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Transcripts For CNNW Fareed Zakaria GPS 20150301



force pilot. what was his reaction as a king? the gloves have come off. as a father. disgust, sadness to the family. how far will his nation go in response to try to defeat isis? this is our war. then from next door the man who could upset israeli politics. a poll this week has the party dead even with the party of the current prime minister benjamin netanyahu. elections are just 16 days away. what does herzog think of mr. netanyahu going to washington in i ll ask him. but first here is my take. washington is getting enthusiastic about idea yonlg cal warfare these days. not democrats versus republicans but rather americans versus islamists. having spent the last two weeks insisting we label jihadi terrorist islamic, many cry we must fight them on ideological front. fine. such a struggle against radical islam will be different from vast cultural struggles and will yield somewhat surprising recommendations for action. our image of an ideological war comes from the cold war, a titanic struggle between two complete world views. that struggle was so pervasive and intense because the enemies ideas were potentially attractive to anyone anywhere in the world. communism and capitalism were both secular ideologies each trying to seduce the world s undecides into its camp. it s difficult to remember today that for decades communism was alluring to tens of millions of people. in the 1920s and 30s, many of the western world s greatest intellectual like irish playwright george bernard shaw and historian hotline g. wells were enamored of it. in 1940s, communist parties got large chunks of the vote in free elections in france and italy, leaving many observers to worry those countries would choose to become communists. around the world the appeal of socialist and communist ideas was real and at times very strong. radical islam by contrast is severely limited in its global allure. almost by definition it is deeply unattractive to all non-muslims. even within the muslim world radical islam does not do well. in the half of that world that votes, indonesia, india, bangladesh turkey iraq and pakistan. parties based on such ideologies have garnered very few votes. thus the ideological war today is really and crucially a struggle within islam. that s a war that has to be waged by muslims. if outsiders like america want to play a role they should try to listen to and support those muslims fighting the good fight. it s irrelevant what barack obama wants to call isis. what matters is what the locals here in jordan and in other arab countries whatnot to call it. against these people as you ll hear in a moment the king of jordan thinks such people should be described as out allows of islam. whatever the phrase the effort seems similar to that of the obama administration to deny these groups the mantle of religion and in effect to ex-communicate them from islam. the ultimate irony is if one does understand the ideology of islamistings properly it leads in one direction. graeme wood in his much discussed essay discussion greater military involvement against isis. the biggest proponent of an american invasion is the islamic state itself he writes. the provocative videos are clearly made to draw america into the fight. and invasion would be a huge propaganda victory for jihadists worldwide. instead koungs containment, selective airstrikes and support from muslims who are working to dissuade their brethren from falling prey to radical islam. in other words, fighting an ideological war against isis actually points one towards a sophisticated strategy that employs military restraint and political cooperation with arabs. i wonder if those clamoring for such a struggle are on board. for more go to cnn.com/fareed and read more. and let s get started. king abdullah ii ascended jordan s throne just over 16 years ago. there arguably has never been a more tense time during his rein reign. by u.n. s count ,000 refugees in january, some say the number is higher. one refugee camp is now the fourth biggest city in jordan. outside jordan s borders it has isis in iraq and syria, which is spilled over into lebanon and turkey and now perhaps even further afield. it has the palestinian problem in israel and the west bank right next door. most recently abdullah has had to lead his nation through the sadness and anger that flowed from the brutal murder of one of the nation s air force pilots by isis. we met in the al husseinia palace in jordan s capital. thank you for joining us. good to be here. this the first time you re speaking to the world since the death of the jordanian pilot and that brutal video. tell us what was your reaction when you first saw the video? in actual fact i didn t see the video. many of uses refused to see what i think is propaganda. lfb oy i had a detailed brief of what happened. we couldn t escape seeing obviously, pictures in the newspapers. discussed sadness to the family. i had met the family on many occasions. my heart went out to the father the mother brothers and sisters, his wife had only been married five months. anger as son of the army forces god bless his soul he s a brother in arms. so i think all soldiers past and present were disgusted by the brutality of what moab was put through. i think if isis or