Live Breaking News & Updates on Goa in charge mahua moitra

Transcripts For SFGTV2 20130222



[applause] so, did anybody hear math? anybody hear any math? yes. i thought the 1, 2, 3, 4 pattern. good. that s counting in hindu. you know how to count to 4. see. 1, 2, 3, 4, 5. 1, 2, 3, 4, 5. 1, 2, 3, 4, 5. pause. 1, 2, 3, 4, 5. 1, 2, 3, 4, 5. pause. that s a rhythmic pattern that repeats itself 3 times about did you know we are doing multicasion and dividing up here? you didn t. so, this music we are dancing on is rhythmicly complicated the underline rhythmic does not go in a straight line. it goes if a cycle beginning on 1 and ending on 1. we are dancing on a 16 beat cycle. you can count to 16. why don t you keep the cycle and we will put a high on top of that. count with one and you can clap. 13, 14, 15, 16, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5. 1, 2, 3, 4, 5. 1, 2, 3, 4, 5. 1, 2, 3, 4, 5. 1, 2, 3, 4, 5. did you know what you just did? you divided 16 into 3 equal parts. i bet you didn t think that was possible i know a physicist that didn t think it was possible. we are rocket scientists. half of you count 16, half do the t high. you can do it. first you try the 16. don t do the t high yet. 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16. 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, you keep counting 16. you guys do this. you will start 5 times 3, 3 times. 1, 2, 3, 4, 5. 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, pause. 1, 2, 3, 4, 5. 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 1. did we end on your 1? whoa, you divided 16 into 3 equal parts. did you know you could do that? i m dizzy. okay. well, we are going to end with a t high within a t high like a wheel that goes around and around and around. i want you to figure out there is a multiplecasion problem in here and i want you to see if you can tell us when we are done what it is. something will repeat 3 times. [applause] okay. which one of you figured it out? yes. 49, hum. i can see how you would say that, why do you say that? there is 49 of something. okay. did you notice the turns? the spins? how many were there in one piece? yes. no. yes. 9. how many times did we repeat that? how many times? 3. 9 times 3 is 27. we did 27 turns but we were going, 1, 2, 1, 1, 2, 1. that s a sophisticated math concept, you were not wrong. i bet you will grow up to be a mathematician. i will give you my address you will have to send me your first paycheck because i taught you this. at this point we would like to thank you very much for coming. if you have any questions. i don t know if we want to open it you will for questions. may be just a few? okay. yes. what s your question? how do we get in this program? that is a good question. it s an interesting question because the answer with the 3 of us is the same. what i want to point out i look like i might be from india when i talk i sound like i m from america. my parents are from india but i was born in america and i started this dance when i was 18. i was not a baby e. both charlotte and an drea did as well. charlotte at 15 years and joe airna and i 15 years. that s how we got in this program. we practiced very hard. very, very hard we practiced everyday and we have been been in india practicing 8 times where our teacher is from. yes. yes. well there are similarities all of southeast asia. we performed in bali with a group. it s a story from the [inaudible] and so the indian epiics actually the indian epiics for very common in cambodia and bali and thailand and there is a different aesthetic. all southeast asia and asia there are a lot of similarities. he is a male entity. he is not are you referring to the story? it s interesting you should say that. a unique indian concept is one of half male, half female. and that is unlike some dances the solo dancer portrays all of the parts in the story. you can portray a feminine aspect and then masculine aspect with the bow and arrow. the male has to portray feminine and the female has to portray masculine. there is a very fierce dance and a soft sort of dance and every dancer has to learn all those aspects. it s very, you know, my teacher i call him a guru in this art form you have to study very, very hard. you have to learn about all the cultural aspects. he says it s liberating because he enjoys and has to learn to bring up the feminine aspect. he s a strong character it s a challenge for him and he likes it. the stories are metaphor cal. i don t look at this that this is a man or woman. there are qualities we all have that some of us are in touch with and are not. in our culture we think people should not be people they have be macho and feminine image. every human being inside them has feminine and masculine qualities. one is not good or bad it s a duality you need to be a whole human being in touch of what is going on in society. if everyone danced or got in touch with different sides of them there would be more harmony in the world. yes. no, we have a school all over here. i m talking so. . we have a school 250 students a school show coming up. she will tell you where you can take classes. in our class we teach kids from 5 years old to 55 years and older. our guru is 62 and he dances circles around all of us he s been dancing since he was 9. you can all learn and parents and grandfathers and grand mourths can learn, toochlt we have a special men s class and have classes in san francisco. if you have questions there is an address on the card and our e mail and you can or you can come talk to us if you have questions. we would like to say and you can say to us thank you so much for coming. [applause] good evening i am the director of the culture association and devoted to the program and here we have master of arts. (applause). (speaking spanish) (speaking spanish). what he is saying that thanks to the bant. bante he got funding for of the peru vaifian culture and got approved. (speaking spanish). okay. good. (speaking spanish). so we have a variety of instruments that we re going to be showing you. (speaking spanish). the name of the instrument is called tale boheha. (speaking spanish). it was a time in peru when the africans were prohibited from playing or making instruments. (speaking spanish). so they were forced to make their own instruments. (speaking spanish). so they use the surroundings and big jars and they used to have water or other type was drinks. (speaking spanish). covered with leather skin. (speaking spanish). and they make the drums. . (speaking spanish). (drums). (applause). (speaking spanish). this instrument is called dungo. spr (speaking spanish). we have two but only one was used. (speaking spanish). this is one that was used north of the capital. (speaking spanish). in the cities of the country (speaking spanish). when he was a child he was able to see those instruments and on extension today. (drums). (applause) . this is a donkey s jaw. it could be a horse or a donkey. donkey s jaw. and it s played by spiking it and to make the rattle sound and also creates this. (applause). (speaking spanish) sorry. (speaking spanish). this is the kahita and it is created as the i don t know that word. how do you say that? the piggy bank. you know where the boxes and the churches collect money? yeah. this is the original he here. yeah. (speaking spanish) (laughing) (speaking spanish). this instrument is called c carete and with the right hand and the left hand and open and shuts in a rhythmic time. (speaking spanish). so this instrument is called sen sero but it s actually a cow bell. (moo). it was made out of material. (speaking spanish)

United-states , Peru , Thailand , India , Bali , Goa , Spain , Cambodia , San-francisco , California , America , Spanish

Transcripts For SFGTV2 20130215



[applause] so, did anybody hear math? anybody hear any math? yes. i thought the 1, 2, 3, 4 pattern. good. that s counting in hindu. you know how to count to 4. see. 1, 2, 3, 4, 5. 1, 2, 3, 4, 5. 1, 2, 3, 4, 5. pause. 1, 2, 3, 4, 5. 1, 2, 3, 4, 5. pause. that s a rhythmic pattern that repeats itself 3 times about did you know we are doing multicasion and dividing up here? you didn t. so, this music we are dancing on is rhythmicly complicated the underline rhythmic does not go in a straight line. it goes if a cycle beginning on 1 and ending on 1. we are dancing on a 16 beat cycle. you can count to 16. why don t you keep the cycle and we will put a high on top of that. count with one and you can clap. 13, 14, 15, 16, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5. 1, 2, 3, 4, 5. 1, 2, 3, 4, 5. 1, 2, 3, 4, 5. 1, 2, 3, 4, 5. did you know what you just did? you divided 16 into 3 equal parts. i bet you didn t think that was possible i know a physicist that didn t think it was possible. we are rocket scientists. half of you count 16, half do the t high. you can do it. first you try the 16. don t do the t high yet. 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16. 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, you keep counting 16. you guys do this. you will start 5 times 3, 3 times. 1, 2, 3, 4, 5. 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, pause. 1, 2, 3, 4, 5. 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 1. did we end on your 1? whoa, you divided 16 into 3 equal parts. did you know you could do that? i m dizzy. okay. well, we are going to end with a t high within a t high like a wheel that goes around and around and around. i want you to figure out there is a multiplecasion problem in here and i want you to see if you can tell us when we are done what it is. something will repeat 3 times. [applause] okay. which one of you figured it out? yes. 49, hum. i can see how you would say that, why do you say that? there is 49 of something. okay. did you notice the turns? the spins? how many were there in one piece? yes. no. yes. 9. how many times did we repeat that? how many times? 3. 9 times 3 is 27. we did 27 turns but we were going, 1, 2, 1, 1, 2, 1. that s a sophisticated math concept, you were not wrong. i bet you will grow up to be a mathematician. i will give you my address you will have to send me your first paycheck because i taught you this. at this point we would like to thank you very much for coming. if you have any questions. i don t know if we want to open it you will for questions. may be just a few? okay. yes. what s your question? how do we get in this program? that is a good question. it s an interesting question because the answer with the 3 of us is the same. what i want to point out i look like i might be from india when i talk i sound like i m from america. my parents are from india but i was born in america and i started this dance when i was 18. i was not a baby e. both charlotte and an drea did as well. charlotte at 15 years and joe airna and i 15 years. that s how we got in this program. we practiced very hard. very, very hard we practiced everyday and we have been been in india practicing 8 times where our teacher is from. yes. yes. well there are similarities all of southeast asia. we performed in bali with a group. it s a story from the [inaudible] and so the indian epiics actually the indian epiics for very common in cambodia and bali and thailand and there is a different aesthetic. all southeast asia and asia there are a lot of similarities. he is a male entity. he is not are you referring to the story? it s interesting you should say that. a unique indian concept is one of half male, half female. and that is unlike some dances the solo dancer portrays all of the parts in the story. you can portray a feminine aspect and then masculine aspect with the bow and arrow. the male has to portray feminine and the female has to portray masculine. there is a very fierce dance and a soft sort of dance and every dancer has to learn all those aspects. it s very, you know, my teacher i call him a guru in this art form you have to study very, very hard. you have to learn about all the cultural aspects. he says it s liberating because he enjoys and has to learn to bring up the feminine aspect. he s a strong character it s a challenge for him and he likes it. the stories are metaphor cal. i don t look at this that this is a man or woman. there are qualities we all have that some of us are in touch with and are not. in our culture we think people should not be people they have be macho and feminine image. every human being inside them has feminine and masculine qualities. one is not good or bad it s a duality you need to be a whole human being in touch of what is going on in society. if everyone danced or got in touch with different sides of them there would be more harmony in the world. yes. no, we have a school all over here. i m talking so. . we have a school 250 students a school show coming up. she will tell you where you can take classes. in our class we teach kids from 5 years old to 55 years and older. our guru is 62 and he dances circles around all of us he s been dancing since he was 9. you can all learn and parents and grandfathers and grand mourths can learn, toochlt we have a special men s class and have classes in san francisco. if you have questions there is an address on the card and our e mail and you can or you can come talk to us if you have questions. we would like to say and you can say to us thank you so much for coming. [applause] good evening i am the director of the culture association and devoted to the program and here we have master of arts. (applause). (speaking spanish) (speaking spanish). what he is saying that thanks to the bant. bante he got funding for of the peru vaifian culture and got approved. (speaking spanish). okay. good. (speaking spanish). so we have a variety of instruments that we re going to be showing you. (speaking spanish). the name of the instrument is called tale boheha. (speaking spanish). it was a time in peru when the africans were prohibited from playing or making instruments. (speaking spanish). so they were forced to make their own instruments. (speaking spanish). so they use the surroundings and big jars and they used to have water or other type was drinks. (speaking spanish). covered with leather skin. (speaking spanish). and they make the drums. . (speaking spanish). (drums). (applause). (speaking spanish). this instrument is called dungo. spr (speaking spanish). we have two but only one was used. (speaking spanish). this is one that was used north of the capital. (speaking spanish). in the cities of the country (speaking spanish). when he was a child he was able to see those instruments and on extension today. (drums). (applause) . this is a donkey s jaw. it could be a horse or a donkey. donkey s jaw. and it s played by spiking it and to make the rattle sound and also creates this. (applause). (speaking spanish) sorry. (speaking spanish). this is the kahita and it is created as the i don t know that word. how do you say that? the piggy bank. you know where the boxes and the churches collect money? yeah. this is the original he here. yeah. (speaking spanish) (laughing) (speaking spanish). this instrument is called c carete and with the right hand and the left hand and open and shuts in a rhythmic time. (speaking spanish). so this instrument is called sen sero but it s actually a cow bell. (moo). it was made out of material. (speaking spanish)

United-states , Peru , Thailand , India , Bali , Goa , Spain , Cambodia , San-francisco , California , America , Spanish

Transcripts For CNNW CNNI Simulcast 20141010



where is kim jong-un? an parent no-show to an apartment ceremony anniversary. i m zain asher. i m errol barnett. we re going to begin with the latest developments on the still ongoing ebola outbreak. we re getting sobering numbers on the financial impact of this crisis. the world bank predicts west african countries can lose over $32.6 billion over the next three months. the nation with the most deaths so far, liberia, is getting help from the u.s. military. another 700 military personnel due late their month. the situation is serious. the cdc director had grim words about the outbreak on thursday, comparing it to another deadly global pandemic. i will say that in the 30 years i ve been working in public health, the only thing like this has been aids. and we have to work now so that this is not the world s next aids. dr. thomas frieden there. concern is growing in spain, where more people are entering the hospital for observation. and a nurse who contracted ebola is there. al goodman is there. how is she doing? what is her condition at this time? reporter: she s in this hospital behind me. and her condition has worsened. now, that s all that we ve heard from the medical team. they say that the patient has told them not to release anymore information. from senior politicians, we ve heard that her life is at risk. and that has given, because of the lack of information we ve gotten a lot of speculation and reports citing forces in spanish media, that she had a tube to assist her breathing. that she didn t. she was fine yesterday and took a turn for the worse last night. we don t know. clearly, her concern has worsened. that s not a good sign for her. in this hospital, the number of people under observation has doubled since this time yesterday. it s up to 12 people now. a lot of those are medical workers who treated her at another hospital in the south, in madrid, when she came in several days ago. that s where the case with ebola was confirmed. but they didn t have, perhaps, the protection that was necessary they re saying. and some of them are in the hospital. also, two beauticians, hair dresses, that were working on her hair. they ve checked in for observation. and outside of the hospital, still in somewhere in the range of 70 people are being monitored. so, a lot of concern here. zain? let s hope the disease doesn t spread further. there s so many critical mistakes made in her diagnosis. she was turned away from the hospital a couple of times. what are spanish health care officials, what have they learned from this? and how are they correcting their protocol? reporter: the spanish health care officials, the medical workers, say they knew what was needed long ago. even some nurses appealed to a prosecutor back in july, that spain was not going to be prepared for this. a prosecutor has just this week opened a criminal investigation. so, medical workers have been saying they ve been warning the government for weeks. remember, that two other ebola patients were treated and died here. those were spanish mission tears in africa. they were brought back here. and they died here. the woman who is the only confirmed case, part of that medical team. now, the politicians, the government, the leaders are saying, all of the protocols were followed. everything was right. now, they re going to revise the protocols. there s a meeting this day between the national government and the 17 regional governments of spain to look at the protocols. they ve gotten help in from the centers for disease control. they re trying to ramp up what went wrong and try to make it better right now. including equipment and training for the medical workers. let s hope her condition improves. we are thinking of her. thank you. this is important for any of our viewers who expect to travel this weekend. some of the biggest and busiest airports in the united states begin screening for ebola on saturday. other nations following suit, as well. cnn s aviation correspondent, renee marsh explains, with the new procedures, it will be difficult to identify travelers with ebola. at airports in west africa, in countries hardest lihit by t ebola virus, everyone is checked for a favor. now, five major airports will begin temperature chex when they land here. but the screening provides a false sense of security. people can take tylenol and ibuprofen and mask that fever. reporter: over the last two months, authorities at west african airports denied boarding to 77 people with fevers or other ebola symptoms. none of those cases turned out to be the disease. you have to remember. people have fevers for lots of reasons. and you re going to be looking for a need until a haystack. mr. duncan wouldn t have been identified by temperature screening. reporter: the temperature ch checks were announced after thomas duncan, died in a dallas hospital wednesday. the cdc does not believe duncan had any ebola symptoms when he arrived. u.s. officials acknowledge that even with the new measures, more ebola cases could arrive in the u.s. we re not making a claim that anything is 100% secure. but most what s important, is we know. reporter: authorities in england are ramping up their screenings. and canada is planning increased screening, as well. my goal is that we create internationally as many different checkpoints as possible for travelers who go through the system. reporter: meanwhile in new york, 200 workers at la guardia s airport walked off the job. following ongoing complaints they say include a lack of equipment and training. the ebola scare is one of the huge parts of it because the workers are cleaning the planes. they find all sorts of things. needles, you know, vomit. all kinds of stuff. reporter: their employer has a different staying last week employees were briefed on protocols. now, the workers say they will return to work. renee marsh, cnn, dulles, international airport. airline passengers have even had some scarce. there was an ebola scare that kept passengers on a flight from philadelphia to the dominican republic stuck onboard the plane for two hours after they landed. here s what we understand happened. local media reports that a man on this u.s. airways flight said, quote, i have ebola. you re all screwed. so, when this plane landed a hazmat crew, as you re seeing here, had to board the plane and escort the man off. it s not clear if he was arrested. but the plane was cleared. the airline later apologized for the inconvenience. but said it had to follow strict guidelines established by the cdc. scary stuff, indeed. switching gears. former soviet leader mikhail gorbachev has been hospitalized. the 83-year-old gorbachev was telling a russian radio station he had a reoccurrence of an undisclosed disease. gorbachev reportedly told russian news service that he s currently wired up to a hospital monitor. he is suffering from a severe form of diabetes. gorbachev was the leader of the soviet union from 1985 until 1991, when the ussr was disbanded. good information on gorbachev s health. what about kim jong-un s health? where is he? the mystery surrounding the north korean leader is de deepening. kim jong-un failed to appear at an annual event. he hasn t been seen in public for more than a month, fueling international speculation about his health. paula hancock joins us live from south korea, where we ve been watching all of this. paula, i know it s difficult to know for sure what s happening in north korea. but what do we know about what took place at today s commemoration event? this was a ceremony that was held at the palace of the sun. this is where the two former leaders are enbalmed and lying in state. kim jong-un has gone to pay his respects on october 10th. he didn t go this friday. the ceremony took place. but there was a basket of flowers with kim jong-un s name on it that was presented rather than the man himself. this is going to deepen the speculation that is swirling around the world as to where the north korean leader is. just last weekend, there was a high-level delegation from north korea, that came at the last minute, to meet officials in south korea and also to attend the closing games closing ceremony of the asian games. and they apparently said to the unification minister that kim jong-un was not sick. and they also said he passes on his greetings. we had an announcement a few hours ago from the unification ministry saying as far as they are concerned, they believed that the leadership is normal. the south korean government is putting to bay there has been a coup or the leader has been deposed. the assumption is, he has health issues. even if he has health issues, north korea behaved in a bipolar fashion. and in some ways, things have been quite typical coming from pyongyang this past week. that s right. you had the high-level delegation. analysts say it s unlikely that the number two, three and four in the country would have left if kim jong-un was not in power or any sinister has happened. or if he was incapacitated and not in control. even if he s not in the public eye. the fact this delegation took place, show there s could be instability in north korea. there s different rumors and speculation. we re not hearing from north korea. so, it s very difficult