the president needs to engage and allow these folks to go down range to leverage up our allies' capabilities. so you haven't disrupted that. the longer this goes the more likely it is they're going to be successful at getting someone to radicalize here in the united states. >> how do you disrun the social media campaign that isis has? no matter how many air strikes you do there, i think that is -- as officials in the u.s. have acknowledged -- >> the state department can't do this with 50 people the whole country has to make -- the president should call the country to action to get ahead of this. we've got the cutting-edge technology firms that could join in this fight and really help make this not just the country but the region a lot safer. i don't think -- i agree that we have to partner with these folks on the ground in syria. but i don't think the american people are prepared to put boots on the ground and take the casualties that will result. and i think we need to authorize -- >> the 101st airborne division this is about special capability soldiers that leverage up our allies. >> i know but they're in harm's way. and they could get killed -- >> you can't beat them without putting -- >> here's a debate i'm sure we're not going to settle in this sitting. but it's going to be an ongoing conversation. mike thank you for coming. a convicted felon and five-time deport tee admits to shooting and killing a woman on a crowded san francisco pier. so why didn't police turn him over to immigration and customs enforcement months ago? ♪ whoa what are you doing? putting on a movie. i'm trying to watch the game here. look i need this right now ok? come on i don't want to watch that. too bad this is happening. fine, what if i just put up the x1 sports app right here. ah jeez it's so close. he just loves her so much. do it. come on. do it. come on! yes! awww, yes! that is what i'm talking about. baby. call and upgrade to get x1 today. ♪ an apparent random killing on a crowded san francisco pier is throwing new fuel on a fiery controversy dominating the republican race for the white house. it's also keeping the spotlight on donald trump. under fire from his rivals for his remarks about mexican immigrants. our cnn sarah sidner has more from san francisco. >> kate steinle, the lady who was down on pier 14? >> yes. >> reporter: in a jailhouse interview, undocumented immigrant juan francisco lopez sanchez, admitted he killed a woman on a san francisco pier. >> you did shoot her? >> hm. >> reporter: 32-year-old kate steinle was killed. lopez claims the shooting was an accident that he was wandering on pier 14 after taking sleeping pills and found a gun wrapped in a t-shirt that went off when he picked it up. >> boom boom three times. >> reporter: according to u.s. immigration and customs enforcement, i.c.e. lopez sanchez has seven prior felony convictions and has been deported to mexico five times. lopez sanchez ankles kgo he came back to san francisco because it's a so-called sanctuary city where local authorities would not detain him solely because of his immigration status. homeland security director jay johnson reacting to the shooting vowed to improve the department's focus. >> we want to work more effectively with state and local jurisdictions to get at people who are threats to public safety who are undocumented, who we should be focusing our resources on deporting. >> reporter: the shooting comes just weeks after republican presidential candidate donald trump's controversial statements on mexican immigrants. >> they're bringing drugs, they're bringing crime, they're rapists. >> reporter: in a statement friday trump said steinle's death was yet another example of why we must secure our border immediately. adding that it is a disgraceful situation. and "i am the only one that can fix it." trump's rivals reactioned to his comments on sunday talk shows. >> are there some people who come with nefarious goals? yes. that's why we need to secure the border. but i would never besmirch all the people who come here. >> i don't think we can sugarcoat that but that doesn't mean everybody who's coming across is a rapist or murderer or anything else. >> reporter: in a statement to cnn i.c.e. said city law enforcement did not honor an earlier detain request for lopez sanchez. if the local authorities have notified i.c.e. they were about to release this individual into the community, i.c.e. could have taken custody of him, thus preventing this terrible tragedy. the san francisco sheriff's department says it is deeply saddened by the death, adding that city ordinance deemed sanchez eligible for release. that ordinance dismisses immigration detainers as a sole reason for holding prisoners. and we just talked to the sheriff one on one, asked him specifically i.c.e. is saying it was a mistake san francisco made they had simply to hand him over to i.c.e. or at least notify i.c.e. he said i.c.e. knows the rules, they know this rule has been in place for a very long time they do not take fault in what happened it is simply the sheriff's department following the local laws. >> no matter how you cut this it's a breakdown in the system. thank you, sarah sidner. we want to dig deeper with former fbi assistant director tom fuentes, our cnn law enforcement analyst. the former acting director of u.s. immigration and customs enforcement john torres. criminal defense attorney joey jackson. john starting with you. help me understand this. he was arrested trying to cross the border back into the u.s. after being deported five times. goes to prison. gets out. instead of being immediately deported pack to mexico he's handed over to the san francisco police department. why wasn't he immediately deported after he got out of prison? >> he was in custody of the bureau of prisons. what happens there is there are two competing requests. one that says i.c.e. wants him, the other one says the sheriff's department wants him. based on an outstanding warrant for drug conviction or drug charge. and so what happens is you could send him to i.c.e. they'll deport him right away. in this instance they prefer to send him over so he can be prosecuted on the drug charge. possibly serve another jail sentence. and then be deported after. >> if he's going to be deported why not just do it from the get-go? especially as we've seen a lot of police departments don't hrn these detainers. so you're running the risk of a police department letting a suspect go out on the streets and kill someone, as we saw in this case. >> historically people have complained in the past why are you going to give a benefit to someone who's here without status by letting them go back to their home country, not serve a day in prison? versus a u.s. citizen under the same circumstances has to go serve his time in prison. so what you see here is you'd rather have that person off the street. knowing he's going to go to prison if he serves time. unfortunately, what you have here are policies in place that prevent two law enforcement agencies from working together until someone's been victimized. >> police departments have their reasons for not honoring these detainers. even if a department doesn't want to honor a detainer in this case why didn't the san francisco police the sheriff's office give i.c.e. a heads-up that we're releasing this suspect that you're interested in? we're not going to hold him but we want to give you a heads-up? >> that's absolutely true. the laws making sanctuary cities in l.a. or san francisco, california cities it's called the trust law. basically is that local police departments can't spend money enforcing federal laws. they can't spend the money housing somebody on behalf of the federal government. that wasn't the case here. san francisco was holding him on drug charges, as john mentioned. and all they had to do was make a phone call. they didn't have to hold him one extra day or give him one extra meal. what they're saying by saying, if you don't give us a court order -- that's just unheard of in terms of police cooperation. we're not going to cooperate with i.c.e. unless we have to and are ordered to by a court? that sounds to me ridiculous. >> that's what the sheriff's office said that we didn't have a court order, therefore, we didn't have to comply. >> in other words, make us we're not going to cooperate, make us. >> you brought up sanctuary cities. sanchez told our affiliate that he kept coming back to san francisco because he knew it was a sanctuary city. tell us what does that mean? and why are there sanctuary cities? >> sure pamela. what he's essentially saying is that they're lax as it relates to the law. let's go pack to what a detainer is. an immigration detainer is merely notification by i.c.e. the immigration custom and enforcement services in conjunction with homeland security to say just detain the person. and it's not necessarily that they're going to be deported immediately but there's some federal issue that the federal government wants to look after. and it's good for 48 hours. and so think about this. the drug charges, he was returned on march 26th. the drug charges were dropped on march 27th. he was held until april 15th. so all that would have been required was for the immigration detainer that is a notification to the federal government and the federal government comes, picks him up and they evaluate whether or not he should be deported is deportable or what the immigration status is. so when you talk about sanctuary cities essentially what you're saying is that they have a policy which is not going to honor federal law. and that within itself is very problematic. >> but the california law makes it if they are a fell on you have to hold that person. that's another debate. thank you very much. just ahead in "the situation room," more reaction to don't trump's remarks about immigrants. his republican presidential rivals are starting to speak out more forcefully. more than two weeks after trump's stunning remarks about mexicans during his campaign announcement. >> they are bringing drugs. they are bringing crime. they are rapists. and some, i assume, are good people. ♪ (music throughout) ♪ the ultimate do-over for wood and concrete with behr premium deckover. get $10 off one-gallon cans and $40 off five-gallon buckets of behr deckover paints and stains. exclusively at the home depot. we live in a pick and choose world. choose choose choose. but at bedtime? ...why settle for this? enter sleep number... don't miss the lowest prices of the season going on now. sleepiq technology tells you how well you slept and what adjustments you can make. you like the bed soft. he's more hardcore. so your sleep goes from good to great to wow! only at a sleep number store. right now, save $300 to $700 on select mattress sets, plus 36-month special financing. ends monday! know better sleep with sleep number. you pay your car insurance premium like clockwork. month after month. year after year. then one night, you hydroplane into a ditch. yeah... surprise... your insurance company tells you to pay up again. why pay for insurance if you have to pay even more for using it? if you have liberty mutual deductible fund™ you could pay no deductible at all. sign up to immediately lower your deductible by $100. and keep lowering it $100 annually, until it's gone. then continue to earn that $100 every year. there's no limit to how much you can earn and this savings applies to every vehicle on your policy. call 1-888-865-2166 to learn more. switch to liberty mutual and you could save up to $423. call liberty mutual for a free quote today at 1-888-865-2166. see car insurance in a whole new light. liberty mutual insurance. ♪ tonight, donald trump is accusing critics of distorting his remarks about mexicans and waiting for many day zs to pounce. several rivals toughened up their reaction to trump over the weekend. >> i think what he said was wrong. i don't think that appropriate and i don't think it has any place in the campaign. >> he's not a stupid guy. i don't think he thinks every mexican crossing the border is a rapist. he is doing this to inflame and insight and to draw attention. >> donald trump does not represent the republican party. i was offended by his remarks. to paint with that broad a brush that donald trump did is -- he is going to have to defend those remarks. >> honestly donald trump needs no help from mike huckabee to get publicity. he is doing a good job of that. >> let's bring in gloria and jeff and sarah. so much to talk about. gloria i want to ask about you what we heard, trump's rivals on the trail coming out and really attacking him for his comments. why now? do you think this is a signal they realize this is someone i have to worry about? >> they are walking a fine line. they don't want to inflame him and empower him and light a match under him. the same thing goes for the republican national committee leaders. they don't want do that so that trump can say, the party bosses look they are against me. that would just give limb ahim a lot more oxygen. the people opposing him are walking a fine line. the donors are saying you know what? you have to oppose this guy. the activists in the party are saying we kind of like a little bit what trump is saying. everybody is kind of walking on tiptoes around here against trump. >> it seems like, jeff from what gloria is saying there is concern about how he is going to react. that he are fearful -- >> play into his hands. >> he is going to win that game probably. he has very -- he has less to lose than jeb bush or marco rubio. they are also afraid -- they were afraid of elevating him. they were trying to ignore it. it has moved too far beyond ignoring. now, again, i think some have missed a leadership moment in terms of calling him out on these things. at the end of the day, the primary election it may be good rhetoric. it's a killer for the republican party and they know that. >> from the perspective of the rnc, they don't want to pick this fight. it has to be a candidate that takes on donald trump, or a network that says we won't allow you on the debate stage. it's not going to be the rnc that says you are not allowed up there. >> the chairman of the rnc has said these comments are not helpful. you are right, they want the candidates to kind of play it out. because they have to thread the needle here. they don't want to empower him any more than he is. >> he has been off the campaign trail. he issued a statement -- >> we heard -- >> it was three pages. someone we will hear from is hillary clinton. she's sitting down for an interview with brianna keilar, her first since she ran for president. she has closed off as we know to the media. now suddenly there's this shift in media availability. what do you make of that? >> i think that it is very convenient for them to be saying right now, look bernie sanders is having a surge. we should get out there. this will be bet areter for us. the clinton campaign is very planned out and structured. this is when they want to move into the longer interviews and being out there and public. this gives them a way to say, we're not taking it for granted. we will sit down for interviews without going head to head and taking on bernie sanders directly. >> when you look at the republican party and this little fight that's going on with donald trump, hillary clinton, by contrast can look serious, engaged in the issues and have a different kind of debate without getting on a debate stage yet. >> she does want to talk about why she's running for president. this gives her the chance. a chance to lower expectations. they're final with people chattering about bernie sanders is rising up a little bit. they know that -- i think they are doing a fair bit of setting expectations we're worried about him. not really worried about him. >> absolutely. we have a long way to go until the election. thank you gloria, jeff and sarah. to our viewers, join us in "the situation room" tomorrow for the exclusive one on one with hillary clinton. she's sitting down with brianna keilar for her first major tv interview since the start of the her campaign. watch tomorrow at 5:00 eastern time. thank you very much for watching. for all of us here at cnn, i'm pamela brown in "the situation room." erin burnett "out front" starts right now. president obama speaking out, admitting isis fighters are nimble owning up to failures. new details on the new york prison escape. how they planned to kill mitchell's husband and the moment she said she couldn't go through with it. breaking news bill cosby admitting he gave drugs to at least one young woman he wanted to have sex with. we have that breaking news tonight. let's go "out front." good evening to all. i'm erin

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Transcripts For CNNW CNN Newsroom Live 20150706

after all those negotiations. >> reporter: well, this is the reason he gave in his blog and the statement we got out of the finance ministry following the resignation seems to suggest that the prime minister, tsiprasalexis tsipras felt to go more comfortable going into negotiations without him there. this is the suggestion that the euro group. we know there is a lot of tension between he and a number of the ministers there. and he has taken this route as a way to facilitate to make things easier between greece and its creditors to reach a deal. this comes after the no vote which has really strengthens in some respects or in some people's eyes the position of the government. it has been hailed in mr. varoufakis' campaign. >> they will be sad to see him go. >> it's a complicated one. varoufakis is someone who is outspoken and popular with a part of the public and unpopular with another part of the greek public. he is a controversial figure. we have seen him getting into all kinds of debates, strong rhetoric exchanged between mr. varoufakis and the german finance minister. so i think this will be seen more as a move of let's go into calmer negotiations and see if we can reach a deal. so some people will be disappointed but i think for others it will open a route to diplomacy in these talks. >> and elinda the big fear right now is of a grexit. how likely is it that this resignation could be a prerequisite to greece being able to stay in the eurozone? >> reporter: i think what we're likely to see from the creditors is they will want a more diplomatic approach from greece and a more reconciliatory tone as we go into the next round of talks. it is obviously very difficult to see how this is going to play out simply because greece is going to go into the next round of talks after months and months of negotiations. now they are likely to ask for more concessions and debt release. and it is uncertain whether the creditors will be willing to back down. until we see how the first negotiations are likely to go it will be very difficult to tell how this will play out. >> elinda just on a practical basis, how are people going to survive over the next few days? as far as the negotiations unfold we've got the situation where the banks are talking about running out of cash and people are obviously struggling hugely just to meet day-to-day costs. >> we do have a situation that banks seem to be running out of cash. right behind me you have a queue at an atm and there are queues all around the country. banks have been closed now for a week. all i can say is that it will be difficult. the ecb convenes today to decide what to the with emergency liquidity assistance for greece. this no at the referendum and a strong no which is not what was anticipated, is likely to affect any decision making for greece in the next day or two. and until some decisions are made for greek people it will be very difficult. i mean it's all we can tell at this point. unless you know mr. tsipras really does manage to reach a deal as he has promised in the next 40 hours the situation with the banks will become incredibly different. >> thank you, elinda. that story from the streets of athens. we want to see how the knockon effect is going to effect the world. the markets are a little lower, how do you read it? >> it's interesting, max. just as the announcement of varoufakis's resignation came out. we were looking at the realtime indices from asia and they turned around. they are heading back toward positive territory. they are a long way into the negative but the situation was worse. the picture was worse before the resignation news came out. to give you an idea the nikkei because down 2.2, 2.3%. hong kong down 4.5%. it has come back a little bit. but what you see there, max is very much a feeling that the possibility, the likelihood of a grexit of greece leaving the eurozone has increased significantly with that no vote. now, what's interesting is with varoufakis' resignation does it then claw back away from the brink, if you like? i mean he was seen certainly by the european authorities, by the troika and central bank and the european commission as someone who they couldn't trust in essence. and that was the problem, that the trust between the two sides had broken down. now he has gone doesn't mean that they will be able to negotiate in better faith with europe when the meetings start tomorrow. certainly, investors as you see there, a little bit of a respite but still there is a lot of skepticism in the markets and the investment community and they are taking a pragmatic view on this. if greece does go they will be prepared for it. >> obviously, greece wants better negotiating terms. now if the eu does give them a sweeter deal what message does that send to countries like portugal spain, italy, countries riddled with debt? >> it's an interesting question. that is the nub of this. if greece can get a better deal and essentially, if he called europe's bluff and went to its own people and came back with this resounding no, what is to stop other countries in the grip of tough austerity measures doing the same. portugal spain, italy, ireland will be looking closely now. this is going to be a political decision. this is no longer an economic decision whether greece stays in the eurozone or not. if it is a political decision it may be the beginning of fundamentally altering the relationship between the eurozone partners. before it was very clear this is the way it's going to be done once the austerity measures came into place you are going to play by our rule book. if greece does not, the others will ask why should they as well. the bottom line here is this has got a long long way to go and we're going to see volatility in the markets continue particularly in the european markets. if you look in the u.s. the futures there are pointing to a 1 to 1.5% fall at the open. there is still a lot of uncertainty out there. the markets hate uncertainty. at the moment it's difficult to get a clear read on where this may end up. >> while this may not have a huge contagion around the world if the ecb puts out the right messages today it is going to put off any big decisions on fed rates. do you think that's true? it could hit the, you know the u.s. and the world market in that sense? >> yeah certainly. a fed rate rise is not a foregone conclusion particularly looking at the statistics of the latest job numbers last week. so expectations are that the fed will raise rates in september. but that is by no means a done deal. any sort of uncertainty, anything that is going to shake global market confidence is going to obviously have a knock-on effect on the u.s. the fed will be in no hurry to further undermine confidence by lifting the cost of borrowing. and the other effect is in china. china is down 30% in three weeks. we're talking $3 trillion being wiped off the value of the chinese stock market. so that is also sending ripples of real concern out across not just asia but around the world as well. what is going on in china you have to balance that with the fact that chinese stocks are up 150%. but the last thing the fed wants to do is raise rates because it feels like it has been having to. it is going to watch closely the conditions. i'm sure europe the grexit threat all that will play into the fed's decision and they are going to err on the side of caution, no doubt. >> andrew if greece was to leave the eurozone which country do you think they would end up looking to for stability? russia? china? what do you think? >> it's a difficult one. i think -- >> that's quite a question. >> look if you look at what's been happening russia has been -- you know has been a relationship between greece and russia much more than china. and china has its own issues to deal with at the moment. russia would be a more obvious partner. what they can actually do is difficult to say. what also to take into account the geopolitics of this a grexit would basically mean that greece was failing and perhaps a failing state, does europe want that on its southern borders? of course it doesn't. what's it going to do to stop that happening? we'll have to wait. what can russia do but i don't know. i don't want to speculate but there has been some sort of relationship. >> absolutely. who knows a grexit could cost the eurozone more than a bailout in the long term. andrew stevens, thank you so much. >> a lot of people are analyzing the exposure countries have to greece but the southern european countries would be affected. let's look at what yanis varoufakis said in announcing his resignation. colorful as ever. i became aware to the fact that the participants of the euro group and other partners would appreciate my absence from the meetings which the prime minister considered may help in reaching an agreement. i will step down as the finance minister. >> he goes on to write is it my duty to help alexis tsipras as much as to take advantage as he considers the capital which was donated to us by the greek people through the referendum. >> and he has strong words about the euro group. >> he does. >> he is quite a character. >> he is going to be missed in terms of a character. greeks around the world are paying close attention to what is happening of course. >> we spoke to one expiateatriat. >> this is how they felt about what the no represents. they saw it as a way of stop following that program. and it's the other thing too it's that this program has created so many people that don't have anything else to lose that they really just don't care if they are going to be in the eurozone or if they're going to go back on drachmas. right now in their pockets they don't have anything. >> we will have more on this story later this hour. you can get the analysis and background on cnn.com including the breaking details on the resignation of the finance minister yanis varoufakis and that's ahead and what is ahead for the greek banks as well. we have good news for the united states. team usa is celebrating in vancouver, canada after winning the highest scoring women's world cup final ever. the u.s. dominated japan, beating the defending champions 5-2. >> sunday's game was a rematch of the 2011 world cup final. this is the third title for team usa and their first since 1999. an amazing moment. >> with a hat trick in sunday's match-up it was carli lloyd who led the team to a world cup victory. kate riley has more. >> reporter: the united states has won their third world cup crown their third title in 16 years. japan had the perfect tournament going into this match although they found themselves down 4-0 after 16 minutes. carli lloyd scoring the first ever hat trick at a women's world cup final. >> i dedicated my entire life to this moment. everything else comes second my fiance friends, family. this is it for me. if you want to be the best you can be you is to sacrifice so much. and for me i wouldn't trade it for anything in the world. >> i always describe her as a winner. she is going to work her tail off and fight for you and you want a player like her on your team. >> big players make big plays in big games. she is the engine of the team and comes up big when we need her. it's important to have someone on the team who is going to take the reins and take control. >> reporter: this game was the highest scoring match at a women's world cup final. the final score, 5-2. the japanese return empty handed. however the americans can now celebrate in style. they've been invited to the white house and the president told the team not to forget their trophy. kate riley, cnn, in the women's world cup final in vancouver. >> so many people tuned in. pope francis starting a trip to ecuador. this trip is coming at an important time for him. chicago police confiscate guns after a deadly and violent weekend there. and we'll look at greece's history in the eurozone and how the country's debt crisis began. ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ if you want a paint that's tough enough to protect from the elements. if you want a paint flexible enough to survive the subtle cracking of time. if you want a paint that gives you a lifetime warranty... only this can. aura exterior from benjamin moore. paint like no other. a new season brings a new look. a chance to try something different. this summer, challenge your preconceptions and experience a cadillac for yourself. take advantage of our summer offers. the 2015 cadillac ats, the sharper performance sedan. lease this from around 269 per month. verizon say neversettle. t-mobile agrees. never settle for verizon's overpriced gimmicks. try the un-carrier risk-free for 14 days you'll love it, or we'll pay for you to go back. . breaking news out of greece this hour the country's finance minister yanis varoufakis says he is resigning after voters voted out of a bailout appeal. >> he said i was made aware of a preference by euro group participants and assorted partners for my absence from its meetings. varoufakis believes that his resignation could help alexis tsipras reach an agreement with creditors. pope francis is in ecuador on a mission for the poor and the planet, meanwhile. >> i thank god for having allowed me to return to latin america and to be with you today in this beautiful land of ecuador. i feel happiness and gratitude after this warm welcome. it's one more demonstration of the welcoming character that define this nimble nation. >> the pope is from south america and he says he is excited to be there and has a busy week ahead. >> later today he plans to lead mass and meet with ecuador's president. in a few days he heads to bolivia and he goes to paraguay. and he has speeches and masses to deliver in his native spanish. joining me is father edward beck. thank you for being with us. these three countries, ecuador, bolivia, paraguay he says they are the forgotten countries of latin america. how does the pope plan to change that? >> just by visiting the poorest countries, he is making a statement. remember he said he wants to go to the periphery. and so in fact he is doing that. some said why didn't he go to argentina? he hasn't been home since he was elected pope. his sister is there and hasn't seen them. he says he has to focus on the forgotten first. these are three of the poorest in south america and he chose them to say these people matter too. >> pope john paul ii visited ecuador. how does this pope's visit differ from the last pope that visited ecuador? >> what is interesting about the last visit is that john paul ii was looking at encroachment theology. this pope, pope francis is not as concerned about that. he brought liberation theologians back into the fold. it says you need to look at god and the experience of faith through the eyes of the poor. that is something very close to the heart of pope francis. so he is not as concerned as john paul ii with the church per se that it's losing members, that liberation theology is ruining the church. he is thinking of the poor and the environment. he is making a different focus and priority than john paul ii. >> he wants to focus on the poor and the environment. but 40% of the world's catholics are in latin america and that number is decreasing. they are losing catholic followers. can the pope's visit expect to reverse that in any way? >> well it is decreasing but we are talking about ecuador being 79% catholics. even though the evangelicals are making inroads, there is something for you in catholicism to those who have left. pent cost lymph and evangelicals is about small-based community and about reading the scripture and serving the poor. and so perhaps the charismatic movement within the catholic church where there is sharing and reading of scripture that can be attractive to evangelicals mo who have leather catholicism. so he may appeal to them as well. >> i want to talk about the context of this visit. this visit does come at a time of political tension in ecuador seeing anti-government demonstrations against the president. do you think the pope will weigh in on that? >> one of the issues that is interesting is the environment. they are mining in a national park right now. and oil drilling and the pope is supposedly going to speak against some of this pillaging of the natural environment. now when the pope arrived, the president made a point of saying how environmentally committed ecuador is. i think the pope may challenge him on that. because some of his own constituents don't believe he is that committed to the environment. i think there will be conflict there. there will be a conflict with the church in the sense that people think the church has been colonialistic in its approach in south america. so people are calling for getting away from clericalism where priests and bishops make all the decisions but have a role for the laity. and it will be interesting to see where the pope comes down on that. >> interesting. the pope is not going to argentina during this visit, preferring to spend time in the poorer countries of latin america. you can log on to this website, vatican.va. chicago gun violence has been making headlines for several years now, and in the past few days a 7-year-old boy is one of seven people killed over the weekend. at least 40 people were shot in numerous incidents. >> chicago's top cop stood in front of a table full of confiscated illegal guns and spoke passionately about what he calls a broken system. >> i'm angry. i'm frustrated. and i'm frustrated and angry that we're here again talking about another senseless murder. pick out the names. the list goes on and on. this has got to stop. we can put another 10,000 police officers on the street. and what would happen? maybe we'll arrest mr. brown 90 times and nothing will happen. maybe we'll take 10,000 guns off the street and 10,000 will fill up that illegal market the next day. i'm incredibly proud of the men and women of this department who in spite of what i'm talking about go out every day and do what they do. we need some help here folks. we have to fix this broken system. >> and he went on to say that basically too many violent prisoners are being released only to return to a life of crime. is it a vicious cycle there in chicago. ahead we go live to athens following breaking news the greek finance minister stepping down. a bombshell in the last hour or so, wasn't it? >> yep. leave early go roam sleep in sleep out star gaze dream big wander more care less beat sunrise chase sunset do it all. on us. get your first month's payment plus five years wear and tear coverage. make the most of summer... with volvo. we call ourselves the freedom hikers. hiking brought us together but that's not the only thing that keeps us coming back. here's to friends who reach for better. fewer carbs, fewer calories, superior taste. michelob ultra. the superior light beer. we live in a pick and choose world. choose choose choose. but at bedtime? ...why settle for this? enter sleep number... don't miss the lowest prices of the season going on now. sleepiq technology tells you how well you slept and what adjustments you can make. you like the bed soft. he's more hardcore. so your sleep goes from good to great to wow! only at a sleep number store. right now, save $300 to $700 on select mattress sets, plus 36-month special financing. ends monday! know better sleep with sleep number. welcome back to our viewers here in the united states and around the world. i'm zain asher. >> i'm max foster. back to the breaking news this hour. the finance minister in greece said he would resign if greeks voted in favor of the latest bailout offer. they voted to reject it and he is resigning anyway. >> elinda labropoulou is in athens with the details for us. we have not heard from alexis tsipras on yanis varoufakis's resignation. i mean are we expected to hear from him praising varoufakis or explain why varoufakis resigned? >> well we know that alexis tsipras is going to be meeting all the other political leaders, the opposition leaders today in just a few minutes from now. so perhaps we'll get a statement right after that. we had a statement from the deputy finance minister who told greek television that basically what will be happening now is we'll be looking at a negotiating team with a more european direction orientation if you like that will submit specific proposals to put an end to uncertainty. it is suggested that mr. varoufakis was more of a hard-liner and greece is willing to follow a more diplomatic route to reach a fast agreement with his creditors. >> in his statement he says i wear the creditors loathing with pride. but the issue is for many people in greece he is seen as a hero because he is martyring himself on this issue. >> for people who wanted to see a more hard-line approach who wanted to tell the europeans, the creditors what many greeks think of them which is along the lines of what you describe from mr. varoufakis he was the man to do it. but it seems that that didn't particularly help the talks until now. you know we've seen months of negotiations so far. so although mr. varoufakis is a popular figure with some it seems that mr. tsipras decided it might be best for him to step down. >> and mr. varoufakis in term of his controversial comments he accused the troika of spreading fear saying that they wanted to humiliate greeks and accused them of terrorism as well. i am wondering how ordinary greeks reacted to those comments. >> i think a lot of greeks are very pessimistic about what is happening and disillusioned with europe and the creditors. they feel they have gone through five years of austerity and very hard times and what has been put on the table does not really get greece out of that austerity cycle and much like the government they have been supporting ideas of debt relief and anything that would show that greece could be moving towards growth. people like varoufakis have been expressing what a lot of greek people feel and also the vote yesterday that no -- that resounding no at the referendum yesterday saying that greece would not be prepared to accept a deal that does not include some kind of way to grow some proposal that would enable greece to get out of resection is very much in accordance to what mr. varoufakis has been saying all along and how a lot of people feel. >> the practical implications of what happens now for greeks. the banks are expected to be opening tomorrow. it doesn't seem likely they will be able to. if they are running out of cash they can't keep giving out $60 a day they were doing >> at the moment it's going to be very difficult to see the deal. this is also something that the government has actually said. the minister of state said the banks will reopen when there is a deal. mr. varoufakis and the prime minister have been saying we can get a deal wildfire 48before 48 hours. that remains to be seen. until there is some kind of certainty and some way of pacifying people that you know they shouldn't just run to the banks and get their money out, it seems virtually impossible to see the banks reopening. it's something that the ecb will decide today whether it will carry on with its liquidity assistance to greece or not or increase it or keep it at the same levels. >> elinda thank you very much. back with you throughout the day as the news sinks in as the finance minister a powerful character is going. >> and i'm curious whether varoufakis' resignation will allow tsipras a better negotiation platform. >> we just saw this from a greek government spokesman saying that varoufakis played a leading role in the negotiations. the prime minister feels the need to thank him for his unrelenting efforts to promote his efforts for the greek people. a greek exit from the eurozone could result in financial contagion. we haven't seen it yet. and we have other debt-laden countries like portugal spain, italy. >> and some are fearing that post grexit greece could partner with russia or china. and immigration could become a greater issue. floods of greeks battling homelessness and more needing aid and wanting welfare. >> as a greek exit seems more and more likely we look back at greece's entry into the group and how the country's debt began to build up. >> reporter: it's not every day that a new currency is born. and the euro created for the world's most important trading block was exciting. >> the euro has been launched and a wonderful step forward has been achieved. >> there were 15 countries then. but the uk and denmark and sweden didn't want a single currency. those that did had to prove their economies were in good shape. greece was the last to hit the target. the enthusiastic candidate because not left out. >> greece really wanted to get in and there was a tendency to take those who wanted to get in. and the eurozone is a political animal. and there was not the political class a sufficient understanding of the economic necessities for making it work. >> in the years that followed euro membership greeks borrowed more than was allowed under the rules. by 2004 it was more than double the limit at 7.5%. it was 9.9% in 2008. the year that the financial crisis hit. by then lenders were worried and they were right to be so. then came a bombshell, athens confessed it had been lying about the true scale of these numbers. in 2010 when the costs of borrowing became unsustainable, europe and the imf rose to athens' rescue. this was bailout number one. >> what will remain of europe if the euro disappears? what will remain of europe if its economic heart collapses? nothing. >> but this wasn't easy money. the lenders demanded tax increases and spending cuts to balance the books. the economy stuttered and the debt mountain remained. but in 2012 bailout number two included debt relief. >> they got it late and probably too late. the europeans have not been blameless. but the real issue here is that successive greek governments can't ever really implement good policies. >> with one in four unemployed and the economy having shrunk 25% in five years late last year greece selected a new leftest party to government. it pledged to resist any more austerity while keeping greece's place in the eurozone. two promises that now look increasingly impossible to keep. tag enwright cnn, london. grim news out of africa. a week of violence has killed 200 people in nigeria. twin explosions in jos where 15 people are dead. >> one blast happened near a mosque and the other at a restaurant in a muslim neighborhood at sunset as people were breaking their ramadan fast. there are no claims of responsibility just yet. the arrest of an illegal immigrant in california exposes major problems with america's deportation process. we'll have more on that in just a moment. developing some of the highest quality nutrition isn't easy so at gnc, why do we do it? why do we work to deliver clinically studied products to fill the world's nutrition gaps? why do we insist on the most stringent quality checks period? well, here's why... ♪ ♪ celebrating 80 years of quality life and quality products. and we're just getting started. gnc. points, points, our points. there has got to be a way to redeem our hotel points. i just want to take a vacation. this seems crazy. oh really? tell us something we don't know, captain obvious. ok. with hotels.com, when you collect 10 nights you get one free. oh. so you only need to know how to count to 10 to earn a free night at places like that nudist resort. yeah i don't know how that got there. because you stayed there took a selfie and hung it prominently on the wall. hm? hotels.com. they won't judge your life choices. lawmakers in south carolina will begin debating whether to remove confederate flag from capitol grounds after a racially motivated shooting at a predominately african-american church. a two-thirds majority is necessary to remove it. some see it as symbol of pride and others as a symbol of hate. >> i said how are you doing? when i did another fellow jumped on me. i got jumped. that was last monday. you try to take down the confederate memorial and take down the ten commandments in oklahoma. you are starting all this stuff you can't handle. >> all it takes is sometimes one person saying think, think it's just a symbol whether it's up there or in a museum it's just a symbol. it's what we do with that symbol that is going to determine whether south carolina is in the news for the wrong reasons or whether we are stepping off the grand stand and shaking hands and saying this is us. >> and south carolina is the only state that flies the confederate flag on capitol rounds. the seven flags you see here incorporate confederate imagery or elude to the confederate past. south carolina flag was the battle flag for the confederate states of america. now one reason the state seceded was to preserve their right to keep slaves. the shooting death of a woman in san francisco is exposing major problems with america's deportation process. >> we have more on the story including emotional comments from the woman's father who watched her die. >> reporter: walking with his daughter kate on a busy san francisco pier wednesday night jim steinly heard a loud pop ring out. >> this was evil. >> reporter: kate fell to the ground hit by a bullet the shooter running off without saying a word. >> there does not appear to be a connection between the victim and the suspect. at this point, it appears to be a random shooting incident. >> reporter: the suspect? 45-year-old juan francisco lopez sanchez, a undocumented immigrant and repeat fell felon. he has been deported five times to mexico. federal law enforcement sources tell cnn it would have been six deportation but authorities in san francisco wanted him on a drug related warrant so u.s. immigration and customs enforcement turned him over to deputies. i.c.e. officials requested an immigration detainer that would give them a head's up before his release. but the sheriff's department denied the request according to policy before letting him go. there was no legal cause to detain him. lopez sanchez now faces homicide charges. >> it's not going to bring kate back them findin the guy and the justice will work its way through the system. but our focus is on kate. >> the suspect reportedly told affiliate kgo he found the weapon on the ground and it accidentally fired when he picked it up. the united nations has released its newest picks for the world heritage list. we'll tell you which places made the cut. that's coming up. never settle for verizon's overpriced gimmicks. try the un-carrier risk-free for 14 days you'll love it, or we'll pay for you to go back. ♪ a good host, is a good host no matter where he's hosting. ♪ an hors d'oeuvre for the table? ♪ perhaps even an elegant gesture for the neighbors. ♪ stella artois host beautifully ♪ the goodness that goes into making a power kale chicken caesar salad is rivaled only, by the goodness felt while eating one. panera. food as it should be. look at this video out of china. drivers attempting to cross a flooded road. >> that is very brave, i've got to say. >> i hope he is all right. pedram javaheri has the details on the weather. >> this is incredible video out of china where we are seeing cars and motorcycles trying to cross the roads. this is incredible. and you see the truck trying to do the same and a bystander on the side of the road. and the force is inundating on the roads. it does not take much moving water and you look at the video again. it looks like a brief puddle but just that just ankle-deep water moving at 6 kilometers per hour can knock you off your feet. we say turn around don't drown is the statement used in the united states. 6 inches will move you off your feet. you bring that to knee high or 600 millimeters that lifts cars and moves them down stream. it is counter intuitive. you say the water is below the door of the vehicle but it takes less water to move the vehicle. we have a trio of tropical systems in the western and central pacific. linfa, we have had heavy rainfall in recent days. that system will weaken and bring some rains towards taiwan. it is this particular feature, chan-hom that is sitting out there west of guam that we are watching carefully. models show the initial storm falling apart and it could get up to 240 kilometers per hour. that would be a supertyphoon. this would be one of the bigger stories of the year if it remains this strong. okinawa, taipei eastern china all in line for damage with this storm system if it makes it there by the latter portion of the week. and the other story is the heat across europe. is this an optical ill love? it is an incredible site as people try to cool off. in germany, receiving the highest temperature germany has ever observed in recorded history. 104 fahrenheit. and frankfurt at 100 fahrenheit is occurring on sunday. but notice a pattern shift here the warmest weather moves east. london will begin a cooling trend. but severe storms in hanover. lightning strikes taking two lives in germany over the weekend. and hail size reports nearly the size of grapefruits or a teacup in diameter 3.5 inches or 9 centimeters in olpe germany. max you are probably glad to be getting away from the london heat. >> the sun came out when i left. >> that happens. >> we talk about heat waves. >> he is glad to be with us. >> i feel bad talking about a heat wave in uk. >> we will take you in atlanta. you are a welcome guest here. >> thank you, so much. over the weekend, the united nations added nine new cultureal sites to its heritage list. scotland made the list as well. it opened in 1890 and carries passengers and freight. it is the world's longest multispan cantilever bridge. and the alamo played a pivotal role in the texas revolution in 1836. coming up next hour we'll have more on the breaking news out of greece where the country's finance minister just resigned in a surprising move. i'm zain asher. >> i'm max foster. do stay with us. ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ if you want a paint with no harsh fumes. if you want a paint without harmful chemicals. if you want a paint that's safer for your family, and the environment... only this can. natura from benjamin moore. paint like no other. a new season brings a new look. a chance to try something different. this summer, challenge your preconceptions and experience a cadillac for yourself. ♪ ♪ take advantage of our summer offers. the 2015 cadillac srx, a crossover with space safety, and style. lease this from around $339 per month. ♪ ♪ we live in a pick and choose world. choose choose choose. but at bedtime? ...why settle for this? enter sleep number... don't miss the lowest prices of the season going on now. sleepiq technology tells you how well you slept and what adjustments you can make. you like the bed soft. he's more hardcore. so your sleep goes from good to great to wow! only at a sleep number store. right now, save $300 to $700 on select mattress sets, plus 36-month special financing. ends monday! know better sleep with sleep number. . -- captions by vitac -- www.vitac.com i'm zain asher a warm welcome to the viewers in the united states and around the world. >> i'm max foster. thank you for joining "cnn newsroom." >> we are following news from greece a country facing an uncertain financial future. >> y

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Transcripts For KPIX CBS Evening News With Scott Pelley 20150709

today was the day the computers died. the new york stock exchange went dark for the longest period since 9/11. and united airlines was forced to ground its fleet when its computers failed. but homeland security says there's no evidence of anything criminal. trading on the big board resumed late in the day and the dow ended with a loss of 261 points. anthony mason begins our coverage. >> reporter: the first glitches in the system began to appear soon after the opening bell when orders for some smaller stocks failed to go through says trader peter tuckman. >> in the midst of trying to fix those problems, they laid out some kind of a new program to prevent this from happening and that may have caused the further technical glitch. >> reporter: a little after 11:30 the n.y.s.e. shut down the entire exchange to sort out the problem and canceled some 700,000 orders in the system. but as the wall street trading floor went silent, trades could still be executed on other exchanges. the markets didn't panic. >> we're not seeing overreaction. we're not seeing fear. we're running in a technically advanced world that does have problems sometimes. >> reporter: in august of 2013 the nasdaq was similarly paralyzed by a three-hour shut down after a software upgrade. steve grubman is chief technical officer with intel security. >> as we upgrade systems in order to make them more reliable and more resilient to cyber attack, the very act of upgrading them will in some cases introduce changes that cause either failures or even new vulnerabilities. >> reporter: the exchange finally reopened at 3:10 in the afternoon with veteran traders like ted weisberg resigned to living in a new age. >> united airlines had a problem today. "the wall street journal" had a problem today, it happens. it happens. it happens. it doesn't happen because people make it happen, it just happens. >> reporter: the s.e.c. and the white house were kept informed while the stock exchange was down today. security experts say whatever the internal technical problem was, does not mean the exchange is any more vulnerable to outside attacks, scott. >> pelley: senior business correspondent anthony mason, anthony, thanks very much. that problem you heard mentioned at the "wall street journal," its web site crashed probably because so many folks were trying to find out what was happening with the stock exchange. the journal was offline for about an hour. at united airlines, the computers went down about 9:00 a.m. eastern time. planes sat idle, coast-to-coast. kris van cleave is following this. >> reporter: the computer glitch paralyzed united airlines, the nation's second largest carrier for roughly 90 minutes. in los angeles, a long line of passengers stretched well past the terminal. it was a similar story in boise, idaho, and at chicago o'hare airport. crowds at the nashville airport ticket counter greeted nancy williams this morning. >> i walked up to the kiosk to just quickly put my bag through and everything was just blank. >> reporter: blank united says because of an issue with a router that knocked several systems offline. passengers could not check in, employees reported flight plans could not be sent to cockpits and crew scheduling software also stopped working. josh marks advises airlines on their systems. and the airlines are so dependent on computers now it's virtually impossible to operate without them. >> there are things that can be done by hand such as printing paper tickets or manually entering flight plans in an aircraft but it adds so much time to a given operation, that by the time you take that into account, the airline is usually just better off just canceling the flight. >> reporter: the pilot on a denver bound flight offered tours of the cockpit because one passenger tweeted "we don't have anything better to do." >> y'all are wonderful people, thank you for your understanding. i really appreciate you very much. thank you. >> reporter: by mid-afternoon, 800 flights were delayed and nearly 60 canceled as the airline tried to catch up during the busy summer travel season. >> something like this can't happen for an airline the size of united. the impact on united from just today's event is going to be into the millions of dollars if not tens of millions of dollars. >> reporter: united has had a number of computer problems since its merger with continental just last month the airline had to ground flights because of a computer glitch. scott, the number of delays tonight has now surpassed 1,100. >> pelley: kris van cleave at washington's dulles airport, thanks very much. it's not a computer but an old- fashioned panic that sent the stock market plunging in the world's second largest economy. china's shanghai exchange has fallen 31% in a month. despite emergency intervention by the communist government. now there's a crisis of confidence in the market and in the leadership in beijing. seth doane is our man in china. seth, these chinese markets were soaring far above rationality so who is getting hurt now that the bubble is burst? the first hour is expected to be rough again today, more