dash as we call them try to intimidate jordanians i think just have the reverse effect. if you look at our history, we re a country that s used to being outgunned and outnumbered. we ve always punched way about our weight. i think if anything dash has us as a tiger by the tail. it just motivated jordanians to rally around the flag and the gloves have come off. what do you think they are trying to do with the video? ? they are always try to intimidate scare, put fire into people s hearts. this is a group that works by intimidation intimidation. they are trying to in vent linkage to caliphates length to our history in islam which has no truth or bearing to our history. to bring in deluded young men and women who think this is sort of an islamic nation it has nothing to do with our history. actually the barbarity with the way they executed our brave hero shocked the muslim world, specifically jordanians from this region. it had nothing to do with islam. intimidation is the major lesson. jordanian government promised an earth charlottering response eringshattering response as i recall. what we ve seen so far isn t that dramatic. is there more to come? what is going to happen? earth shattering from all military capabilities is not something that happens overnight. there has been a massive response electric their campaign. there are continued operations going on in syria. we are coordinating with our friends in iraq. there is a long-term approach to this issue. and again, this is one of the issues that i d like to point out to you. one of the things that the isis and daesh has been saying why are we picked on by fellow muslims, why are jordanians getting involved in this war. it is our war. it has been for a long time. against these people for lack of a better term these are outlaws, in a way, of islam trying to use expansionist policy. the minute they set up this irresponsible caliphate to try to expand their dominion over muslims. they try to make themselves look as the victims. it is us muslims preying on them. what about the hundreds if not thousands of muslims they have killed in syria and iraq over the past year and a half. the tribes we have a responsibility to reach out to in eastern syria, important in western iraq that had been executed in large numbers over the past year and a half. so this is our war. we have a moral responsibility to reach out to those muslims to protect them and to stop them before they reach our border. in syria, are you not inevitably aligned with the assad government in the sense that if isis is your main threat, winston church hill said if hitler were to invade hell i would make common cause with the devil. do you have to de facto side with assad. there s the history dealing with regime and history of dealing with isis or dash. what has taken prominence at the moment is isis, daish at this stage. are we trying to chew gum and walk at the same time? this has to be decided by the international community. we believe there has to be a political solution that brings it to the table because there is this bigger problem. that has not been clarified at the moment. coalition, arab muslim western, so to speak, can only do so much in syria against isis. but at the end of the day it has to be syrians themselves especially when you want to reach heartland of isis. when we come back with his majesty king abdullah ii i will ask him what he wants to call the radical islamists or radical extremists that president obama doesn t want to call islam, when we come back. put under a microscope we can see all the bacteria that still exists. polident s unique micro clean formula works in just 3 minutes, killing 99.99% of odor causing bacteria. for a cleaner, fresher brighter denture everyday. ring ring! progresso! i can t believe i m eating bacon and rich creamy cheese before my sister s wedding well it s only 100 calories, so you ll be ready for that dress uh-huh. you don t love the dress? 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i think he is right. i think this is something that has to be understood on a much larger platform. they are looking for legitimacy they don t have inside of islam. when we re asked in debate are you moderate or extremists these people wan to be called extremist. they take that as a badge of honor. if you ask me moderate or extremists i m a muslim. these people terms using more and more they are in a way outlaws that are on the fringe of islam. and if you look at sort of the way they are presented inside they are inside sunni islam. sunni islam is 1.5 billion muslims. they represent only 1%. out of that may be 200 to 500,000 of these people. out of these to label islam under the term extremists and moderates is wrong. making the comparison they are extremist muslims is actually working exactly what these people want. no we are muslims. i don t know what they are. they definitely do not have any relationship to our faith. when baghdadi the leader of isis came out with his manifest okay even extremist organizations completely backed away from what he said. he has nothing to do with the tent tent tenets of islam. who should respond to this arab response muslim response or should the west be in the lead? this has to be unified. i ve said this to leaders both in islamic and arab world and to the world in general. this is a third world war by other means. this