Transcripts For CNNW CNN Newsroom 20120728 : vimarsana.com

CNNW CNN Newsroom July 28, 2012



a radiologic tech. that's when the licensing board started investigating him will after an incident in a hospital in arizona. they are speak viewed interviewe and he told the licensing board i looked in and found dave lying on his back in the bathroom stall. i looked in the toilet and spotted a 5 cc syringe and needle floating in the water. the label was blue and he said i'm going to jail. while this arizona board was investigating him, he voluntarily surrendered his license and he wrote a letter to the board saying, i'm surrend surrendering my arizona license at will beuse i don't have the resources nor money to fight the accusations. and willing to wait to be eligible for reinstated in through three years. later that very same month, he went on to work in hospitals in philadelphia, kansas, georgia, and then new hampshire. an expert? so-called drug diversion says it's all too common that a health professional will be investigated in one state and then leave to go work in another state. >> it's a very big problem and it's a problem that's nothing new. it's been going on for some time. it is much worse than we probably know. >> fred, wae've reached out to his lawyer and he had no contact. he's in jail in new hampshire and on tuesday he waved his right to a federal detention hearing. new evidence surfacing in the colorado movie theater massacre. the suspect, james holmes, was being treated by a psychiatrist at the university of colorado before the shooting that took 12 lives and injured steps more. there are also reports that holmes sent the psychiatrist a notebook that may contain possible damning evidence. next hour we'll talk about what a doctor can and cannot legally do in cases like this or potentially report to authorities even. and now to the victims of that rampage. services today for three of the 12 people killed in that crowded movie theater just over a week ago, the victims include naval petty officer john larimer from illinois, matt mcquinn from ohio who died saving his girlfriend from gunfire, and an aspiring sports reporter jessica ghawi from texas. powerful words from ghawi's brother during her service in san antonio today. >> i just wanted to leave with you two things. if this coward could is done this with this much hate, imagine what we can do with this much love. and the other thing is if you're putting your dreams on hold, you stop that right now. you chase those dreams. you don't know how long you have here. >> all three of the victims memorialized today were in their 20s. and tonight at 8:00, cnn's don lemon host as special report madness at midnight, the search for answers in aurora. now to travels overseas for mitt romney. he just landed in tel aviv after taking a charter flight from england. he's hoping to redeem himself after some rather embarrassing gaffes in london. the british media had a field day after romney appeared to question whether they were ready to host the games. they even dubbed him mitt the twit. and now to a remembrance of 9/11. on that day, 40 passengers and crew members of flight 93 died when their hijacked plane crashed in somerset county, pennsylvania. today the navy christened a ship named in honor of the heros who died on that flight in a ship yard in afternoon dale, a suburb of new orleans, family members of those killed gathered. a bottle of sparkling wine was smashed against its hull. and explosions shatter buildings. you hear from a woman in syria's largest city coming under heavy attack today. hmm, it says here that cheerios helps lower cholesterol as part of a heart healthy diet. that's true. ...but you still have to go to the gym. ♪ the one and only, cheerios ...but you sti[siri]e to go sirianother busy day today.ke? are you serious? [siri] yes i'm not allowed to be frivolous. ah ok, move my 4 o'clock today to tomorrow. change my 11am to 2. [siri] ok marty, i scheduled it for today. is that rick? where's rick? [siri] here's rick. oh, no that's not rick. now, how's the traffic headed downtown? [siri] here's the traffic. ah, it's terrible, terrible! driver, driver! cut across, cut across, we'll never make it downtown this way. i like you siri, you're going places. [siri] i'll try to remember that. see life in the best light. [music] transitions® lenses automatically filter just the right amount of light. so you see everything the way it's meant to be seen. experience life well lit, ask for transitions adaptive lenses. this is new york state. we built the first railway, the first trade route to the west, the greatest empires. then, some said, we lost our edge. well today, there's a new new york state. one that's working to attract businesses and create jobs. a place where innovation meets determination... and businesses lead the world. the new new york works for business. find out how it can work for yours at thenewny.com. violence is spilling in to damascus and also now allepo. it's