than 80% of investors here in china are so-called mom and pop outreach chain ease investors who got into a booming market. more than 4 million new investors got in in the month of may alone. and the government here has really worked as a sort of cheerleader encouraging people to invest. money has been relatively cheap to get so pem have borrowed heavily to buy stocks. and as stock prices have slid, we have seen panic selling. >> pelley: and the chinese government is taking extraordinary measures to try to stop this. >> reporter: that's right. more than a third of the 2,800's companies on the country's two main stock indexes here have been forced to stop trading. and the government has set up a massive $19 billion stabilization fund to try to buy up some of those shares and shore up the market. it so far has not really worked and that's creating fears here not only among average chinese but also within the ranks of the communist party, this, of course, scott is a country that is used to having total control over its economy. a place certainly that praises stability. >> pelley: seth doane in beijing at the start of another trading day there, seth, thanks very much. there was a shake-up today in the baltimore police department. justice correspondent jeff pegues reports the commissioner was fired. >> so we need a change. >> reporter: mayor stephanie rawlings-blake announced the change that many said was long overdue. she said questions about commissioner anthony batts' leadership was distracting from the fight against crime. >> too many continue to die on our streets including three just last night and one lost earlier today. families are tired of feeling this pain. >> reporter: batts had been in charge of the police department since 2012. in late april, he faced his biggest test after riots exploded in the city in the wake of the death of freddie gray in police custody. six officers have since been charged in the case. that created a rift between batts and his officers. they accused him of putting them in harm's way during the riots he was reported apologizing to the police union at a closed door meeting in may. >> reporter: despite the apology, some questioned whether police were easing up on arrests and protests. homicides spiked in the weeks after the riots. there were 42 murders in may after 22 in april, and 15 in march. just today that police officers union issued its report on the riots and strongly condemned batts' leadership. scott, with the rise in crime, it's been a long summer for baltimore and the officers charged in freddie gray's death will not be back in court until the fall. >> pelley: justice correspondent jeff pegues, thanks very much. today we learned that the gun used to murder a young woman in san francisco last week had been stolen from a federal agent. the killing of kathryn steinlee caught national attention because the suspect is an illegal immigrant who had been deported five times before. the gun was stolen in the burglary of the agent's car. the suspect says he found the gun and it went off accidentally. america's heroin problem is getting worse. there's a new report from the c.d.c. that says in just six years, heroin use has risen 150% to more than a half-million americans. and over a decade, use by women alone is up 100%. elaine quijano now on the most innocent victims of drug abuse. >> reporter: this newborn was in a neonatal intensive care unit at tufts medical center in boston for three weeks. the jerking movements are symptoms of opiate addiction. he was given morphine to ease his withdrawal. his 32-year-old mother asked not to be identified. >> i felt guilty. and i felt bad. i felt like that it was my fault because of my drug use. >> reporter: she says she became hooked on percocet at 17 after she had her wisdom teeth removed. for the last six years she's been taking subutex, a medication to keep her off prescription painkillers but it is still an addictive narcotic. dr. johnathan davis is chief of newborn medicine at tufts. >> when you look at these babies, it can break your heart because they are very, very irritable, inconsolable, they are crying, they have tremors. >> reporter: how fast is this problem growing? >> it's growing really fast. and we're very, very concerned. and with a seven fold increase in the last seven or eight years, we're keeping babies in the hospital much longer. the average cost of a baby who goes through withdrawal is approximately $53,000 in the united states compared to only $1,000 or two with a normal newborn. >> reporter: melissa morales who has battled a heroin addiction was on methadone treatment when she found out she was pregnant. her daughter weighing just over two pounds at birth went through withdrawal. when you saw her like that, what was going through your mind? >> regret. a lot of regret. >> reporter: jane alice is now 13 months old. she will be monitored for years. doctors are just beginning to study the long-term affects of babies born as opiate addicts. elaine quijano, cbs news boston. >> pelley: we've been learning this week that the pentagon is falling far behind in the most important part of the strategy against isis. training syrians and iraqis to do the fighting on the ground has turned out to be extraordinarily slow. so we asked david martin to look into this. >> reporter: at a hearing before the senate armed services committee, defense secretary ashton carter disclosed that a $500 million program to train 15,000 syrian opposition fighters has gotten off to an embarrassingly slow start. with just 60 recruits in training. >> i said the number 60 and i can look out at your faces and you have the same reaction i do. which is that that is an awfully small number. >> reporter: carter said 7,000 syrians have volunteered, but they first must go through screening designed to weed out extremists and those who want to use the american training and equipment not against isis, but against the syrian regime of bashar al-assad. a fight the u.s. wants no part of. some who make it through the screening quit the training and go home. said one u.s. official, "we are failing miserably." in iraq, the u.s. has trained some 10,000 iraqi soldiers but that too is going slower than planned due to a shortage of recruits. more alarming is that iraqi troops in the field have, as in the recent battle for ramadi not been willing to stand and fight, even when they outnumber the enemy. that said joint chiefs chairman general martin dempsey is not a problem that can be solved by american advisors. >> if it takes us to stiffen their spine in the face of a threat that is existential to them, then it doesn't seem to me that they are going to be stiff. >> reporter: for now the most capable ground troops fighting on the u.s. side are the kurds. with the help of air strikes they have regained territory in northern iraq and syria and are pushing toward the isis stronghold of raqqa. general dempsey has estimated it will take three years to push isis out of iraq. as for syria, scott, there is no timetable. >> pelley: david martin at the pentagon for us tonight, thank you. a doctor turned hundreds of patients into victims. and stole millions from medicare. so how did he finally get caught? and, a close encounter with whales. when the "cbs evening news" continues. continues. and a professional golfer have in common? we talked to our doctors about treatment with xarelto®. xarelto® is proven to treat and help reduce the risk of dvt and pe blood clots. xarelto® has also been proven to reduce the risk of stroke in people with afib, not caused by a heart valve problem. for people with afib currently well managed on warfarin, there is limited information on how xarelto® and warfarin compare in reducing the risk of stroke. i tried warfarin before, but the blood testing routine and dietary restrictions had me off my game. not this time. not with xarelto®. i'll have another arnold palmer. make mine a kevin nealon. really, brian? hey, safety first. like all blood thinners, don't stop taking xarelto® without talking to your doctor as this may increase your risk of a blood clot or stroke. while taking, you may bruise more ea sily and it may take longer for bleeding to stop. xarelto® may increase your risk of bleeding if you take certain medicines. xarelto® can cause serious, and in rare cases, fatal bleeding. get help right away for unexpected bleedin g, unusual bruising or tingling. if you have had spinal anesthesia while on xarelto® watch for back pain or any nerve or muscle related signs or symptoms. do not tak e xarelto® if you have an artificial heart valve or abnormal bleeding. tell your doctor before all planned medical or dental procedures. before starting xarelto® tell your doctor about any kidney liver, or bleeding problems. xarelto® has been prescribed more than 11 million times in the u.s. and that number's growing. like your guys' scores. with xarelto® there is no regular blood monitoring and no known dietary restrictions. treatment with xarelto® was the right move for us. ask your doctor about xarelto®. bring us your aching and sleep deprived. bring us those who want to feel well rested. aleve pm. the only one to combine a safe sleep aid... plus the 12 hour pain relieving strength of aleve. be a morning person again with aleve pm. >> pelley: federal p >> pelley: federal prosecutors are asking for a sentence of 175 years for a cancer doctor whoim victimized hundreds of patients with unnecessary treatments, all so he could make millions in insurance payments. some of his patients didn't even have cancer. dean reynolds was at day three of the sentencing hearing in detroit. >> reporter: victims of dr. farid fata gathered outside the federal courthouse and spoke about how he did so much damage for so long. liz lupo said her mother, who died an agonizing death from lung cancer, was too trusting. >> she wanted to believe him because he was the only one giving her hope. >> reporter: but fata used his elite credentials and large practice as a smoke screen to dupe patients and fleece medicare and private insurers. he discouraged patients from getting second opinions and belittled them when he asked about his painful but always billable chemotherapy treatments. >> the doctor would send me down the hall in the waiting room which would be passed the i.c.u. doors, in the waiting room so i wouldn't hear anything, but you could still hear it loud and clear. >> reporter: hear what? >> her screams. >> reporter: when angela sought a job as a nurse for him she was alarmed by how the chemo drugs were being administered at his office. >> i questioned quite a few of the medications, like that is not supposed to be given. that drug is not supposed to be given that way. and response i got from the nurse that i was shadowing was well, that's how we give it here. >> reporter: she didn't take the job and filed a complaint with state regulators. fata was investigated but cleared. finally in 2013, after one of the doctors fata employed complained, the f.b.i. was called in and fata was arrested, but not before he hurt people like teddy howard. you did not have cancer? >> no. >> reporter: who told you you had cancer? >> dr. fata. >> reporter: fata's chemotherapy was pointless. howard needed a new liver and now requires a lifetime of medication to stay healthy. >> i take about 40 pills a day. >> reporter: when we asked a former federal prosecutor here if something like this could happen again, scott, he said sure. especially when desperate people place all of their faith in a man they should be able to trust. >> pelley: dean reynolds reporting for us tonight, dean thank you very much. a groundskeeper may want to put in for hazard pay. that's next. our cloud can keep them safe and accessible anywhere. my drivers don't have time to fill out forms. tablets. keep them all digital. we're looking to double our deliveries. our fleet apps will find the fastest route. oh, and your boysenberyy apple scones smell about done. ahh, you're good. i like to bake. with at&t get up to $400 dollars in total savings on tools to manage your business. i take prilosec otc each morning for my frequent heartburn. because it gives me... zero heartburn! prilosec otc. the number 1 doctor-recommended frequent heartburn medicine for 9 straight years. one pill each morning. 24 hours. zero heartburn. this allergy season, will you be a sound sleeper, or a mouth breather. well, put on a breathe right strip and instantly open your nose up to 38% more than allergy medicines alone. so you can breathe and sleep. shut your mouth and sleep right. breathe right. fact. advil is not only strong it's gentle on your body too. no wonder doctors and patients have trusted advil... for their tough pains for over 30 years. relief doesn't get any better than this. advil. feel secure in your dentures... feel free to be yourself all day. just switch from denture paste to sea-bond denture adhesive seals. holds stronger than the leading paste all day... without the ooze. feel secure. be yourself. with stronger, clean sea-bond. ♪ ( "magnum p.i." theme playing) >> pelley: the former star of "magnum p.i." got busted by a real private investigator, hired by a california water district it is suing tom selleck saying that he got around drought restrictions by having someone steal water from a fire hydrant and haul it to his ranch. we tried to reach selleck for comment but came up dry. latinos are now california's largest ethnic group according to the census bureau. the strait has about 15 million latinos and about 14.9 million nonhispanic whites. new mexico is the only other state where latinos outnumber whites. an alaskan fisherman has and an alaskan fisherman has a whale of a tale, about a dozen humpbacks surfaced just feet from brad riches boat. rarely do you see so many having lunch together. have a look at this photo. landmarks as we never see them coming up next. ing... kind of like you sometimes, grandpa. well, when you have copd it can be hard to breathe. it can be hard to get air out, which can make it hard to get air in. so i talked to my doctor. she said... doctor: symbicort could help you breathe better, starting within 5 minutes. symbicort doesn't replace a rescue inhaler for sudden symptoms. symbicort helps provide significant improvement of your lung function. symbicort is for copd, including chronic bronchitis and emphysema. it should not be taken more than twice a day. symbicort contains formoterol. medicines like formoterol increase the risk of death from asthma problems. symbicort may increase your risk of lung infections osteoporosis, and some eye problems. you should tell your doctor if you have a heart condition or high blood pressure before taking it. grandfather: symbicort could mean a day with better breathing. watch out, piggies! child giggles doctor: symbicort. breathe better starting within 5 minutes. call or go online to learn more about a free prescription offer. if you can't afford your medication, astrazeneca may be able to help. song: rachel platten "fight song" ♪ two million, four hundred thirty-four thousand three hundred eleven people in this city. and only one me. ♪ i'll take those odds. ♪ be unstoppable. the all-new 2015 ford edge. unbelievable! toenail fungus? 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because my teeth are yellow. why don't you use a whitening toothpaste? i'm afraid it's bad for my teeth. try crest 3d white. crest 3d white diamond strong toothpaste and rinse... ...gently whiten... ...and fortify weak spots. use together for 2 times stronger enamel. crest 3d white. backfire on the city. next weather talent appears at wx center with generic >> pelley: in our continuing effort to cover the world from every possible angle, anna werner has the view from high up looking straight down. >> come a little south on your next circle. >> reporter: it's a typical afternoon for 71-year-old photographer jeffrey milstein. >> that building with all those lights is cool. >> reporter: he's dangling out of a helicopter in new york city looking for the perfect shot. from 2,000 feet up, milstein captures our world from a different perspective. >> you see where everything is and you see how people are moving and how housing is formed and the different patterns in the roads and just you get a feel for how they look from the air. >> reporter: milstein started flying and taking photos as a teenager. 50 years later, he still loves to do both. >> it just felt free to be up there. and i just love taking pictures. >> reporter: he spent 20 years as an architect, but 15 years ago he turned his focus to his camera. >> i like to try to create some order out of the chaos by getting things very lined up and balanced. >> reporter: his unique approach of shooting the underbelly of an airplane landed him a show at the smithsonian. >> the thing that i like about it is you get all the detail and then you can blow it up really big so you get the sense of what it's like when the big giant plane flies right over your head. >> reporter: whoever thinks of shooting the underside of an airplane? >> i do. >> reporter: he flies below an object and over others, he photographed skyline, airports cruise ships. >> you start looking at it and you start seeing the golf putting course and basketball courts. >> reporter: it seems like everybody has been out on a sunday in a boat like this. >> exactly there are little stories going on. these are people in a classic chris-craft and they are all a little bit older and then you get the young people zipping around. each one is its own little story. >> reporter: a snapshot of the way we live our lives. one picture at a time. anna werner, cbs news, new york. >> pelley: and that's our view tonight. for all of us at cbs news, all around the world, good night. cbs captioning sponsored by cbs captioned by media access group at wgbh access.wgbh.org your realtime captioner is linda marie macdonald. tonight, new information about the gun used to kill a woman walking on a san francisco pier a week ago today but there are plenty of questions about how the suspect got it. good evening, i'm allen martin in for ken bastida. >> i'm veronica de la cruz. authorities now know where the gun came from that was used to kill a woman on pier 14. they traced it back to a federal agency. kpix 5's devin fehely begins our coverage. >> reporter: how did that gun end up in the hands of an accused killer? we now know definitively that the gun used to kill 32-year- old kate steinle did in fact belong to a federal agent, a ranger with the bureau of land management. a spokesman for the agency says the gun was his official firearm given to him by the agency. but it was apparently stolen in a car break-in in downtown san francisco on june 27. the ranger according to the agency reported the theft to the police department. what's less clear is how the gun ended up in the hands of the accused killer, juan francisco sanchez. lopez sanchez claims he found the gun and fired it accidentally although he is currently charged with murder suggesting police and prosecutors believe this was an intentional act not an accident. a spokesman for the bureau of land management says the ranger was on official business when they stopped in san francisco where the break-in occurred and a spokesman says the agency was saddened by news the steinle daetz and expressed their condolences by the news of

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Transcripts For CNNW Erin Burnett OutFront 20150707

he was deported five times is accused of shooting and killing this 32-year-old san francisco woman, kate steinle was working with her father on a pier in san francisco. she was shot once in the chest. sanchez even admitted to the shooting but he says it was just an accident. immigration officials are blaming the city of san francisco. it's a so-called sanctuary city for immigrants. they are blaming it for failing to turn sanchez over for deportation. he had been arrested in the city on drug charges but released instead of being handed over for his sixth deportation. you heard me right, sixth. tonight, for the first time democratic presidential candidate hillary clinton weighing in. >> here is a case where we've deported deported he ends back up in our country and i think the city made a mistake. >> and republican presidential can dadedidate donald trump refused to back down from his controversial comments calling illegal immigrants rapists and criminals. >> talking about illegal immigration and it's a bad subject in this country, and people don't have the guts to address it. we have to stop illegal immigration into this country. it's killing our country. >> "outfront" from san francisco tonight, the stark trues about this is if san francisco turned sanchez over for deportation, kate steinle would be alive tonight. >> reporter: that's true but san francisco sheriff says hey, if ice did its job knowing what the policy rules that have been in place for years now and gone to the a court, he wouldn't have been out, either. they would have gotten their man. now facing murder charges, undocumented immigrant juan francisco lopez sanchez told a judge he was not guilty in the killing of 32-year-old kate steinle. even with the spanish translator he didn't seem to understand what was going on in court and answered the judge's questions about court dates with the same answer not guilty in spanish. wednesday, kate steinle was enjoying a walk on pier 14 with her father when she was struck with a bullet. when she laid on the ground she pleaded with her father to help her. he tried but she died at the hospital. the detail haves sparked a political firestorm because lopez sanchez was an undocumented immigrant allowed out of jail three months ago even after his record showed several felony convictions and five deportations to mexico. as the so-called sanctuary city san francisco said it was following it's policy that prevents for holding non-violent offenders unless it has a court order. ice blames the local government for failing ochoto notify it about sanchez' release but the federal government says ice didn't do what it was supposed to do. >> did you say the feds made the blunder? >> the laws are changing in municipalityies and i feel the feds need to really catch up and this was affirmed even in a meeting that i had with homeland security cabinet secretary johnson and their deputy dieartment director this year when he met to suggest our laws are changing. what is it that the feds are going to do to comport with our requirements because ultimately they still need an order from a judge in order to facilitate the deportation of somebody who had been incarcerated. >> reporter: ice did not get a judge's order. immigrants' rights advocates says these cases misses a huge point. it's not about immigrants' rights it's about gun rights. >> we're getting distracted by conflicting immigration with criminal justice, and criminalizing entire communities based on the horrible actions of one person and that doesn't address public safety. it doesn't prevent these horrible tragedies from happening again. there needs to be questions asked about how people obtain guns in this country compared to other countries. >> reporter: lopez sanchez is expected back here in court on june 20th and june 27th and that is because when the judge kept asking about those dates, he was very confused and just kept saying not guilty so the judge says okay we'll go ahead and have you here in court. he's now in jail on a $5 million bail. erin? >> thank you very much sarah. incredibly horrible story. a tragedy in matter how you look at it. so how much crime is really committed by undocumented or illegal immigrants? is this as big of a problem as donald trump says. tom foreman is here with an investigation and is trump right? >> erin if you look at certain facts, there is something to support what he says. in 2014 well over 30,000 undocumented immigrants with criminal records were released. for all types of crimes big and small and u.s. immigration customs enforcement says a staggering 121 people released in this fashion were later rearrested for suspected involvement in murder. these cases often make headlines. one of the former contestants for "america's top model" was killed in a triple homicide in north carolina. an undocumented immigrant once in custody and was incredibly set free. in 2010 a woman in new york had been men niced by an undocumented worker and then because china would not take him back he was set free and authorities say he hunted her down in new york and brutally killed her literally ripping out her heart and these stories go on and on erin and the country this big, does that represent a gigantic surging problem? i don't know. but it is very shocking the cases you do hear about. >> it is shocking and troubling and here is the question tom, these people are in custody. they are in the united states illegally, and they are criminals in these cases. why are they ever set free? they are in custody. why wouldn't you say there is the boarder, good-bye let the door hit you on the way out? >> that is a fantastic question and part of this is a legal matter. i'll say immigration has a person in custody. they want to deport him but as in the case with the guy from china, the home country says we don't want him, either. we'll not take him back. the supreme court ruled these people cannot be held forever just because they might be a threat. so you would think that all these law enforcement agencies state, local and federal would agree to track these dangerous individuals, but even though we've talked for years about a comprehensive network of information sharing between all law enforcement agencies it still does not exist. so one againency may know a dangerous guy is free and roaming but the local folks may not though and vice versa and too often, erin, the victims have no clue. >> unbelievable. all right. thank you very much tom. "outfront" now jose antonio vargas he is chronicled his own life as an undocumented immigrant in the united states since he was 12. jose look this is a dark side of the story, right? 30,000 undocumented immigrants with criminal records as tom reported released last year. that's just one year. many people hear that and are shocked. they think look, if you're in the country illegally, you commit a crime and get deported period. >> by the way, 30,000 out of an estimated 11 million undocumented immigrants right? 30,000 of estimated 11 million undocumented immigrants. i have to tell you, listening to that report by tom, i'm not sure if he read the study by the university of mass massachusetts saying foreign born individuals exhibit low crime. a study from northwestern university said there is essentially no correlation between immigrants and violent crime. we in the media are the ones making these correlations that since we're talking about quote unquote illegal people that they are violent criminals. this is a tragedy. i completely agree with you -- >> look, you may have a point but let me ask you about correlating, correlation, right? let me just ask you about the raw absolute number right? 