brings muslims, christians other religions together in this generational fight that all of us have to be together. so it s not a western fight. this is a fight inside of islam where everybody comes together against these outlaws so to speak together. it s a short-term part of this military part of the issue. there s medium part which is security part to it. there s a long-term element to this which is obviously the ideological one. that s the one more complicated and more difficult. in sunni islam, as you know no real priestly hierarchy. there are no popes or really anything like that. but there is historically a great weight given to people who have some family association with the prophet. your family is regarded as descending from the prophet. given that do you think that when you hear talk not just from people in isis but people who did the things they did in paris about blasphemy and punishments of blasphemy, do you think any of this has any basis in islam? again, those that are trying to use there s a difference and i m sure we can get into this between freedom of speech and hate speech. both ronnie and i president of paris, the right thing to do to stand against extremism. also a muslim policeman ahmed, the first policeman to be at the scene of that crime who paid with his life defending the laws of france. we were there to defend those innocents killed in the name of islam, whether it was the 150 odd school children killed in a school in pakistan whether it was the thousands that were killed in a nigerian village in a single day or thousands of muslims killed every day in syria and iraq. so the issue of the blasphemy, if anybody understood the prophet, may peace be upon him, and how he used to look at life he was persecuted at the beginning of bringing islam together and he always forgave. there were some brutal things that happened to him, his family and he always forgave those around him. so for these extremists now to be able to sort of be the defenders of his honor when they don t understand who he was, i find so insulting in a way, because he would have always forgiven. but that s not what they want to do. they want to create that hatred. my brother again spoke out that the sort of vilifying of religions is something we all have to stand together. then you see the good stories unfortunately not reported enough in the media. so when you look at what s happened over the past several months when people or extremists in sweden went and sort of painted insulting graffiti on a mosque door in the city in sweden the swedish people came out and put paper hearts on the door of that mosque. islamic groups went out chanting against islam. the great cathedral of cologne turned out its lights in protest against that. last week young muslims in oslo held hands around a synagogue to show a ring of peace. these are the messages that we re all united together against this fight. and not to fall into the trap that the extremists want on either side to create hate between religions. that s what we have to concentrate on. when we come back more of my interview with the king of jordan. i will ask him where isis gets its money when we come back. major: here s our new trainer ensure active heart health. heart: i maximize good stuff like my potassium and phytosterols which may help lower cholesterol. new ensure active heart health supports your heart and body so you stay active and strong. ensure, take life in. if you don t think top of my game when you think aarp, you don t know aarp. aarp s staying sharp keeps your brain healthy with online exercises by the top minds in brain science. find more real possibilities at aarp.org/possibilities. 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. like, literally ran into him. [rambling]. this story had 30 minutes left. until kim realized that stouffer s mac and cheese is made with real cheddar aged to perfection for 6 long months. when you start with the best cheddar, you get the best mac and cheese. so, what about jessica? what about her? stouffer s. made for you to love. nestle. good food. good life. meet the world s newest energy superpower. surprised? in fact, america is now the world s number one natural gas producer. and we could soon become number one in oil. because hydraulic fracturing technology is safely recovering lots more oil and natural gas. supporting millions of new jobs. billions in tax revenue. and a new century of american energy security. the new energy superpower? it s red, white and blue. log on to learn more. whether you need a warm up before the big race. or a healthy start before the big meeting there s a choice hotel that s waiting for you. this spring, choose choice twice, get a night at no price at 1,500 hotels. book now at choicehotels.com mman. king abdullah of jordan. people how they finance themselves sophisticated media operation. let s start with the money. how do they have so much cash? money does get supplied by individuals in our part of the world. you ve seen u.n. resolution recently to try and move us into international community to make sure those accesses are cut off. you ve also got to remember that isis was fairly successful in taking over territory whether it was in syria and more recently in iraq where they overran banks and managed to capture a lot of money. then they ran their own economic industries so they