syria's largest city. also now the scene of fierce fighting as rebels battle government respects fors for control. forces for control. at least 100 have died just today. >> the bombing started from three to four days before. and there have some neighborhoods in the city north side and some neighborhoods at the west side still more safe than other neighborhoods. these people, it they have no place to go. because -- they come to al whlen po allepo one to tw before and now they can't go to their homes and now to more safe neighborhoods.l allepo one to t before and now they can't go to their homes and now to more safe neighborhoods. allepo one to tw before and now they can't go to their homes and now to more safe neighborhoods.allepo one to two before and now they can't go to their homes and now to more safe neighborhoods. >> i spoke to an activist in allepo and we're not using her name for her own safety. let's talk about all that's taking place. allepo a very important commercial city. the largest in syria, which is interesting because most people think damascus. but rebels seem to have the advantage. >> this has been something we've been waiting for, something western governments have been fearing. even washington saying there could be massacre ahead. it's almost as if the united states decided to attack new york city. this is syria attacking its biggest city. pd t and the question now, is in the decisive battle. thousands have been infiltrating in, government forces sending tanks, helicopters. and this is a completely one-sided battle that could get very bad. >> so the regime or the government pulling out all the stops using aerial arsenal, grau ground forces. but is there any indication that they are weakening in any way? >> the short answer is no. syria is not a super power and what we've seen is when they're trying to put down their -- they am mass all their forces in one place and they don't have enough men or material to be everywhere at once. they are not likely to run out of material there. the question is how much can the rebels do. as we heard earlier, the government has cut off the city and there are citizens who can't get bread and gasoline. and the rebels seem determined to fight it out. >> and still no indications, really no i guess real clarity on an end in sight. >> in fact now. and this is the stunning thing. to be honest, as cruel and as ruth this will as this war has been up until now, it is mystifying to me why the rebels would try will this inside a crowded urban area. i mean, if you're trying to be a force for good, do you really want to draw civilians into this kind of blood shed? nothing outside the world is stopping it, weapons are coming in it's an open secret that weapons and money are being smuggled in. the people with guns are determined to keep fighting and no matter where you are, when the men with guns want to fight, no one can stop them. >> so the resources are endless. something else will have to intervene. >> or the rebels will -- the government is well supplied. the rebels could conceivably run out of men or material. but they he are still being supplied and the whole country is being boiled like a caldron. >> here we are at 16 months in and the numbers are sizable every day. today 100. >> and it could get a whole lot worse. this is a city of 3 million to 4 million people. the blood shed could be in-calculable. >> jonathan, thank you so much. this, an olympic shocker. particularly for michael phelps and his fans. we'll be going to london live to update you. and if you do have to go out today, you can continue watching cnn there your mobile phone and also from your desktop. cnn.com/tv. a pretty stunning defeat for one of the most decorated owe himmi himmi owe limpiance. a rather surprising outcome. ped droe, this is exactly what the olympic games are all about. you never know. they're full of surprises. you can't presume you know what the outcome will be. >> you're right. and this is a major story because not only did phelps fail to win the gold, he missed out a medal all together. so ryan lochte pretty much took michael back to school and taught him a lesson. he told michael phelps in the pool that he's got to step up his game if he's going to have a chance of picking up some titles here in london over the next ten days. he was like dynamite out there in the aquatic center. he led from start to pin finish. and phelps was fourth. brazil got the silver. japan with the bronze. it's a case of michael pick up the pieces and trying to figure out what went wrong in the pool. >> and i wonder for michael phelps who has quite the litany of races that he'll be involved in, if he would be reflecting on the what went wrong or if it's a matter of focusing on, okay, the next race. >> exactly. i think you forget about what happened. kind of like when you play golf. if you have a bad hole, you forget about it and you move on. up next he has to focus on his next goal getting back in there and going for a medal. he needs