30,000 undocumented immigrants with criminal records released last year and not deported. that's still wrong, isn't it? >> by the way, like i don't know the numbers in terms of how many of those people committed violent acts or murder. i don't know that. but what i do know is a lot of people considered to be actually if you look today people actually in prison now in custody, a lot of them is because of immigration violations not because of criminal violent violations. i mean i have to say reading the news we're talking about immigration, which is incredibly complicated, right? >> yes. >> my question about that case in san francisco is why didn't ice, one of the most rogue, if not the most rogue, why didn't they issue a warrant to arrest him? right? >> let me ask you about that case. the suspect in the san francisco murder case on his way to be deported for a sixth time. san francisco didn't hand him over because it's a sanctuary city -- >> wait wait wait that's fact factually incorrect. they can actually once a judge issued a warrant, they could have turned him in, but ice didn't do that. ice didn't follow that. i actually think this is where it's interesting, right? >> so you're saying it's ice's fault, not san francisco's? >> yes, ice's fault and people have to understand what ice does. right? we're talking about billions of dollars spending supposedly to keep our boarders secure and mind you, this guy got caught. he kept going back in and out. how did that happen? >> ice, just so you know is saying they asked san francisco to notify them when they would release this guy. they said that was not honored, they were not notified. that's what they are saying. >> again, to me from an immigration process, the fact they didn't get a judge to issue a warrant, not just deport him but detain him, not even to detain him. back to donald trump because we have to talk about this. the irresponsibility that donald trump has been doing in the past couple weeks trying to relate immigration, illegal immigration, criminality and mexicans there are 33 million mexican americans in this country, 22 million of whom are born in america, are american born citizens. yet, donald trump stalks about immigration as if it's a mexican problem. this donald trump, i mean i was watching your show last night, actually aaron and when donald trump says that we must secure the boarder, why doesn't anybody in the media actually talk about the fact that in the past decade those 1 million less people who have come to this country. >> economic crisis had a lot to do with that. let me play -- >> if you talk to border patrol -- >> i want to play what donald has been saying because to your point he doubled down not backing down. here he is on this program, another program on cnn. >> you don't have any regrets about that word -- >> some are good and some are rapists and some are killers and we don't even know what we're getting. all you have to do is go to fusion and pick up the stories on rape. >> that's about women being raped, it's not about criminals coming across the boarder or entering the country. >> well, somebody is doing the raping don. >> now, jose the cases that tom was mentioning and to your point, they are just a few cases but horrific cases and shouldn't be happening. those people shouldn't be here that are doing those kinds of crimes. >> dylann roof shouldn't be happening. dylann roof shouldn't be happening but to say these cases represent 11 million people and back to donald trump, here is my question erin i really want to ask you this question what is the responsibility of journalists? once donald trump says secure this boarder, what is our responsibility to say mr. trump right, boarder, the level of migration from here from mexico to the united states is actually at the lowest level since the '70s. >> right, which is a fair point but fair point to note 30,000 undocumented immigrants were released and not deported. i think your point is fair but that point is fair too. >> we're talking about 30,000 people. i don't know the specific stories. mind you, what happened in san francisco is a tragedy but to blame sanction war blame swank -- sanctuary cities these people are immigranted in cities and communities to be part of that community so they can report a crime, so they can report harassment and be part of the community. that's what that is about. >> jose, thank you very much and i do want to note for the record a local reporter in san francisco and affiliate of cnn asked sanchez why he live in san francisco and he did say specifically because it was a sanctuary city where he would not be pursued by immigration officials. "outfront" next are undocumented immigrants building donald trump's latest hotel and janice dickinson, one of cosby's most vocal accusers does his testimony support her accusations or not? and jared fogle, subway dumping him. could he face federal charges. when you do business everywhere, the challenges of keeping everyone working together can quickly become the only thing you think about. that's where at&t can help. at&t has the tools and the network you need to make working as one easier than ever. virtually anywhere. leaving you free to focus on what matters most. when i started at the shelter, i noticed benny right away. i just had to adopt him. he's older so he needs my help all day. when my back pain flared up we both felt it i took tylenol at first but i had to take 6 pills to get through the day. then my friend said "try aleve". just two pills, all day. and now, i'm back for my best bud! aleve. all day strong and try aleve pm now with an easy open cap. i already feel like we're the most connected but i think this solo date will seal the deal. sure! i offer multi-car, safe driver, and so many other discounts that people think i'm a big deal. and boy, are they right. ladies, i can share hundreds in savings with all of you! just visit progressive.com today. but right now, it's choosing time. ooh! we have a winner. all: what? [chuckles] he's supposed to pick one of us. this is a joke, right? that was the whole point of us being here. our eyes...they have a 200-degree range of sight. which is good for me hey! ... and bad for the barkley twins. take care of all your most important parts with centrum. now with our most vitamin d three ever. tonight damming report claiming undock documented residents are working for donald trump on the construction site in washington d.c. they told the reporter they entered the united states illegally. joe johns is "outfront." >> reporter: just blocks from the white house in downtown washington real estate mogul donald trump is turning the old post office pavilion into a luxury hotel. >> it will be perhaps the most luxury hotel in the world. >> reporter: he to theauted it on the campaign trail. >> we had a good plan and great financial statement. >> reporter: that construction site has become ground zero in the debate over illegal immigration sparked by trump's comments about mexican immigrants last month. >> they are bringing drugs. they are bringing crime. they are rapists and some, i assume are good people. >> reporter: "the washington post" interviewed about 15 laborers at the d.c. hotel site report thanksgiving that manying many revealed they entered the u.s. ill legegally. none would speak on camera and none would say whether they legally resided in the u.s. but expressed outrage over what they said were trump's offensive remarks. [speaking foreign language]. >> reporter: one colleague told cnn he didn't conon on the project who was undocumented and others said they were focused on the job, not the controversy. >> i don't give a [ bleep ] about it. i'm here to make money. >> reporter: a trump spokesperson said the obligation to check all workers on site is exclusive to lend lease, the contractor on the project adding this of course assumes the assertion regarding the employee ease status is accurate. so far, the controversy hasn't hurt trump in the polls, but it has affected his bottom line. nbc dropped trump's hit show "the apprentice." that network and univision pulled out of miss usa. serta and macy's cut ties. >> i'm really big on dressing for success. >> for the people doing this this isn't good for my brand. it's bad for my brand. maybe i'm leading in polls but this is not good i lose customers, i lose people. >> reporter: tonight the list of those distancing themselves from trump is growing. the pga will not hold the grand slam golf tournament at drump nation -- trump nationingal looking for another venue. >> joining me now, my panel. paul this washington post report is exactly what trump's gop rivals wanted right? they wanted someone to come in and undermine him on this core issue but is it enough to hurt trump with voters? >> you know, i don't know. joe's report is terrific. i like the construction guy. >> that was the highlight. >> that was great. >> he is speaking as we talked about on the air before to a lot of anger among folks but if you get labeled a hypocrite, his answer is this is a subcontractor responsible for this. the next step will be this. joe pointed out the pga is celebrating, reminded me that mr. trump owns golf courses. i'm not a golfer but you wonder around on the grass or something. somebody once told me some of the people that work at gulf courses sometimes don't have proper papers in a boarder state like california or los angeles that broke up with the pga today. this could cascade for mr. trump. i'm not making allegations. i haven't the slightest idea. >> you're saying it's possible. >> it's plausible other journalist will look into it and republicans may be goating them into doing it. >> who knows where that washington pose report originated. to paul's point, trump's rivals want voters to the see him as a hypocrite. as paul pointed out, he says it's the contractor responsible for the hiring background checks. that's true. that's how the construction business works. will this move the needle against trump or not? >> when you compound that with the fact you have to remember that trump employees a lot of people. he employs a lot of people at the golf courses. he employs a lot of people at nbc for "the apprentice" and he employs a lot of people that make his shirts and ties and if you remember back to the presidential announcement, he declared he would be the greatest jobs' president god created and i think if republicans or journalists wanted to press him on something substantive in this they would ask how many people have lost their jobs because of your message and because of the business opportunities that have been dumped? >> now, paul okay let's take the other side. hillary clinton, bill clinton were at donald trump's wedding. lots of pictures. donald trump donateed to hillary clinton's senate campaign. in this picture you'll see bill with donald at a charity golf event. they are friendly. isn't it a bit hypocriteical of hillary clinton to be disowning trump as she did in the interview that i'll play in a minute? >> we'll get to the clip. i noticed she was very gentle. she distanced herself from the comments and said they were disappointing. >> so you thought it was gentle? >> believe me i've gotten scorched by hilary that's mild for her. so she's like saying that's disappointing because as you point out, they have a friendship. he did support her in the past and i bet you he's sitting on a stack of very graceious thank you notes. >> and i'm sure he saved every one. >> he's great at this stuff. so i don't think she's hypocritical because i didn't think she went over the top. she slammed jeb bush harder than donald trump. >> interesting though interesting take on it. so let's get to the interview that breanna did with hillary clinton, s.c. here is what hillary clinton had to say on trump's comments on undocumented immigrants. >> i'm very disappointed in those comments and i feel very bad and very disappointed with him and with the republican party for not responding immediately and saying enough stop it. >> it does now i hear it with paul's context, it does sound soft. >> i think actually that's a gift to republicans, especially republicans like rick perry and bush and gram who have an opportunity to come out hard against the comparison between them and donald trump, as they have fairly positions. so i think that is an opportunity she just handed over. but i think her larger comments on immigration, i don't know if you plan to play any of those but her larger comments on immigration i thought sounded really extreme and outside the main stream of what most people think on this issue. most people on immigration prioritize boarder security not a bathpathway to citizen ship. most immigrants prioritize legal status. many want to return home. in the wake of the sanction wary city shooting and the five-time deported seven-time convicted felon, most people are not in the mood to be told by hillary clinton, we're not sending them all home. that was tone deaf out of step moment she had in that otherwise great interview that breanna did. >> if she follows the polls, we accuse her of being authentic and this time she didn't and she's tone deaf. cut the lady a break. she just actually said what she thinks and i thought that was one of her better moments in the interview because you could see she's actually been talking to voters and she's very concerned about the issue of immigration and the pain that it's caused in the latino community. >> thanks to both of you. don't miss donald trump back on cnn tomorrow night at this time with anderson an "360". tv network pulling cosby show reruns. my gust called america's first super model, janice dickinson and jared fogle, his home raided by federal agents. subway erasing the image cutting ties with him. why? we have that breaking story ahead. [ male announcer ] we know they're out there. you can't always see them. but it's our job to find them. the answers. the solutions. the innovations. all waiting to help us build something better. something more amazing. a safer, cleaner brighter future. at boeing, that's what building something better is all about. ♪ ♪ ♪ i'm the biggest threat your business will ever face. your size, your reputation mean nothing. because tomorrow, i'll be your competitor. and i was born to disrupt everything you think your business is about. see you soon. the next wave of the internet is bringing the next wave of competition. we're ready. are you? tonight the cosby show pulled from the air, one of the fastest growing tv shows dropping cosby reruns after bill cosby admitted he drugged women he wanted to have sex with but tonight there are questions surrounding cosby's admission since some women involved knew about the drugs. is this the slam dunk that vin kates accusers. in a moment i'll speak live with one of those accusers super model janice dickinson but first gene casarez is out front. >> reporter: one by one they came forward. >> i woke up or came to very groggy with him removing my underwear. >> the room started to spin. >> he was on top of me kissing me forcefully. >> reporter: more than 25 accusers over the past 40 years but some people have doubts. >> getting accused of stuff when you're famous it opens the door for everybody to come out and say and me too, boss. >> reporter: some now disbelieved. jill scott supported cosby sweating in december, i'm respecting a man that's done more for the image of brown people than anybody ever. now tweeting she was wrong. sadly his own testimony offers proof of terrible deeds, which is all i ever required to believe acquisitions. that testimony is from a deposition given by cosby under oath in 2005 as part of a civil case filed that same year in pennsylvania by andrea constant an employee at temple university where cosby was on the board of trustees. constant alleged she was sexual assaulted by cosby in 2004. when you got the quaaludes, was in your mind you were going to use these queueaaludes for young women you wanted to have sex with? yes. did you ever give them the quaaludes for sex? >> she meets me back stage, i give her quaaludes, we have sex. while they don't constitute proof, it's the closest cosby has come to admitting he drugged women and took advantage. according to abc news cosby's camp said in a statement the only reason mr. cosby settled is because it would have been embarrassing in those days to put all those women on the stand and his family had no clue. that would have been very hurtful. but cosby's lawyer marty singer tells cnn, we have no knowledge who issued the statement to abc. it was not an authorized statement from any cosby representative. the records were made public monday after the associated press went to court. in renld ring thedering the decision the stark contrast between bill cosby the public moralest and bill cosby the subject of serious caleallegations concerning improper and criminal conduct is a matter as to which the public has a significant interest. bill cosby was deposed for two days in 2005 and there was an interim seal put on it so it definitely could have been public but everything came to a halt the case did not go to trial. this was a confidentiality agreement, that deposition was to be sealed and wasn't opened until now, ten years later, erin? >> incredible. you think about that decision made all right. thank you very much. "outfront" now, janice dickinson, she claims bill cosby assaulted her in 2007 and she's suing him for defamation. >> he called your claims a fabricated lie. yesterday when you heard in news cosby admitted to giving drugs to women he wanted to have sex with, what do you think? i'm >> i'm angry. i'm angry that it happened to me in the first place. i'm angry that i was drugged against the law and that i was raped without my consent against the law. two violations. i think that i have mixed emotions. >> and janice -- >> my feelings -- >> i'm sorry. >> my feelings are that i've not only i, all of these women and even the women that haven't come forward have been holding on to this and we have been called liars and we have been called you know fabrication, fabricating these lies and making false allegations against this big, america's dad hero power narcissistic cause. i'm very upset, and i'm embarrassed, embarrassed for his fans that he has deceived for all of these years. more than 30 you know. i've been holding on to this since 1982 and i am just extremely upset. i do not feel vindicated. i do not feel i don't feel you know, any yippee. i feel that you know women that have been supporting him, his wife his family his fans whoopi goldberg all these other women, ms. scott, thank you for coming forward, ms. scott, by the way. it's now up it's now, i just need lisa to depose this man so i can have some soleace to my soul. what about the embarrassment for my family, for my friends, for the people that i've worked for, the work that i've been denied? the catastrophic nightmares. the embarrassment to my children. >> lisa, you know when you hear janice and it's very powerful, janice when you say you don't feel vindicated it isn't that simple it isn't that black and white. you know lisa of usually in the deposition bill cosby didn't admit to actually drugging accusers without knowledge because the two women knew that these were drugs they were being handed and i spoke -- >> wait not exactly. not exactly. his attorney didn't allow him to the answer that question. and that's very important because i've read the several hundred pages of documents released yesterday, not just the ap couple paragraphs on them and his attorneys blocked him from answering almost every question. in fact it's amazing he did answer this question about the drugs. somehow that question got out and answer got out and went back to objecting to just about everything. cosby did not deny, he just didn't answer the question whether it was done without consent. >> he didn't and his attorneys said the women knew to your point it's unclear whether they knew or didn't but this is what they are putting out there. let me just play for you what defense attorney tom mezro said about the accusations. this is what he said on the show last night. >> you know, in the '70s and '80s you had a lot of situations where men were giving drugs to women, women were giving drugs to men, both were consenting, both had alterer motives. >> what do you say to those who say this isn't a clear cut case? >> i love tom but you got to be kidding me. this has nothing to do with people consensusly doing drugs. even if a woman voluntarily uses drugs, once she's passed out and somebody has sex with her, that's called rape period end of story. but we have a big spread sheet in my office of the 47 women that came forward publicly and all of them say they were drugged without their consent. janice for example, thought she was taking a little pill cosby was offering for menstrual cramps and completely knocked her out. >> i was raped. >> i'll play a little more. in jean's piece you heard but here is more of what whoopee said. >> in america, still, i know it's a shock but you actually were innocent until proven guilty. he has not been proven a rapist. >> janice when you hear that what do you think? how does someone at this point prove, prove something? >> i can't answer anything about whoopee goldberg you know she's a talk show host you know. i don't know if she's ever been raped or drugged or bought off. i don't know. i can't answer that. >> erin? >> yes, lisa? >> can i take a quick shot at that? >> yes. >> interesting bill cosby and supporters say it's never been proven in court when we know for at least ten years cosby's attorneys have done everything possible to keep women out of court. that's what they did in 2005 and are doing in our case. bill cosby refused to show up for his deposition in our case. i guess now we know why he doesn't want to come down and answer questions. janice dickinson will get her day in court. >> lisa what will you do next with the case? >> well we're going to fight back against all of the technical al gangsstech nikin this case -- technical allegations and we'll make a motion bill cosby like every other litigant has to come down and answer questions under oath. there is no special exception for celebrities. he will have to come to my office and answer questions. i'm sure his attorneys will fight everything but i'm confident the judge here and the judge in pennsylvania will help and assist us in getting justice. >> i hope he does answer those questions and i thank both of you very much. janice i know it's hard to talk about but thank you for coming on and answering my questions. thank you for coming. >> you're welcome, erin thank you. up next, investigationors raiding the home of jared fogle. the company suspending the relationship and the dark story behind the raid is next. video surfacing of a star quarterback punching a woman in the face. she says something racist to prompt this his lawyer says but would that excuse the violence? 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>> ryan thank you. we'll be following that story. next, we have newly released video of a star quarterback punching a woman at a bar. this is actually of usually, really hard to watch. his attorney says she used a racial slur and that attorney is my guest next. unbelievable! toenail fungus? seriously? smash it with jublia! jublia is a prescription medicine proven to treat toenail fungus. use jublia as instructed by your doctor. look at the footwork! most common side effects include ingrown toenail, application site redness, itching, swelling burning or stinging, blisters, and pain. smash it! make the call and ask your doctor if jublia is right for you. new larger size now available. push your enterprise and you can move the world. but to get from the old way to the new you'll need the right it infrastructure. from a partner who knows how to make your enterprise more agile, borderless and secure. hp helps business move on all the possibilities of today. and stay ready for everything that is still to come. developing some of the highest quality, clinically proven nutrition isn't easy so at gnc, why do we do it? 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>> that's not our message, erin. that got originally leaked and i was asked about it. there are witnesses that will testify to that. i want tolly leaked and i was asked about it. there are witnesses who will testify to that. but i want to tell you, our message is clear. deandre is very apologetic for his behavior. this is a young man already based on his family already has him volunteering at a battered women's shelter. he is trying learn and grow from this experience. he made a miss take. he certainly wishes he walked away and didn't engage in what occurred here and is basically trying to get his life back together, which isch has already derailed. >> so you're not trying to say the racial slurs, no matter how horrible they may have been and horrific they may have been justify what happened. >> no. in fact they occurred early on in the conversation before he struck her. and immediately, once she turned around. that wasn't what -- as many people are saying provoked this incident. i disagree with that. he has no excuses. he owns this. he realizes he made a huge mistake. and he is off the team. his scholarship has been taken away. and he is trying to learn and grow from this experience. >> so what will happen to him? as you said. star quarterback. he's been kicked off the team of he lost his scholarship. >> hopefully we can teach our young adults if they make mistakes, they need on learn from them and hopefully grow from there. that may stop violence in the future. and his family is strongly against violence against women. this was not the way he was raised and he feels very ashame embarrass asked apologetic over the whole incident. now all he can possibly do is try and figure out how he might be able to get an education. his family doesn't come from money. and certainly, it is going to make him getting an education extremely difficult because the scholarship is taken away. >> so he's asking for a second chance. he is volunteering at the battered women's shelter. >> yes. he realizes he has to prove himself now and that's what he is prepared to do. if someone is willing to take a chance and give him a second chance, he is more than happy to try to make amends for what has occurred. >> thank you very much. i appreciate it. obviously appreciate your taking the stand you're taking. >> it is a very difficult situation. >> thank you so much. >> thank you. and we'll be right back. visibility into your business, it can quickly become the only thing you think about. that's where at&t can help. at&t's innovative solutions connect machines and people... to keep your internet of things in-sync, in real-time. leaving you free to focus on what matters most. you total your brand new car. nobody's hurt,but there will still be pain. it comes when your insurance company says they'll only pay three-quarters of what it takes to replace it. what are you supposed to do, drive three-quarters of a car? now if you had a liberty mutual new car replacement, you'd get your whole car back. i guess they don't want you driving around on three wheels. smart. new car replacement is just one of the features that come standard with a base liberty mutual policy. and for drivers with accident forgivness,rates won't go up due to your first accident. learn more by calling switch to liberty mutual and you can save up to $423. for a free quote today,call liberty mutual insurance at see car insurance in a whole new light. liberty mutual insurance. tomorrow john walsh will join us. the hunt starts this week. thank you for joining us. as always we want to remind to you please set your dvr to report "outfront" so you can watch anywhere any time. anderson cooper "360" starts right now. good evening. thank you for joining us. a very big night ahead. hillary clinton's first national interview since entering the 2016 presidential race and you'll see it only here on cnn. first another big development in the bill cosby story. his admission about obtaining drugs who he planned to have sex with came to light. he made it under oath in a court deposition ten years ago and has tried to keep it under wraps. what may have persuaded the judge to make it public. >> reporter: it was learned the deposition was unsealed based at least in part on a controversial speech cosby gave in 2004. >> these are people going around stealing coca-cola. people getting shot in the back of the head over

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Transcripts For CNNW CNN Newsroom With Fredricka Whitfield 20150711