were selling a lot of oil, producing about a billion dollars worth of revenue a year. that s been degraded quite significantly since because of coalition airstrikes. but they had this own ability to run their own economy quite successfully. do you think that defeating isis will require or should require american boots on the ground american ground forces? look i think that a lot of us are looking at this it being sort of our fight, arab muslim challenge, trying to keep western boots off the ground is i think an essential part of how we move forward. i think this is why most of us are looking at it that way. at the end of the day why? do you think it would be a gift to isis to have americans? that could be an element of it because i think sort of the perception they would use occupation as the wrong issue. they will obviously always use the idea of this is a crusade, which it is not. actually this is our fight. at the same time when you look at syria and also iraq it s the integrity and sovereignty of those countries. it has to be syrians dealing with their issues and iraq is dealing with theirs. it doesn t mean they can t be aided by air, possibly special forces types of operations in the future. those are things being looked at. what i think is more important to look at challenges and holistic approach the challenging in 2015. the fixation today is on iraq and syria. we can t forget the problems of sinai. we can t forget the problems of libya. we must not forget africa boca haram, shabaab and the problems these franchises so to speak, are presenting to asia. haram, shabaab and the problems these franchises, so to speak, are presenting to asia. haram, shabaab and the problems these franchises, so to speak, are presenting to asia.k haram, shabaab and the problems these franchises, so to speak, are presenting to asia.o haram, shabaab and the problems these franchises, so to speak, are presenting to asia. so like minded countries need to come together and bone up to how we can share responsibility work together and deal with these problems in a holistic approach. do you think prime minister netanyahu has genuinely be making an effort to create a two-state solution to the palestinian problem? at this stage, nothing proactive will happen from either side unfortunately until we get passed the elections. my hope is that once we get past the elections, there is a serious commitment from both sides to move on the two-state solution. the reason is if this is our generational fight against these outlaws of islam, we have been talking about this global threat. what these people use as one of their main recruiting issues rightly or wrongly, because the israelis will say these problems have nothing to do with us and get upset when i say all roads lead to jerusalem, they use this as an argument. we saw that the spike in recruiting in the summer when the wars happened and 700 women and children died as a result foreign fighters flocked to syria and to iraq because of what they perceive as the justice of the palestinians and of jerusalem. so if we re going to have any chance of winning this generational fight, this third world war by other means, if we can t fix this israeli palestinian problem, this ongoing situation that s been there for many decades, then we have at least one hand tied behind our backs if we re to deal with this. this is the challenge to both israeli and palestinian leadership. you have to understand this problem has become much bigger than ourselves. how are we going to be able to win this? how are we going to justify us muslims with the international community, fighting with people if this thing keeps bubbling. that s the major challenge, i think. your majesty, pleasure to have you on. thank you so much. hi, this is jennifer i will be out of the office until monday, and won t be checking voicemail during this time. i ll reply just as soon as i get back to work. sail with the number one cruise line in alaska. enjoy 7-day cruises from $499. call your travel consultant or 1-800-princess. princess cruises. come back new. 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is it more sadness or anger or both? i think it s a combination of both of those feelings. there s a lot of sadness about the fact that boris nemtso v one of the country s most prominent opposition figures has been gunned down so ruthlessly on the bridge as you say, a short distance from the kremlin. you can see traffic is back here now. just about an hour ago there were thousands of people who turned out to pay their respects to express their sadness but also their anger at the direction which russia has turned with the killing of boris nemtsov. one of the signs that struck me propaganda kills, one of the slogans brandished on signs. a reference to this idea that russia has become a place where if you re opposed to the kremlin, if you reject what the kremlin says you become an enemy of the state. that s something that s been actively propagated by the governments of this country. it s within that context that boris nemtskov was killed. that s what the people who came to this rally were concerned about. what do we know about the suspect or possible suspect. apparently thoughts have a digital sketch. can you give us any more information about that? yeah. a digital sketch. it s pretty vague. there s some vague distribution