to know exactly what s going on. but it has been five weeks. and inevitably, there will be a lot of scrutiny as to why he has not been in the public eye because he is always in the public eye. only once has he disappeared for three weeks back in 2012. that wasn t explained. he turned up at a dolphin park. and there s no mention where he had been. but he s often on-camera. he s giving guidance, field guidance to those around him. and often on north korean television. the fact he hasn t been seen physically for five weeks is pretty significant. all right. paula hancock, looifr live for us in seoul, south korea. it could be gout. a leg injury, who knows? it has been a tense night in st. louis, missouri, as protesters faced off with police over the shooting of another black teenager. police say one officer was injured and two people arrested thursday. the protest started wednesday after the teenager was shot and killed by an officer. police say the suspect fired several shots at the officer first. the officer shot back 17 times. more protests are planned in nearby ferguson, missouri, this weekend, where unarmed teenager, michael brown, was shot and killed by a police officer about two months ago. more of the world s biggest stories still to come for you after the break. something that zain knows about. stocks have been falling. from new york to hong kong. so, we re going to look at what lies ahead for european markets. a live report from london is coming up. also ahead, why many are saying pope francis could be the next nobel peace prize winner. we ll see. we re in seattle to see which 100 calorie black cherry greek yogurt tastes best. definitely that one. that one s delicious. it s yoplait! what? i love yoplait! the other one is chobani. really. i like this one better. yoplait wins again! take the taste-off for yourself. it was a brutal day for u.s. stocks on thursday. as october s rollercoaster ride continues. the dow plunged 375 points, the biggest loss this year. that translated to a 2% loss. wow. dramatic there. the nasdaq and the s&p 500 have had tough trading sessions, as well. one day earlier, the dow had its single-biggest gain of 2014, with a lot of fears about global and economic growth that are feeding some of the instability that apparently is leading to volatility. let s cross over and check trading in asia and australia. zooming it over here for you. and as you see, it s allred. japan s nikkei is down one percentage point. the hong sang is down a percentage point. the shanghai composites down. pulling back more than 2%. a lot of not a lot of optimism there in the markets. and europe exchanges are just getting their trading day started. could things look better for investors over there? let s go to naina dos santos, who joins us from london. we saw the dow suffer triple-digit losses. the worst one-day loss of the year. that s coming after a massive rally. what s with the volatility? what s going on here? this shows you how fickle the markets can be. and it underlines the fact that investors are getting extremely nervous about the markets hitting record highs earlier. the economic fundamentals. the gdp growth isn t there. the jobs growth isn t there in some of the economies, too. a lot hinges on what was said by the european bank manager. his views reiterated about the head of the national monetary fund, as well. warning countries in the eurozone to get ahead of the economies. let me show you how things have opened here across europe. markets have started out the day on a downbeat note. in points terms, this is one of the multimonth lows. putting on the decline of 1%. this is one of the better performing economies across the whole of the european union. i want to hone in on germany here, with the dax around .75%. this is where the pressure point is. the reason why people are getting nervous across this region is because yesterday we had a dispointing raff of export data from germany. remember this is supposed to be the exporting powerhour of sewer row zone. and we saw exports fall to their lowest level since back in 2009. even germany is having a hard time economically speaking these days. all those red arrows across your screen, clearly making investors nervous. typically, history tells us october can be a rough month for stocks. could that be part of it, as well? probably. what we re seeing is there s a dip in confidence here. people are looking forward to statements coming from the imf and the world bank throughout the course of this week. and there s a lot of potential shock out there to the global economy. we have health crises in places like africa, that could affect the production of the mining sector. china s economy slowing down. and concerns about what the european central bank can do to stimulate an any like this. we ve even had the chancellor of the u.k. effectively our finance min minister saying that even to the ftse is outside of the euros and we re not immune from the headwinds coming in from europe. and factor in russia and the situation in ukraine, what is dragged companies. october is a difficult month. you and i have reported on business news for a number of years. that old saying says buy in may go away. traditionally, october and september are difficult months. investors start to reassess their portfolios. this is what they re looking for. they think, are the economics telling us something different from the markets? and that s why one day we have the markets up. and another day, we have the markets down, when the economic data doesn t seem to support that theory. october is traditionally a bad month for stocks. fears about the eurozone economy playing in. nina, thank you. we appreciate it. next on cnn, one of mexico s most wanted cartel leaders has been captured. we ll look at why the u.s. has to offer up to $5 million for his arrest. also, coming up, for months, authorities have said it s likely the passengers onboard malaysia airlines flight 17 were killed instantly when a rocket hit the plane over ukraine. now, a new detail is raising questions about that theory. stay with us. every day people fall, from a simple misstep, to tripping over a rug, to just losing their balance. and not being able to get up from a fall can have serious lifetime consequences. being prepared is important. philips lifeline with autoalert is more than just a medical alert button. it s an advanced fall-detection system, designed to get you help quickly. if you fall and you re unable to push your button, the fall detection technology within autoalert can trigger the button to automatically place a call for help. philip s lifeline has saved more lives than any other medical alert service. this is philips lifeline, we received a fall detected signal. do you need help? call now about philips lifeline with autoalert, the only button with philips advanced fall-detection technology. we ll send you this free brochure with information about the importance of getting help quickly should you happen to fall. when i fell, i couldn t press the button. i blacked out, and so having lifeline with auto alert really saved me. if they don t push the button, they re not able to push the button, it takes over and gets them the help they need. multiple sensors inside autoalert can recognize the differences between your everyday movements and a fall. so if a fall does happen, and you re unable to push your button, autoalert can detect it and automatically place a call for help. in a fall or medical emergency, every second counts. with lifeline you re connected 24 hours a day, 365 days a year, so you have quick access to help when you need it most. over 7 million people have benefitted from the lifeline service. no wonder it has been recommended by over 200,000 health care professionals nationwide. a personal emergency could happen at any time. be prepared. make sure you have auto alert. if you or someone you love would like information about philips lifeline with autoalert, call now and we ll send you this free brochure, and ask about free activation when you order. call this number. call now. one of mexico s most-wanted cartel leaders has been ke detained. he faces u.s. charges, including drug trafficking, conspiracy, money laundering and order people to be killed. a new development regarding the malaysia airlines jet that crashed in ukraine, killing everybody onboard. the dutch foreign minister says rescuers found a passenger wearing an oxygen mask. this raises questions about what really happened in the moments after the airliner was allegedly hit by a missile back in july. many of the passengers of that doomed flight were from the netherlands. they did not see the missile coming. but you know that someone was found with an oxygen mask over his mouth? so, he had time to do that. the foreign minister later expressed regret for those comments. all of the victim s relatives had not been performed. the mh-17 disaster goes to my heart. i feel enormously for the next of kin. the last thing i would want to do is worsen anywhere suffering. now, to let s go to what s taking place in asia. typhoon vongfong is weakening. but it remains a credible threat to everyone in japan. this is the second typhoon in two weeks to threaten the island nation. derek van dam is here. we can t relax. it can be dangerous. very much so. this storm is still an equivalent strong category 4, if it was an atlantic hurricane. it s dropped below supertyphoon status. this is the latest information. the latest update. winds at 220 at the moment. we don t want to minimalize the storm because it s packing quite a punch. and has its eye set on okinawa, the southern japanese islands. saturday morning and impacting the japanese mainland. here s the projected path. the path of uncertainty. you can see how the wind strength does weaken as it enters the prefecture in southwestern japan. expected to impact tokyo by monday and tuesday. keeping a close eye on that. residents in and around okinawa need to pay attention. the eyewall is going to make a considerable difference, depending on where it travels over the next 24 hours. the good news working for us here. it s interacting with cooler ocean temperatures. that s going to weaken the storm significantly going forward in time. if this storm is just a little to the east of okinawa, this would be good news because it will keep the strongest winds offshore for that region. but if it s only 52 to 100 kilometers to the west, that s a different scenario. the strongest winds onshore near the city of okinawa. this is a two-punch here. this storm is following a similar track to what was typhoon panpone that brought the rainfall to the east coast of the japanese rain fall. we re following cyclone hudhud. and this storm is expected to impact the east coast of india by sunday morning. now, the cnn world weather center is expecting upwards of 50 million people to be affected or impacted by this storm. heavy rain and also strong winds. that s all from the world weather center. you know, and the typhoon vongfong, even though it is weakening, residents need to pay attention. thank you so much. we appreciate it. thanks, derek. the family of the man who died from ebola in the united states is angry. thomas eric duncan s nephew says his uncle wasn t given a chance to live. we have that story coming up. also coming up for you, depending on the kindness of strangers. refugees fleeing from i.s.i.s., tight to survive in the iraqi capital. [light instrumental music] female announcer: recycle your old fridge and get $50. schedule your free pickup at: welcome back to those of you watching here in the u.s. and all around the world. we appreciate it. i m errol barnett. and i m zain asher. as fears of ebola spread across the globe, australia reports that tests on 11 people have come up negative on the virus. they were screened after arriving from west africa. they included a man arriving home after tending to patients in sierra leone. the disappearance of kim jong-un is ramping up speculation. the 31-year-old kim has not been seen in public for more than a month, raising rumors about his current status, particularly involving his health. and kurdish forces defending the town of kobani says the situation is getting worse. and that s despite air strikes against i.s.i.s. more i.s.i.s. fighters and armed vehicles are entering the city. and turkey says it will not send ground troops to save the border town. britain and canada will join the united states in screening passengers whose travel originates in the nation s hardest hit by ebola. jim golden tells us about the british plans to keep the disease out of that country. reporter: in the next couple days, passenger who land here at heathrow and garrett airport, will be asked how did they get here? did they come through the three western african nations where ebola is taking hold. they won t be able to check on people who have done one hop. many people will have gone through multiple cities to get here. this enhanced health protection in a the u.k. is implementing is to see who might have come in exposure with those who have ebola. it can take 10, 15, 20 days until people present ebola. they want to carefully check these people. also, they want to know where the people are going to go after they leave the airport. and there will be health official here s in the u.k. airport, if these people present any kind of illness. the health officials here and the government say, nothing is 100% foolproof. they want to ensure the public they are trying to find out if anybody comes into the u.k. who may be infected with ebola. jim bolden, cnn, heathrow airport. so many western countries desperately trying what they can to prevent the virus from spreading. the family of the first person diagnosed with ebola in the united states says he died because of bias or racism. they say thomas eric duncan was treated differently than the ebola patients in the u.s. ed lavandera has this story from dallas, texas. reporter: thomas eric duncan s family is left wondering what if? they say their not angry everything wasn t done to save the man s life. he didn t get what he deserved, like everybody else in america. reporter: his nephew says it s suspicious that all of the white patients survived and this one black patient passed away. he wasn t given a chance. he came from liberia. and he had all of the symptoms that he had ebola. and they sent him off. reporter: hospital officials say thomas eric duncan was treated like any other patient, regardless of nationality and ability to pay for care. the hospital says it has a long history of treating a multicultural community in this area. duncan s family says the hospital took too long to give the patient experimental medicine that might have helped save him. hospital officials say the investigative drug was administered as soon as his physicians determined that his condition warranted it. and as soon as it could be obtained. but hospital officials didn t ask for permission to use the experimental drug, until after five days that duncan was admitted and three days after he tested positive for ebola. there s going to be evaluations that take place. reporter: texas officials are considering an investigation into his treatment. but a top federal official says, despite the initial missteps of the hospital, criticism of duncan s medical team isn t fair. they provided excellent medical care. people need to appreciate that even under the best of circumstances, ebola is a very serious disease. in this particular epidemic, with an overall mortality of a bit more than 50%. reporter: duncan died with family members unable to get anywhere near him. the last words that eric duncan said were said to a nurse. she asked him what he wanted. and he said, he wanted to see his son. reporter: the morning duncan died, he was supposed to speak with his son over a video line. but time ran out. the call was never made. ed lavandera, cnn, dallas. now, to the battle against i.s.i.s. u.s. air strikes on i.s.i.s. targets in kobani, syria, seem to be doing very little to stop the advance of i.s.i.s. militants. the terror group now controls a third of that city. u.s. forces launched 11 more air strikes in syria and in iraq thursday. most of them near kobani. military officials say they destroyed an i.s.i.s. bunker and other targets near sinjar mountain in iraq. the world s attention may be focused on the battle for kobani. but the syrian regime is not letting up its activities against forces. 25 civilians were killed including 4 women and 4 children. you re looking at amateur video posted on social media, that claims to show the aftermath of that strike. and the united nations says more than 3 million people have fled syria because of the brutal civil war. when you factor in ton registered refugees, the number is much higher. look at your screen here. the number of total refugees, according to regional governments. 1.6 million in turkey. 1.5 million in lebanon. and 1.4 million in jordan. thousands of people fleeing are heading to baghdad, looking for jobs and places to live and move on. and even though they can get some help from the iraqi government, they really depend on friends and strangers to get by. our senior international correspondent, ben wedeman, has more. reporter: the tire shop is an unlikely place to make a home. but when you ve lost everything, you take what you can get. this family, christians from northern iraq, have lived here in baghdad since june. they fled their home near mosul, as i.s.i.s. overran the town. my friend who owns this place, told me bring your family to live here and we ll take care of the rest, says sami, the father. the shop owner, by the way, is a muslim. 8-year-old isa rocks the cradle of his brother, born in baghdad. the smell of tires perm nates the room. in an annex to a mosque, 18 families, about 100 people, have also found a temporary home. they are a shia minority from northern iraq, one of many ancient communities driven from their lands by i.s.i.s., which continues to smash the complicated ethnic mosaic that was iraq, into a thousand pieces. this man tells me the local community has been generous. until now, we haven t had to pay for anything out of our pockets, he says. but our lives are back there. that s where our homes are. where our fore fathers lived. there, we had our friends, our relatives, our graves and our land. his family lives in a classroom at a nearby elementary school that shelters 140 people from the north. he can t afford medicine for his ailing wife. when they arrived in baghdad, the family slept on the pavement before coming here. all we want is to go back to our homes, to our homes. if we could return home, be safe, we d be happy to sleep on the bare ground. thousands of people fleeing i.s.i.s. have come to baghdad. but there are no camps in this sprawling city. no facilities to support them. most depend on the kindness of strangers and friends for help. so, this man has problems with his kidneys. he doesn t have enough money to pay for the operation he needs medicine. and everybody here seems to have problems. health problems. the kids all have diarrhea. people are desperately looking for work that they can t find. the government has tried to help them. in theory, every family that s been displaced gets about 1 million dinars. about $800. the kindness of strangers can only go so far. ben wedeman, cnn, baghdad. in the number of refugees is going to increase, unless i.s.i.s. retreats. for the first time, same-sex marriage is legal in the majority of american states. up next, where people are lining up to get their licenses. and which former soviet state is making same-sex history as well. that s coming up. when it comes to medicare, everyone talks about what happens when you turn sixty-five. but, really, it s what you do before that counts. see, medicare doesn t cover everything. only about eighty percent of part b medical costs. the rest is on you. [ male announcer ] consider an aarp medicare supplement insurance plan insured by unitedhealthcare insurance company. like all standardized medicare supplement insurance plans, it could really save you in out-of-pocket medical costs. so, call now and request this free decision guide. discover how an aarp medicare supplement plan could go long™ for you. do you want to choose your doctors? avoid networks? what about referrals? [ male announcer ] all plans like these let you visit any doctor or hospital that accepts medicare patients, with no networks and virtually no referrals needed. so, call now, request your free guide, and explore the range of aarp medicare supplement plans. sixty-five may get all the attention, but now is a good time to start thinking about how you want things to be. [ male announcer ] go long™. estonia has made history with a new law on same-sex partnerships. this new law grants same-sex couples, like the ones you re seeing here, the same rights and responsibilities granted to heterosexual couples. and estonia is the first to allow parter inships. in the u.s. state of nevada, a state senator and his partner of six years became the first same-sex couple to get married there. nevada is the 26th state to allow gay and lesbian couples to wed. which means same-sex marriage is now legal in more than half of the united states. nine more states could legalize unions after federal appeals court issued mandates in recent months. and the u.s. supreme court decided monday to take up challenges to these rulings. seems there s no love in hong kong right now. pro-democracy protesters are urging for new demonstrations in the coming howevers. this comes after officials canceled talks scheduled for today. does the movement really have the energy to keep going? let s pull in our senior international correspondent, ivan watson, live in hong kong. and talk about the latest information here, ivan. i m wondering, with the talks off the table, and student leaders calling for more protests throughout the weekend, are we back to square one here? the same place we were two weeks ago. you can make that argument. the students say they have to get demonstrators back out into the streets here. back into this encampment here that has been under way for a week and a half, blocking off a stretch of highway in downtown hong kong. to keep up the pressure on the hong kong government. that s after the number two official in the hong kong government announced the talks would be broken off with much regret, the basis for constructive dialogue had been seriously undermined. the students are calling on follow demonstrators to come in here in large numbers, bringing this time, for the first time, tents and sleeping bags. and they re calling for a longer-term occupy process. and as one of the student leaders put it, he said that they wanted to get answers from the hong kong government as to why they used force against the demonstrators, tear gas, a week and a half ago, in these streets. take a listen. if they do not give a just, reasonable answer to all of the occupiers, there s no reason to persuade people from retreating. so, we have now demanding the government to respond to the demands proposed by hong kong citizens. now, in some respects, it s clever that the protesters have called on this large rally to be held friday night. it s, of course, the begipping of the weekend. more people will have free time. they don t have to go to work on saturday. but can the protesters maintain the enthusiasm, maintain the momentum, or build it back up from what they saw last week, when so many people came out into the streets. and so many of them told us they were coming out because they were angry and frustrated with the images of tear gas being used against unarmed demonstrators. tear gas, a measure that the security forces have not used here in hong kong against their own citizens, really, in nearly a decade. errol? all right. we ll see. will the students show out in force this weekend? will the police show the same restraint they showed over the past two weeks? those questions to be answered ahead of an uneasy weekend there in hong kong. ivan watson, joining us live. we ll keep an eye on the protests. the stray dog who became the furry face of anti-austerity protests in greece has died. local media reports that the dog actually died peacefully while sleeping on a couch. that s according to the family that adopted him in 2012, after retiring after he retired from protesting. photos and video show him squaring off with riot police, dealing with tear gas and walking at the front license plates. a greek journalist says the dog was in poor health from years of tear gas and being kicked by police. that s just so sad. sad. heartbreaking. that is sad. in just over an hour, how about something that won t break your heart. maybe make you feel good about the word. the nobel committee will announce this year s peace prize winner. there s 278 nominees. that s the most ever for this prestigious prize. the person or organize that will pick up that prize is anyone s guess. but we have some favorites. some favorites. people who would lead right now. yeah. annual short list on your screen. and says the smart bet is on pope francis. i like him. i think he s done a lot for the catholic church. he s done a lot to rise its profile around the world. second is edward snowden. this would be a controversial choice. the former nsa contractor turned whistleblower. number three is malia yousafzai. she has taken the world by storm. the pakistani teenager that s become a global symbol. and rounding out the list, an investigative newspaper in russia. and on the right side of your screen, a congolese doctor and a leading figure in a fight against sexual violence. how does the committee choose? i m betting it s going to be pope francis. something tells me. we ll have coverage of the 2014 announcement, including a special in about an hour from now. very good stuff. stay tuned for that. coming up this hour on cnn, if you re caught speeding, blame it on your car. if you re driving a new tesla. that looks nice. details on this after the break. 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[ male announcer ] join the millions of people who have already enrolled in the only medicare supplement insurance plans endorsed by aarp, an organization serving the needs of people 50 and over for generations. remember, all medicare supplement insurance plans help cover what medicare doesn t pay. and could save you in out-of-pocket medical costs. call now to request your free decision guide. and learn more about the kinds of plans that will be here for you now and down the road. i have a lifetime of experience. so i know how important that is. a new warning from top health officials as u.s. leaders try assure americans that new airport screenings will help stop ebola from entering the u.s. this morning, several europe airports will screen for ebola. we are live with the latest. breaking news this morning. a new night of chaos on the streets of missouri. protesters clash with police over a deadly officer involved shooting. new video. and less than one ohour, we ll