massive crowd there. this is the last leg of his pilgrimage to south america. he visited ecuador, bolivia all earlier this week. he chose these countries to encourage the poorest and the most marginal people to stay faithful. joining me right now in asuncion paraguay is shasta darlington and john allen. let's begin with you, chasshasta. let's talk about the mass and the importance of it and how so many have turned out to see the pope. >> that's right. this is the most important shrine in paraguay. not noenlonly in paraguay. it is an important destination for pilgrims coming from argentina. pope francis' home drint.country. they have been camping outlining the papal route hoping to get a glimpse of latin america's first pope and the first pope of any kind to visit paraguay in almost 30 years. an important moment for the country. we will see a lot of ar jen tine flags waving as well all around this important shrine there, fred. >> shasta it was also important for the pope to visit a children's hospital earlier. why? >> reporter: well you know the pope is a magnetic presence around children. whenever they see him, they rush him. they won't be peeled off of him. security forces believe me they try. you can see pope francis himself also lights up. when he went inside the hospital according to his prepared remarks, what he told the children is that we as adults need to learn from you, from your joy, from your tenderness also from your warriorlike spirit in the face of adversity. this is something we have heard from him before. on the one hand we need to protect our children. also he repeats that just like jesus christ we need to view children as our ideals what we should try and emulate an not the other way around, fredricka. >> john from denver during the pope's visit, he has focused on the most vulnerable the poor. even yesterday, he visited a prison in beau liveolivia. what is his overall message during this three south american nation tour as he tries to call more attention to the poor. those who are in prison and those who are vulnerable. among those, also the elderly. how and why is he choosing this directive? >> hey, fred. well, this is clearly the first time we had seen and heard this kind of thing from pope francis. shortly after he was elected to the papacy in march, 2013 one of his first public outings was to go to prison to wash the feet of inmate, both christians and muslims and also some women. reaching out and speaking to the poor. what is distinctive with this trip with he see a geopolitical strategy at work underneath that. he wants latin america to become the phrase he uses is a great homeland. a kind of economically and great homeland. a block that can stand up to the major world powers on behalf of the poor. that so to speak, is the political heavy lifting, he is trying to get done this week. >> at the same time you mentioned the word politics. he has made some conscientious decisions about places not to visit because of the political climate. i think the pope doesn't get sucked into partisan politics. part of the reason he didn't want to go to argentina, they have presidential elections coming up in october. make no mistake. the pope does not want to lead a party. that doesn't mean he is a political. there has been a fairly sharp political edge to a lot of his rhetoric and gestures. fundamentally, he believes that the global economic order as it has developed in the early 21st century is unjust. that is it kind of consigns a large percentage of the human family to forming a permanent underclass. he wants to challenge all of that. he believes that latin america, if it got its act together in terms of overcoming its internal divisions, could be a very important change agent. will that work? >> let's remember the last time a pope was in paraguay was john paul ii. the country was under a strong man by the name of alfredo. john paul directly challenged him to create better space for political pluralism and democracy. within a year after the pope's visit, strasner was gone. popes can make a difference. >> john allen, always good to see you, appreciate it. >> thanks, fred in just a few hours, republican presidential candidate, donald trump will head to nevada and arizona. in vegas, he will speak at a libertarian conference and he will head to the phoenix convention center where he is expected to deliver remarks on immigration with phoenix sheriff, joe arpaio. he has made headlines in the past for his anti-immigration policies and rhetoric. this event was supposed to be in a smaller venue but was moved to a much larger setting. the convention center to accommodate what's expected to be a sizeable crowd. last night in los angeles, trump was greeted by protesters upset about his remarks about people crossing the border from mexico. trump also met with families there whose loved ones were killed by undocumented immigrants. trump continues to insist that he will connect with latino voters. >> when the word gets out, i will win. romney let us all down. he was a very poor campaigner. he did a horrible job. he should have won that race. he did not do well with the hispanics. when it is all said and done i will win, win the hispanic vote over the democratic whoever it may be, probably hillary clinton. >> joining me right now, m.j. lee. tell us who are aboutmore about what's expected as the donald makes his way to vegas and phoenix? >> good morning. i have spoken to some of trump's campaign officials. i asked them what will he say at this big rally? they said his message will be this. stopping illegal aliens from killing u.s. citizens. that means that trump will be doubling down on his original comments which obviously were controversial, speaking about folks coming over in mexico that they are most often criminals or rapists or drug dealers, has created a huge bash lash. we are expecting him to say those comments again today repeatedly. we are expecting protesters to show up at his event to send him the message that his comments are not appreciated. >> mr. trump is speak very confidently about his position here and then you look at the polls and he continues to stay on top. what are his people, so to speak, saying about how he is managing to do this and at the same time offend so many? >> look i think it is certainly true that mr. trump's comments about illegal immigration probably are appealing to a small subset of the republican base. i think you probably can't overstate just how deeply upsetting his comments have been to the immigrant community, particularly the latino community here in the united states. i think that's why even though we have seen mr. trump surging in the national polls, there has also been a ton of backlash. earlier this morning, michael smerconish spoke with the executive vice-president of the trump organization about his relationship with the latino community. let's take a listen. >> donald trump has a great relationship with latinos. this is all being fostered by groups that want to create something for themselves. eventually he is going to have the latino community voting for him as well. the people that are most hurt by illegal immigration happen to be legal immigrants. it is not that he is against immigration. his father grandfather, came from germany. his first wife from czech. his current wife in slovenia. he is not anti-immigrant. donald trump wants immigration. it is what created this country to be the wonderful country that we are. >> so, again, comments that we are probably going to continue hearing over and over again from trump and his campaign officials in the coming months. >> okay. so m.j. let's talk about another potential candidate. maybe the cat is out of the bag. we are talking about wisconsin governor scott walker. so via tweet, prematurely, an announcement was made he will be running. however, it had been said his formal announcement would be on monday. was it premature? was this intentional? was this a problem with twitter or was this the scott walker camp? >> it sounds like walker's campaign did not mean to send out that tweet. they have said that was unintentionalle. it is sort of the worst kept secret that scott walker will be running for president. i think we can bet on that being the announcement made in wisconsin. we have known for a while that governor walker has been holding back from jumping into the race because he has had so many issues to deal with in his home state. on monday i guarantee it will be that he is officially making a run for the house in 2016. >> all right, thanks so much. for all the latest news on the race for 2016 go to cnn politics.com. still ahead, the fbi now says, dylan roof dylann roof never should have been able to buy the gun he did to kill nine people in a church. we have details from the house. the fbi made a huge mistake. there was a flaw in that background check that allowed the charleston shooter, dylann roof to get his hand on that .45 caliber gun. all those details coming up next. i know i have an 812 fico score, so i definitely qualify. so what else can you give me? 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a review by the fbi inspection division is now underway. this comes following revelations that dylann roof should not have been able to purchase the gun he is accused of using in the charleston church shootings. >> reporter: this contradicts what the fbi says that the background check was done properly. now, revealing this big bombshell of an error. he says this was a mistake. they are all sick that it happened. the man who confessed to gunning down nine people inside a south carolina church should never have been able to buy the .45 caliber gun used in the slaughter. that emission coming from fbi. they made a mistake during his background check. according to law enforcement officials, within days after the shooting agents on the ground knew something was amiss and suspected that his arrest record should have prohibited the gun purchase. >> that just shows how a bureaucratic mistake can cost human life. >> reporter: the director says the fbi examiner during his background check didn't discover he had previously admitted to illegally possessing drugs when he was arrested in late february. that would have permitted him from passing the background check. >> there is a revel ligsation that would have said if he was a drug dealer he wouldn't have gotten it. >> reporter: he said the fbi examiner failed to make contact with the columbia south carolina police department. which arrested him on the drug charge because of a clerical error that listed the wrong police department in the online court system. after three days of waiting, the south carolina gun shop legally used its discretion to sell roof the gun even though his status was still pending. it is disastrous that this bureaucratic mistake prevented existing laws from working and blocking an illegalle gun sale. for the family of one charleston victim surprise and understanding. >> i thought being that it was an fbi check that they were very thorough. so i was surprised that they weren't very thorough. but, i know people make mistakes. >> fbi officials met with the families in person this week to make assurances that the system would try to be fixed but also to explain the mistake. fred? >> all right. thanks so much. >> former police officer jonathan gilliam, help people skrund stan even when you her sunlen say the gun shop legally was able to use its discretion even after they didn't hear from the fbi after three days. that is customary? >> well apparently so. it does point out one thing, one very important thing. if we are going to set up standards that say if you do drugs, you can't have a gun or if you are a felon or if you have been arrested for certain things you can't buy a gun. if we are going to set up those standards, then we need to have better people to input the things in the computer. so these gun owners can see these things or something has to be redone. you see who is it left to. it was left to a guy who owns a gun store who works at the counsel counter to make a psychological judgment call that he is not qualified to make. that is something that is a real problem. >> doesn't it send up a red flag for the gun shop owner or whoever is in the position of trying to consider and get these check-ups done. if they didn't hear from anyone that maybe there is some presumption that something is wrong or does it mean eliciting another phone call to make sure. is it really okay i can sell this firearm to someone? >> well fred we would have to see the statistics on how often this happens. if this happens all the time then it wouldn't be uncommon in the gun store to say oh it is probably just going to take a little while longer. the law says i can sell this to you after three days. so i am going to sell this to you. why the law says it? i don't know. if you are going to put something in place, make it very firm and very strict. the biggest takeaway from all this having been in the fbi for eight years. i will tell you this and i don't know an fbi agent that would agree with me right now. there is too much paperwork. stuff is not straemeamlined. when they decide to do something a better way, they don't get rid of the other way. they keep them both. you are inundated by paperwork. if i take a picture with this phone right here there is a date and time stamp on the picture. why isn't it then when somebody gets an arrest record or they get arrested or something happens and they input that it immediately goes to a database with a time and date stamp saying this just happened? >> so when you talk about the straem streamlining are you talking on the level of the seller? the streamlining of the local jurks jurisdiction or all of the above? >> a national database that collects rapidly when people need a background check. they have the credentials to logon. they are just logging on and saying here is the person's information. it immediately goes in and says whether or not this person has been arrested in the past 24 hours, which shouldn't be difficult. most stuff gets inputted very quickly in police departments and turned around and seas, okayays, okay you can't sell this guy a gun. >> you got it. the killing of a san francisco woman is now raising new questions about the so-called sanctuary cities. there are hundreds of these communities across the country. what exactly are they? what role does the san francisco status as a sanctuary city play in this crime? kids are expensive. so i'm always looking to get more for my money. that's why i switched from u-verse to xfinity. they have the most free on demand tv shows and movies on all my devices. it's perfect for me because my kids are costing me a fortune. i'm going to cabo! [ music plays ] don't settle for u-verse. xfinity is perfect for people who want more entertainment for their money. the arrest of an undocumented immigrant and the killing of a san francisco woman has sparked new debate over sanctuary cities san francisco, new york that have polities and laws that limit the extent that law enforcement and other government employees will help the federal government find or help detain the 11 million undocumented immigrants. kate steinle was shot and killed while walking with her father along a san francisco pier on july 1st. juan francisco lopez-sanchez pleaded not guilty. he has been convicted of several felonies and deported five times. he had been released after local authorities decided not to prosecute him on a 20-year-old marijuana charge. federal immigration says they might have deported him again but the san francisco sheriff's department never told them lopez sanchez was being released. here to talk about sanctuary cities is attorney and immigration annal immigration analyst reyes. >> how are local governments allowed to make these laws around put policies in place that macon flikt with the enforcement of federal immigration laws? >> they don't exactly conflict. there is a lot of confusion about what the term means. a sanctuary city all that means is that the federal government still has control over immigration enforcement, which it historically has and always has. as recently at 2012 the supreme court says it must have. that leaves state and local officials to handle criminal offenses. one of the big misconceptions about sanctuary cities are that they are a place where undocumented people can live and work openly and not have to fear the authorities. you can be deported in a sanctuary city. local officials can turn you over to i.c.e. >> it means the senganctuary cities can ignore law and custom enforcement, i.c.e. to administratively doe ploy illegal aliens without seeking from the federal or local court. if the federal court doesn't instruct or have warrants is it the discretion of some of these sanctuary sit itcities to say we north going to volunteer or reach out to i.c.e. to try to have this person deported or to further any kind of offense of the federal immigration law? generally speaking in the sanctuary cities all across the nation miami, new york chicago, seattle, in these sanctuary cities when local officials encounter someone who may be undocumented if they are not processing them for some type of criminal offense, they will let them go. that doesn't conflict with federal law. they are leaving the immigration enforcement to the federal government. the reason they do that in the past there were times when with programs like the secure communities, 287-g program, where local officials cooperated with federal officials. what happened was state police sheriffs and county executives didn't like it. >> why not? why wouldn't they want to cooperate or respect federal law? what is holding them back? what is the argument as to why they don't want to? >> the reason there was this pushback. remember this came from law enforcement, not from immigrant rights advocates or anyone like that. it came from police, local officials. they wore the costs of holding undocumented immigrants while ice came to pick them up. if there was any type of liability issue. this he picked up someone spanish speaking and held them and they turned out to be ai green cardholder. they wore the liability for that. they could sue the city not the federal government. local officials didn't like it. they are not trained to do immigration policing. they thought rightfully, this should stay with the federal government. when we talk about sanctuary cities one of the biggest proponents was rudy giuliani. he is not soft on crime. this would allow local police to do the job they can do best and let the federal government handle their responsibilities. >> it is very confusing and it sounds very arbitrary and it differs from city to city even though you are talking about 200 different jurisdictions. in the case of the san francisco situation, you have the sheriff coming out yesterday who said that it was i.c.e. that didn't follow procedure. prior to that i.c.e. said san francisco didn't make that phone call and let us know so that we could take the next step. neither one of those arguments have anything to do with what you just laid out, an issue of paperwork or money or expense. >> exactly. >> so what is it? >> when you think about it remember the last segment when you were talking, i believe it was, with the fbi official and he said, unfortunately there was a bureaucratic mistake and a life was lost. a similar situation here. it wasn't about deportation. this guy was deported five times and jailed for re-entering. the city agency should have issued a warrant. the city could not have disregarded but they didn't. the city let him go and we have tragic consequences for this young woman. >> thank you so much. we will have to let it go. >> we'll be right back. ♪ while you're watching this i'm hacking your company. grabbing your data. stealing your customers' secrets. there's an army of us. relentlessly unpicking your patchwork of security. think you'll spot us? ♪ you haven't so far. the next wave of the internet requires the next wave of security. we're ready. are you? ♪ ♪ when you're living with diabetes steady is exciting. only glucerna has carbsteady clinically proven to help minimize blood sugar spikes. so you stay steady ahead. when you travel, we help you make all kinds of connections. connections you almost miss. and ones you never thought you'd make. we help connect where you are. to places you never thought you'd go. this, is why we travel. and why we continue to create new technology to connect you to the people and places that matter. i called for help as soon as i saw her. i found her wandering miles from home. when the phone rang at 5am i knew it was about mom. i see how hard it's been on her at work and i want to help. for the 5 million americans living with alzheimer's and millions more who feel its effects. let's walk together to make an even bigger impact and end alzheimer's for good. find your walk near you at alz.org/walk. want bladder leak underwear that moves like you do? try always discreet underwear and move, groove, wiggle giggle, swerve, curve. lift, shift, ride, glide hit your stride. only always discreet underwear has soft dual leak guard barriers to help stop leaks where they happen most and a discreet fit that hugs your curves you barely feel it. always discreet underwear so bladder leaks can feel like no big deal. because hey, pee happens. get your free pair and valuable coupons at always discreet.com good saturday morning. i'm fredricka whitfield con trotroversy continues to follow the stop and frisk policies. a report suggests that many stops may be going undocumented. in 2013 a federal judge ordered the program be reformed after finding the department unintentionally discriminated against minorists. sarah ganam, what are we learning from the new report? >> good morning, fred. that's right. this report is showing the numbers are down but not necessarily for the right reasons, fred. this report finding that in many cases, documentation is not properly handled when it comes to stop and frisk. that officers aren't necessarily putting on paper when stop and frisk is occurring and there is another reason too, that they found that these numbers may show that they are drastically down from 2011. that's that this report finds that officers may be misinformed, may be not trained properly and then not using stop and frisk policy when they should. so not stopping people who they should be stopping on the street, two-fold here. this report comes after the stop and frisk policy nypd policy was found unconstitutional by a federal judge in 2013. it was a violation of the fourth and 14th amendment. this policy had been widely criticized and peaked under michael bloomberg. it was a policy of stopping people on street and searching them if there was any suspicion there might have been foul play. they might have been involved in. the 14th amendment says you need a reasonable suspicion of a crime being committed. the federal judge found this was in violation of that. as a result this federal junl former federal prosecutor his name is peter zimroth, he was tasked with revising the nypd policy working with them. the first report he has released since he began going back and looking at that. this is what he found, fred. >> how is the nypd responding right now? >> so they are saying that they are going to revise their training so that officers understand how to document their encounters with the public specifically when it comes to stop and frisk. they say it is of the jut most importance to them that documentation is accurate of course. now, another response to this is that peter zimroth is saying that he wants to implement a body camera program that's more random among the different precincts so that they can look and see how body cameras, how the police react to them when they are wearing them how it affects what they do and their actions as well as the public that they are dealing with how they react to police who are wearing body cameras. >> okay all right. sarah ganam, thanks so much in new york. still to come serena williams making history yet again, another title. this time, will believewimbledon, alive report next. it relieves bloating in minutes. plus that uncomfortable pressure. no wonder it's the #1 gas relief brand. this is an iphone. and it comes with something different. ♪ ninety-nine percent of people who have an iphone love their iphone. ♪ if it's not an iphone, it's not an iphone. ♪ congratulations. you're down with crestor. yes! when diet and exercise aren't enough, adding crestor lowers bad cholesterol up to 55%. crestor is not for people with liver disease or women who are nursing, pregnant, or may become pregnant. tell your doctor all medicines you take. call your doctor if you have muscle pain or weakness, feel unusually tired have loss of appetite, upper belly pain, dark urine or yellowing of skin or eyes. these could be signs of serious side effects. i'm down with crestor! make your move. ask your doctor about crestor. a huge day for serena williams. the world number one player won her fourth grand slam. joining me is christina mcfarland from the all england club. four majors in a row in this calendar year. last year it seemed like an anomaly but here we go again. she is amazing. >> reporter: she is absolutely incredible. it is hotting up here now with that potential calendar grand slam. 13 years after she took her first wimbledon title here she has followed up with her sixth. her 21st grand slam of her career. but, you know what it wasn't an easy match for her here in the finals. she went down early in the first game of the first set. she was broken against the young 21-year-old. garbine garbine muguruza. she hit serves of 123 miles an hour. she wrapped up the match 6-4, 6-4. she dropped to her knees when she knew she won it and leapt up and dropped all over the court an went over to console her opponent. all eyes will turn to the u.s. open next month. serena is on for a potential calendar grand slam. that's four grand slams in one year. if she can do it she will become the first player men or women to win this calendar grand slam since steffi graf since 19le 1988. incredible. >> it is hard to believe, 1988 when steffi graf did that. this is an amazing year for any spectator to watch tennis too. christina mcfarland thanks so much. appreciate it. we'll be right back. here at td ameritrade, they love innovating. and apparently, they also love stickers. what's up with these things, victor? we decided to give ourselves stickers for each feature we release. we read about 10,000 suggestions a week to create features that as traders we'd want to use, like social signals, a tool that uses social media to help with research. 10,000 suggestions. who reads all those? he does. for all the confidence you need. td ameritrade. you got this. south carry care governor, nikki haley, says it is a new day in her state. this is why. the confederate flag was removed on friday triggering a roaring emotional reaction from the thousands of people that turned out to witness this historic moment. this after state lawmakers voted overwhelmingly to remove the confederate flag in the state grounds. it is now in the south carolina relic room and military museum. the call was sparked by the killing of nine people at a historic african-american church in charleston. the confessed shooter, dylann roof was photographed with the confederate flag. joining me right now is bakari sellers, a former state representative of the state house and born and raised in the state. good to see you, bakari. the fbi, before i ask you about the confederate flag and what that means to you, particularly as a native son of south carolina let's talk about the fbi and its response saying the background check of dylan roof that confessed was not thoroughly completed. he should have never been able to purchase that gun. what's your reaction to that. >> an apology is not enough. we had a travesty a failure in our bureaucracy that allowed this to happen. i saw the fbi director stand up and say, he apologized and it tears his heart up. we need more action than that. this can not happen again. we had a fame yurilure by our government that allowed nine people to die. someone out on bond that previously admitted to a drug offense should not be allowed to get a gun. that's common sense. the fact the system failed it didn't just fail me or those nine families. they failed the entire country. we were on the brink of something very very bad in south carolina and charleston. as a community, we were on the brink to make that not happen. we are going to make sure that doesn't happen again. >> in turning history around, the flag would be removed from the state grounds. as someone born and raised in south carolina you have seen that flag during your lifetime. what did it mean to you to witness it being brought down? >> when the flag came down, tears came down. in my 30 years of being on this great earth, i have never lived in south carolina when that flag has not flown. for me it is a personal my father was shot february 196 and imprisoned after the massacre. i knew clemente pinckney serving with him for eight years. i know what it means when that flag came down. it was one of relief it was one of joy. and my tears were tears of optimism as well. and so i look forward to a new day in south carolina beginning of a new healthy conversation not just in this state but throughout the country. >> what does it mean to you that the catalyst of this change there have been so many debates over the years. there have been other votes prior to last week. but the catalyst of change of bringing down the flag would be the deaths of nine people including your friend mr. pinckney? so how do you process that? >> well for me it goes back even further to be completely honest. for me it goes back and i think about the sheroes like sarah may fleming who sat down on a bus before rosa parks. jessica simkins and the three young men killed in the orange road massacre. i think about 40 years ago when jean tul and kate patterson filed a bill to remove it. it does bring you great sadness clem and others had to die for this flag to be brought down. but i know those nine are joining hands in heaven today looking down upon us and saying job well done. >> bakari sellers, thanks so much for your time today. >> thanks for the opportunity. have a great day. >> you, too. still ahead, outrage over a doctor who got rich by treating hundreds of patients for cancer even though they didn't even have the disease. details on the doctor sentenced next. to help rearrange the fridge and get us energized! i'm new ensure active high protein. i help you recharge with nutritious energy and strength to keep you active. come on pear it's only a half gallon. i'll take that. yeeeeeah! new ensure active high protein. 