put out by the police. they are looking for somebody who is between 170 and 176 centimeters tall things like that. i m not clear it s going to be the kind of description that is going to lead to a conviction necessarily in this case. that s one of the big concerns here too. russia even though it says it s going to bring the culprits to justice in this killing, it s got a very patchy record indeed in solving these kinds of political killings. the killers back in 2006 of a prominent journalist who was a fierce critic of the government. the he has been sent to prison but those that order it have not been found. so russia has a very patchy record. it is a great deal of scepticism amongst ordinary russians that it s going to be any different this time. matthew, thank you so much. this is certainly a case where you think you re watching some kind of thriller. unfortunately it isn t, it s reality. thank you. we re going to go on to other news. yesterday venezuelan president declared authorities have had arrested an unspecified number of americans, including an american pilot, for espionage. maduro claimed united states backed a coup plot against him. the u.s. denied it but the president also announced several high-profile u.s. officials including george w. bush and former vice president dick cheney would be banned from venezuela. that s all the time we have for this cut-in. i m dana bash. this has been gps and a news update. fareed will be back in just a minute from ahman, jordan. he ll have a man that might be netanyahu s political nightmare? no president obama but herzog. isaac her zog, you re going to meet him in a moment. and stay awake during the day. this is called non-24, a circadian rhythm disorder that affects up to 70 percent of people who are totally blind. talk to your doctor about your symptoms and learn more by calling 844-824-2424. or visit your24info.com. don t let non-24 get in the way of your pursuit of happiness. e financial noise financial noise financial noise financial noise ring ring! progresso! i can t believe i m eating bacon and rich creamy cheese before my sister s wedding well it s only 100 calories, so you ll be ready for that dress uh-huh. you don t love the dress? i love my sister. 40 flavors. 100 calories or less. sfx: common city background noise credit belongs to the man who strives valiantly who errs who spends himself in a worthy cause and who, if he fails at least fails, while daring greatly sfx: background city noise if a denture were to be put under a microscope we can see all the bacteria that still exists. polident s unique micro clean formula works in just 3 minutes, killing 99.99% of odor causing bacteria. for a cleaner, fresher brighter denture everyday. ister benjamin netanyahu will address the united states congress to warn it directly of the iranian nuclear threat. it s a move security adviser called destructive to the fabric of the relationship between the two allies. two weeks later israel will hold national elections. labor party chairman and leader of the opposition isaac herzog has emerged as chief rival for the job. a poll had the two parties tied for the top number of seats in the new parliament. he joined me from tel aviv. mr. herzog pleasure to have you on. pleasure to be with you, fareed. this week you said prime minister netanyahu s decision to speak to the united states congress two weeks before the election without informing the white house, was political spin. what did you mean by that? that we make it clear to the american public and to our viewers that there is no difference in israel as to the strategic threat that emanates from the iranian nuclear program. clearly no israeli leader and me included will ever accept a nuclear iran. however, the way to deal with it in my mind should be different. and i think netanyahu s speech in congress is a mistake. need to work together intimately with those negotiating with the international agreement with iran and make sure that this agreement is ironclad on delivery namely there will never be an iranian nuclear bomb. when arguments emanate, such as the arguments surrounding the speech of netanyahu in congress there are questions that are raised. there is daylight between us and the administration and that s not good. and you would not have gone? hu been prime minister you would not have accepted the invitation to speak to congress two weeks before the election? i would make sure that nothing of this sort would be viewed as partisan in any way. the united states was always strategic for us was never partisan. israel knew how to work the floor both sides and keep unique relations with both parties. i definitely believe that it is a mistake to present an elected official in the united states with a question whether he prefers the white house or prefers israel. actually isn t a question. we have common grounds. you know we share the same objective of making sure that iran won t have nuclear weapons. iran is a rogue state, a dangerous state. iran spreads hatred all over the world. iran should be demanded by the international community in these negotiations to make it clear it accepts israel as part of the family of nations rather than calling for its eradication. these are the issues we should be talking about. we should define intimately between the nations what is a bad deal. the president himself said