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Transcripts For CNNW CNN Newsroom With Brooke Baldwin 20150225



just last night, national security adviser susan rice talked about the potential for an isis attack inside the u.s. listen to this. isil has the potential and perhaps the intent to try to attack the u.s. homeland. to date their ability to carry out you attacks against u.s. persons, interests, facilities even overseas is thus far limited. but we recognize that they have an ambition and ideology that poses a threat not only to the people in the countries of the middle east but also have acted in europe and elsewhere more broadly. we take that very seriously. joining me now to discuss further. global affairs analyst bobby goesh. also with me is evan perez, our cnn justice correspondent. i want to start with you, evan. i know you re still learning details about the recent arrest. what do you know now about the suspects? we know that the suspects got on the radar of the fbi last summer. after the fbi saw them posting very alarming things on the internet in a website that traffics in isis ideology and propaganda. they decided to introduce them to an undercover informant who then was able to record them as they talked about what their plans were. we know that, in addition to traveling to turkey and eventually to syria, if they were thwarted in those plans they were talking about air kag out attacks in the country, trying to attack president obama or kill police officers or fbi agents or even bomb coney island. one of the suspects is on these websites talking about those plans. that s what s so crazy to me. they re online. it s essentially a public forum. anybody could intercept these communications. are they talking law enforcement to take action? i think there s some of that. in a lot of the sites you see the bragging. i m going to do this or that. it explains why the fbi waited for somebody to buy a ticket and get o on a plane before acting. it s one thing to make sort of rash statements online. it brings you into focus and it makes the fbi start paying attention. but they will probably not begin to act just on the basis of rash threats. they will wait for you to take some action. we also know that the fbi was able to plant an informant so they were able to get a lot of information. one of the three is in the court documents is being part of or running a network. this guy, it would appear he s the oldest of the three, it would appear he s an enabler. he s the one who sort of make the connections from people here and people over in syria and turkey. we know some of them were from pakistan another from kazakhstan. where are they going in terms of where do they get this ideology? were they already somewhat more swayed towards radicalization being here in the u.s.? it does appear that at least one of them got the attention of his own mother. this is something that law enforcement actually is hoping that when some family member notices that somebody is getting radicalized and perhaps thinking about doing this that they speak up and do something. apparently one of the guys his mom thought that perhaps he might be heading to this direction and perhaps planning to travel to syria. she took away his passport and so he then decided he was going to come up with alternative ways perhaps telling his mom he was going to uzbekistan to visit family and try to carry out his plan. i ll read you the posting that got the fbi particularly interested from one of the suspects. he s 24 years old. he says is it possible to commit ourselves as dedicated martyrs anyway while here? what i am saying is to shoot obama and then get ourselves shot which is an indication perhaps of as bobby says sometimes these guys aren t that very bright. thank god, right? that s sometimes how the fbi and the justice department security division can do something about him. the fear for the fbi and fosh justice department is that some of them they don t know anything about. on the flip side here they re obviously living in america, aren t from america originally. why such an anti-american sentiment coming from them? any number of reasons for that. they re from countries where there is a history of islamic extremism. we ve seen this happening most recently in europe that people born and raised remember the attackers in paris were born and raised in france. french nationals. these guys are not citizens. those are french nationals. it shows you that this ideology can reach far beyond the immediate surroundings of the middle east into societies where you would expect people have better opportunities, exposed to a wider range of ideas than people living in some village in syria. it sort of gives the lie to the idea that only those young, disillusioned, unemployed poor arab kids are sort of suspect to this kind of ideology. it shows that the ideology can appeal. you have to assume that these are not quote-unquote people. it s not normal thinking to want to assassinate the president of the united states and become martyrs in a foreign country. there are people in all societies. thanks to communication and social media, they were able to leap over the barricades and reach these people. what s crazy, you look at the media coverage of isis in the last months and say they really came on the scene. it seems like this group has been exposed. there are no secrets about what they are about. they are all about the terror the horror seemingly indiscriminate. they go after women, children muslims, jewish people christian people. so how does it seem so easy for them to still recruit? because it s looking easy. i mean there will be a small number of saidists and sort of twisted individuals in many societies. what appeals to them to go here to syria and iraq they re seeing that there s almost impunity. you can go and fight there, you can kill and rape and pillage and no one is going to stop you. this will change when there s a strong military victories against isis. once they ve been killed in large numbers or being arrested and territory taken back from them that s when these hot headed young people will start thinking wait a minute maybe it s not so easy. right now it s looking too easy. they can go there and the iraqi army will put their guns down and walk away and you can do whatever you want. nobody has challenged them. they ve definitely succeeded in making look what they re doing over there in some glamorous way, they ve made it look like you can come over here and you can be part of something. for a lot of young people young men of a certain age, that can be attractive. there s a reason why a lot of them join the military because they want some adventure. so what isis has been very good about is portraying some kind of reality that frankly is just not true. somehow speaks to some young people. they can, like bobby was saying, some of them are middle class kids. they re not just people from disadvantaged backgrounds. yet they re portraying this online with their propaganda but we re reviewing the truth and people are still going along. before we talk more i want to play sound with the fib director just today talking about isis recruiting. isil in particular is putting out a siren song through their slick propaganda through social media that goes like this. troubled soul come to us. you will live a life of glory. these are the apocalyptic end times. you will live a life here. if you can t come kill somebody where you are. that is a message that goes out to troubled souls everywhere. resonates with troubled souls, people seeking meaning in some horribly misguided way. those people exist in every state. i have homegrown violent extremist investigations in every single state. that last line homegrown violent extremist investigations in every single state. bobby, how confident should the american people be that the fbi is all over this? well i would think a their degree of confidence. fair degree of confidence. the fbi has been tracking these groups for many many years, pretty much since 9/11. they ve gotten a pretty good track record of anything really harmful taking place. the boston bombing was a rare exception. so i would be quite confident of the fbi. but you worry that this is a very very large haystack this country. even if there are a lot of needles, it s going to be hard to find them. you have to worry on some level, what if just as with the boston bombers, one of them slips through the dragnet. that s what really frightens people. they have already slipped through the cracks. fortunately, they have these guys in new york again. innocent until proven guilty. what do we expect? we expect they ll get read the charges. this is not over. this is just the beginning of this case. we know that they were arrested overnight and the fbi was talking to them to figure out if there s more to this. who else is a part of this. you know ana, one of the scary parts to this story talking to the fbi the last couple of years, one of the things they re looking for is any kiensign of a network. you ve seen one off here or there, one person two persons going over siblings in particular. this one, they are alleging that there is a network. that really means that they have their work cut out for them. this is the case that s going to reverberate for the fbi because they have to figure out where else something like this could be developing. one of these guys was arrested in florida, right? exactly. what was he doing there? it s not clear from the charges that were brought today. but that s something that we re going to be following up on. all right. evan perez, bobby ghosh. thank you. we ll be talking to you throughout the day on cnn. much more ahead out of new york city. we re expecting a news conference with new york officials shorptly. we ll bring that to you live. also ahead, new developments involving the mysterious drones spotted for a second straight night now over landmarks in paris. now the u.s. secret service is getting involved. we ll have a live report. also, a guilty verdict in the american sniper murder trial. we re now getting our first look hearing the first sound at some of the most powerful moments and the evidence used in court during the suspect s insanity defense. plus a winter storm slamming parts of the south right now. we have a busy hour ahead. so don t go away. over 20 million kids everyday in our country lack access to healthy food. for the first time american kids are slated to live a shorter life span than their parents. it s a problem that we can turn around and change. revolution foods is a company we started to provide access to healthy affordable, kid-inspired chef-crafted food. we looked at what are the aspects of food that will help set up kids for success? 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two pieces. one is the video of him fleeing from the police because the police are people who arrest you when you do something illegal. that shows that he knew doing something wrong. you got it. the second one would be the video where the investigators expertly asked the right questions because they know the statute and they asked him, did you know what you did was wrong. he says yeah, yeah i did. those had to be critical piece was evidence. ultimately you can have a mental disease or defect and be not insane. there was plenty of evidence of mental disease, but the ultimate question was whether or not routh knew what he was doing was wrong at the time that he did it. and the jury it appears, answered that question pretty easily. and pretty quickly. there s question about the motives. joey, i want to ask you, danny mentioned the interview with routh and that being a dam ning piece of evidence. his own words used against him. i want to play a piece of sound from routh. this is during an interview source with the officer taking him into custody after his arrest in the patrol car. listen to what he says. are you all right back there? so nervous about what s going to happen to me. i m alive today. i been so paranoid schizophrenic all day, i don t know what to think of the world right now. i don t know if i m insane or sane. i don t know what s even sane in the world right now. he even brings up. i don t know if i m sane i don t know if i m insane. obviously jurors thought he was faking it to some degree to kind of sway the case already right then and there. does the defense make any mistakes along the way? it s not so much that the defense made mistakes as much as the prosecution honed in on hey, guess what? it showed in the clip this guy knew how to get out of it. when he had the argument with his family at a fish fry and he said i m going to kill all of you and myself. what happened? he said i m not feeling well i m mentally ill. guess what? he goes to a mental institution. he holds captive his girlfriend and the roommate with a sword saying i m hearing things you re going nowhere. the police come he doesn t go to jail he goes to a mental institution. it played into the theme that the prosecution used this guy is manipulating the system. why? he knows what to say so the police will take him to the mental place and not that other place we call jail. finally, if you look at what the prosecution did, in terms of seinfeld right? saying that there was a seinfeld episode relating to pigs and he used that episode again to say, flying pigs, have men, half human, half pig, the jury felt from his own mind. he s taking. that s what the prosecution did effectively, i think. we now know one of the jurors saw the blockbuster movie american sniper. listen to what he said on good morning america this morning. it gave me a better outlook on chris role as a marine. what that job entitles a greater respect for it. but as far as the actions that took place on february 2nd you know, chad was still in the picture. chad was not in that movie. i basically put the fact that chris was a marine out of my mind and just looked at him as a person. looked at chad as a person looked at eddie as a person. so the fact this guy saw the american sniper movie where chris kyle is the hero how did he end up on the jury? judges have a lot of discretion in this area. there s no hard-and-fast rule but what the judge will do is take a juror aside and say based on what you ve heard or read or seen can you base your verdict on just the facts in this case can you put those opinions you have aside, anything you ve seen beforehand render a true and impartial verdict. for that reason because there s so much discretion vested in the court, you see a wide variety, depending even on the jurisdiction. if you re a small town you can t get rid of too many jurors. because sooner of later you run out of jurors. courts in smaller towns may take a different view of say, a jury with 500 people in the pool. it does defend from court to court. you see decisions all over the place in this area. we know this is a small town. 18,000 people in this part of texas. maybe that played into it. real quick, want to talk about who you might call the star witness. this is chris kyle s wife. his widow. taya. very emotional on the stand. we re just now hearing this audio because the judge wouldn t allow the release of the audio during the actual trial. but listen. do you know where that s taken? i do. it was in scottsdale arizona. 1:23. take a minute if you need to. sorry. you can feel taya s grief as she looks at pictures of her husband with family members. was emotion a driving factor in the jury s decision? you have to believe that she really connected with that jury and why would she connect with that jury? this is a grieving widow. this is the wife of someone who was assisting veterans who served his country, four tours in iraq. what was his sin here chris kyle s sin. assists yet another veteran by making them better. he s trying to help. he ends up dead. so at the end of the day, certainly the jury would have looked at her and said you know what that loss there needs to be some accountability for it. to the extent you re sitting in that chair, eddie ray routh, you re the guy being held accountable. you aren t insane, you re guilty. you knew right from wrong. that s what this jury did. thanks for being there along the way for the ride to describe and help us understand the trial at hand. thank you. absolutely. thank you. up next drones over the streets of paris. and there were more of these unmanned devices spotted in the french capital last night. how the u.s. secret service plans to help. plus we re getting word that three journalists in al jazeera have been arrested for flying drones. are they connected? 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the information is just coming out now. but we heard from the prosecutor there in paris who said no it s unconnected. when that information first broke, that the three journalists had been arrested for flying a drone. we thought it was strange that they were the culprits of drone flying and al jazeera had been actively reporting on the fact that the mystery drones were spotted. it looks like they were doing it as part of the story. according to the info out of paris, one was flying the drone, one was filming it and the other one watching. it looks like they were doing this on their own in a separate part of the city near a park. what is still a mystery is what s been going on for the last two nights. at one point there were five drones over sensitive locations in paris. and now the you mentioned yeah, the fbi is working with authorities over there to try to figure out, get more information, figure out what that s about. if it is a threat. have officials said whether this could be terror-related? i hate to go there. it s on everybody s mind. that s the obvious question. you re right, nobody is going there at this point. right now it seems to be a mystery. what s known about drones like this is that they re lightweight, they can t carry a big load. you know such as explosives. they don t go very far. they don t go very high. so the threat that experts are talking about surrounding this is pretty minimal. that s not to say that there couldn t be some destructive plans around these at some point in the future. it s really unknown what the point was of flying these things all around the same time over sensitive locations. i mean we re curious to hear in the end if it s solved who has been doing this and why, especially since it is illegal to fly these things over paris at night. during the day, you can fly them but you need a permit. there s been no indication of who has been doing this at this point, ana. or where they re coming from or where they re going, which is surprising. certainly, we ll get more details as this investigation unfolds. michelle kosinski we appreciate it. coming up guns and ammo. examined by ballistics experts in the trial of aaron hernandez. no murder weapon has been found in the case. now the testimony of the housekeeper of the nfl is raising some questions. three new yorkers arrested accused of trying to aid isis. one of the men caught at jfk airport trying to catch a flight to turkey today. nypd expected to hold a news conference shortly. we ll bring that to you live. just about anywhere you use sugar, you can use splenda®. .no calorie sweetener. splenda® lets you experience. .the joy of sugar. .without all the calories. think sugar, say splenda® you just got a big bump in miles. so this is a great opportunity for an upgrade. sound good? great. because you re not you you re a whole airline. and it s not a ticket you re upgrading it s your entire operations, from domestic to international. which means you need help from a whole team of advisors. from workforce strategies to tech solutions and a thousand other things. so you call pwc. the right people to get the extraordinary done. now back to our breaking news. the fbi says it has foiled an alleged plot by three new york men to aidan even join isis in syria. according to the court documents, one said he was willing to kill the president, president obama, if isis ordered him to do so. the other suspect arrested in new york was just arrested this morning at new york s jfk airport trying to board a flight to turkey and eventually goat syria. the court papers said he considered shooting fbi agents and police officers if he was unable to get to syria to join isis. joining me now to talk more about this bob bear and former cia operative. bob, thanks for joining us. how did the fbi track these guys leading up to this arrest? well normally it works that they catch them on social media when they first consider turning to violent jihad. they go up on the internet twitter, facebook. in this case, i understand that one was on a blogging site. national security agency follows that. at that point, the fbi has an open investigation and they start running people into this group and the main objective is to quickly find out how big the cell is. is it one or two people or 20. they want to get them all before they move to arrest. once they talk about assassinating the president, blowing up targets in coney island shooting police they pretty well have to move very fast. they could easily pick up guns and turn to action quickly. so it s all a question of timing. right. this investigation, we do know started over the summer. it s been ongoing for more than six months. what is that threshold for law enforcement to take action? i think i would suspect and we haven t seen this for sure, that they had a source close to these people and once they actually talked about once they had been turned away or couldn t get to syria, at that point they were probably considering making attacks in the united states and the fbi moved very quickly. it s always a balancing act for the fbi. do you let the investigation run on for years or move quickly. the fbi has gotten very good at it. but what worries them though is the lone wolf who doesn t go up on the internet doesn t go on social heedmedia and simply picks up a gun because there are so many soft targets in this country. any one of them would fit the call of the islamic state. how do you catch those people? it s nearly impossible. i want to read you a statement from the fbi assistant director in charge. it said the defendants looked to join the eye another form of isis by flying