16 grams of protein and 23 vitamins and minerals. all in 160 calories. ensure. take life in. if you qualify for a sittingham's card today i can offer you no interest for 24 months. thanks to the tools and help at experian.com, i know i have an 812 fico score, so i definitely qualify. so what else can you give me? 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[ music plays ] don't settle for u-verse. xfinity is perfect for people who want more entertainment for their money. outrage today after a detroit-area doctor was sentenced for giving cancer treatment drugs to more than 500 patients who did not need them. some of them didn't even have cancer. dr. fariedd fata was sentenced to 45 years in prison. but for many victims and their families isn't enough. it was an emotional ending to a long court saga. jonathan carlson from our cnn affiliate wxyz was there. >> reporter: farid fata got 45 years in jail but caused a lifetime of pain for his victims. >> so sorry for all you went through. >> reporter: tears and hugs come naturally these days for this group. >> it's not all right, actually. it's not all right. >> no. >> you know? it's not all right. but you have an amazing attitude. amazing! >> that's god. >> i know. >> all god. >> reporter: they're bound by tragic circumstances. each one a victim in some form of fashion of a cancer doctor prosecutors say did the unthinkable. >> this we believe to be the most serious fraud case in the history of the country. >> reporter: but it was so much more than just fraud to these folks. they lost their health or their loved one to dr. farid fata's care or lack thereof. more than 500 patients were unnecessarily pumped with drugs, prosecutors say. lives altered or ended. an emotional week which began with victims sharing their stories of pain finished with dr. fata himself sobbing before the judge, begging for lean yen sichlt leniency. 45 years in jail. >> 45 years for the lives that he took. >> it wasn't enough. all the victims? my sister's gone. it just want enough. >> reporter: prosecutors wanted what the families wanted 175 years. >> we believed that nothing short of a life sentence was appropriate in this case because the harm was so egregious. >> reporter: but for families they concede prison terms will never bring complete closure. >> can't bring any of them back. you can't heal the hurt. >> reporter: so where do these men and women go from here? they're still trying to figure that out. >> hopefully move on somewhat or try to now. >> it's been a very long road. and a very hard journey for all of us. >> reporter: fata will next have a restitution hearing. he's on the hook for 17 million in fraud. he also has the right to appeal today's sentence. >> thanks so much to jonathan carl sohn with wxyz our affiliate. checking stories right now, florida state running back dalvin cook was suspended indefinitelily after being charged with misdemeanor battery for allegedly punching a woman in a face outside a tallahassee bar last month. he is denying the allegation. it's the second battery charge against an fsu player in the past several days. quarterback de'andre johnson was dismissed from the team and charged with battery for this incident caught on tape in a tallahassee bar. and in bosnia people are remembering the 8,000 men and boys killed in the srebreneza massacre 20 years ago. the serbian prime minister attended the ceremony. former president bill clinton was part of a delegation that traveled to bosnia to commemorate the anniversary and he addressed the crowd there. >> i am begging you not to let this monument to innocent boys and men become only a memory of a tragedy. i ask you to make it a sacred trust where all people here can come and claim a future for this country. >> bill clinton was president at the time of the bosnian massacre. the killings pushed him and other western leaders to support nato action in the region. we've got so much more straight ahead in the news room. it all starts right now. happening right now in the news room, donald trump making a bold prediction. >> when it's all said and done i will win, win the hispanic vote. vote. >> the presidential candidate will speak to thousands about immigration in a matter of hours, plus a report that two commercial airline pilots posted pro-isis content on their facebook pages. and later serena williams ta

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Transcripts For CNNW CNN Newsroom With Fredricka Whitfield 20150711

the sixth time! you're live in the cnn news room. >> hello and thanks again for joining me. i'm fredricka whitfield. it's a big day for republican presidential candidate donald trump. first a stop at a libertarian conference in las vegas. then he's off to phoenix for a rally on immigration that is expected to draw thousands. meanwhile, protests like this one in los angeles friday continue over trump's controversial remarks about people crossing the border from mexico. but today on cnn a trump executive says those remarks are misunderstood. >> what donald trump said in his speech was not directed to mexicans. that's a gross distortion by the press, by the liberal media, that wants to take donald trump out of this race. he did not say mexicans and he certainly did not say latinos. he said mexico. he was referring to the mexican government. what he then did is on probably more than 10,000 speech es and meetings with both liberal media as well as print and television he went ahead and explained exactly what he meant. that it's the mexican government not mexicans. that wasn't enough. >> i understand that. >> he put out statements. let me just finish this. he put out statements that explained it. but they still don't want to hear it. and so donald trump is not backing down. he doesn't back down to anyone. >> but michael, michael, i know and i want to get to that too. i don't consider myself part of any liberal media. i just want to get to the facts. and the facts suggest that proportionately those who are here in this country illegally are committing less crime than native-born americans. that's what the "washington post" was getting at when they called out mr. trump and they said this just isn't true. >> well tell that to the family of this young girl that was killed. the bottom line is this is not an issue about one person though in all fairness if you look to see the tragedy that took place in charlotte, what a great result that that had for charlotte and the american people. and let's hope that the same thing happens for this beautiful young girl that was killed in san francisco. this is a time for immigration reform. and that's something mr. trump feels strongly about. >> all right. so you heard mr. cohen say trump's remarks were not directed at mexicans. you be the judge. here is that speech from last month. >> when mexico sends its people they're not sending their best. they're not sending you. they're not sending you. they're sending people that have lots of problems. and they're bringing those problems with us. they're bringing drugs, they're bringing crime, they're rapists. and some, i assume, are good people. >> all right. let's bring in cnn political reporter m.j. lee. all right, so donald trump and his people are saying his comments are being misinterpreted. so as he visits vegas and then onto phoenix, how much will this be about clarifying his comments or reiterating his comments? >> reporter: i think donald trump is expected to only reiterate his comments today, fredricka. i don't think there is going to be a clarification or an attempt to take back anything that he has said so far, even amid all this controversy. when i spoke with trump officials earlier today, they made it clear that the main message that he is going to be driving home is how do we stop illegal immigrants who come into the country from killing u.s. citizens. that was the exact words that campaign officials used when they were trying to describe what mr. trump's message would be in arizona today. i think that to say that this has been just a controversy would be an understatement. i think that there are many immigrants in the country, particularly those of latino background who are very offended by the comments that he has made. and i think with the two events today, mr. trump will only be re-emphasizing the earlier remarks. in fact yesterday when he spoke in beverly hills he really doubled down on the message that he has been repeating over and over again. let's take a listen. >> we're housing people from all over the world that other countries don't want. they're sending criminals to us. and we're putting those criminals in jail. oftentimes after they've killed somebody or hurt somebody. >> so the word "criminals" i think is one that we're going to be hearing a lot from donald trump today, fredricka. >> okay. while in arizona, phoenix in particular he is expected to appear with the sheriff there joe arpaio who is famous in his own right for his own anti-immigration kind of sentiments. will they be speaking kind of in concert? what is this relationship and how is it going to be displayed? >> i think that you're right that especially for the people of arizona, they know this man. they know sheriff arpaio as being someone who has taken very anti-immigration stances in the past. i think that it does sort of help reiterate trump's comments about illegal immigration from the last couple of months. i think whether the two of them are going to be on stage together at the same time or whether they will end up being separate speeches i'm not sure. but the fact that are going to be at this event together will send that message. >> all right. m.j. lee, thanks so much. and of course remember for all the latest news on the race for 2016 go to cnn politics.com. new details about a deadly attack targeting isis in afghanistan. former taliban leader hafiz hafiz sayeed thought to be an isis leader in afghanistan and pakistan has been killed in a u.s. drone strike. the afghanistan intelligence agency says sayeed was one of 30 other insurgents killed in the strike on their compound in eastern afghanistan. a spokesman says the leader who was killed is not the man with the same name who has a $10 million u.s. bounty on his head. egyptian authorities are now trying to find out who set off a car bomb outside the italian consulate in downtown cairo this morning. the blast killed at least one person and injured nine others. it also caused significant damage to the consulate. had the attack happened on a week day, the area would have been teaming with people. no one has yet claimed responsibility. australian authorities are worried that two indonesian airline pilots may have been radicalized by isis. that's according to an intelligence report obtained by the news web site the intercept. that report details the social media behavior of the two men. authorities are concerned that they could post security threats because of their knowledge of aviation and security procedures. both pilots have facebook pages which post pro-isis materials. the one of the men denies that he is a member of isis. indonesia's national police chief tells cnn their investigation shows the two pilots are not directly involved with isis but he also said they often post about isis on facebook and they are sympathizers. indonesia's foreign affairs ministry says it's asked the country's intelligence agencies about the pilots. the federal police told cnn it doesn't comment on intelligence matters. joining me right now from new york a former navy s.e.a.l. jonathan gillian also a former fbi special agent. jonathan this all sounds very alarming especially since you're hearing acknowledgement being an isis sympathizer not necessarily an isis member. what do you make of all this kind of information? >> first off, fred, we have to look at the terminology that's being used. an isis member? what is that? you don't get a membership card to be in isis. you don't go to isis boot camp to be a fighter. you're a sympathizer. you're somebody who understands what the ideology the fundamental islamic ideology that isis follows and you subscribe to that. >> doesn't it sound rather alarming and you're a pilot and you've got a whole lot of peoples' lives in your hands? >> it doesn't get any more alarming than that. the only thing they could add to that if they had some kind of license to carry explosives on their planes. it doesn't get any worse than that right there. those two individuals should be pulled straight off those planes never to fly again. and they should be highly investigated. i mean they should dig into everything. all their contacts, who they're contacting. because there is no way that these two individuals just are fans of isis. it goes way deeper. >> would it be the situation or the case that the australian government or even indonesian government feels like they don't have the authority to take them from their piloting duties because of this information? or is there a more international or global i guess field or entity that could make that kind of decision? >> well when you work in certain areas, those areas come with certain types of responsibility and overwatch. and when you have proven to the world that this group has declared war on most western countries and on anything that's not islamic, and then they've shown throughout history that they're not opposed to using planes they should take this very seriously. these individuals are allowed to fly in these airplanes by the governments. i mean they go and they get a job with the airline industry but they have to be vetted and cleared to go and fly these planes. you can't just allow anybody who has any type of ideology to jump inside an airplane with 200 something people in it that basically it's a flying bomb. >> okay. and then now we are just learning that isis is claiming responsibility for -- or i'm sorry. isis supporters i'm being told is claiming responsibility for that consulate attack there in cairo, egypt. so what is your response when you hear that? what duds that mean, isis supporters versus members of isis? i mean this language or these semantics is getting very complicated, isn't it? >> it is. because we're allowing it to be. i mean look fred we're talking now about an explosion. and sympathizers right? we were just talking about two airline pilots that were sympathizers. the fact is people that subscribe to the fundamental islamic ideology that isis al qaeda, all these different groups subscribe to it's one ideology. there might be different divisions. one may want to do shootings. one may want to do explosions. one may want to crash planes into buildings. it's one ideology. we need to stop differentiating between all of them and we need to stop looking at trying to pick between a sympathizer, somebody who's a supporter and somebody who's an operator. they're all operators, whether they're directly or indirectly related. look at germany back during world war ii. you had direct people involved in the fighting you had indirect people that supported it and allowed to it happen. it's the same thing here. >> just for clarity, my cnn producer is telling me that's the language isis supporter. just like you i think we all wish we knew a little bit more about what that really means. jonathan gilliam, thanks. so appreciate it. and we'll be right back. >> you got it. nges of keeping everyone working 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of your face, tongue, or throat, dizziness, or confusion. today's the day to ask about levemir® flextouch®. covered by most health insurance and medicare plans. >> a mystery in massachusetts surrounds a little girl known only as baby doe. she was placed with a zebra blanket and inside a trash bag along boston's harbor. people are wanting to know who she is and how did her life end. millions of people have viewed this composite sketch of the girl believed to be nearly four years old. hundreds of tips have come insofar, but none have panned out. cnn spoke with the district attorney on this case who had a message for the child's family. >> we appeal to the care givers the parents, please step forward, clear your conscience. no child, no person deserves to be discarded like this. >> all right. joining me right now is cnn law enforcement analyst tom fuentes. it's been more than two weeks now and no one has come forward. how concerning is it to you that so many millions nearly 50 million, would view this composite sketch. there have been tips but nothing has panned out to the family of this child, a little bit more about the identity. anything about this child. >> it's very concerning fredricka. i mean we don't know how long that child went missing, if she was missing. we don't know if whoever was her caretaker had her locked up in a basement somewhere for several years and nobody recognizes her now. we just don't know so many things about this case. obviously we don't know who she is and who put her in the bag and put her in the water. so all of this is pretty incredible especially as you say, nearly 50 million people have seen the photo the estimate of what she should look like. usually those are pretty accurate the forensic people that make those. they're surprisingly good later when you're actually matching it up to the real person. but in this case it's a tremendous mystery. >> does it worry you that there are some inaccuracies of the composite drawing? might it begin with that and that's why no one's able to identify this child? or is it something more where investigators are now going to have to go that real gum shoe kind of approach to investigate where did the new clothes or fairly new blanket come from? what's the origin of that? where could it have been purchased? that kind of stuff? >> oh, yeah. they'll be doing all of that. then they'll be analyzing all of the information by the center for missing and exploited children to see reports nation-wide and then contacting canada to provide additional information if they have cases that have not been solved of children that have gone missing. so that's one aspect of it. but there's a lot of detective work that goes into this. but it's just very difficult. if you have especially with young children the earlier in age they are the time they go missing or at the time something happens to them and then if a couple of years go by they do change a lot. but even so if somebody is aware of a child approximately this age and missing, they'll call in and they've been calling in. it's just that none of them matched up yet. >> so it's a tragic situation. all right. and there's the information if people have information they should be calling any one of these numbers here. tom fuentes, thank you so much. >> you're welcome. >> we'll be right back. i don't want to live with the uncertainties of hep c. or wonder... ...whether i should seek treatment. i am ready. because today there's harvoni. a revolutionary treatment for the most common type of chronic hepatitis c. harvoni is proven to cure up to 99% of patients... ...who've had no prior treatment. it's the one and only cure that's... ...one pill, once a day for 12 weeks. certain patients... ...can be cured with just 8 weeks of harvoni. with harvoni there's no interferon and there are no complex regimens. tell your doctor if you have other liver or kidney problems or other medical conditions. and about all the medicines you take including herbal supplements. harvoni should not be taken with any medicines containing amiodarone, rifampin, or st. john's wort. it also should not be taken with any other medicine that contains sovaldi. side effects may include tiredness and headache. i am ready to put hep c behind me. i am ready to be cured. are you ready? ask your hep c specialist if harvoni is right for you. i already feel like we're the most connected but i think this solo date will seal the deal. sure! i offer multi-car, safe driver, and so many other discounts that people think i'm a big deal. and boy, are they right. ladies, i can share hundreds in savings with all of you! just visit progressive.com today. but right now, it's choosing time. ooh! we have a winner. all: what? [chuckles] he's supposed to pick one of us. this is a joke, right? that was the whole point of us being here. a look at our top stories right now. the fbi's inspection division is reviewing an agency mistake that allowed dylann roof to purchase a handgun prior to the charleston south carolina church shooting. the agency revealed roof should not have been cleared to purchase a weapon because of a prior arrest on drug charges. that detail was initially missed by the agency during a background check because of a clerical error. and in bosnia people are remembering the 8,000 men and boys killed in srebrenica the massacre of 20 years ago. some were not happy with the serbian prime minister attending the memorial. he was first booed, then as you can see he was forced to leave when a group of people started throwing rocks at his vehicle and chased after him. all right. they call it the serena slam. serena williams making history yet again, winning her sixth wimbledon title and four consecutive grand slams this year. cnn's christina mcfarland is in london. she saw it go down. it was pretty exhilarating and exciting. >> reporter: that's right, fredricka. it's got to be one of the most predictable results in women's tennis these days. serena williams triumphing again on centre court 13 years after she took her first title here she's followed up with her sixth. as you say her 21st grand slam title. you know fredricka, on paper this should have been an easy matchup. she was up against a 21-year-old first-time grand slam finalist. but serena had to battle back twice to stay in this match, often screaming out in frustration on the court. she hit serves of up to 123 miles per hour. that's faster than some of the men on the tour. and eventually eventually she dominated 6-4, 6-4. i can tell you what, now everyone is turning their attention to the u.s. open next month. serena can dominate there, too, she has a chance of that calendar grand slam which you know is all four grand slams in one calendar year. hasn't been done since steffi graf in 1988. for a player who is 33 years old, i wouldn't bet against her because she has an incredible record. she's won 21 grand slam finals lost only four. and she is now the oldest and the most dominant player of her generation. >> wow. we know u.s. open will be sold out for sure. folks are already starting to readjust their plans now and finding ways in which to position themselves to potentially watch history yet again? all right, christina thank you so much. all right. still ahead, crowds of people protesting presidential candidate donald trump in l.a. and now he could face more protests today in phoenix. because tomorrow, i'll be your competitor. and i was born to disrupt everything you think your business is about. see you soon. the next wave of the internet is bringing the next wave of competition. we're ready. are you? [ male announcer ] we know they're out there. you can't always see them. but it's our job to find them. the answers. the solutions. the innovations. all waiting to help us build something better. something more amazing. a safer, cleaner brighter future. at boeing, that's what building something better is all about. ♪ ♪ hello again, everyone. thanks so much for joining me. i'm fredricka whitfield. in about two hours, donald trump takes the stage at the conservative freedom fest in las vegas. then he heads right to phoenix, arizona where he will be holding a major rally on a topic that is firing up his base and angering many in his own party, immigration. he is expected to be joined on stage by maricopa county sheriff joe arpaia a controversial opponent on the issue of illegal immigration. joining me right now from new orleans, columnist democrat and co-author of the "the party's over" l.s.hennecan and republican strategist brian morgenstern. so trump's comments on immigration. in large terms he really is kind of directing the entire conversation all of the other candidates now have to either clarify, defend, or say they in no way agree with donald trump. he's in the driver's seat here isn't he? >> he is very much -- and we're riding shotgun too right? i mean the media plays a big role in this. so i guess we should take our piece of it. here's the reality. the more that these kinds of comments become part and parcel of this race the more that hispanic voters are driven away from the republican party. two or three more of these rallies with joe arpaio and it could be another generation before the republicans get any significant number of latino votes again. >> so what is going on here brian, in your view? in vegas and he'll be in phoenix and apparently he's now going to be in the convention center a much larger venue, because he has said that a lot of people a very large crowd, is going to comment we're seeing that in terms of the polls. he's risen to the top. so his message or something about him, right, is very popular. so he's hitting a nerve, but at the same time he's also exciting a lot of people because the turnouts have been big? >> well look we pay close attention to donald trump's campaign i think for the same reason we pay close attention to i don't know car accidents and his hair. because it's unusual and upsetting. i mean, donald trump is getting an awful lot of attention for stirring up trouble. he picks fights to promote himself. it's something he's done throughout his career. i think if there's any credit at all to be given to him, or at least some defense, i think it's lumping in his comments as anti-immigrant as opposed to anti-illegal immigration. i think it's an important distinction. but the fact remains as i've said before and i'll say it again, he's going around insulting people to promote himself. and it's not really good for anybody. and in terms of the polls that you just talked about, fred donald trump is up there, but when you ask people if they would really support him, i think at this point it's to see him in debates. and when you ask those same people in that same polling data they said would he be around at the end? is he a really viable candidate? it was only something like 7% actually thought he would stick around. again i wouldn't give credit to the polling data. he's insulting everybody. it's ridiculous. i think that's why it's so intriguing. but he is also highlighting the problem of illegal immigration, which people do care about. >> so brian, you bring up is he a viable candidate that. has been the conversation. but then now it seems as though everyone else is following his lead in terms of commenting or clarifying, et cetera. and so i wonder, ellis, especially as he and other candidates poise themselves for the first debate how much of driving the conversation will trump be doing? >> how viable do you want really? i mean by any measure the guy is extremely viable. i will leave it to brian to make those careful distinctions between illegal immigration and exactly where the lines are. the way this thing plays to the vast majority of americans, especially latino americans, is that this guy is out saying a bunch of crazy stuff. he's driving the dialogue. and the other members of his party are in a very uncomfortable position about do they attack him? what's he going to do to them in the debates? i mean this is by any political definition -- >> what is it doing to the party? first we hear reince priebus said to tone it down. then donald trump comes out shortly thereafter and says it was a congratulatory call. it almost seems as though the party, too, is either beholden to donald trump or feeling like they're in an awkward situation where they can't really control him. nobody can, right? >> no, of course not. nobody can control this guy. he's unhinged which of course -- >> good word. >> yeah. which of course is making the other candidates