rightly so a bad deal is no deal. israeli ngo has released a report there has been a 40% rise in settlement activity construction in the west bank since last year. a lot of people believe at this point a two-state solution is really going to be very, very difficult. do you believe if you were prime minister that there is an actual path to a two-state solution and what is it? it s materialistic. i don t agree with all these opinions. i think that it is viable. however, right now our relationship with the palestinians is at a dead-end. it s actually one of the worst periods in the relationship. the palestinians opted for unilateralism. they have come forward with unilateral steps both to the security council as well as going to the international criminal court against our soldiers who have protected our nation against palestinian terror from hamas. we will stop unilateral action by palestinians and we will try to reignite the process. i will definitely try to reignite the political process with the palestinians by way of including our neighbors in this process such as egypt and jordan on a regional platform and trying our best again, not to give up but trying our best again. what do you make of this recent court decision in the united states awarding damages against palestinian authority? if you are trying to make peace, is that something that is not going to help because you need a partner, or is it something that has to be done? how do you view it? first and foremost we need to negotiate. that s what we need to do. we need to talk to each other. i met president abbas a couple of times in the past year. i must say i actually asked him, do you believe there will be a day when you will be able to come to an agreement with an israeli leader. he wasn t sure about his answer. i say to you and say to our viewers, first and foremost we need to win trust with our neighbors. we need to extend our hand and see what and how they are coming into this again, yet again, not to give up try, and not naive. i think that it will be much more difficult to start again, but we should start again. what would be the biggest difference mr. herzog between you being triple and bibi netanyahu baseball prime minister a month from now. there are many differences. internally i offer totally different social economic platform which strengthens and empowers the people which returns money to them which has a better division of income in our society and gives them hope. and secondly, i want to bring hope to our people to my people as well as to our neighbors. i believe that in our region everybody ought to live quiet, tranquil and successful life. we have to do whatever we can to give hope to our children and to the next generalerations. i will try my best i will try again, i will talk to the region. israel should be part of that coalition which fights extremism and works together towards peace and works together towards stability in the middle east. mr. herzog pleasure to have you on. thank you, fareed. that was israel s labor party leader isaac herzog. we asked prime minister netanyahu to appear but he declined our invitation. next on gps, the world s longest train journey was completed this week. we ll tell you where it went and why. k on purchases. that s a win. but imagine earning it twice. introducing the citi® double cash card. it lets you earn cash back twice, once when you buy and again as you pay. it s cash back. then cash back again. and that s a cash back win-win . the citi double cash card. the only card that lets you earn cash back twice on every purchase with 1% when you buy and 1% as you pay. with two ways to earn, it makes a lot of other cards seem one-sided. 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. okay, listen up! i m re-workin the menu. mayo? 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[ bottle ] ensure®. nutrition in charge™. he trains. he s psyched. ready for the knockout? you don t know aarp. he s staying in shape by keeping his brain healthy and focused with aarp s staying sharp. with online mind sharpening exercises developed by the top minds in brain science. and exercise and stress reduction tips that can impact brain health. so he s ready for the real possibilities ahead. if you don t think top of my game when you think aarp then you don t know aarp . find more surprisng possibilities and get to know us at aarp.org/possibilities. this week the federal communications commission voted to adopt strong net neutrality rules which would give certain internet providers faster or slower speeds blocking sites entirely or potentially charging for preferential service. brins me to my question where does the united states rank globally in terms of broadband speed? second ninth, 15th or 27th? stay tuned and we ll tell you the correct answer. this week s book of the week is actually a play on broadway. it s called disgrace. it s about the very struggle within islam between radicals and moderates that we ve been talking about these past few weeks. it s a riveting production. if you re not in new york you can buy the book. they won the pulitzer prize. the last look. the world s longest rail journey completed this week. a chinese chicago train finished first strip from the town in china to madrid and all the way back again as pointed out. that means it passed through no fewer than eight