to sturk u. turkey in a vain attempt to evade detection and several of the defendants planned to commit attacks here in america if they could not travel including killing fbi agents. they got stopped, bob. what mistakes did they make? well i think the mistakes is they didn t understand how to travel without coming to the attention of the fbi. the fbi is monitoring the main databases for airline reservations apollo and saber and a couple other ones. they can see reservations made to turkey and you combine that with social media, stuff they re watching. the algorithm to say, hey we got a suspect here. these people are not particularly cunning or clever. they are central asianss, one from kazakhstan two from uzbekistan. there s violence that goes back to the 80. a lot of the guys are fighting with the islamic state and al qaeda. you re saying given their background, it s not surprising that they could be drawn into isis web of sorts? especially the uzbekistans. they ve been carrying on violent jihad so long. they have relatives in these groups they ve been watching this from the time they were very young and they re very susceptible to the islamic state, blandishments and recruitment campaigns. bob baer thanks for your expertise on this. on to another big story. today in the murder trial of ex-nfl star aaron hernandez. the jury got a crash course in semiautomatic weapons. the prosecution called a ballistics expert with the state police to discuss the .48 caliber bullets used in the shooting death of odin lloyd excuse me .45 caliber bullets. the gun that matched the bullets is not known where it is yet to be found. joining me now, cnn s national correspondent susan candiotti who has been following this story closely. this all sounds technical. why is the testimony of this ballistic expert important and was the jury paying attention? reporter: hi ana. the jury has been very attentive throughout the trial so far. this is day 15. some days are more dramatic than others. this was a day of important technical evidence. in this case a ballistics expert brought on board to talk about analyzing the .45 caliber bullets and shell casings found both at the murder scene and in a dumpster. and his opinion is that they are consistent with .45 caliber shells all fired from the same glock semiautomatic handgun and that s the gun that prosecutors say was used to murder odin lloyd, and that weapon is still missing after all this time. they never found it. i wanted to tell you about other important testimony that was also shown this day was a photograph that was taken on the very same night that odin lloyd was murdered. this is a photograph of aaron hernandez, his fiancee and two other couples a few hours before that murder took place. they were all getting together for drinks at a bar in providence rhode island. not far from where aaron hernandez lives. the prosecutors brought attention to what aaron hernandez was wearing. it s a white hooded t-shirt, the same kind of sweatshirt they say that he s seen wearing on surveillance video in his home again, the night of the shooting. ana. i want to talk about more surveillance video. we know that hernandez s fiancee he has been in court for most of the time. wasn t there today. or was there today but not in court yesterday. the jury did see a lot of surveillance video of her. what was in that video? reporter: prosecutors say this is very important video that they wanted the jury to see because it shows the day after odin lloyd was murdered aaron hernandez s fiancee after allegedly getting a coded message from aaron hernandez, leaving their home and walking out carrying what appears to be a very heavy black trash bag in which, authorities say, she was carrying away what they suspect is this missing murder weapon. she has testified that she brought this bag to a dumpster and then after that she doesn t remember what happened to it. when she came back home, a house cleaner that works there described how she felt jenkins was acting later that same day. listen. i saw her speaking on the telephone, i saw her looking out the window. i saw she was crying. she was nervous and she was walking back and forth. now, jenkins was not in court for that testimony yesterday. but she was back in court today, sitting behind her fiancee, both of them exchanging smiles. ana? she s been given immunity. will she testify, do you think? reporter: well she apparently has no choice. prosecutors say she will be called as a witness. the question is what will she say when she takes the stand? right. susan candiotti, thank you for your reporting. up next more than 100 southwest planes grounded not for weather reasons today but because these planes didn t get their mandatory safety checks. why did the airline miss these required inspections? that s next. and more on the three men arrested here in the u.s. one allegedly on the way to join isis expecting a news conference here in new york any moment. we ll have that as soon as it gets going. back in a moment. nervous whitening will damage your teeth? introducing listerine® healthy white™. it not only safely whitens teeth. .but also restores enamel. lose the nerves and get a healthier whiter smile that you ll love. listerine® healthy white™. power to your mouth™! my name is michael. i m 55 years old. and i have diabetic nerve pain. the pain was terrible. my feet hurt so bad. it felt like hot pins and needles. coming from the inside out of my skin. when i did go see the doctor and he prescribed lyrica. it helped me. it s known that. diabetes damages nerves. lyrica is fda-approved to treat diabetic nerve pain. lyrica is not for everyone. it may cause serious allergic reactions or suicidal thoughts or actions. tell your doctor right away if you have these, new or worsening depression, or unusual changes in mood or behavior. or swelling, trouble breathing rash, hives, blisters, changes in eyesight including blurry vision, muscle pain with fever tired feeling, or skin sores from diabetes. common side effects are dizziness, sleepiness, weight gain and swelling of hands, legs and feet. don t drink alcohol while taking lyrica. don t drive or use machinery until you know how lyrica affects you. those who have had a drug or alcohol problem may be more likely to misuse lyrica. having reduced pain. is great, and i m grateful for it. ask your doctor about lyrica and visit lyrica.com to learn about our $25 co-pay offer when heartburn comes creeping up on you. fight back with relief so smooth. .it s fast. tums smoothies starts dissolving the instant it touches your tongue .and neutralizes stomach acid at the source. tum, tum tum tum. smoothies! only from tums. so.you re sayin you ll give me my credit score for free. right! now you re gonna ask for my credit card - - so you can charge me on the down low two weeks later look, credit karma - are you talking to websites again? this website says free credit scores . oh. credit karma! yeah, it s really free. look, you don t even have to put in your credit card information. what?! credit karma. really free credit scores. really. free. i could talk to you all day. ten minutes before 3:00 in the east. we re watching the podium here to listen to the police commissioner of new york city talking about the arrests made just today involving three new york men who are accused of having plans to go help isis. one of them arrested at the airport just this morning at jfk. we ll bump into this press conference and take you there just as soon as it gets going. right now, i want to turn our attention to southwest airlines forced to ground more than 100 of its jets today because they missed safety checks. now, it was the airline who came forward and admitted the planes missed inspections and they were taking them out of service. cnn aviation regulations, correspondent renee marsh is following this story. after all of the troubled plane stories recently this seems pretty significant. we re talking about a lot of airplanes here. 128 of the boeing 737s. again, you just mentioned, they missed the required inspection. this is a portion of the plane that they re supposed to be inspecting. it s the stand by hydraulic system which is a backup system. it is in charge of essentially controlling the rudder of the plane, which is this back port. they did not get the scheduled maintenance for this specific backup part. this is what the airline said in a statement. they say the airline voluntarily removed these aircraft from service while the faa works with boeing and southwest to evaluate a proposal that would allow the airline to continue flying the planes until inspections are completed. so we do know that they did come up with an agreement with the faa. they will be allowed to fly these planes for another five days while these checks happen. but as a result of this you know yesterday we saw 80 cancellations. today we saw fewer than that as a result of these missed maintenance checks. it s sloppy paperwork. sloppy maintenance as it relates to keeping track of when they need to get these checks done. but as you mentioned, they did come forward and now they are taking action on this ana. renee marsh, thank you. up next any moment now, nypd expected to give a press conference with more on the three men arrested here in the u.s. one allegedly on the way to join isis. nypd commissioner bill bratton expected to speak. we ll bring that to you live and we re learning new details about these three men, including plans to travel and hijack a plane. more on this when we come back. 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Transcripts For CNNW New Day 20150824



three american heroes, praising them by their actions, they avoided the ultimate carnage on the train, an attacker with over 300 bullets. they should be an inspiration for us all. spencer stone with his arm still in a sling from injuries suffered over the weekend in bringing down the gunman. he led the way in to the french presidential palace. this morning, three americans arriving to a red carpet. the french president honoring them the highest award for bravery. the honor came after this incredible scene was viewed around the world. a gunman hog tied on the floor of a passenger train. the close friend said they acted on instinct. it was do something or die. it wasn t a conscious decision, we acted. the 23-year-old spencer stone, led the charge. i saw he has an ak-47. it was jammed or not working or he was trying to charge the weapon. alek hit me on the shoulder and said let s go. reporter: authorities say they along with a british national prevented what could have been a bloody massacre. tackled him, hit the ground. alek came up, put him on the ground while i put him in a choke hold. he kept pulling more weapons left and right. reporter: the suspect is a moroccan national who boarded the train carrying a small arsenal of weapons, including an assault rifle with at least eight magazines, an automatic pistol with extra ammunition and a box cutter which he used to slash stone multiple times, nearly severing his stone. he s not dead because he took action to protect himself and everyone there. plus, being an angel in the room. reporter: stone s father believing it was destiny, the three men moving from coach to first class because of better wi-fi. i expect nothing less of my brother. reporter: radical islamic networks across europe, including a french isis cell in turkey. his lawyer says he denies he is a terrorist. instead, he intended to rob passengers on the train with weapons he found in the park. stone rushed to help another who was wounded in the neck. i stuck my two fingers in the hole. pushed down and the bleeding stopped. over the weekend, president obama called the men personally, commending them for their courage and quick action. the french president saying they deserve commending and inspiration that others should be aware if faced. the french president was quoting them saying if you are presented with a crisis, then you need to act as these men did. chris? as we both know well, nic, easy to say, tough to do. boy did they step up on the train. what a difference it made. thank you for the reporting. let s try to walk you through what happened here. we have this train route. we told you where it is. paris, amsterdam. just about an hour before it gets to where it s supposed to, everything starts to unfold. as you heard from nic, one moment, they are all on the train. the next moment, one of the passengers coming out of the restroom confronts the gunman preparing for this. his lawyer says he found the weapons in the park. authorities don t believe that. that passenger gets hit. then, what happens is these americans are up in the other part. they hear about it. they make a decision. one by one, they come forward. the first guy holds him down. he starts getting slashed. he literally has his thumb severaled, a wound to his face. two buddies come to help out, put him on the ground. the interesting part of this, the aftermath is this is the guy who was hurt, that you saw there talking his way through it. there s the bad guy they have hog tied there, the alleged bad guy. another french american, a 51-year-old who also came up and took away the machine gun at one point. he reached into his pocket, grabbed a pistol, shot him and got his ak-47 back. that took us through all the events there. again, alisyn, the question is if you are brave enough and faced with a situation where there s potential harm, you step up. i would love to believe i could do that, chris, but i don t think it is possible for most of us mortals. those three guys were made of a different stock. we are so proud of them here today. meanwhile, chris, there was a new york social worker on that train to paris and witnessed the horror of the attempted attack. christina coombs joins us now with more. how are you feel sng. exhausted. exhausted. i can imagine. this is overwhelming. let s go back to the beginning. what were you doing on the train to begin with? i had been on vacation in europe for the first time ever, which is extremely exciting for me and i was happy about it. i was traveling with a good friend of mine through italy and then amsterdam and then we parted ways in amsterdam. he went to berlin and i was to go to paris. you were on that train alone? yes. at what point during your ride did you realize something was unfolding? i was on the train doing my make up, actually and, you know, i had the pulled out tray table out doing my make up and all of a sudden, between 5:45 and 5:50, i heard gunshots. you heard gunshots in your car? i believe after, you know, just thinking about everything that went down and the other information i have gained that i believe the gunshot happened in car 11. i was in car 12. but i was in car 12 near the entrance of 11 and 12. so, when you heard gunshots, when did you realize that something terrible was unfolding and you needed to take cover? as soon as i heard as soon as i heard the gunshots, myself and everyone around me ducked under their seats. i ducked under the seat and had the tray table over my head as well. i was sort of doing this and i also had my cell phone clutched in my hand underneath the seat. you had your cell phone clutched and you were able to take some photos of this entire crime unfolding. we have those. you have shared them with us. what is this picture we are seeing? so, this photo is a man that, it appeared to me that his neck his neck was profusely bleeding. this is the first victim, you believe, shot in the neck? i believe, yes. he was shot in the neck and had come stumbling into the train. he had a bloody duffel bag that i also have a photo of. he first dropped the bloody duffel bag in the seat across from me, then he collapsed to the floor very close to where i was sitting. here is the picture of the duffel bag? yes. you are under your seat, you are taking cover and you see this man fall, with blood and you see the bloody duffel bag. what is going through your head while that s happening? i didn t know what to think. i thought, oh, my god, he got shot, he s dead. i thought he, like, i m like the neck, that s a severe area to be shot. he might be dead right now. i thought am i next? that was my first thought, am i next? are we all next? you thought someone was on a rampage? right away. i did. was the gunman saying anything? no, i didn t hear the gunman. what i believe, at this point, is the shot was fired in car 11. that the man was running away from the assailant, probably into car 12 and dropped the duffel bag and fell to the floor very close to where i was sitting. that s what i believe, that s how i believe it happened. you and fellow passengers are cowhering under the seat. at what point did you figure out there were three heroes on the train? i had seen at least two of them while i was under my seat still and snapping photos. just to go back to that real quick. i was snapping photos not just snapping photos, i was on facebook chat with a friend. while it was happening? yes. i have the conversation. i said i messaged him and said oh my god, oh my god, there s a man with a gun, there s gunshots, a man dropped to the floor in front of me bleeding. that s when i snapped the photo of the duffel bag and the photo of him on the floor. later on, i snapped the third photo of the assailant. when did you realize there were people on the train who were going to try to save you? while i was under there still, i had the shots were fired, the man was bleeding. i didn t know what to think. then, actually, while i was under there, i saw a large rifle. at first, i thought, oh, my god, is that the gunman because i didn t know yet who he was. i later learned he was one of the three men that saved all of our lives. i believe that was probably what he had taken from, maybe what he had taken from the assailant. i know he had to wrestle him and take the ammunition away. did you hear, during the process of this, we know there was some conversation exchanged. did you hear them talking? i heard one of them say i m a paramedic, someone get this man some help. you know, he was basically trying to come to this man s rescue. the first victim? the victim with the bloody neck, the gunshot to the neck. the only victim i saw was the man who got shot in the neck. he was asking passengers in my car to get neckties, men s neckties or a woman s scarf to make a tourniquet. could you tell there were three americans on the car and they were trying to quell the situation? i believe i only saw two of them. i don t think i saw three. but i did come out from under a lot of us came out from under our seats when we realized they communicated to us, okay, we have the mantied up. his ammunition was taken away. they did communicate that. i was still scared and shaken up. i felt a bit safer to come out of hiding, so i did that. also, they actually made us all go to the back of the car and eventually made us go to the next car, car 13, because they didn t want so many people near this man on the floor bleeding. what do you think it was that allowed the three americans to run toward danger, when everyone else, your reflex and mine would be to hide? fight or flight, right? yeah. i know a couple of them have military background. so, i guess, i don t have military background myself, but my understanding is that, you know, if you have that training, that s probably what you are kind of programmed to do, essentially. i don t know what it was but i think they were very, very brave. i owe my life to them. i m incredibly grateful to those three men. they are fantastic human beings, we are all grateful for what they did for us. what do you want to say to them? thank you so much, from the bottom of my heart. i don t feel like i m you know, the thoughts running through my mind are, am i going to die? i m not ready die. that s how i felt. excuse me, i m getting a little emotional. you know, i feel like i have so much more to do with my life. i m only 28 years old. and i have goals and everybody else on that train does as well. they saved us. you know, they are heroes. if they don t think they are heroes, i mean, they are very humble and i respect that. they are heroes. they are truly heroes and my mom wanted to say thank you so much. she s very grateful that they were on that train. all of your loved ones and everyone on that train s loved ones. we are happy you are safe and that you survived this and came on to share your pictures and story with us. thank you. thanks so much. no problem. michaela? an incredible account, alisyn, thank you for that. stock markets in asia and europe falling sharply on fears of an economic slowdown. china s shanghai composite seeing the shares wiped out. the loss on friday bleeds into monday. what does it mean for the u.s. markets today? we have the woman on the job. christine romans has more on this. it s going to be ugly. you have apple shares lower, facebook shares lower. this is what it looks like around the world. i mean you have big losses in europe and shanghai closed down 8.5% wiping out all the gains for the year and a dramatic day for the year. that is a plunge. an ugly market. futures in the u.s., s&p down 2%. that s a big move. a 2% move is a big move. we are going to see more pain for your 401(k) today. why more pain? friday was terrible. the dow jones down 3%. it s below 17,000. it s the lowest level since last fall. these were some of the worst losses in four years for the market. commodities, a big loser, too. take a look at oil, below $40 a barrel. look at this. six year lows for oil. lower gas prices. by halloween, you are going to have $2 gas. that s the upside for consumers. it s unease for anybody with energy stocks in their 401(k). it s unsettling for country that is depend on oil for their revenue. three hours until the markets open. it s going to be another ugly open. the weekend was not a speed bump for the selling. the selling is out there in full force. correction, what do you think the duration is? it is a correction for the dow so far. the s&p 500 hasn t hit it yet. it will this morning. the stocks have been going up for six years without a solid correction. some say it could be healthy for investors. we ll keep an eye on it. thank you. you re welcome. isis is on a rampage in syria. they blew up a temple that stood for years. that is what the terrorists want to do, is erase civilization. last week, isis terrorists beheaded an 82-year-old syrian scholar who worked more than five decades as head of antiquitie antiquities. two days of violent demonstrations rocked the city and left hundreds injured. thousands pouring into the streets demanding the lebanese government resign over weeks of uncollected garbage piling up on the streets of beirut. the prime minister threatening to do that warning their country is on the verge of collapse. investigators working to find out what caused two deadly air show accidents in europe. the death toll continues to climb after a relic military jet plunged on to a busy highway. in switzerland, audiences watched in horror. ian lee is live with the latest details and new video. ian? reporter: alisyn, this is as far as they are letting us get to the crash site here in southern england. it s just on the other side of this airfield here. authorities saying there s still dangerous conditions because of jet fuel that is there. today, they are expecting to remove the body of the aircraft and they expect to find more bodies with that. that s coming as we are seeing new video released showing us exactly how this happened. one from a dashcam on a car that was traveling down the highway and the majority of these people who died were people who were commuting back and forth. this has devastated this small communitied. this is also coming as there was another deadly air show accident in switzerland where two airplanes crashed. one pilot died there. the other one was able to get out of the plane and parachute. for here, this investigation, still ongoing, still trying to figure out what exactly happened. chris? thank you very much, ian. this morning, joe biden could be one step closer to a run to the white house. biden held a private meeting with senator elizabeth warren saturday. michelle kaczynski joins us with more. was this a planned trip? does the administration know about it? why her? what do you think? it was last minute, not originally on his official schedule. even if this is what the public sees, this steps things up a notch. we saw the president go on a quiet vacation in south carolina, but we knew he was talking to advisers. last week in delaware, meeting with advisers. this meeting on saturday at the white house with elizabeth warren, the hero of many lib rap democrats and progressives. some are seeing that as him leaning toward making the run. sources are telling cnn, he s taking this seriously, yes. the decision still has not been made. he wanted to get her take on iran, make sure she knew where he stood on the issues, especially the economy. now there is the draft biden 2016 superpac that says it s already drafting talent, looking at fund raising. in this e-mail it sent to democrats around the country, it said they have been drawing on a growing voter appetite and ground swell of grass roots interest in his candidacy. they will continue this aggressive campaign for the vice president to launch a successful bid for the nomination and eventually the nomination. that group is laying the framework. not everybody in the democratic party see as biden run as a great idea. he is seen as a viable alternative to hillary clinton. others see it as possibly, they are going to have to choose where their loyalties lie. michaela? we ll have more of this coming up on new day. we ll talk about elizabeth warren. what was that conversation about? is he thinking of asking her to be a running mate? stay with us. we ll be right back. no sixth grader s ever sat with the eighth grade girls. but your jansport backpack is permission to park it wherever you please. hey. that s that new gear feeling. this week, these folders just one cent. office depot officemax. gear up for school. gear up for great. you forgot the milk! that s lactaid. right. 