to get on the podium in the next event he's into raise his confidence. we spoke before the race and we talked about the fact that he just squeezed into the final. was he saving energy, was he actually struggling. the answer is he just wasn't fast enough. so was just the medley, is he going to be faster in other disciplines? michael phelps will come out and compete, no doubt about it, but right now, he's not looking like the fastest guy in the water. >> so is it a friendly rivalry? you've heard they're good friends and then you've also heard they motivate one another in kind of a more competitive way. so can you have both? which is it? >> well, i can tell you that when you spend as much time as they do together in the kind of competitive environment, i'm sure they have good days and bad days. rate now i think if you ask michael phelps if lochte is miss his best friend, he would say no, he just beat me. but they have mutual respect for each other and i think that they are decent friends.just beat me. but they have mutual respect for each other and i think that they are decent friends. but can you you be that close to someone you want to beat? i've talked to roernlg fger fed about that and he said we're this close, but when we're in competiti competition, i want to beat that guy more than anyone else. so i think it's tough to be great friends when you're out there going for gold. >> and serena and venus. they're sister, but they are competitors and the blood thing goes on the sidelines. so one more time, lochte winning his first gold. michael phelps does not medal at all. but there are more. meantime, michelle bap obam leeing the white house delegate and she had front row seat for serena williams' victory. sitting in the family box for the match. and she was seen chatting with willi williams' steer sister. williams gave the first lady a thumbs up to say hello and then met with mrs. obama after the victory. track and field or athletics is one of the most watched olympic sporting events. and an olympian who won two gold also happens to be my father. he's now 87 years old. he's a bit fragile these days in a wheelchair, but nothing will stop him from heading to london tomorrow, 64 years after winning the 800 meters 4 by 400 relay and brochbs in tnze in the 400 . but 1948 diver san lee and harrison dillard will be there, as well. my brother and i will escort my dad who is very anxious to reunite with all of them. we call them the '48ers. they will all be making that journey across the pond to london and dad along with fellow olympians from that historic games are featured in the new york times in a beautiful potential gallery. you've got to check it out. you can hear them in their own words, as well, at n ychlnytime. how they continue to keep the olympic flame burning bright. they comfort crying kids. and sometimes they teach them how to read and how to write. i'm talking about nannies. not those olympians i was speaking of. but the nannies in many ways every single day are spreading cheer and love to a lot of these kids. they're almost like second mothers to many of them. a family portrait coming up. not those olympians i was [ "human" by the human league playing ] humans. we mean well, but we're imperfect creatures living in a beautifully imperfect world. it's amazing we've made it this far. maybe it's because when one of us messes up, someone else comes along to help out. that's the thing about humans. when things are at their worst, we're at our best. see how at libertymutual.com. liberty mutual insurance -- responsibility. what's your policy? in syria today, government forces are laying siege to the city of allepo. rebel activists say there was nonstop shelling in the city this morning and residents have been fleeing to safer neighborhoods. they also said at least 100 people have been killed in fighting around the country today. one of the upstate new york's most recognizable buildings has been reduced to rubble this morning. intentionally the 19 story building just outside rochester was taken down. it was built back in 1973 and has been used as a nursing facility. but the small elevators made it too difficult for nursing staff to care for over 200 residents. so they decided to bring it down and then they'll start all over again. you may remember the story of an elderly school bus monitor taking shots, criticism, terrible licks from a group of middle school bullies. the video sparked outrage after going viral. now we're happy to report that the woman, 68-year-old karen klein, is not retiring. she isn't quitting because of what happened, but simply in her view it it's just time to leave. they are the glue holding many professional families together. yet many times they go either unnoticed or undervalued. i'm talking about nannies. lisa sylvester finds out how they do it. >> reporter: they read to them. they play with them. they have a way of making everything better. in every way a loving mom. except they're not. >> my favorite is a