very uncomfortable. >> is it making the party look bad? forget about what it's doing to the other candidates for a second. what is it doing to the party itself brian? >> well it's distracting. as marco rubio said the other day, and i think that's the appropriate word. because these guys who really have a chance to become president and who really want to present their ideas in a positive way in ways to move the country forward are getting pushed out of the debate by donald trump's bluster. and so it is distracting. it's more than just annoying for the other candidates. and it's harmful. but it will bring attention, of course to the primary debates which people might not otherwise watch. and i'm hopeful that some of these viable candidates like rubio, maybe walker maybe bush will be able to capitalize on this as an opportunity to show what donald trump really is and actually stand up for what the party is pushing for which is a brighter future for america. >> all right. so now back to some of the other candidates. scott walker. he's expected to make his formal announcement on monday. but then something strange happened. somehow that announcement was made via twitter and twitter is saying it's not the scott camp it's not their fault. what is really going on here ellis? or was this a mistake? or was this also kind of trying to test the water? is it trying to maybe even upstage donald trump? >> well it's all silly calculation, honestly fred. i mean the notion that we should in the media sort of go with these schedules well i am a candidate. i'm an exploring candidate. i'm a thinking about it candidate. you know what? none of it matters. the guy is running for president. he's going to make some announcement that we all expect. is it going to be a surprise. this is just part of the theater of it. it's fun to watch. but he's in the race. let's see how he does. >> all right. ellis hennecen brian morgenstern, thanks so much. we'll have more to talk about later because this keeps going, doesn't it? still to come on cnn, pope francis sell bracing mass in paraguay as thousands gather to hear him speak. cnn's shasta darlington is there live, shasta. >> reporter: that's right, frederik cave. he's just wrapped up the mass where many of his nate native argentines turned out to hear him. more coming up. when you're not confident you have complete visibility into your business, it can quickly become the only thing you think about. that's where at&t can help. at&t's innovative solutions connect machines and people... to keep your internet of things in-sync, in real-time. leaving you free to focus on what matters most. pope francis just finished celebrating mass in paraguay. hundreds of thousands of people attended. many who traveled from argentina, the pope's home country. joining me right now to talk more about this is cnn's shasta darlington in paraguay. so shasta tell us more about the location of this mass and who was in attendance. >> reporter: well fredricka, the shrine of the virgin of calcupe is the most popular in pair guy. thousands of people make pilgrimages every year to either thank the virgin or to pray to her to intervene on their be half in the case of sickness a loss desperation. she's also very popular among pair pair /* paraguayan immigrants. according to officials, nearly 100,000 argentines crossed the border to attend the mass today, the mass tomorrow. we heard pope francis actually refer to the virgin mary as aim grant herself who fled the country to keep her family safe fredricka. >> shasta darlington thanks so much. still ahead the killing of a san francisco woman is raising new questions about so-called sanctuary cities. find out why the issue is creating tension between the federal government and local officials. vo: today's the day. more and more people with type 2 diabetes are learning about long-acting levemir®. as my diabetes changed it got harder to control my blood sugar. today, i'm asking about levemir®. vo: levemir® is an injectable insulin that can give you blood sugar control for up to 24 hours. and levemir® helps lower your a1c. levemir® lasts 42 days without refrigeration. that's 50% longer than lantus® which lasts 28 days. levemir® comes in flextouch® the latest in insulin pen technology from novo nordisk. levemir® is a long-acting insulin used to control high blood sugar in adults and children with diabetes and is not recommended to treat diabetic ketoacidosis. do not use levemir® if you are allergic to any of its ingredients. the most common side effect is low blood sugar which may cause symptoms such as sweating, shakiness, confusion, and headache. severe low blood sugar can be serious and life-threatening. ask your doctor about alcohol use, operating machinery, or driving. other possible side effects include injection site reactions. tell your doctor about all medicines you take and all of your medical conditions. check your blood sugar. your insulin dose should not be changed without asking your doctor. get medical help right away if you have trouble breathing, sweating, extreme drowsiness swelling of your face, tongue, or throat, dizziness, or confusion. today's the day to ask about levemir® flextouch®. covered by most health insurance and medicare plans. i like your place. oh, thank you, make yourself at home i'll be right back. hm. she's got x1. alright. huh, hm, ohh... monster? she seemed so nice at dinner. i'm back! ahh! uhh... whatcha doing? ohh, just... watchin' law & order. awww, you're nervous. that's so cute. call and upgrade to get x1 today. ♪ all right. the arrest of an undocumented immigrant for the killing of a san francisco woman has sparked new debate over so-called sanctuary cities. san francisco is one of hundreds of communities across the country that have policies or laws that limit the extent law enforcement and other government employees will help the federal government find or detain america's estimated 11 million undocumented immigrants. many are blaming san francisco's sanctuary status for the death of kate steinle. she was shot and killed while walking on one of the city's piers with her father. juan francisco lopez sanchez has pleaded not guilty to killing her. sara sidner has the story. >> reporter: a father reacts to the searing pain or losing a loving daughter the a the hands of a stranger. >> this was evil. evil personified. >> reporter: jim and his daughter 32-year-old catherine steinle, were taking a stroll on picturesque pier 14 in san francisco. at the same time this man, juan francisco lopez sanchez, fired a gun he says he found wrappeded in a t-shirt in a dumpster. he says the shooting was an accident. but the killing has sparked a national debate over immigration reform. lopez sanchez is an undocumented immigrant who has been deported from the u.s. five times. it would have been six but his case got caught in the local versus federal policy fight. >> let me ask you this. from a lay person's standpoint looking at this it looks like san francisco sheriff's department messed up here. what do you say to that? >> they're completely wrong about that. as sheriff i adhere to the laws that govern our land. in san francisco's not alone. in fact well over 300 municipalities have similar laws like san francisco because what has not been reconciled on the federal level, local governments and state governments are devising new laws that help direct the relationship about i.c.e. and what is troubling is that this word "detainer" that i.c.e. is putting out there that they had asked our department they have known for a long time that what we require in san francisco, like the 299 plus other cities is that we need a lawful court order, a warrant or a court order that helps the transference of somebody in our custody to i.c.e. this has been in practice for quite some time. >> lopez sanchez had just been in federal prison and would have been put in deportation proceedings, but because of a decades-old outstanding warrant in san francisco, immigration and customs enforcement handed him over to local authorities. but san francisco declined to prosecute the old drug case and the sheriff's department's let him go free even though immigration official had asked san francisco sheriff's department to notify them if he was to be released. but they did not. >> do you feel at all any guilt or responsibility for what happened? >> i feel horrible about this. this is absolutely horrible. it's a senseless tragedy. and i think it really does spotlight the fragmentation of how law exists between a local, state and federal level and how it is completely sort of patchworked around the country. but you can't deny that over 300 cities now in a very short period of time have adopted laws like san francisco, meaning something that isn't working on the federal level. >> reporter: the reason the sheriff's department declined to notify i.c.e. officials is because san francisco is a so-called sanctuary city. generally speaking it won't hand over nonviolent undocumented people without a court order. but the family wants nothing to do with the political debate saying their sole focus is on reminding the world of what a wonderful person steinle was. >> it's not going to bring kate back. again, them finding the guy and whatever. the justice will work its way through the system. but our focus is on kate. >> reporter: sara sidner cnn, san francisco. >> let's bring in our legal guys now. a civil rights attorney and law professor in louisville kentucky today. and in for the shale shal we say vacationing richard herman this week joey jackson, criminal defense attorney. >> good for him. >> i know. he never takes a weekend off. cnn legal analyst joey jackson joining us from new york. good to see both of you gentlemen. so avery, you first. this is so perplexing. i think many people are very confused about how it that is local governments are allowed to make laws that may conflict with the enforcement of federal immigration law. help me understand. >> it doesn't conflict fredricka. i think this has been politicized. it does not. we have had sanctuary cities for decades. there are nothing inconsistent. the argument that it somehow interferes with federal law is nonsensical. federal law prohibits an intentional concealment of unlawful detained aliens or people generally. the bottom line on this thing is that all i.c.e. had to do is get a warrant, get a warrant. the problem would have been solved. this has nothing to do -- >> the argument that i.c.e. makes in this case is that local authorities didn't make a phone call to inform them that they had him. and were going to release him. >> exactly. >> is that true? >> local authorities knew and i.c.e. knew that because of sanctuary status all i.c.e. had to do is get the warrant. there wouldn't have been a problem. it was i.c.e.'s problem, it wasn't san francisco's problem. >> joey? >> well first of all, while my debate skills are not as vigorous as richard herman's let me say this. i respectfully disagree with my colleague, mr. freeman, for the following reasons. this is a horrific act, number one. >> of course. >> i think it absolutely conflicts. there's a 1996 law, a federal law, and that empowers and requires the locals to cooperate with the federal government okay? that's number two. number three, cooperation is simply honoring a detainer. it's an immigration detainer. and all that says it doesn't say we're going to deport you. it's not an arrest warrant. it simply says to give us notification and it empowers the local government to hold someone for 48 hours. now, further, fredricka, this arrest apparently or he was returned on march 26th. they decided to drop the charges on march 27th. he was held until april 15th. what was to prevent a simple - phone call. >> is it likely they would have known about the track record? [ overlapping speakers ] >> i don't think they need a warrant. i disagree with the sheriff. there's no need for a warrant. now, i do agree that an immigration detainer is not at all a command. it's a request. however, in light of the fact that the 1996 federal law requires cooperation, in light of the fact that these laws have not been challenged as they relate to sanctuary cities i really do that it's right for the time they be challenged. >> on what basis, joey? >> let me -- allow me to explain. i'm glad you asked. challenged on the basis that the federal government is the authority on the law. when the federal government requires and says that you cooperate, you cooperate. you don't decide as a locality what laws to enforce and what not ton force. let me say this. it's one thing for a locality to affirmatively go out and start checking papers and determining who's legal and who's illegal. that's what they tried to do in arizona. >> in phoenix. >> they said you can't do that. but it's another thing for a locality simply to honor a detainer that says notify us that someone's here. that's all you have to do. >> you know what? the reason that argument -- we've heard that argument before. except what congress did is they asked the inspector general of the department of justice whether sanctuary laws violated federal law based on what joey's explained. bottom line the conclusion by the inspector general of the department of justice is that it didn't violate law, didn't interfere with federal law. so while the argument is made about the 1996 law, in 2006 and 2007 congress through the inspector general said exactly the opposite. >> and i'll say one other thing if i briefly can. that was prior to the arizona decision that had two key points. in that arizona decision which struck down arizona's intent to make all these -- >> based on race. >> it said number one, you cannot overstep the federal government. and number two, you cannot undermine the federal government. and number three -- >> on race. >> -- in 2009 -- no. as it relates to status as it relates timeo immigration, any contrary to federal law. finally, in 2009 arizona, their own attorney, evaluated it and said you know what? this law has not been challenged. and issued that in a memorandum. i think it's right to challenge. right to evaluate it. >> and they lost. >> local communities should not be flouting federal law. >> we're going to leave it there, gentlemen. avery, always good to see you. joey? i don't know. debate skills? check. you were worried about that? >> i think he did all right. >> he did as well if not better than richard maybe. i don't know. >> come back from vacation soon mr. herman. >> i enjoyed having both of you. brilliant minds. thanks so much. appreciate it. >> bye bye. still ahead, the fallout from the largest data breach against the u.s. government. i don't want to live with the uncertainties of hep c. or wonder... ...whether i should seek treatment. i am ready. because today there's harvoni. a revolutionary treatment for the most common type of chronic hepatitis c. harvoni is proven to cure up to 99% of patients... ...who've had no prior treatment. it's the one and only cure that's... ...one pill, once a day for 12 weeks. certain patients... ...can be cured with just 8 weeks of harvoni. with harvoni there's no interferon and there are no complex regimens. tell your doctor if you have other liver or kidney problems or other medical conditions. and about all the medicines you take including herbal supplements. harvoni should not be taken with any medicines containing amiodarone, rifampin, or st. john's wort. it also should not be taken with any other medicine that contains sovaldi. side effects may include tiredness and headache. i am ready to put hep c behind me. i am ready to be cured. are you ready? ask your hep c specialist if harvoni is right for you. ♪ ♪ [ male announcer ] you wouldn't ignore signs of damage in your home. are you sure you're not ignoring them in your body? even if you're treating your crohn's disease or ulcerative colitis an occasional flare may be a sign of damaging inflammation. and if you ignore the signs, the more debilitating your symptoms could become. learn more about the role damaging inflammation may be playing in your symptoms with the expert advice tool at crohnsandcolitis.com. and then speak with your gastroenterologist. ♪ while you're watching this i'm hacking your company. grabbing your data. stealing your customers' secrets. there's an army of us. relentlessly unpicking your patchwork of security. think you'll spot us? ♪ you haven't so far. the next wave of the internet requires the next wave of security. we're ready. are you? ically proven to reduce back pain and 93% of participants reported back pain relief. plus it costs about the same an innerspring yet lasts twice as long. so if you want to sleep better or find relief from back pain, call now! call this number or click now for your free $50 savings card and catalog with price list. call now or click for your free $50 savings card and catalog. a look at our top stories right now. eurozone leaders are meeting in brussels to decide whether or not to accept greece's latest bailout proposal. the greek parliament approved the plan which includes new economic reforms aimed at ending the country's financial crisis. the proposal would result in spending cuts and increased taxes. and in london serena williams has won her sixth wimbledon title. she now has 21 major single titles. today's win marks four straight majors won since last year's u.s. open. if she wins this year's u.s. open she will be the first player since steffi graf in 1988 to win the french australian, u.s. open and wimbledon and french open all in the same calendar year. the so-called calendar grand slam. and we are learning new details about the worst data breach ever against the u.s. government. u.s. officials suspect china may be to blame. and president obama could be among the millions of americans whose personal information may be at risk. meanwhile, the head of the office of personnel management has stepped down one day after revealing the breach was much worse than expected. cnn senior white house correspondent jim acosta has more. >> reporter: opm director catherine archeleta came to the white house and offered her resignation on friday morning. president obama send it the white house says because he believes new leadership is quote badly needed at the agency. administration officials say personal data including social security numbers, health records, and in some cases fingerprints of 21.5 million federal employees and some of their relatives, were swept up in this hack. stolen user name and password were all the hackers needed to break into the federal system. the chinese are the leading suspect at this point. but the white house has yet to publicly accuse beijing of being responsible. and while it also stands to recent president's personal data was also obtained the white house will not say for sure. here's an exchange i had with the white house press secretary, josh earnest. >> do we know if the president's personal data has been swept up in this? is it involved in any way? >> i don't have information about the president's personal data. even if i did i'm not sure i'd share anytime this setting. >> just about every federal employee since the year 2000 that would of course include the president, data swept up by these hackers. >> again i don't have any information about the president's personal data. >> archeleta's resignation came roughly 12 hours after she told reporters on a conference call she wanted to stay at opm to oversee the upgrading of federal data systems. instead she's replaced by beth covert a top official at omp. she starts next week. so much more straight ahead in the news room and it all starts right now. donald trump making a bold prediction. >> when it's all said and done i will win -- win the hispanic vote. >> this has the presidential candidate prepares to speak to thousands about immigration in just hours. and later, the search is on for the parents of this little

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Transcripts For CNNW CNN Newsroom With Fredricka Whitfield 20150705

what do we understand is happening right now? who do i have there in athens? >> reporter: can you hear me? >> yes, i can. tell me what's happening. >> reporter: good evening to you. >> i know the polls have closed. it was expected that two hours after the polls closing there may be some early results and that's what we're starting to see a bit of right? >> reporter: correct. correct. what we've got now is 20% of votes being counted. we have looking like 60% going to the no. this is early stages at the moment. normally in the previous election at the beginning of the year for the prime minister all you needed was 10% of the vote to get a sense of which way it's going to go. at the moment we're 20% of the votes being counted. 60% with no. i can tell you -- i've been here to greece many many times throughout this year and i have a been here this week spoking to both sides of the camp yes and no side and this afternoon alone i stopped so many greeks and every single person i stopped it's been a no. i have yet to meet one person voting for yes.- of course we don't know if there's an element of shyness to it. the fact that they would go against voting for europe rather than their prime minister. we don't know that yet. it's from what i've seen not scientific in any way, shape or form but gives you a sense of the voice of people here in athens. >> so help us understand because some folks are just tuning in and just trying to get a grasp of what this referendum vote was all about in greece. so if early indications are correct, the majority would be voting for no the majority would be saying we don't want anymore austerity measures being extended by the european union, which would mean potentially more tax increases or some sort of refurbishing of the way in which the economic structure thus far has been handled in the last five years. help us better understand what that means for the average greek there. >> reporter: what they would vote on and what the referendum question is do you accept the proposals that have been asking for. that's calling for more cuts in pensions more tax rises. majority of people interpreted that as more austerity or more of the same or really changing the way the country is run. europe on the other hand saying this referendum saying it's not about going out of europe. different interpretations depending on what side you're on. the way the greek people see it is do we want more austerity? the economy has shrunk 25%. unemployment around 26%. youth unemployment is more than 50%. and to put in context for you from people i have spoke to for months since i've been in greece they say only 50% of pensioners here rely on pensions as their only source of income. so they say, look the cuts to now, austerity to now hasn't worked so why back further proposals that will make our lives so much tougher? >> some are saying that things have been so bad in the past five years why would they want more of the same but then what's the flip side as we saw leading up to this weekend that banks were closed atms were running out of money, there were food shortage shortages, medicine shortages, why would a no vote if indeed that ends up being the majority a no-vote, how could that change all of those things and create better situations in terms of food supply or even money? >> reporter: there is a feeling of the people here that have nothing left to lose. they have suffered so much. and they are betting on something better to be completely honest with you. the people that voted no that i spoke to are worried about the banks not being open on monday but at least we voted for something that perhaps will define and shape our future. we do not want to have our hands tied to proposals that really will make our life harder. they are scared the next couple of days. they are worried that the european central bank may not pump more money into the banks and they are worried that a deal will take more than 48 hours to reach. but as the prime minister said if people vote overwhelming no that will strengthen his hand when it comes to negotiating position and meet with europe next week. whether he gets it that way is a completely different matter because europe has been very clear on this. if people vote no it's a sign they don't want to be in the euro. in many ways problems are just only really starting for greeks. >> so it had been said two hours approximately after the polls close, which would have been noon eastern time here that we would start to see some numbers. any predictions as to when some of those hard and fast numbers might happen? >> reporter: i think by two hours or so it will get more clarity in terms of the numbers coming from athens. we've been looking at different constituency. this is what people have been telling me all week. many people backing with pride and dignity and those are words they're using. >> thank you from athens. we'll check back in with you. let's talk more about this with a cnn global economic analyst and assistant managing editor for "time" magazine. help us understand. again, these are early numbers. it's unclear what the final tally will be. so far some polls are indicating more than 60% are voting for no for no more assistance from the eu. what do you interpret here? >> well i think for greece if you get a no vote it's going to mean short-term chaos. i think that you could have a major sort of banking hysteria. it's possible that the european central banks would cut off emergency funding if it looks like the vote is no. i think that you're really going to see a lot of what you saw last week in a heightened way. panic over people not getting money out of the atms, et cetera. the bigger question is what this means for the european markets and global markets. my sense is that answer is going to hinge on what the european central bank does on monday. i think if we come into monday and start to see what we did last week which is really shaky markets, stock markets falling, bond yields and some of the other peripheral countries meaning investors thinking markets are getting riskier, you'll look at ecb to see what they're doing. will they try to tampen down the panic and how effective will that be? that's the key question that the global investment community will look for. >> what about even more immediately? if we lead up to this weekend are seeing that banks are closed people running out of money, there were restrictions on how much you could -- 60 euros you were able to withdraw from an atm per customer at any one time how might things be different on monday? >> i don't think they are going to be different. if anything if we get a no vote there will be more panic. what will essentially start happening at that point is you'll see greece moving from being a country that is within the european community to falling potentially out of eurozone or becoming what it was before which is really frankly an emerging market. a poor country. greece is .3% of the entire global economy. this is a very small, very poor country. the reason we all care about it right now is it has potential to destabilize the euro. the euro fell quite a bit against the dollar. it's possible that will happen again this week and then you start looking at what that does to the rest of europe. do you see slower growth in europe? do you see potentially another recession in europe? what does that mean for the rest of the world? those are the big questions. >> why would it potentially destabilize the euro? we're talking about one small country. as you said its history is such that economically it wasn't incredibly strong before becoming welcomed into the eurozone. why would it destabilize the eurozone potentially? >> that's a great question. the entire eurozone is an unprecedented experiment. this is several countries 18 countries, coming together creating this new currency. that was unprecedented. now the idea that it could break apart and one of those countries could pull out is also unprecedented. no one knows quite how the dominos will fall once that starts happening. there's the immediate questions of greek debt and who gets paid and who doesn't and you can bet that there will wrangling over that. the issue is does this start to undercut the european economy to the extent that other countries start becoming riskier and that lenders don't want to lend in italy or in spain. what does it do to the value of the ureeuro overall and the legitimacy of the experiment where countries will come together and form a new bloc and be a united states of europe that really hasn't happened. if there were to be a bigger breakup, that's a major