100% real milk, just without the lactose. so you can drink all you want. .with no discomfort? exactly. here, try some. mmm, it is real milk. see? delicious. hoof bump! oh. right here girl, boom. lactaid®. 100% real milk. no discomfort. and for a creamy and delicious treat, try lactaid® ice cream. 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. is man kind? are we good? go see. go look through their windows so you can understand their views. sit at their table so you can share their tastes. sleep in their beds so you may know their dreams. go see. and find out just how kind the hes and shes of this mankind are. all right. so we have the known and the unknown in politic this is morning. here is the known. which part do i get? the unknown. i know. vice president, joe biden, held a meeting with elizabeth warren this weekend. the unknown is why and what does it mean for his future? let us discuss. errol, do we know they have some pre-existing relationship? is there any reason? we heard from kaczynski this wasn t on his schedule. they have some kind of relationship. as the vice president, he would have sworn her in. they don t have a close relationship. she represents an important part of the party. there is an elizabeth warren wing of the party. you have to talk to her. if you want to talk to certain progressive donors, activists and consultants and see where that part of the democratic party, where their heart is. it would be sensible for biden or frankly anyone else to get a sense of that. is there any other way to interpret that other than biden is getting his ducks in a row for a run? joe biden is certainly signaling he s running for president. does it mean he will run? that s a different question. he has to build up expectations. if he were to announce he wasn t running, that would be a very different story for him. after another month of expectations, people wondering will he or won t he? he would get more attention for that, which is what he wants, ultimately, one way or another. he wants to be president and reach out to elizabeth warren or he doesn t want to be president. get the maximum amount of attention. why do you say he leaked the meeting and is looking for attention? why? it s what the people around joe biden have been trying to do for the past several weeks, several months, in fact. leaking people close to biden saying that bo biden, his late son, wanted him to run. his ole organized effort around people in the immediate biden circle, the ring around that one saying, you know, trying to lay the ground work for a presidential run should he want to do it. worked for the vice president to lay the groundwork for that. all the incentive is with the vice president right now. what do you think about that theory, this is an attention getting stunt? equally. it does increase his cache even if he doesn t run? you heard them in the 2012 effort, they needed him for the ticket. somehow he found his way to new hampshire more often than which are not swing states, more often than the campaign staff wanted. he wanted to be considered. it is clear he wants to be considered. this leaked meeting, some of the other efforts he made. i tell you the conversations i would like to hear about are the calls he s making to donors and what they are saying back to him. that s going to determine his ability to put together a campaign. we shouldn t be so cynical to dismiss the idea that the people are going to decide this, not the donors and keown consultants and elizabeth warren. it would be negligence for him to walk away even though in the polls i do better against in several match ups against republicans than hillary clinton. i am more likable within the democratic party than hillary clinton according to some of the numbers. if he can get donors to put something together, why not? you are always more attractive before you are in the race. do you think the obstacles to entry are a larger issue than the enticements? the organizations, the number of people working for hillary, the pockets that have been tapped for hillary. the party s disposition towards hillary. what do you think? i mean that s certainly a huge factor here. his poll numbers are riding skid high as you said because he s not in the political game. it s where hillary clinton s poll numbers were two or three years ago in the state department. the fact that so many obama veterans from, you know, the president s former campaign manager are working with the hillary superpac, there s a structural problem to getting talented, qualified operatives in a small amount of time before the iowa caucuses on february 1st. things are going to be hard for the vice president. hillary clinton has quite a head start right now. thanks so much. great to see you. great to have all that information. mark your calendars. the next presidential debate is less than three weeks away. jake tapper will moderate the next debate, september 16th, live from the reagan library in simi valley, california. will do. three american heroes honored for foiling a massacre on a high speed train. it has people wondering how vulnerable trains are in the u.s. brain food, hmmm. ensure has b vitamins that help support brain health - now that s smart nutrition. ensure s complete balanced nutrition has 26 vitamins and minerals and 9 grams of protein. ensure. take life in. rheumatoid arthritis like me. and you re talking to a rheumatologist about a biologic, this is humira. this is humira helping to relieve my pain and protect my joints from further damage. this is humira helping me reach for more. doctors have been prescribing humira for more than 10 years. humira works for many adults. it targets and helps to block a specific source of inflammation that contrubutes to ra symptoms. humira can lower your ability to fight infections, including tuberculosis. serious, sometimes fatal infections and cancers, including lymphoma, have happened, as have blood, liver and nervous system problems, serious allergic reactions, and new or worsening heart failure. before treatment, get tested for tb. tell your doctor if you ve been to areas where certain fungal infections are common, and if you ve had tb, hepatitis b, are prone to infections, or have flu-like symptoms or sores. don t start humira if you have an infection. talk to your doctor and visit humira.com this is humira at work. look at us.ert a nation of checkers. missing this moment. to check all of the other moments. really, mom? just one look. they ll never notice. checkers, you can keep failing at trying to sneak a peek. or, you can change the way you check your phone. it s 3-0 in the first. how d you do that? magic. acutally, it s the samsung galaxy s6 edge, with discreet edge notifications. i turned around and saw he had what looked to be an ak-47. it looked like it was jammed or wasn t working and he was trying to charge the weapon. alek hit me on the shoulder and said let s go. go is what they did. that was u.s. airman spencer stone. he helped subdue an armed man. raising concerns about the vulnerability of trains in the u.s. are current measures enough? we want to turn to the national cnn security analyst. right in her wheelhouse to talk about this. you wrote a great piece for cnn.com. in it, you reflected, a lot of us have that feeling. should we be so lucky to sit in a situation near alek and anthony. they are not going to be everywhere. there are lessons we can learn from what happened in france. let s talk about that. the reaction of these people to run towards danger while the rest of us cowher looking for safety. what is the right thing to do in a situation like that? it s so fact dependent. that was my cautionary statement in the column. in some instances, not a train, but universities and colleges where there s a lot of active shooter training going on right now, what we recommend to people is to run away. to save your own life and the lives of others by not cowerring. in a train, it s not so easy. you are in a closed space. part of what we have to learn, coming from articles is that the french train officials were really slow in terms of notifying people what was going on, stopping the train. you want to stop the train because then people can jump out and you have fewer people on the train. this was a combination of heroism, luck and just, you know, i love these guys. it rarely happens in my world. i know, in your world especially. i think all of us want to give them a hug. yes. let s talk about the security that does exist or doesn t exist on board. i know things differ from country to country and continent to continent. it sounds as though the response was slow. are transportation officials working with the workers on board to, i don t know, train them? i think so, but probably not enough. it s the train workers that are going to be the first responders. there has to be more training here and in europe. the challenge is not, you know, do we have enough police officials on each train, which can be ramped up. in europe, for example, 40 million people ride the trains a day. that is, i mean, it is the commercial activity, what we talk about is flow. the flow of people, goods, commerce and business. the more security apparatus you are going to put on it, the slower that flow is going to be, which is going to have all sorts of impacts for everyone, including people s capacities to go from point a to point b. trains represent, in some ways, an alternative to the major security apparatus at airports. the more security you put on trains, the market is going to drive elsewhere to individual cars ar buses, which will become their own soft target. that s the issue. no, i understand, you can t replicate what we have seen happen with air travel. even that slowed us downgoing through the airport security. it s just not scaleable when you look at transferring to rail. i want to pivot to the gunman. he has been identified. officials believe he s associated with a french isis cell within turkey. potentially, this is a lone wolf attack. his lawyer says he was hungry and on the train to rob people. give us an idea of how they can fight this lone wolf situation. well, one is there s surveillance we used to pick him up. what they have to do is increase the surveillance on those whose travel appears to show they have had some sort of training. the turkey/paris or turkey/france nexus we have ian before. france has a problem, it does. this refugee crisis is not a different story. it is now creating radicalism in western european countries, which they don t have the resources or even though france is changing laws to catch all these people. it s obviously a scary combination. thanks so much for your expertise. thank you. tensions continue to escalate between north and south korea following a fatal land mine. the south offering an apology, the north refusing. the late es when we come back. all: milk! milk! milk! milk! milk! okay! fun s over. aw. aw. thirsty? 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(vo) you can pass down a subaru forester. (dad) she s all yours. (vo) but you get to keep the memories. love. it s what makes a subaru, a subaru. look more like a tissue box. you may be muddling through allergies. try zyrtec® for powerful allergy relief. and zyrtec® is different than claritin®. because it starts working faster on the first day you take it. zyrtec®. muddle no more™ . it means you can also afford to get up to 50% swedish-er swedish massages. making it the place to find a place for labor day. go and smell the roses! man boards a train with an ak-47, a pistol, box cutter and load of ammo. it s a recipe for disaster but not this time. childhood friends, stone, and skarlatos stopped the attack. the gunman, a moroccan. he was on the train to commit a robbery. tense negotiations between north and south korea this morning. they are demanding an apology from pyongyang. the north is making their own demands. we are live in seoul with the latest. what is the latest? reporter: well, the south korean government says the president, that is, says these talks that are happening right now, these talks that are stretching into the third day, that nothing will be accomplished unless north korea apologizes. she wants them to say sorry for putting land mines in the dmz, land mines that seriously injured two south korean soldiers. without it, she says, any sort of deal or peace is off. meanwhile, while this is happening, the talks long and difficult, what s happening on the ground here is south korea is detecting troop movement. the artillery forces on the front line from the north korean side, they have doubled. 70% of north korean submarines left their bases. while the talks are aiming for a middle ground, it appears, as far as what s happening on the ground are preparations for war. chris? obvious show of force. what does it mean for the u.s.? we will follow this, thank you very much. the son of an oklahoma politician is accused of stabbing him to death. the oklahoma labor commissioner, mark costello suffered multiple wounds to his head and neck. his 26-year-old son was taken into custody. to a lighter story, the national zoo in washington is celebrating this morning after giant panda twins were born over the weekend. they are only the third set of twin cubs to be at a u.s. zoo. so far, the swins are vocalizing well and appear strong. meanwhile, their big sis turned 2 a day after her siblings were born. what a birthday bash she had complete with her favorite frozen fruitcicle cake. dangerous animals. no, they are adorable stuffed animals we should play with. but the babies are not cute. it takes them a few months to get fuzzy. they are cute to the mommy. not an unusual situation for babies in general. everybody s baby is beautiful, but really to the mom, that s always true. rain is headed to the northeast. let s get to chad myers for a look at the forecast. hi, chad. you can dress him up, but don t take him out. don t hide the truth. turn around and speak truth to the board. rain coming into the northeast. it s cooler weather. it is going to be an amazing week. finally, finally cooler weather here going to push in. look at the temperatures. minneapolis, 57. bismarck, you are 44. that is, right now, this instant, nice weather think the weekend. it is going to be nice from now to friday. saturday, new york city 70s and 80s, going to feel nice. humidity is gone for a while. back to you. thanks for that update. the big question, is he in or is he out? vice president biden keeping everyone guessing about a possible 2016 run after a meeting over the weekend with senator elizabeth warren. what does it mean for hillary? we have a biden insider ahead. we ll ask that. i brought in some protein 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. does your makeup remover every kiss-proof,ff? cry-proof, stay-proof look? neutrogena® makeup remover does. it erases 99% of your most stubborn makeup with one towelette. need any more proof than that? neutrogena. small job? no, doing the whole living room. hey you guys should come over later. the exclusive one-coat color collection from behr® marquee interior. every color covers in one coat, guaranteed. turning a two-coat job into an easy marquee® afternoon. sfx: phone chime they re still at it. behr® marquee. behr s most advanced interior paint and primer. exclusively at the home depot. i will say don t jump in, if i were joe biden. i would give serious consideration. i have a great deal of respect for joe biden. he is a good and decent man. it would be nice to have one lifelong democrat in the race. joe biden has the political world buzzing after meeting with elizabeth warren this weekend. will he join the democratic field? a former adviser to the draft biden effort and former chief of staff from the committee and president of vox global. thank you for being here. is joe biden getting into the race? well, i m not advising on him whether or not he should get in. he is certainly somebody who having run twice before knows what is involved in making that decision. what you are seeing is somebody who is taking this incredibly seriously and doing really smart things as they think about the process. of course, there is this, you know, extraordinary variable relative to his son and his family and having to make that decision. but, i think you are going to see a decision from the vice president in the next four to six weeks. okay. you say he is doing incredibly smart things to take the temperature where he is. one of those, i guess, is meeting with senator elizabeth warren. joe biden has been in democratic politics for decades, obviously. what can she tell him about this decision? well, look, i think i m not sure as the specifics of the process of that meeting. if i were advising the vice president, i would say there s a number of people that are important to meet with in a democratic party. elizabeth warren would be at the top of that list. she is an incredible voice of the democratic party. she has an incredible grass roots following. i think one of the things tough do, as you go about this process, is listen to other people. he s meeting with elizabeth warren. he s going to talk to and it s been reported, other people in key states. such as, meaning fund-raisers, donors? well, look, i know what i read in the newspapers, he is reaching out to people in, you know, places where he s got a lot of friends, places like new hampshire, iowa, south carolina, nevada, some of the key primary states for the vice president. what would biden bring to the race that hillary clinton and bernie sanders don t have covered already? look, i think if the vice president decides to run, it s going to be about the vice president, not any of the other candidates out there. i think he brings an incredible voice for the middle class. he brings and incredible voice to civil and gay rights. a time where the world is fluid and dangerous, the vice president probably has more experience in foreign policy than any other candidate. i would say he brings a humanity and authenticity to this race that i think voters are going to be drawn to with the vice president. it s interesting you use the word authenticity. many people are saying, in some strange way, the assent of trump is helping joe biden. it seems as though the populous wants an unvarnished candidate, somehow. is he the democratic counter part to donald trump? no. he s not. the vice president has been deeply committed to public service and public policy his entire career. he will be doing that long after whatever decision he makes here. he is not splashing in and nor, by the way, would it be about the vice president. it would be about the american people, the middle class. i think his authenticity transcends, you know, prime time television shows or anything else. it s part of the policy and the issues he s worked on. i think that s what people care about. thank you for being on new day. come back when you have spoken to the vice president and you have some scoop for us. all right. thanks. thanks so much. what is your take on all of this? tweet us #newdaycnn or facebook.com/newday. we will read them on the show. we are following lot of news. let s get to it. three bonified american heroes. the word hero has never been more appropriate. we just kind of acted. he was ready to fight to the end. reporter: the suspect. the belief is this was connected to terrorism. he had a lot of ammo. intentions were clear. stock markets in europe and asia falling sharply. prepare for the worst losses in four years. pandemonium at the united states capital. the giant panda gave burt to a pair of baby cubs. zoo keepers had no idea the second baby was on the way. i was excited. i teared up a little bit. announcer: this is new day with chris cuomo ma alisyn camerota and michaela pereira. three americans were honored in france for taking down the gunman on a high speed strain. stone, sadler and skarlatos were presented medals for bravery by the french president. well earned. officials say the heavily armed suspect is linked to isis. his lawyer says he found the weapons in public and was there to rob passengers because he was hungry. cnns coverage begins with nic robertson. what more have we learned? reporter: well, chris, i can tell you it s a rainy day here, but it hasn t dampened the spirits of the hero. they had put their lives on the line risking themselves to save the other passengers on the train from what could have been ultimate carnage. to man whose hand was injured, stone, his arm still in a sling was the first to lead the three friends in to meet the french president. this morning, three young americans arriving to a red carpet ceremony in paris. the french president presenting them with the highest award of bravery, the legion of honor. it came after this up credible scene was viewed around the world, a gunman, hog tied on the floor of a passenger train. the close friends say they acted on instinct. it was either do something or die. it wasn t a conscious decision. we just acted. 