countries, china, kazakhstan russia belarus, poland germany, france and spain according to chinese state media. the journey was more than 8,000 miles each way and each leg took roughly three weeks. to put that in perspective, the run for distance is equivalent to traveling between los angeles and new york approximately six and a half times or from l.a. to sydney and back again. the direct link to the west has been called the 21st century silk road by chinese officials. it isn t just isolated route, they announce add fund that would link markets across asia and beyond. it s officially the year of the sheep, or by some translations the ram or the goat. but perhaps the silkworm would be more appropriate. the correct answer to the gps challenge question is d. as of this friday the u.s. ranks 27th in broadband download speed, right behind hungary and bulgaria. americans pay a lot for their internet. according to the new america, the majority of the united states internet customers pay more than their counter-parts in europe and arab. thanks to all of you for being part of my program this week. coming from amman, jordan. we will see you next week in new york. when in fact the war was 1,000 miles off sea. since then a bunch more. the liberal media, a long time o reilly foe claims

Jerusalem , Israel-general- , Israel , West-bank , Alaska , United-states , Tel-aviv , Madrid , Spain , Turkey , China , Syria

Transcripts For CNNW CNN Newsroom With Poppy Harlow 20150308



iraqi militant is shot and killed by an unknown assail lachblt. hello, everyone thank you for joining us the. new revelations today in the search for malaysia flight 370. it has been one year since the plane vanished and now a new report from malaysian authorities is raising new questions, among the findings is that the battery for the plane s flight data recorder had been allowed to run out, before the plane actually disappeared. investigators also say they found no signs of stress or unusual behavior among the plane s crew leading up to the disappearance. and there s still no explanation for why this fight veered so far off it s original course. richard quest has been going through the hundreds of pages of these documents. reporter: hundreds of pages of documents supporting back ground information have now been released and although they don t give us any information about what happened in the cockpit, we still don t know why the plane went missing or indeed where it ended up. they paint a very detailed picture of the aircraft it s systems, it s crew and how air traffic control performed on the night and it s not a pretty picture. on the equestion of the pilots there is simply no evidence that the captain is in any way unstable. in fact the reports specifically say the captain s ability to handle stress at work and home was good there was no known history of apathy anxiety, irritability, no significant changes in his lifestyle, interpersonal conflict or other stresses. neither the pilot, the captain nor the co-pilot had any financial problems. they had regular bank accounts regular insurance policies nothing out of the ordinary. in terms of what happened on the night. here we see a very different picture. congress fusion and chaos between ho chi minh and coup kuala limbumpurlumpur. could they have lost it in 30 days but have have been told previously they are good now we know they are not. the picture we are getting of what happened on the night, certainly contributed to the fact that now we have no idea whether r where the plane has ended up. all right, richard quest, thank you so much. the australian prime minister also addressed the search for the missing plane. he cautioned that people need to be realistic. can t go on forever. but as long as there are reasonable leads, the search will go on. 239 people were on the plane, and that means hundreds of family members are still without answers. anna koran takes a look at what the search means to them. reporter: on a simple chain around her neck danika wears her most precious possession. it s the only piece of his that we are close to. reporter: he kissed her goodbye and asked her to look after his wedding ring. he was heading to a mine site in kuala lumpur and he said if anything happened to him, the ring would go to the son who married first. my life stopped that day, so that s what i remember of my life. i m purely now i m existing people stay you ear cope re coping. for 12 months the mother of two has been desperately searching for answers, unable to come to terms with the fact her husband is gone. you have be here to think that someone, your best friend, you maybe husband, and the father of my children went through any of that. i don t want that for him. and it s the not knowinga inging that really eholds you. reporter: she holds on to eternal hope. if i m alone, i think if he comes back i look at our wedding pictures if he comes back it would be amazing. our kids have grown too much it s been 11 months since paul left and we re coming up on his second thirlt bay birthday. reporter: saying the malaysians black of transparency has been just as appalling as their inge sensitive treatment of the families. and as is search continues for mh-370 but if nothing is found, the operation may be called off. that s so unfair where does that leave us? we can t move beyond the mh-370. they may be able