geopolitical event. >> do you see other countries whose economies may be fragile following suit potentially? >> absolutely. you have countries like italy and spain that have big debt problems. same way greece does. now, i don't see right now those countries falling out of the eurozone. i don't think in the next few weeks and months we'll see a crisis of that magnitude. this is unprecedented territory. once greek starts falling out, a lot of unforeseen things could come into play and there could be contagion as in the financial crisis in 2008 and you don't know where they'll come from. i think the markets will be very jittery for the next week or two. >> all right. thank you so much. appreciate it. also this afternoon, the first latin american pope begins his second visit to south america after a trip to brazil back in 2013 and this time he's bringing a message of solidarity with the poor. pope francis lands in ecuador in a couple hours. we'll visit some of the poorest countries in a region where some 40% of the world's catholics live. also an area where many have turned away from catholicism to embrace evangelical religions. i see lots of people out lining the streets. this is a greatly anticipated visit. >> reporter: exactly, fredricka. the excitement is really growing. this is the first time in three decades that a pope has come here to ecuador and as you mentioned, people are lining up here on the street. he's not expected to pass by in his pope mobile for another four hours but these people want to make sure they get a glimpse of him. it's a big challenge for pope francis for the reason you mentioned. the catholic church has been losing ground to these evangelical pentecostal and we had a chance to visit one of the churches yesterday. every saturday they join in song and prayer at this church on the outskirts of quito, awkwarduk ak ward -- ecuador. for every catholic church there are a half dozen evangelical temples. god put us on earth for a reason she says. my reason is to visit those in need and talk to them about god. but with the emergence of pope francis, a champion of the poor there's a new renewed erenewed en enthusiasm. not only is this latin american pope very charismatic person but the first time in 30 years a pope has landed here in ecuador. for this father pope francis is building a foundation. what the pope is doing is generating a kind of internal movement in the church to build on that foundation he says. but it's too soon to talk about impact. first, priests have to embrace the pope's message and parishioners especially the young have to feel motivated to return to the fold. just to give you an idea about how big the challenge is that faces pope francis, a generation ago more than 90% of latin americans were catholic. today that's just 69%. so while this visit is an important first step he really has to go much further to get those people back in the pews. >> those are significant numbers and differences. thanks so much. we'll check back with you later on. also still ahead, the royal family celebrating a special day at church. crowds lining the streets there as well as princess charlotte makes her second public appearance after her christening. we have the amazing pictures and details next. are you moving forward fast enough? everywhere you look, it strategy is now business strategy. and a partnership with hp can help you accelerate down a path created by people, technology and ideas. to move your company from what it is now... to what it needs to become. ♪ ♪virgin islands nice♪ ♪so nice♪ ♪so nice, so nice♪ book five nights today and get one free. plus $350 towards shopping dining or other fun activities. now that's virgin islands nice. ♪so nice, so nice♪ hundreds of fans greeted england's favorite new baby. princess charlotte's second appearance since being born. crowds greeted them as they walked to church. it was there that baby charlotte was christened. we go live now to london. erin charlotte's brother, prince george he was center stage, too. he was christened at a chapel in central london. this was different. he was wearing something rather spectacular. paying homage to his dad. >> prince george was wearing some red shorts very similar outfit to what prince william wore when prince william was a baby and met prince harry for the first time at the hospital. so a little nod to history there. lots of attention of course also paid to what kate was wearing. she was wearing a alexander mcqueen quote and a taylor hat. this was a very special moment for the royal family. as you said there, prince george was christened in london. princess charlotte christened in a place called sandringham not far from where prince william and kate live. it's the place where the royal family gathers every year to celebrate christmas and they go on this same walk to the church. i'm told the ceremony itself lasted around 45 minutes. it went absolutely smoothly. there were historic touches throughout. the font was brought in from london. first time from outside a royal palace. it was brought in with special security. i understand that baby charlotte was baptized with water from the river jordan as well. after the ceremony concluded, they had a reception for friends and close family on the estate. they had tea and cake and i also understand the famed photographer was brought in for a family portrait. >> my gosh. they are so picture perfect no matter what angle they all look so good. the two little babies are precious. >> absolutely adorable. >> all right. thanks so much. we're not done. we want to talk more about this incredible looking couple. let's bring in royal commentator from new york. so victoria princess charlotte wearing that lace and satin christening gown and it has family history. have we seen this before? >> it has a lot of family history. it's a replica of the original gown created in 1841 for the first child of prince albert and queen victoria. it was worn by every royal baby until 2004. it was simply deemed too delicate and the royal family wanted to preserve it. the queen's personal dresser handmade a brand new one but the detail is really quite incredible. it's exactly the same. that's been worn by every royal baby since prince edward's son was christened in 2008. >> these photographs are just stunning. the water from this famous holy river, all used during this baptism. why was this very significant and how does this uphold something about tradition? >> when it comes to the royal family we're seeing a sense of history and continuity. continuity is what they are all about. so looking at this font this was designed and commissioned by prince albert and queen victoria for christening of their first daughter in 1841. the water that comes from the river jordan is believed to be where jesus was baptized by john the baptist because of significance to christianity it's used by christian royal houses. we saw all of the old customs and traditions associated with royal christenings incorporated today. where we saw a touch of new was in selection of the godparents. william and kate have made sure to choose people based on friendship trust and loyalty opposed to wealth status and position. this is new for royal babies. in the past we saw european monarchs lords, knights, sort of people that are very high status. with william and kate we're seeing very close friends and family members. first cousin on each side. three very close friends. this is where cambridges are trying to adapt how things were done before to make sure it works for their family and really brings things into the modern age. >> wow. how do they do this? >> i can tell you from experience those are hard to push. steering is horrendous. this is from the 1950s. she did it in heels. >> makes it look effortless and easy. no fair. all right. we'll see you again. thank you so much. >> thank you. all right. still ahead, the fight over the confederate flag is heating up in south carolina. big rallies for and against the flag as lawmakers prepare to debate whether to remove it. details next. ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ that's amazing. it's amazing. this is amazing. that's amazing! real people are discovering surprising things at chevy. we're sold. it's so pretty. they're good-looking cars. it feels great. perfect. this is not what i would expect from a chevy at all. get more than you expect, for less than you imagined at the chevy 72 hour sale. now, get zero percent financing for seventy-two months on most 2015 chevy vehicles. hurry, the clock is ticking. get yours now. the seventy-two hour sale ends july 9th. find new roads at your local chevy dealer. you know your dentures can move, unlike natural teeth. try fixodent plus true feel. the smooth formula helps keep dentures in place. it's free of flavors and colorants, for a closer feeling to natural teeth. fixodent. and forget it. u.s. secretary of state john kerry says the latest round of nuclear talks with iran could go either way. kerry says there has been some progress but there is still major sticking points. >> we don't have a deal if there's an unwillingness to move on things that are important, president obama has always said we're prepared to walk away. it's not what anybody wants. we want to get an agreement. >> foreign ministers are arriving today to finalize negotiations ahead of tuesday's deadline. fourth of july celebrations turned deadly on kentucky's ohio river last night. one adult and one teenager were killed. three others are missing after a pontoon boat capsized near downtown louisville. four others were rescued from the water. the pontoon was pinned against a work barge near a bridge. it's unclear what caused the accident. >> the fight against the confederate flag is raging in south carolina. hundreds are rallying at the sate capitol calling for the flag to be removed. ♪ >> reporter: on the anniversary of america's independence this crowd faced one flag. >> this is marvelous. this is what true independence is all about. >> reporter: while crying for this one to be taken down. >> it's been a long time coming. this flag belongs in a museum. >> reporter: for opponents of the confederate battle flag the division comes from a difference of opinion. hundreds of critics including members of the naacp made their case on what the bars and stars represent. >> it's a stain on our state. you can't really deny that the only thing that it really symbolizes is racism. >> it was put up to represent segregation. >> reporter: supporters say it's a symbol of southern heritage and tribute to civil war dead but that's a viewpoint many here say they still don't accept. >> to honor the dead who fought under that banner and honor terms of sundayrrender. >> they renew the connection to dylann roof. >> decent people, god fearing people. >> reporter: the question for this group, will south carolina lawmakers finally take action in the coming days? >> i come here a lot. i drive by here a lot. i feel awful. i really would like to see it come down this week. it would be great. >> reporter: a feeling shared on this fourth of july. >> that was mike from wis in south carolina. nick valencia joins me now. describe the scene today on the capital. >> reporter: it's a lively discussion between those who want to see the flag remain at the state capitol and those who want to see it taken down. a group of half a dozen people holding the confederate flag having a healthy discussion with somebody who wants to see the flag removed. as we've been reporting, lawmakers are set to debate the permanent removal of the flag from the pole from a monument which rests 50 yards in front of the state house here in columbia. the republican governor called for it to be removed just days after a photo emerged of the charleston church shooter holding the flag. this debate is going to require two-thirds vote in both chambers of the house and senate in the state general assembly for this flag that's been flown here since 1961 to be removed. earlier we caught up with people on both sides of the debate. >> they are being spoon-fed what the media and haters and they are haters. they don't know me as a person. they see this white girl standing here holding a battle flag. a battle flag that flew in battle. i'm holding this flag in remembrance of all of the men who lost their lives. >> that symbol excludes some of us from feeling that we're included and that we're a part of what's going on. so that debate being brought about now is needed. >> reporter: a recent survey with lawmakers taken in the state of south carolina suggests there are enough votes to have this flag removed and if everything goes smoothly that flag could be removed as soon as thursday according to some representatives. tomorrow's debate will be whether or not there will be testimony or if it will go straight to a vote on the floor. >> all right. nick nick, thank you so much. debate beginning tomorrow in columbia south carolina and soon after a vote. thanks so much. jeb bush says donald trump wants attention with his comments on immigration. cnn's sunlen serfaty is live for us at the white house. >> reporter: the comments by trump dominate so much of the discussion out on the campaign trail and this really does seem to be getting under the skin of many other republican candidates including jeb bush. i'll have latest back and forth after the break. leave early go roam sleep in sleep out star gaze dream big wander more care less beat sunrise chase sunset do it all. on us. get your first month's payment plus five years wear and tear coverage. make the most of summer... with volvo. (vo) if you have type 2 diabetes you may know what it's like to deal with high... and low blood sugar. januvia (sitagliptin) is a once-daily pill that, along with diet and exercise helps lower blood sugar. januvia works when your blood sugar is high and works less when your blood sugar is low, because it works by enhancing your body's own ability to lower blood sugar. plus januvia, by itself, is not likely to cause weight gain or low blood sugar (hypoglycemia). januvia should not be used in patients with type 1 diabetes or diabetic ketoacidosis. tell your doctor if you have a history of pancreatitis. serious side effects can happen, including pancreatitis which may be severe and lead to death. stop taking januvia and call your doctor right away if you have severe pain in your stomach area which may be pancreatitis. tell your doctor right away and stop taking januvia if you have an allergic reaction that causes swelling of the face, lips tongue, or throat, or affects your breathing or causes rash or hives. kidney problems sometimes requiring dialysis have been reported. using januvia and a sulfonylurea or insulin together may cause low blood sugar. to reduce the risk, your doctor may prescribe a lower dose of the sulfonylurea or insulin. your doctor may perform blood tests before and during treatment to check your kidneys. if you have kidney problems a lower dose may be prescribed. side effects may include upper respiratory tract infection, stuffy or runny nose and sore throat, and headache. for help lowering your blood sugar talk to your doctor about januvia today. jeb bush says donald trump doesn't represent the views of most republicans. he's firing off the most aggressive comments yet on trump who called mexican immigrants rapists. >> trump is wrong on this. he's doing this. he's not a stupid guy. i don't assume that he thinks that every mexican crossing the border is a rapist. he's doing this to inflame and incite and get organization which is his organizing principle of his campaign. it doesn't represent the republican party or its values. we'll begin when we're hopeful and optimistic and big and broad broad. >> trump fired back saying bush is out of touch with the american people and doesn't understand anything about border security. cnn's sunlen serfaty joining us from the white house. the fight between bush and trump is this a short lived battle or a prelude of bigger fights to come? >> reporter: the fact that it's sucking up so much oxygen on the campaign trail is turning into a big concern within the republican party. i think that's in part why we likely have seen a lot of these republican candidates start to take on trump more directly in those controversial comments. you know jeb bush being a great example. yesterday in new hampshire he really didn't sway away from taking trump head-on saying he was offended by what trump said personally because of course he is married to a woman born in mexico and he called them extraordinarily ugly comments. trump is not backing down. he's doubling down on his defense over the original intention of what he meant during those controversial comments. here's what trump had to say today. >> i love the mexican people. they're fantastic. everybody knows that. in terms of the border it's a disgrace. either we have a border or we don't have a country. you can't have a country without borders. and people are coming in and some of those people -- i read it even yesterday. there was a huge article about the tremendous crime that's taking place. it's like a crime wave. one of the most dangerous places on earth. and i bring that up and i'm a bad person. >> reporter: and this all back and forth comes at a time when republicans are very aware of their need to make inroads within the hispanic community. they know this is an important voting block and why we've seen people like jeb bush and mitt romney over this weekend start to speak out and take more leadership on the issue especially because it's also creating divisions within their party. >> sunlen serfaty, thank you so much from the white house. on the democratic side hillary clinton's visit to new hampshire is now making news for what happened to the reporters covering her. so you were covering clinton yesterday. you described how she was walking in the parade fourth of july celebrations. but apparently what made for a good photo was the fact that reporters were lassoed. describe what this is all about. you see them roped in there. >> what happened is that this parade was going down the main road in this small town in new hampshire. in the beginning, they were allowing reporters to walk down the parade with secretary clinton sort of freely and then as things got a little more crowded and they felt like they needed to have more control and make sure reporters weren't crowding her, they took out this white rope and held it so reporters could not get close to secretary clinton, which meant that a lot of reporters as you can see from footage and the pictures that have now been widely circulated a lot of reporters having to walk backwards and being forced to walk at the pace of the clinton staffers holding the rope line. a lot of people were tripping. i lost my shoe at one point. it was a hectic scene. a lot of people found the pictures to be both sort of amusing and a little is this the best way to handle the press especially for a candidate who has had a lot of issues frankly so far in terms of her relationship to the press and access that she has given to reporters. >> were any making an issue out of this in any way? >> i don't know if spectators were making an issue out of it. most people in the town were happy to see her but i think the response to the pictures that have been circulating, i understand them. i think that the image doesn't look great. i know a lot of people have asked the question to its reporters specifically why don't you all just refuse to abide by these rules that clinton staffers are making up and trying to enforce. the answer is that it's not just clinton staffers. there are secret service officers surrounding her so staffers say you have to get out of the way and secret service says you have to get out of the way, there's no good way to pushback on that. >> thanks so much. appreciate it. still ahead, captured killer david sweat behind bars again. details on his new confinement next. across america people, like basketball hall of famer dominique wilkins, are taking charge of their type 2 diabetes... ...with non-insulin victoza. for a while, i took a pill to lower my blood sugar but it didn't get me to my goal. so i asked my doctor about victoza. he said victoza works differently than pills and comes in a pen. victoza is proven to lower blood sugar and a1c. it's taken once a day, any time. and the needle is thin. victoza is not for weight loss but it may help you lose some weight. victoza is an injectable prescription medicine that may improve blood sugar in adults with type 2 diabetes when used with diet and exercise. it is not recommended as the first medication to treat diabetes and should not be used in people with type 1 diabetes or diabetic ketoacidosis. victoza has not been studied with mealtime insulin. victoza is not insulin. do not take victoza if you have a personal or family history of medullary thyroid cancer multiple endocrine neoplasia syndrome type 2, or if you are allergic to victoza or any of its ingredients. symptoms of a serious allergic reaction may include swelling of face lips, tongue or throat fainting or dizziness, very rapid heartbeat problems breathing or swallowing, severe rash or itching. tell your doctor if you get a lump or swelling in your neck. serious side effects may happen in people who take victoza including inflammation of the pancreas (pancreatitis) which may be fatal. stop taking victoza and call your doctor right away if you have signs of pancreatitis, such as severe pain that will not go away in your abdomen or from your abdomen to your back with or without vomiting. tell your doctor about all the medicines you take and if you have any medical conditions. taking victoza with a sulfonylurea or insulin may cause low blood sugar. the most common side effects are nausea, diarrhea, and headache. some side effects can lead to dehydration, which may cause kidney problems. if your pill isn't giving you the control you need... ask your doctor about non-insulin victoza. it's covered by most health plans. ♪ ♪virgin islands nice♪ ♪so nice♪ ♪so nice, so nice♪ book five nights today and get one free. plus $350 towards shopping dining or other fun activities. now that's virgin islands nice. ♪so nice, so nice♪ >> it's a five-minute walk and you can see the courts and hear the roar from center number one court. >> apartments start at $2,200 a week and family homes top out at $23,000. players are willing to pay big for the convenience of walking to work. >> it's something just nice about wimbledon. >> roger federer requires two houses when he comes to wimbledon to accommodate his growing family. >> they are quite superstitious a lot of players. i can never get a player to live in a house that's number 13 for example. >> wimbledon business owners know the value of privacy. if they keep their clients happy, they'll return for years to come. new details about captured inmate and convicted killer david sweat. he's now behind bars at a different maximum security prison and on suicide watch. sweat is being held at the five points correctional facility in new york about a five-hour drive from the clinton correctional facility where he broke out. we'll be housed in a single cell within the facility's 23-hour confinement unit. sweat and fellow escapee richard matt led authorities on a three-week manhunt after they escaped last month. an undocumented immigrant is the prime suspect in what appears to be a random shooting of a woman in san francisco and that is stirring up tensions in the immigration debate. would kate still be alive if a suspect, a repeat felon, wasn't allowed in the u.s.? our boris sanchez joins us now from new york. boris, how is the family taking this news? >> very difficult for them as you can imagine, fredricka. this appears to be a random senseless murder. officials wanted this man detained on a prior arrest he was let go leading many to wonder if this whole thing could have been avoided. walking with his daughter kate on a busy san francisco pier wednesday night, jim steinly heard a loud pop ring out. >> this was evil. evil personified. >> reporter: kate fell to the ground hit by a bullet. the shooter running off without saying a word. >> there does not appear to be any connection between the victim and the suspect. at this point it appears to be a random shooting incident. >> reporter: the suspect, 45-year-old juan lopez sanchez, an undocumented immigrant and repeat felon. according to immigration officials, lopez sanchez has been deported five times to mexico and in march he was released from federal prison after serving time for sneaking back into the u.s. federal law enforcement sources tell cnn it would have been six deportations except authorities in san francisco wanted him on a drug related warrant so u.s. immigration and customs enforcement turned him over to deputies. officials say they requested an immigration retainer to give them a heads-up before he was released but the sheriff's department denied the request according to policy before letting him go. the chief attorney telling cnn there was no legal cause to detain him. lopez sanchez now faces homicide charges. >> it's not going to bring kate back. again, finding the guy and whatever the justice will work its way through the system but our focus is on kate. >> officials in san francisco say there was no warrant or judicial order of removal for him so legally they had no cause to hold him. >> all right. boris sanchez, thank you so much. >> we'll have much more in the "newsroom" after this. this allergy season, will you be a sound sleeper, or a mouth breather. well, put on a breathe right strip and instantly open your nose up to 38% more than allergy medicines alone. so you can breathe and sleep. shut your mouth and sleep right. breathe right. we're just hours away from the kickoff of the women's world cup kickoff. vice president and his wife dr. jill biden, also showing their support for team usa with their soccer jerseys right there and guess what? they'll be at the game. coy wire is joining us from vancouver. he too is at the game. four hours away from game time. are we talking butterflies or just pure adrenaline rush? >> the team is in a situation where they could slip up mentally. they beat number one germany so contentment could creep in. they face japan who beat them in the last world cup finals so with revenge on their minds they could become too hyped. i've been around a lot of athletes. something in their eyes says they're locked in and team leader leader abby wambach touched on that. >> it's an achievement in itself but we still have to win. we haven't won anything yet. and we know what that feels like from four years ago and it's not a good feeling. >> this team has the mindset of a champion right now. they have an opportunity to make history by becoming the first country to win three women's world cup titles. fred? >> so exciting. okay. so vice president biden there along with his wife. what about the fan base? is it mostly pro-usa? >> just 38 miles from the u.s. border american fans are here in droves. it's a sea of red, white and blue. i want to the fan fest. we got some great goal celebrations from fans here to support their team. this women's world cup is getting huge tv ratings. that u.s. versus germany semifinal match was record breaking. average of 8.4 million viewers tuned in setting a new record for the most watched semifinal in u.s. history, women's or men's. >> my gosh. it's going to be so exciting. even for those not huge soccer fans something tells me they'll be in front of the television set 7:00 eastern time tonight rooting on team usa. coy wire thank you so much with that front row seat. have fun. the next hour of the "cnn newsroom" right after this. ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ kids are expensive. so i'm always looking to get more for my money. that's why i switched from u-verse to xfinity. they have the most free on demand tv shows and movies on all my devices. it's perfect for me because my kids are costing me a fortune. i'm going to cabo! [ music plays ] don't settle for u-verse. xfinity is perfect for people who want more entertainment for their money. hello again. thanks for joining me. i'm fredricka whitfield. we begin with breaking news out of greece. polls are now closed and we're getting the first early results of the greek referendum. at issue, if greece should accept more financial help from europe. tens of thousands of greeks have taken to the streets on both sides of the vote as the country slips closer to the edge of collapse with about 50% of the vote

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