23-year-old airman spencer stone led the charge. i saw he had what looked to be an ak-47. it looked like it was jammed or wasn t working. he was trying to charge the weapon. alek hit me on the shoulder and said let s go. reporter: he and his two friends along with a french and british national prevented what could have been a bloody massacre. when i heard they are moving, it gave me the impetus to get up and do it. ran down, tackled them, hit the ground. alek grabbed him and took him down. i put him in a chokehold. the moroccan national boarded the plane carrying an assault riffle, including eight magazines, a pistol with extra ammunition and a box cutter, which he used to hit stone nearly severing his numb. he took immediate action to take action to protect himself. plus, being an angel in the room. his father, believing it was destiny. they moved to first class for better wi-fi. i expect nothing less from my brother. he is linked to investigations into radical islamist networks across europe, including a french isis cell in turkey. his lawyer says he denies he is a terrorist and instead robbed them on the train with weapons he found in a park. one passenger was shot in the melee. stone rushed to help another who was wounded in the neck. i stuck two of my fingers in the hole, found what i thought to be the artery, pushed down and the bleeding stopped. reporter: over the weekend, president obama called the men personally commending them for courage and quick action. the french president said they are an example for others that when faced with a crisis, he was quoting anthony sadler who was asked about this, how he was impacted and felt about how it happened. that, alone, a huge honor here. do what these three young heroes did when presented with a situation of crisis. stand-up and do something. a very high honor indeed. alisyn? we are so proud of them back here at home, nic. thanks for that. a new york social worker witnessed the horrifying attack. we spoke with her about what she saw as she traveled on the train for what was supposed to be her first vacation to europe. so, i had been on vacation in europe for the first time ever, which was extremely exciting for me. i was happy about it. i was traveling with a good friend of mine through italy, then amsterdam, then we parted ways in amsterdam. he went to berlin and i was to go to paris. you were on the train alone? yes. at what point did you realize something was unfolding? i was on the train doing my make up, actually. i had the fold out tray table out doing my make up. all of a sudden, between 5:45 and 5:50, i heard gunshots. you heard gunshots in your car. i believe after, you know, just thinking about everything that went down and the other information i have gained, i believe the gunshot happened in car 11. i was in car 12. but, i was in car 12 near the entrance of 11 and 12. you heard gunshots. when did you realize something terrible was unfolding and you needed to take cover. as soon as i heard the gunshots, myself and everyone around me ducked under the seats. i ducked under the seat and had the tray table over my head as well. i was doing this and i had my cell phone clutched in my hand under the seat as well. you had your cell phone and you were able to take photos of this entire crime unfolding. we have those. you have shared them with us. what is this picture we are seeing? so, this photo is a man that, it appeared to me that his neck his neck was profusely bleeding. this is the first victim, you believe, that was shot in the neck? i believe, yes, he was the first. he was shot in the neck and had come stumbling into the train and he fell to the he had a bloody duffel bag that i have a photo of. he first dropped the bloody duffel bag in the seat across from me, essentially. then he collapsed to the floor very close to where i was sitting. here is the picture of the duffel bag. you are under your seat, taking cover. yes. the tray table is down and you see this man fall with blood and the bloody duffel bag. what is going through your head while all that is happening? i didn t know what to think. i thought oh my god, he just got shot. he s dead. i thought he, like, the neck, it s a severe area to be shot at. he might be dead right now. i thought am i next? that was my first thought, am i next? you thought somebody was on a rampage? yes, right away. was the gunman saying anything? no, i didn t hear the gunman. what i believe at this point is the shot was fired in car 11 and the man was running away from the assailant into car 12 and dropped the duffel bag close to where i was sitting. that s what i believe, that s how i believe it happened. you and fellow passengers are cowerring under your seat. i had seen at least two of them. while i was under my seat still and i m snapping photos. just to go back to that real quick, i was snapping photos, but not just snapping photos, i was on facebook chat with the friend of mine i had been traveling with. while it was happening? yeah, i was having a conversation. i said, i messaged him and said oh my god, oh my god, there s a man with a gun. there s gunshots. a man just dropped in the floor in front of me bleeding. i snapped the photo of the duffel bag and the photo of him on the floor. later on, i snapped the third photo of the assailant on the train with his hands behind his back. when did you realize people were on the train that were going to save you? while i was under there still, i had the shots were fired. the man was bleeding. i didn t know what to think. then, actually, while i was under there, i saw a large rifle. at first, i thought, oh my god, is that the gunman? because i didn t know, yet, who he was. i later learned he was one of the three men that saved my life and all of our lives. i believe that was probably what he had taken from maybe what he had taken from the assailant. i know he had to wrestle him and take the ammunition away. did you hear, during the process of this, we know there was some conversation exchanged, did you hear them talking? i heard one of them say i m a paramedic, someone get this man some help. you know, he was basically trying to come to this man s rescue. the first victim? the victim with the bloody neck, the gunshot to the neck. the only victim i saw was the man who got shot in the neck. he was asking passengers in my car to get, like neckties, men s neckties or a woman s scarf to try to make a turn quet to stop the bleeding. could you tell there were three americans on your car trying to quell the situation? i believe i only saw two of them. i don t think i saw three. so, i but i did come out from under a lot of us came out from under our seats when we realized they they communicated to us, okay, we have him tied up, ammunition taken away. they did communicate that. we felt safer. i was still scarend and shaken up but i felt safer to come out of hiding. they made us all go to the back of the car, then to the next car, car 13, because they didn t want so many people near this man who was on the floor bleeding. what do you think it was that allowed them to run towards danger when everyone else, naturally, your reflex and mine is to hide. fight or flight, right? yeah. i know a couple of them have military background. so, i guess i don t have military background myself, but my understanding is, if you have that training, that s probably what you are kind of programmed to do, essentially. i don t know what it was, but i think there are very, very brave, i owe my life to them. i m incredibly grateful to those three men. they are fantastic human beings, we are all grateful for what they did for us. what do you want to say to them? thank you so much from the bottom of my heart. the thoughts running through my mind were, am i going to die? i m not ready die. that s really how i thought or felt. excuse me, getting little emotional. you know, i feel like i have so much more to do with my life. i m only 28 years old. i have goals and everybody else on that train does as well. they saved us. you know, they are heroes. if they don t think they are heroes, i mean, they are very humble and i respect that, but they are heroes. they are truly heroes. my mom wanted to say thank you so much. she s very grateful that they were on that train. we are grateful they were on that train. hundreds. i keep thinking about the fact in those early moments, too, they didn t know if he was alone, if there was another gunman or assailant. all that happening so fast with fluidity. they knew he had shot somebody, knew he had the ak-47. they decided to rush him. and others. another person got shot in the neck. a lot of people stepped up. invokes memories of flight 93 on 9/11. they knew they were going to take care of it. they were so grateful for people like that. heroes that walk among us. in other news, breaking, in fact a brutal day for global investors. markets in china, taiwan and hong kong. let s turn to christine romans with the impact it s going to have on wall street. that s what we are waiting for. let me show you the world markets first. these are the red arrows around the world. paris down 3%. the spark here with shanghai, shanghai having a horrible day. they are calling it black monday in china. look at futures in the u.s. you are seeing follow through here. s&p 500 futures are going to be down big time. ift s going to be a very ugly day. the dow is in a correction. it s down 10% from the most recent peak. a lot of ferocious selling and names of the year are down. apple, netflix and disney. we are seeing one of the things that is important to watch. oil prices down sharply. this is unsettling because one, energy companies in your 401(k) have been hit and all the country that is depend on oil for revenue are getting hammered. oil prices are challenging. you are seeing stocks react. we have a couple hours until the opening bell here. it is going to be a very ugly day for stock investors. some perspective. record highs in stocks, remember? a lot of people are telling me, we need to have a correction at some point. it s ugly when it happens. when your money is in the market, you don t feel like you need to lose it. we ll keep watching it. thank you very much. a big boost for president obama s iran nuclear deal. harry reid says he strongly supports it and will see everything in his power so it stands. remember, the president needs 34 senators in his corner to this wart an override of his veto. 27 democrats support the deal. schumer and menendez oppose it. wok to be done. going to the lone star state to talk border security. the gop contender facing backlash about comments about immigration, looking to turn things around to get trump who is in texas off his back. susan is live in d.c. with the latest this morning. good morning. reporter: good morning. jeb bush is trying to recapture the tone and substance by making his case at the border today. he is going to be in mcalan, texas. he is going to close his meeting to discuss border security as well as economics. his message is that his plan is in contrast to trump s $500 million plan. that requires big government spending. bush s trip follows the visit to the border to force all illegal immigrants out of the country to babies born in the u.s. to undocuments immigrants. trump used the offensive term, anchor babies as did bush. this got a lot of criticism last week. bush refused to apologize for it. many hispanics did not think it would have a long lasting impact given his close connections to the latino community. trump kept up his criticism of his opponent closer to his heels. we need a person with a lot of smarts, a lot of cunning and a lot of energy. jeb doesn t have that. he s a nice person. if he wins, good luck, it s another bush, the same old story. the visit at the border is meant to regain, recapture control over this issue. alisyn? thank you for that. an indycar driver is in critical condition after this flying debris hit justin wilson directly in the head. he lost consciousness sending his car into the wall. he has a severe head injury. the driver in the first car was shaken by what happened. he left the reck with an injured foot. so excited about the fast pace racing and such. the danger is definitely real. i think it s nerve-racking to watch. back to the top story. what do we know about the men those three american heroes took down? was he just a train robber or was he part of a larger terror network? we ll tell you the latest, next. imagine - she won t have to remember passwords. or obsess about security. she ll log in with her smile. he ll have his very own personal assistant. and this guy won t just surf the web. he ll touch it. scribble on it. and share it. because these kids will grow up with windows 10. get started today. windows 10. a more human way to do. if you can t stand the heat, get off the test track. get the mercedes-benz you ve been burning for at the summer event, going on now at your authorized mercedes-benz dealer. but hurry, offers end august 31st. share your summer moments in your mercedes-benz with us. when you re not confident your company s data is secure, the possibility of a breach can quickly become the only thing you think about. that s where at&t can help. at at&t we monitor our network traffic so we can see things others can t. mitigating risks across your business. leaving you free to focus on what matters most. look at us.ert a nation of checkers. missing this moment. to check all of the other moments. really, mom? just one look. they ll never notice. checkers, you can keep failing at trying to sneak a peek. or, you can change the way you check your phone. it s 3-0 in the first. how d you do that? magic. acutally, it s the samsung galaxy s6 edge, with discreet edge notifications. the gunshot was one of the pretty much the first thing that came to our attention. i didn t know it was a gunshot at the time. it was behind me. i had no idea what he intended to do but, yeah, that was the first thing that happened. alek skarlatos, one of a group of americans who became heroes taking down a gunman on a paris bound train. officials say they had the suspect on their radar, suspected of terror links. his lawyer says he s just hungry, homeless and looking to rob passengers. let s go to an analyst. first the easier question, do you believe there is a likelihood that this man is what his lawyer presents him to be? not in the least. he came into the train with an ak-47, nine magazines, a pistol and box cutter. if you are coming just to rob a train, that is not what you will find. not what you find hiding in a park, which is what was suggested. he was on the radar, but not closely enough to monitor his movements. is that deficiency or window to reality? window of reality. if you look at the people being monitored over seas, there are thousands of people on the radar of authorities. this is someone who had gone to syria. unless grow to join a jihadist group, it s not against their law. a problem of potential radicalization, people associated with jihadist movements. it s so broad, you cannot survey them all. then you get to the reality of what happened on the train. you are not always going to have these three men. there s a french american citizen in the hospital. other nationalities involved that stepped up. doesn t always happen. trains are vulnerable. there s no security going on and off. should that change or choose convenience over 100% safety? it s a great question. you are not going to see train stations in europe move toward airport stale security. the belgium prime minister called for not only urgent discussion about increasing rail security, but a reveal of the zone that throughout europe provides for passport free travel from one country to another. there s going to be a lot of discussions about can you increase the ability to look at identification documents? you can see if someone is a suspected terrorist and searching people s bags, looking at the attacker here and the ammunition on the train. there s going to be a discussion, isn t this the kind of thing you could have stopped? you are looking at measures, not airport security, but more police presence to interrupt terrorist plots. we don t want to do what we do on airplanes, for one simple reason, convenience. europe has 40 million a day on the rails. the u.s. doesn t have as much volume, but similar volume per capita. we don t do it because we don t want to do it, not because we can t do it or shouldn t do it, right? there are other reasons besides convenience. convenience is high on the list and tied in with economics. you need to be able to move people. if you slow down their day, you are taking away man hours from the day. a third thing is cost. if you are to implement tsa style security throughout europe, it would be extraordinarily expensive. that s another reason. it lends itself to a fourth concern,eth ka si. if you are going to do tsa style security, bringing in all these people, do you have enough qualified individuals? right now, when people try to test the tsa system, sneaking bombs across, more often than not, they are able to get them across. tsa is expensive, but it s not clear it s doing its job of preventing. as we know, you better than i, these are the same questions that used to be asked before 9/11, then everything changed with respect to air travel and hopefully we don t have a similar situation on the rails. thank you for understanding who this man is and who he isn t. could another billionaire raise a challenge with donald trump? that s what murdock would like to see. we ll let john king explore that inside politics. she ll log in with her smile. he ll have his very own personal assistant. and this guy won t just surf the web. he ll touch it. scribble on it. and share it. because these kids will grow up with windows 10. get started today. windows 10. a more human way to do. the the lincoln summerre. invitation is on. get exceptional offers on the luxury small utility mkc. mkz sedan. the iconic navigator. and get a first look at the entirely new 2016 mid-size utility lincoln mkx. during the final days of the lincoln summer invitation get your choice of mkc, mkz or mkz hybrid for $369 a month with zero due at signing. an honor they won t soon forget for three american heroes. french president presenting knights of the legion for bravery for taking down a gunman on a high speed train. that gunman is linked to isis fighters in turkey. he and his lawyer claim he was on the train to rob passengers because he was hungry. investigatoors are trying t figure out what caused an explosion. it contained nitrogen, oxygen and freon. it took hours for firefighters to put out these flames. no injuries reported. a louisiana state trooper is fighting for his life this morning. he is trying to talk a dui driver out of a crashed truck when they shot him in the head. another driver saw what was happening, got the weapon away from the gunman and slapped the troopers handcuffs on him. he is in critical condition with severe, neurological damage. we wish him well in his recovery. boston police 18-year-old kevin norton, and a 27-year-old made violent threats on a facebook group. they tried to get into the venue to kill fellow contestants, but were taken into custody after weapons and ammunition, a lot of it, as you can see there was found inside their vehicle. a head scratcher. none of it makes sense. my 9-year-old does pokeman. scary. let s get to inside politics with john king. so much to talk about, john. will he or won t he? we have to ask the president who gets to have lunch with that guy today. good morning. let s go inside politics. a very busy monday. to share with me, sara and olivia. the president is back at work and the vice president is back from work after a break. they are going to sit down for lunch today. mr. president how was the last round of golf or so mr. vice president tell me about the elizabeth warren meeting? the meeting with very interesting. she is not in the race, by driving the conversation, which is what a lot of people want outside of hillary. someone who can speak to the far left. so far, bernie sanders has done that. there aren t many people that think he could be a threat in the long term. joe biden is a different story. he s talking to long term advisers, making phone calls. when you come back from delaware, you invite elizabeth warren to come to the vice president s residence, do it on a saturday, you know it is going to get out. i talked to people that say he did it, took it to the next level because he s more comfortable with running. he s not there yet. what does that mean? more comfortable with the idea of running. he s kissing the ring here, paying attention to e lizwet warren. in a way you are. you are trying to make sure if you announce for president, you have a rational behind you. you are not younger than hillary. you wouldn t be making more history than hillary. you don t necessarily have a better relationship with the base of the party than hillary. if you have elizabeth warren on your side, you have the two-term vice president who achieved a lot in his time in office and this much better connection to the base of the party. biden/warren. does the president like this idea or not like this idea? this is unusual in the sense dick cheney didn t run. we knew he was not going to be a candidate for president. we didn t think joe biden was going to be. it s so unusual. usually, you pick a vice president, he gears up. al gore tried and failed. what does the president think here? does this help him? does he think it s not a good thing? let s be honest, he s kind of sort of said hillary clinton put his eggs in a clinton basket. a lot of people in the white house put their eggs in a clinton basket. it s a very awkward position. it s because joe biden didn t know indication he was considering it until recently. the reality is, the obama administration agenda is going to be on the table no matter what, no matter if it s hillary clinton or joe biden. he has to choose between friends. the white house is working closely with the hillary campaign. john is there frequently. this would put the president in an awkward spot. would love to be at that lunch. rupert murdock told us he was at the great barrier reef on vacation. this is what you do when you are on a low budget vacation. with trump being a candidate, it s time for bloomberg to step into it. he later tweeted, i didn t say i would vote for him, just a friend i admire. just playful mischief or up to something? totally playful mischief. he hasn t shown appetite for this, for 2016. i think this is, let s see if i can do something dpr from the great barrier reef. see if i can make bloomberg s monday more interesting? we are not on the same page of this, that s what we need, more candidates. he s happy moving back to the company, taking the reigns there. murdock felt like doing a little tweeting. we ll see how this plays out. donald trump on the sunday shows this past weekend. he has dominated the republican race. he is stirring the agenda and dominated in a way that has many unhappy and uneasy. george stephanopoulos trying to get him to stay he is going to build a wall and round them up. how are you going to pay for it? you don t say how you are going to do it. excuse me, george? you declare you are going to do it, but don t say how? i m telling you, growth management. i m going to get great people that know what they are doing. again, in a normal campaign, that would not fly. for donald trump, it seems to work. don t ask me what it is going to cost in the budget or ask where i m going to get the money. i m going to get good people and get rid of the stupid people. people say i like what donald trump is saying, they like his rhetoric on immigration and he s blunt. there s a certain amount of trust. they say he s a businessman, el rich and done things before. he would figure it out. it defies the rules of politics. the things he s said would be gaffes for other candidates. not for trump. romney was criticized for changing issues. trump, never mind. he has the republicans talking about should we build a wall and could you get mexico to pay for it? can we round people out and send them out? the conversation about the 14th amendment and anchor babes. if someone comes into the united states and has a baby, should that baby be a citizen of the united states. if necessary, he would try to change the constitution. ask scott walker this question and it depends on which day of the week you ask him. do you think birthright citizenship should be ended? we should end it? yeah, to me it s about enforcing the laws. people understand you are not for ending it? i m not taking a position on it one way or the other? you are not seeking to appeal the 14th amendment? no. my point is any discussion that goes beyond the border or enforcing the laws should be a red flag. they have heard lip service from politicians and are angry. monday, yes, i think so, absolutely. friday, i m not taking a position one way or the other. sunday, no. and the walker campaign says he s being absolutely consistent on this. clearly consistent. sorry, my apologies, governor. i know he s not. what are they going to say, no idea? we are winging this one? they can t say that. he s a hero for his governship. the donor community here, many don t matter. trump s campaign, what people think doesn t matter anymore. donors do matter. he needs their money. if you are on the edge and they say i will give you money and see where it goes and you are worried he is not ready for prime time, it doesn t make you feel better thchlt is a big mistake if you stand-up for conservative principles. to change your policy this many times doesn t project that. it s a new week, maybe he can clear it up as we go forward. the immigration debate shall continue. you know what else it is, john? it s a new day. it is a new day. thanks so much. see you tomorrow. the abortion issue is more complicated in ohio. they will vote on a bill to ban abortion if they have down syndrome. might parents or doctors have to go to prison? we ll have the bill s co-sponsor next. hey pal? you ready? can you pick me up at 6:30? ah. 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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! diis critical for brain health?n brain food, hmmm. ensure has b vitamins that help support brain health - now that s smart nutrition. ensure s complete balanced nutrition has 26 vitamins and minerals and 9 grams of protein. ensure. take life in. 