lot of times people will tell me how much i look like the kids and i'll gee, well, that's on coincidence because i'm the nanny. >> reporter: they are the nanny, helping raise other people's children. erica has been with her current family for 2 1/2 years. >> one of our jokes is that there's the husband, and then there's the-shf she's his wife, his contemporary, modern working woman, and then i'm her 1950s housewife who takes care of kids and dinner and runs them to, you know, last minute doctor's appointments. >> reporter: but it's a job erica says she loves. and so does lori. >> they make you happy and they make you laugh. sometimes they give you a hard time, but then it's fun. >> reporter: she is herself a single mother. when she's working for ten hours a day, it means she's away from her own child. >> yes, i do, i do miss him a lot before i think about him and sometimes i call just to hear his voice. >> reporter: she works in tacoma mark, maryland. >> she's a really strong person. i don't know how she does it. >> reporter: the stories of nannies and their private lives are the subject of a "new york times" photo essay. >> these women are a huge part in some cases 50%, 80%, 30% in raising the children that they take care of and they are really mother figures. >> reporter: she started the project after watching the relationship between her own child and a nanny. >> i watched my baby fall in love with another woman. and it was an incredibly you powerful experience. it was unexpected and it was intense and it was complicated. it was also very beautiful. >> reporter: this is her than any from guatemala. she shs been a nanny for 16 years. >> for me it's like my own child. it's like -- a feel, i can't explain. >> reporter: there are estimated 1 million nannies in the u.s. and yet they often go unnoticed. >> a lot of nannies are immigrants and don't have the same rights necessarily and access to the same kind of services. and i think that they tonight g don't get the credit they deserve at all. >> i definitely think that people tend to look down on nannies.all. >> i definitely think that people tend to look down on nannies.>> i definitely think t people tend to look down on nannies. i've had people say things where whatever they were saying i could tell that what they meant was, so what are you going to be when you grow up? >> reporter: in an thatnannies n entrusted with their true treasure, their children. they get paid for what they do. but for the good ones, there's no measure for the love they give. >> lisa sylvester joining us live from washington. a lot of families feel like they couldn't do without those nannies. they really are a piece -- a member of the family. but it's not necessarily a reflection of families that are wealthy, is it? >> no, not necessarily. this is one of those things where it's not just the affluent families that who can using nan nannies. and i can speak from personal experience. i have friends in the same situation. she put her name on a list for a daycare when she was six weeks pregnant because she couldn't get in, so many families turn to nannies or nanny shares. so it's becoming quite more common particularly in your urban cities for professional peoples to turn to nannies. >> is there a push for certain states to adopt some type of legislation to ensure that in n nannies don't get short changed when it comes to benefits, health insurance, vacation time, being paid for sick day, et cetera is this becau cetera? because i know that can be a real problem, too. >> this is a real issue. and what you said at the beginning of our conversation is so true. parents rely on these nannies. but it is a two-way exchange. and for the nannies,e treated f. new york state recently passed a domestic workers bill of right so is when things like overtime or sick time or when all these issues come up, that at least there is some mechanism for these issues to be resolved. and in montgomery county, maryland, they have passed a law a couple years ago where they now have families required to have contracts with their nannies spelling out again will is what will happen in the event someone is sick, this is overtime rules, vacation and so forth. and so i think that will go a long way so that the nannies feel treated and they get the respect that they deserve. >> lisa sylvester, thanks solve. if you're planning a trip this summer, there are new apps to help you get organized and find the best deals while on the road. extreme heat continues to cripple the crop industry. just take a look at how badly corn production is getting hit. according to statistics, over 64% of the country is experiencing moderate or worse drought conditions. the effects of the heat will soon take its toll on our wallets, as well. emily schmidt has details. >> reporter: in a rural corner of maryland, it is the right place, the wrong time, to live off the land. >> yeah, it's been sunny side too much this ye

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