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. when you have a migraine, you ll reach for anything to make the pain go away. truth is, most pain relievers don t work like excedrin migraine. it relieves my pain starting in 30 minutes. that s fast! plus, sensitivity to light and sound. excedrin migraine. wow, that was fast. a legislature is considering a ban on abortions if the child is diagnosed with down syndrome. opponents say the bill will not pass legal muster but they ensure abortions are not performs based on a possible genetic disability. joining us to discuss is john becker, a co-sponsor of the bill. representative becker, thanks so much for being on new day. explain to us how this bill works. if a mother were to terminate a pregnancy once she learned the child had down syndrome would she face joul time or the doctor face jail time in. thanks for having me on alisyn, good morning. this bill is not aimed at the mothers at all. it is aimed at the doctors and doesn t prevent or in essence outlaw abortions or down syndrome people. it s rather the intention, the sole intention is because the fetus is diagnosed with down syndrome. this is such an agonizing and personal decision for parents. why is it the state s responsibility to make this decision for parents? well, alisyn, it s a matter of the state s responsibility to protect lives. we are talking about innocent human beings. that s kind of really the pro-life movement in a whole is all about. have you talked to parents who have had to make this decision? well, no. but, let me tell you about some down syndrome people that i have met or their parents. they are quick stories. the first one, i was a teenager at church. there was a kid, this was a catholic church giving the sign of peace during the ceremony. he would go up and down the main aisle ten rows deep and shake hands with the person at the end of each pew. this was a cute kid, everybody loved him, he was great. the second one, i want to tell you about an individual named teddy kramer. people can google him, teddy kraemer, cincinnati reds bat boy. i used to work with him. great guy, inspiring story. the third story is i was going door-to-door campaigning for this position. i met a dad who was in the driveway with his daughter who has down syndrome. looking at the love between the two and the big smile on this little girl s face is precious. these are real people that need protection. we have all met children with down syndrome. as i m sure you know, there s a spectrum. there are mild cases and those children bring a lot of joy to their parents and there are more severe cases. in those severe cases, sometimes they have to be institutionalized. rarely are they able to go to college or graduate from college. a fraction of them, only a fraction of them end up working at a paying job. so, is it your suggestion that if parents feel ill equipped to have a child with special needs that the state would take care of them? those children could be institutionalized and the state would pick up the tab? well, alison, for parents who are not equipped, a lot of parents aren t. i get that. there are a lot of people that are equipped and want to adopt these special needs children. there are options out there. the idea is, just because somebody is handicap, we don t want to put them to death. a pro-life movement means pro-life for all innocent, human life. what the pro-choice says is it is a deeply personal decision of parents and the state is getting in the way of that personal decision. i mean, representative, where does it stop? what else can the state tell you about how many children you should have or what other personal decisions are you comfortable with the state making for you? alisyn, again thrks is a matter of a life and death decision. sure, tough. it gets into the hard cases. we are making a law based on hard cases. it makes for bad law. carving out exceptions, it s not unusual when a baby is diagnosed with down syndrome, the diagnosis is wrong. that occurs 20% of the time. you have a perfectly healthy baby that is being aborted. i m not sure about the statistics because, perhaps at first there may be a misdiagnosis, but not later in the pregnancy when there could be other ultrasounds. it s nice to think they would be adopted, but history doesn t prove they are always adopted. many are institutionalized at great cost. it costs 12 to 13 times more to raise a child with down syndrome than other children. this is according to the cdc. so, if that child is not adopted, who will pick up those costs? well, there is always cost incured for any person with handicaps. we work with the schools on that. they have their special needs kids and the cost to educate a special needs kid is dramatically higher than a typical kid. this is another example where, yeah, certain people in our society do cost more. just because, you know, somebody has a disability doesn t mean they should be discriminated against in the woman. congressman, thanks so much for coming on and explaining the bill for us. we ll follow it. thank you for having me, alisyn. what s your take on this story? tweet us #newdaycnn or facebook.com/newday or my twitter. i look forward to reading your feedback. michaela? all right. not one but two panda cubs born at the national zoo. the second one catching everyone off guard. we are going to bring you an update on their conditions, ahead. is man kind? are we good? go see. go look through their windows so you can understand their views. sit at their table so you can share their tastes. sleep in their beds so you may know their dreams. go see. and find out just how kind the hes and shes of this mankind are. no sixth grader s ever sat with but your jansport backpack is permission to park it wherever you please. hey. that s that new gear feeling. this week, these folders just one cent. office depot officemax. gear up for school. gear up for great. imagine - she won t have to or obsess about security. she ll log in with her smile. he ll have his very own personal assistant. and this guy won t just surf the web. he ll touch it. scribble on it. and share it. because these kids will grow up with windows 10. get started today. windows 10. a more human way to do. every auto insurance policy has a number. but not every insurance company understands the life behind it. those who have served our nation. have earned the very best service in return. usaa. we know what it means to serve. get an auto insurance quote and see why 92% of our members plan to stay for life. the signs are everywhere. the lincoln summer invitation is on. get exceptional offers on the luxury small utility mkc, mkz sedan. the iconic navigator. and get a first look at the entirely new 2016 mid-size utility lincoln mkx. during the final days of the lincoln summer invitation get 0% apr for 72 months on the 2015 lincoln navigator. some live pictures for you inside the nursery where the giant twin pandas were born over the weekend. we re watching on mom there looking at mom snuggling with her cubs. for the first time the national zoo is home to five giant pan pandas. joining me now is someone that worked closely with the pandas. dr. brandy smith at the smithsonian national zoo. great to have you here. tell us about the condition of the cubs right now well, thank you for having me. it s great to be here. the cubs are doing pretty well. these early days everything still touch and go. we re watching them closely but we re hopeful now. what is the biggest concern, you say touch and go? well, you know, they are so fragile. they re so tiny and so fragile, and we re just the first few day of life there could be things that were wrong with them. they could have problems with them or challenges with mom taking care of them. so almost anything could go wrong in these first few days. that s the balance, right? you wanting to make sure they get the best care they can, keeping an eye on them, but let the mother do her job of mothering. because they re twins she has a hard time taking care of two at one time. we re helping her out and swapping cubs. she gets to focus on one cub and we focus on the other. that s fantastic. we understand mom was artificially inseminated by two males. that will create diversity in the species genes, i suppose. it is. it s exciting. not only to find out who the father is going to be. there s a potential that each of the cubs could have a different father. that s interesting. talk to us what happens to the cubs once they get a little bit bigger. indian they go ba i understany go back to china? they will. the reason we have panda cubs is to keep making more panda cubs. when our cubs grow up and are ready to breed we send them back to china to find mates of their own. it takes a long time. we want to make sure that the cubs are being cared for. when do you think the general public will get to have their first view of the little ones? so, probably in a few months, probably around christmas or the first of the year if everything goes well. right now the panda house is closed. we re keeping everything quiet and the best environment for the mother to take care of them. if anybody wants to get a behind the scenes look #pandastory. any names in the works for them yet? no, and so we just want to get we re not thinking about that now. we just want to the first week is the most crucial so i m not thinking beyond a week right now. i understand that. talk to us about the overall state of the endangered giant panda population right now. this is good news if twins are coming into the program. they are. you know, these species are endangered. so every single panda makes a difference in the world. the fact we have the two pandas it s important to the entire global population, and hopefully they ll grow up happy and healthy and they ll go on to breed and make more pandas. hopefully their off sping will eventually be in the wild someday. you can see mom working on her job which is mothering. we know bao bao the second surviving cub had her second birthday over the weekend! the day after her new siblings came on scene. i m sure she s upset they re stealing her thunder. i see she had a nice fruitcake there. she enjoyed the candidate. she was sleeping on top of her cake all day long. bao bao doesn t know there s anyone in the world besides bao bao. she s enjoying it and not even concerned with the cub right now. i respect that. my birthday is coming up. i might do the same thing. thank you so much, dr. brandy smith. thank you for the update on the cubs and wish you well in their care. i think we should probably jump to the news in a second. how about that? it s panda day. the best panda names and we don t know who the father is yet? why isn t jerry springer here today? we picked a bad day for jerry to come. using the hashtag and let s start off with panda names. you think they ll be able to influence the national sure! why not? the rest of my day is buried in pointless suggestions. you know what it will be? panda pandemonium. the taking of the baby from the mom why don t they let the bear take care of her own? that s two. she had two. as a mother of twins, it s hard sometimes to juggle both of them. yeah. i can relate. what do you think? a lot of news, let s get to it. they are truly heros. just kept pulling more weapons left and right. the guy had a lot of ammo. his intentions were clear. joe biden held a private meeting with senator elizabeth warren. could it be a biden warren ticket in the making? elizabeth warren has her thumb. i can t imagine the clinton camp will be happy of this. a day of fun turned to tragedy. stay in your places, please. this is new day with chris cuomo, allis welcome to new 8:00 in the east. breaking overnight three childhood pals celebrated worldwide. spencer stone, anthony sadler, alex skarlatos awarded a medal after preventing a emotional massacre on a high-speed train. they took down the gunman being linked to isis. the suspect said he s dumbfounded by allegations he s linked to terrorists. he claimed he was on the train to rob passengers because he was hungry. breaking news coverage begins with cnn nick robertson. give us the latest from paris, nick. reporter: hi, good morning. the three young american heros the french president said they should be an inspiration for all of us. they diverted a possible major catastrophe. there were more than 500 people and more than 300 bullets. the men came to the presidential palace here. they were let in. spencer stone s arm still in a sling. reporter: this morning three young americans arriving to a red carpet ceremony in paris. the french president presenting them with a country s highest award for bravery, the legion of honor. the honor came after this incredible scene was viewed around the world. a gunman hog tied on the floor of a passenger train. the close friends say they acted on instinct. it was do something or die. it wasn t a conscious decision. we just acted. 23-year-old spencer stone lead the charge. i saw he had what looked to be an ak 47. it looked like it was jammed or wasn t workiwork, he was trying charge the weapon. he and his two friends anthony sadler and national guard member alex sckarlatos prevented what could have been a bloody massacre. when i heard they were moving, it gave me the impetus to get up and galvanize me as well. ran down, tackled him, hit the ground. grabbed the gun out of his hand and put him in a choke hold. the suspect is identified as a more more rock con national. he boarded the train with ammunition and a box cutter he used to slash stone several times. i think he s not dead because he took immediate action to take action to protect himself and everyone else there. plus, there being an angel in the room. stone sbelieving it was destiny. the three men moving from coach to first class for better wi-fi. reporter: according to a senior counter terrorism official he s linked to radical islamic networks across europe including a french isis cell in turkey. his lawyer said he denies he s a terrorist. instead he robbed passengers on the train with weapons he found in a park. one passenger was shot in the melee. stone rushed to help another who was wounded in the neck. i stuck two of my fingers in what i thought to be the artery, pushed down and the bleeding stopped. reporter: over the weekend president obama called the men personally commending them for their courage and quick action. reporter: the french president said there will be an investigation into a security and the french transport network, but he said whatever authorities do, there is always a responsibility left with the individuals left with people to try to do something. and he quoted anthony sadler saying that when presented with a crisis, that you have to do something. a very high honor, indeed, for the three young american heros. if only we were all so capable as these three heros. nick, thank you so much. a new york social worker witnessed the horrifying attack. we spoke with christina kunz about what happened on board that train.account. you are taking cover, the train table is down. you see this man fall with blood and you see that bloody duffel bag. what is going through your head as that s happening? i didn t know what to think. i thought, oh, my god this man got shot. he s dead. i thought he, you know, i m like the neck that s a severe area to be shot at and he thought i might be dead. am i next? that s my first thought. am i next? when did you realize there were people on the train who were going to try to save you? the shots were fired, the man was bleeding. i didn t know what to think, and then i saw a large rifle. at first, i thought oh, my god is that the gunman because i didn t know yet who he was. and i later learned he was one of the three men that saved my life and all of our lives. we know were there some conversation exchange within the three americans. did you hear them talking? i heard one of them say i m a paramedic someone get this man some help. he was trying to come to the man s rescue and he was asking passengers in my car to get, like, neckties like men s neckties or a women s scarf to make a tourniquet around the neck. they communicated we have the man tied up. his ammunition was taken away. they did communicate that. so we felt a bit safer i was still scared and shaken up but i felt a bit safer to come out of hiding. i did that, and they made us go to the back of the car and then eventually made us go to the next car, car 13, because they didn t want so many people near the man who was on the floor bleeding. what do you want to say to them? thank you so much from the bottom of my heart. i don t feel like i m, you know, the thoughts that were running through my mind were, you know, am i going to die? i m not ready to die. that s how i thought and felt and excuse me, i m getting a little emotional. and, you know, i feel like i have so much more to do with my life. i m only 28 years old, and i have goals and everybody et. cetera on th else does as wel. they saved us. they are heros. if they don t think they re heros, then, i mean, they re very humble and i respect that. but they are heros. they re truly heros. my mom wanted to say thank you so much. she s very grateful that they were on that train. joining us now is state department spokesman john kirby. good to have you with us, sir. when we look at the situation, let s put aside the question for now whether or not the man was looking to rob or what the much more obvious suggestion she s there to terrorize. lone wolves? we don t want to get ahead of the investigation, but you re right, chris. it races the specter of self-radicalized loan wolves, as you put it. whether they re motivated by isil or some other terrorist group. whatever their ideology is. this is a concern and has been a concern since we saw the rise of isil last summer. we have more than 30 countries inside the 60 plus country coalition that are taking legal and administrative steps to try to deal with exactly this kind of problem. what is the chance that the violence in korea escalates between the north and south. it s difficult to predict. we don t have a lot of insight into the north s intentions and thinking and their actions. it was encouraging to see the two sides talk over the weekend. nobody wants to see this come to blows on the korean peninsula. we have almost 30,000 troops there and they re ready but that s not the outcome that anybody wants to see. tensions are high. we continue to watch this closely and obviously hope things can deescalate. how comfortable are you there s no better deal than the iran deal on the table? well, it looks like kerry talked about this at length. the deal was negotiated over the course of two two and a half years and it wasn t just the united states and iran, it was, you know, five other countries with us. and so the international committee includes to the e.u. and the international communities behind the deal there s no other alternatives out there. certainly none that anybody put forward. what is important to remember the deal brought iron to the table. this deal will take away their ability to possess a nuclear weapons capability. answer the criticisms. the criticisms are, one, you turned it into a situation that is no longer if but when they get it. you have given them $150 billion when you could have held off. you re not squeezing the sanctions anymore that you could have continued ed tto do, and didn t give back the american prisoners before starting any notions. that s a lot. we ll take them one by one. we wanted to separate the condition of the americans being detained with iran. they need to be home with their families. linking them to the deal might have made is the situation worst. we never missed an opportunity to talk to iranian leaders about that. you mentioned $150 billion. i know, the numbers fluctuate here, but, look sanctions relief is what brought iran to the table. the u.n. sanctions in place were there for one reason only. to deal with their nuclear weapons capability and to try to bring them to the table. there was going to be a measure of sanctions relief. u.s. sanctions are not going to be removed on iran for the knee their use conditions. we have other economic and military options at our disposal if they continue to support terrorism in the region, and to conduct destabilizing activities. nobody will take our eye off that. and i can t remember you had a couple more. i know you remember, john but you re ducking. you ve answered enough. we ll follow on the conversation as we see where the votes go. we don t want to preargue something. can you say that the state department approved of the use of clinton s private e-mail server the way it was conducted from start to finish? well, look, as you know, chris, this issue is under a series of reviews and investigations. i m not at liberty to comment too specifically about past use of the e-mail server. what i can tell you is we at the state department are committed to making the e-mails, there s 30,000 more to make them public. we re going to do it carefully through the freedom of information act and the process. but secretary kerry is committed to do it as expeditiously as possible. understood, but it is your department and it is your policy and it would be within your purview to say whether or not her practice met your policy. can you? well, we have said in the past, chris, there was no policy prohibiting the use of a private e-mail account here at the state department. that is still a fact. now we obviously have policies in place now that highly discourage that and you re supposed to yut the government account so there s a constant permanent record of it. at the time she was not violating policy. even though there was a change in 2009 and that would have overlapped? as i said when she was secretary of state there was no prohibition to her use of a private e-mail. that s the position of the state department. obviously whatever else comes from the investigation you ll have to watch. it s a question that gets overlooked here. can you ever have a problem with what she was doing and did you say did you go to the secretary and say it? i m not aware of what str individual conversations might have occurred. i wasn t here. there was no prohibition for her use of this. we since changed the policy to discourage that greatly. in fact, the policy is you have to use the government account for business. is it a fair point that the policy was changed while she was secretary of state and whether or not she met with the changes of policy? i tonight believe the policy changed while she was secretary, chris. i would have to look at that. certainly as i said, at the time when she was secretary of state, she was not violating any policy or regulation. john kirby, thank you very much for taking on the issues of the day. we look forward to having you back. my pleasure. the u.s. market is bracing for a drop this morning after asian markets took a huge hit overnight. china s losses stirring up all sorts of economic worries across the globe. christine romans is now here with us this morning looking at this. it s getting worse by the minute, you guys. i hate to tell you. this is what world markets look like. getting worse. look at london, paris, frankfurt a problem there, shanghai start this all at 8.5% decline for the day. it s down 5% over the last month. let me show you futures. this is an ugly picture. just look at that for a second. it s telling you if things hold it s going to be worse today than on friday. this is a big decline for any market, certainly a big decline for today. friday, you saw the dow down 530 points, nothing good to say about the stock market action on friday and the selling has continued all the way over the weekend. a couple of problems here, you have china and the growth is slowing. china, of course, is the factor to the world. all the countries that supply raw materials to china are in trouble because china doesn t need as much of their stuff. you have the commodities declining and the oil price decline below $40 a barrel for the first time since 2009. it s going to be great for drivers. it s going to be great as you fill up the car this fall. not so great for anybody who relies on stable energy prices for their business. we are about an hour and 15 to the opening bell. i have to show you the futures one more time, guys. 645 points lower is what it looks like the dow could open this morning. oh, boy. thank you so much for keeping an eye on that for us as we know you will throughout the day. destruction in the aplmra. blowing up one of the most important historic sites. it marks the first time isis terrorists have destroyed roman ruins since seizing palmra. investigators are morning are digging for clues what caused a pair of deadly air show crashes in europe over the weekend. the death toll climbing in england after a vintage jet nose dived on a busy highway. and horror as two planes collide midair in switzerland. we are live with new video of the deadliest crash. ian? reporter: michaela behind we re watching as the crane is pulling off the wreckage from the highway. we re seeing chunks of the airplane being put on a flat bed trailer. this is the moment which authorities said they are likely to find more bodies. right now at least 11 people, they say, are likely to be dead. the number is expected to rise as they clear the scene and pull that wreckage out. this is a town really in shock. a small community. this air show was really the height of their summer. we re seeing the deadly tragedy. also, police hearing from other family members who say they still have people missing. that is something that they re going to be double checking when finding out the final death toll here. but we re also getting new footage of this crash from a dash cam on a car. you can see it coming down and hitting blowing up and no surprise at the large death toll because the huge explosion. also, in switzerland we did have another air incident where two planes collided. one pilot was killed and another one, though, was lucky enough to bail out of the plane and parachute to the ground. it s been a deadly weekend for air shows. chris? thank you very much, ian. in politics there s lots of speculation this morning that joe biden is one step closer to white house run. cnn was first to report that joe biden held a private meeting with senator elizabeth warren on saturday. the big question why? cnn white house correspondent joins us with more. the tantalizing aspect. a ticket or is it just to meet with someone who represents the progressive part of the party? reporter: that s a million dollar question. is it the writing or wall or what will be the big sign that joe biden is indeed challenging hillary clinton and running for president. could it be that this morning his office announced he has a new communications director with big time campaign experience. jon edwards for president, or it could it be the meeting on saturday with senator elizabeth warren? the hero of many liberal democrats and progressives. he flew in for the meeting. it lasted about two hours, and he flew right back home. some are seeing that alone as a signal that he s leaning toward a run. sources tell cnn he wanted to get her thoughts on that possibility. that he wanted to talk about his stance on certain issues such as the economy but he s still thinking about. here is what the super pac supporting biden said. while the vice president thoughtfully considers his potential candidacy, draft biden 2016 assembled a who is who of staff talent focussing on death to media strategy, aggressive fundraising, innovative digital outreach. what all watchers seem to agree on he has to make this decision whatever it will be within about a month. allison? okay. everyone on tender hooks waiting to see that decision. an apology from espn for comments he made. captured on video giving the controversial advice to a group of first-year players. just in case you are knocked on the side if y all got approved you have to have fall guy. carter now tweeting, quote, seeing that video has made me realize how wrong i was. i was brought there to educate young people and instead i gave them bad advice. every person should take responsibility for his actions. i m sorry and i truly regret what i said that day. is he sorry? i m sure he s sorry once it blew up. that he got caught. what do you think? making a joke? got taken a wrong way? it sounds like he was joking around and trying to relate to the guys and what have you. but i think he was trying to share some insight. i don t know. i don t know. i feel twisted up about it. it s not the kind of advice you need to be giving anybody. even if he s joking it s something that happens too often with the younger guys, especially you need to support them not send them astray. that s too bad. i like cris carter. will he or won t he? please tweet allison. do you think joe biden will make a run for the white house? if so, what does mean for hillary clinton? who wins, in your opinion? tweet allison! rheumatoid arthritis like me. and you re talking to a rheumatologist about a biologic, this is humira. this is humira helping to relieve my pain and protect my joints from further damage. this is humira helping me reach for more. doctors have been prescribing humira for more than 10 years. humira works for many adults. it targets and helps to block a specific source of inflammation that contrubutes to ra symptoms. humira can lower your ability to fight infections, including tuberculosis. serious, sometimes fatal infections and cancers, including lymphoma, have happened, as have blood, liver and nervous system problems, serious allergic reactions, and new or worsening heart failure. before treatment, get tested for tb. tell your doctor if you ve been to areas where certain fungal infections are common, and if you ve had tb, hepatitis b, are prone to infections, or have flu-like symptoms or sores. don t start humira if you have an infection. talk to your doctor and visit humira.com this is humira at work. you totalled 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? 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what does it mean for hillary clinton? let s discuss this with our cnn political commentator. a democratic strategies and pro hillary clinton super pac and cnn political analyst john avalon. great to have you here. paul, i want to start with you. good morning. you ve known the vice president for a long time. do you think that he s going to get into the race? the truth is i don t know. i think this is one of the classic cases where those who know aren t talking, and those who are talking don t know. i don t know. i have known him for a long time. he s a beloved figure across the democratic party. president obama will tell you this, the best decision he made is putting joe biden one heart beat away from the presidency. obviously for hilary i help run the super pac that supports him. i think we should give him the time and space to make his decision rather than stampeding him. is he a stronger candidate than hillary in light of this one number? put up the poll number about her trust worthiness and how it s continuing to haunt her now. i don t know what the number means. this is the one in florida i want to get to in a second. first, you can look that s what i said. okay. if clinton is not honest and trust worthy 60 at least in three big fat states. do you see this as a blip or do you see this as a reason that biden may be the party s best bet? well, i can t imagine that vice president joe biden would make a decision based on one number in one poll. the only person who has numbers on that factor as bad is trump and he s leading in his party. is trump proof he feels vulnerable? i want trump to keep running. i m going to send him vitamins. he s going to think about what is best for his family and country. the and the third tier is the pragmat pragmatics. it s an idealistic guy for somebody who has been in politics all his life. i think he ll do it the right way. but the third criteria is toughest for biden. i think paul can probably agree with that. the democrats need to confront they have a depth in the bench problem. when joe biden is your alternative to hilary, he s the only guy older than hillary clinton. i m not saying that an arp membership is a problem. but partly what is driving the biden bandwagon now is simply just a desire for a better more vibrant race in the democratic party. you have bernie surging but it s not offering a credible alternative as a nominee. may win a couple of primaries but not necessarily change the outcome. the question for bide isn t best day the first day i get in? that s a of tougher calculus. let s play about what donald trump said he would prefer to run against joe biden or hillary clinton. listen to him this weekend. i think they re the same. i think that hillary may be damaged, however, because of her e-mail. but i don t know. she could get over that. i don t know how she possibly can, but if she could i would say they re pretty equal. paul, are you willing to concede that she is damaged by the e-mail controversy? no. it s a very long way before the election. this is going to be it s going to be long forgotten. everything in texas is forgotten. i m moving my son in today at the university. congratulations! yeah. but mr. trump is going to have his own problems, believe me. i don t want him to have problems. i want him to win the republican primary. hillary has to deal with it and she s dealing with it. i think it s going to be long forgotten. some sweet day voters will engage. they re not going to. they re going to ask questions like who is going to get the economy moving again? they ll turn to hillary. they have to trust the answers. that s why it matters. we had kirby on. i had five ways to get him to say the state department had practices not because i want to indict him. he said we changed the policy and didn t affect to her. i don t want to mess with the investigation. it s not so much that hillary is going to get indicted. i don t know the gop is running that and it sounds scary, but it s about whether or not she is trusted on what she says. that s something that can be a little bit difficult to deal with. biden s decision time line does corp. correspondent to a weakness in hillary clinton s numbers not just the owners and trust worthy but questions and clouds pumped up by gop candidates who love to have her not be on the ballot. the time line coincidence is a problem. it s going to be tempting for biden to get in. you have to play the game out. we ll say the constitution doesn t permit a vice president from serving more than two terms. oh. planting a seed. go ahead. hillary is favorable is above 70 among democrats. it s above 70. this is not a rejection of hillary. we love joe biden. all democrats do. by the way, the bernie sanders is not a rejection of hillary. her numbers are terrific. it s not a rejection of her. as john said earlier they want a race and contest. i think it s good. hillary ran against joe biden in 2008 and barack obama. it didn t destroy the democratic party. it helped us win the next two presidential elections. it would not be the end of the day to have even more candidates in the running. i want a tough contest. admiral kirby did not dodge your question. he said hillary did not violate policy at the state department. i didn t say he dodged it. i wanted to get deeper into what the policies were and he was reluctant to do that because the ongoing investigation. don t put words in my mouth! he cleared her. he cleared her. all right. she didn t violate any policies is what he said. that s what he said. okay. john, paul, thank you. the texas parents you have to be careful. mark your calendar, everybody. the next presidential debate is less than three weeks away. if you can believe it! cnn will moderate the second gop debate wednesday, september 16th. it is live from the reagan library in california. we will be there! mark it down. a gunman s plan to target a high-speed train in france foils. questions being raised about what can be done to improve safety on the rails. we ll ask the questions to a counter terrorism expert to get his take next. rition is critical for brain health? 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what does it mean about safety? cnn counter terrorism analyst your smile i know speaks a complete condemnation of the suggestion i m about to make. 2004 spain bombing 191 killed, 2005 london bombing 56 killed, 2006 mumbai bombing 209 killed. all of them on trains. here in the u.s., as we know, even after 9/11 all too easy to get on a train. if you want to do bad things. you say doesn t mean we change policy because? that s too simple, chris. i say nonsense. so you to look at the counter terrorism world not from our perspective but from the eyes of the adversary. they go after icon targets. things like the entertainment industry, things like nightclubs. we see them go after schools. major threats or attacks against buildings in new york, chicago, west coast. transcription things like subways and trains. so step back and by the way the past month or two we ve seen military recruiting stations. we ve seen the parliament in ottawa, attacks against police. do you want to secure every one of those by checking those who approached with the backpack. remember the underwater bomb ea. before we have a conversation about trains, you ve got to look at the world through the eyes of the adversary and look at targets in the aggravate. i m going to say securing the targets it s not possible. but do trains get a little bit higher of a value than you re placing on them given the numbers i read to you? not really. if i m looking at 15 years in the entirety, i look at attacks against things like nightclubs in bali. those are cultural symbols of the west cultural symbols of western culture. i look not only at trains i look at subways. you re talking about the long island railroad. you want to check that during rush hour morning and evening? i don t think so. you re looking at trains up-and-down manhattan. the bart in san francisco, looking at the metro in washington. i agree there are some sort of themes to what terrorists look at, but if you look at the volume that we re talking about in terms of not just spot checking backpacks but securing every single train, securing those locations. if you look at london years ago or during the height of the ira bombings, you have to remove trash cans because terrorists will start to place bombs in trash cans and explode five minutes later. i don t think we re thinking about this 48 or 72 hours after the french attacks with enough perspective. okay. understood. thank you for that perspective on that. let me ask you about something else that has been kind of inching at you a little bit which is that you believe there s talk in the hillary e-mail scandal about classified information as being misunderstood. what is your take? i think the public conversation is oversimplifying this. not because it s misguided or not because it s not important. the people looking at this don t have an understanding of classification. we re not talking about hillary clinton, i would say assume, taking an intercepted north korean. what i m saying an intelligence professional reviewing the e-mails is going to have a struggle determining what is classified and what is not. what if she says these iran negotiations they re tough. i can t go on vacation right now because it s pretty important that i stay here. is that classified? is that revealing something sensitive about the nature of the negotiations? i guarantee my friends and at intelligence agencies don t have an easy time to tell the congress and everybody else in the campaign process who is interested in this what is classified and what s not. they re going to disagree about that. so what does it mean? terms of what they ll be able to yield in terms of investigation? i m going to offer you a suggestion, chris, when the reports come out from washington about the review of those e-mails from the intelligence community, here is your first question. was there unanimity across the community, a., on what was classified and what wasn t? and b., on the number of e-mails that merited consideration for review by the intelligence community. people are going to take the initial review, i bet, and run with it and suggest whatever it says at the intelligence community came out with a hard and fast judgment about whether there is classified information on the server. i would bet you there s people in the rooms in washington who would not share that view. they re fighting today saying not because they re political just because it s vague about whether what she said is classified or not. it s not going to be simple. they ve been forced into a political position and that s going to comprise that s right. it s going to comprise it s not security question. it s a political question. this is not security. philip mud, appreciate it as always. thank you, sir. thank you. dr. dre saying he s sorry from the people he hurt. is it sincere? is there a motive behind it? we ll take look at it all. no sixth grader s ever sat with the eighth grade girls. but your jansport backpack is permission to park it wherever you please. hey. that s that new gear feeling. this week, these folders just one cent. office depot officemax. gear up for school. gear up for great. can a a subconscious. mind? 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something sincere? we look deeper ahead. imagine - she won t have to remember passwords. or obsess about security. she ll log in with her smile. he ll have his very own personal assistant. and this guy won t just surf the web. he ll touch it. scribble on it. and share it. because these kids will grow up with windows 10. get started today. windows 10. a more human way to do. every auto insurance policy has a number. but not every insurance company understands the life behind it. those who have served our nation. have earned the very best service in return. usaa. we know what it means to serve. get an auto insurance quote and see why 92% of our members plan to stay for life. if you can t stand the heat, get off the test track. get the mercedes-benz you ve been burning for at the summer event, going on now at your authorized mercedes-benz dealer. but hurry, offers end august 31st. share your summer moments in your mercedes-benz with us. y all got a snapshot how americans really feel. we gave the people a voice. we gave the people truth. your songs, they glam rorize the lifestyle of gangs, guns, drugs. our art is a reflection of our reality. what do you see when you go outside your door? i know what i see and it ain t glamorous. that s a scene from straight outta compton. controversy emerged around the film amid suggestions that the film glossed over allegations of violates against women by dr. dre. he issued an apology over the weekend. i think we have to read the statement from dre off the bat. if you ll indulge me. it 25 years i was a young man drinking too much. none of this is an excuse for what i did. i ve been married 19 years and every day i m working to be a better man for my family. i apologize to the women i hurt. i deeply regret what i did and know it forever impacted all of our lives. resonate with you enough? not impressed. why? i think it s a missed opportunity. explain. say their names. do we have an indication he apologized correctly to him? that statement doesn t suggest that. that s first. be clear. say their names. say what you did, say what happened and why the new york times? he could have picked a different he could have picked world star. you know, where his audience is. he could have made an impact. so i felt that he was very removed from that. he was very removed from the people that he could have impacted. so meaning he could have made an impact on the community and sort of could have been an instructive moment for young black men. completely. it was a difficult. right. if you really going were going to make ape mends say their names, go where the people are you can impact this. between he and apple, billions of dollars if you want to be hard, if you want to be gangster, why not hip-hop against violence against women? do something substantiative to great a legacy instead of the one off brush off. i thought this was reactionary. it was reactionary. it was limited. no one people have been talking about from miles davis to chris brown, people have been talking about brilliant artists who beat women and women have been writing about it. and you talked about dee barts is one of the women alleged she had been beaten by him. we ll talk about that in a second. we re hearing that some people i m not sure i feel it. they re drawing comparisons to bill cosby, and do you see any parallels at all? you could say famous and rich and black man. that s it. very different scenarios. he did come out and has addressed this where cosby, for the most part, threw hough his lawyers hasn t addressed this. someone made a statement with his name. i feel like he didn t say it didn t happen. he even, you know, in the rolling stone he said it happened years ago. he s been vocal about it through the years. dre addressed it. taking a different tone. take us back a little bit. you were there in the day. you were at one of the parties when dee barnes was allegedly hit and the whole situation that happened with her. what was the vibe? the vibe i was the fashion director at vibe magazine at the time. we were the rolling stone of hip-hop. we were the cultural magazine of note. this act was so significant. it really was that moment when men and women split. men and women colleagues, journalists, the women were speaking out about it. joan morgan, lisa jones, me, and no other men were really talking about it. and i believe this was the moment when even the term hip-hop feminism that joan morgan coined began. hip-hop has been a dangerous environment for women. but this was real. in a word, you think this is done? no. you think we re going to hear more about it? i think apple and dre should do something substantiative. maybe they ll hear that call. mikala angela davis. thank you so much. chris, over to you. it s monday. let s get the week started right! how about a little good stuff ? we ll be right back. shopping online. .is as easy as it gets. wouldn t it be great if hiring plumbers, carpenters and even piano tuners. were just as simple? thanks to angie s list, now it is. start shopping online. .from a list of top rated providers. visit angieslist.com today. wow. sweet new subaru, huh myep.? you re selling the mitchmobile!? man, we had a lot of good times in this baby. what s your dad want for it? ..like a hundred and fifty grand, two hundred if they want that tape deck. you re not going to tell your dad about the time my hamster had babies in the backseat, are you?! that s just normal wear and tear, dude. (vo) subaru has the highest resale value of any brand. .according to kelley blue book .and mitch. love. it s what makes a subaru, a subaru. having a perfectly nice day, when out of nowhere a pick-up truck slams into your brand new car. one second it wasn t there and the next second.boom, you had your first accident. now you have to make your first claim. so you talk to your insurance company and.boom, you re blindsided for a second time. they won t give you enough money to replace your brand new car. don t those people know you re already shaken up? liberty mutual s new car replacement will pay for the entire value of your car, plus depreciation. call and for drivers with accident forgiveness, liberty mutual won t raise your rates due to your first accident. switch to liberty mutual insurance and you could save up to $509. call liberty mutual for a free quote today at see car insurance in a whole new light. liberty mutual insurance. diis critical for brain health?n brain food, hmmm. ensure has b vitamins that help support brain health - now that s smart nutrition. ensure s complete balanced nutrition has 26 vitamins and minerals and 9 grams of protein. ensure. take life in. when heartburn comes creeping up on you. fight back with relief so smooth and fast. tums smoothies starts dissolving the instant it touches your tongue. and neutralizes stomach acid at the source. tum-tum-tum-tum-tums smoothies, only from tums. the good stuff brought to you by tums. fights heart burn fast. the good stuff. yeah. the boys battling a big disease. he should be thinking about himself. he s only 5 years old. he s doing the opposite. his name is dawson and he s fighting leukemia. what gets him through is the love of drawing. that s what helps him deal with the treatment and the pain. it got him thinking five years old. maybe it will help other kids in the hospital, too. he started a drive for crayons. he thought maybe get a few boxes. guess what. it wasn t your simple eight pack of crayons and boxes. he got boxes full of crayons. it filled up the back of a minivan and there was just it was amazing. and you know what? that s a great picture. thousands of crayon ands markers. he s challenging crayola to match the donations. step it up! what a great little man. we wish you wiell, honey. it s time for news room with poppy harlow. newsroom begins. this is cnn breaking news. good morning. i m in for my friend carol costello. i want to welcome our viewers in the united states and around the world. we begin with breaking news on wall street. dow futures down some 600 points this monday morning ahead of the opening bell. investors are fearful, fearful that when the market opens in 30 minutes it will be a blood bath. u.s.

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