to. but they don t come home to an empty house and two young children who should have their father here who has every right to be here and if not they are legally and morally contracted or committed to findinging them bringing them all home for us. and that s what they should do. with mementos of paul scattered all around the house, dani dani danika may never know what happened to him. i ll never stop thinking about him. he s done everything for us. he s amazing. achblgd i and i know if the shoe was on the other foot he would never stop looking for me and i won t stop looking for him either. and one of five men arrested in connection with the february killing of russian leader boris boris chechen police battalion, two of them he was shot in the back as he walked with his girlfriend near the kremlin. matthew chance is live for us now in moscow so matthew, what is the connection between the suspects especiallily the one that pleaded guilty so nemtsov. that s the really interesting question you have put your finger right on it. we don t know if there is any link to them. what the authorities say is that these people they have been charged noud edd now with this not just with carrying out the chilling also of organizing it as well. there are five systems that have now been for the most part charged, so the discuss pigs is that one of them drove the get away car and the three others were involved in some way in plotting and organizing the killing of boris nemtsov, who, if anyone ordered them to carry out this attack against boris nemtsov who you point out was one of the fiercest critics of the leader of russia. four of the men are chechen, putin has a long history of batting chechen rebels. is anyone questioning why chechens would want a putin opponent killed? well i mean there s a lot of speculation about why that might be. there s been in the russian media, conspiracy theories the chechens may have been hired by the enemies of russia the ukrainian government has been mentioned, as a matter of fact to carry out this killing in order to make russia look bad, certainly it s the position of the russian government that that was a provocation, in order to cast russia in afternoon extremely bad light. but i think the fact of the matter is that chechnya is an extremely loyal part of the country still, even if there s not a war there them. and there are now guns for fire there. and these individuals, if they are responsible for actually carrying out the attack could have just been hired by any party who wanted boris nemtsov dead. that they caught the triggerman doesn t exactly shed light on why nemtsov was killed. this is a mystery with so many layers and the layers just skipped deeper and longer. matthew chance in moscow appreciate it. now to selma alabama, where huge crowds are now krzing the edmond pettis bridge. what an extraordinary per, of course yesterday it was historic and extraordinary, yet later today the march is officially set to begin. you re seeing the mass of people who have collected here in these ely live pictures there. yesterday you saw the president of the united states there, and our live coverage continues through today, the marcherings will take to the bridge in a symbolic day. it was march 7, 1965. yesterday was the official date march 7, but traditionally, and for years now, john lewis and others have taken that walk across the bridge on a sunday, even if march 7 landed on a friday. so today you will see large masses of people who will cross the edmond pettis bridges. in 1965 it took five days over that march to culminate over a 54-mime path. yesterday the president talked got progress and still work to be done. what they did here will reverberate through the ages. not because the change they want was preordained, not because their victory was complete but because they proved nonviolent change is approximate possible. that love and hope can conquer hatred. we have had live images today and you ll see live images tomorrow the initial walk expected to begin at 5:45 eastern time. and iraqi impimmigrant escapes isis object to be gunned down here. he had only been in the country for 20 days fleeing the r isis for the safety of texas only to be killed. coming up after the break we ll have the search for his killers. my tempur-pedic made me fall in love with mornings again. i love how it conforms to my body. with tempur-pedic the whole bed is comfortable. it s the best thing we ever did for ourselves. it s helping to keep us young. (vo) visit your local retailer and feel the tempur-pedic difference for yourself. they say after seeing a magician make his assistant disappear mr.clean came up with a product that makes dirt virtually disappear. he called it the magic eraser. it cleans like magic. even baked on dirt disappears right before your eyes. mr.clean s magic eraser. the real question that needs to be asked is what is it that we can do that is impactful? what the cloud enables is computing to empower cancer researchers. it used to take two weeks to sequence and analyze a genome; with the microsoft cloud we can analyze 100 per day. whatever i can do to help compute a cure for cancer, that s what i d like to do. a mystery in dallas, police say a he died right in front of his wife and bore. neck nick what do police belief? police have very little information. they say they re asking for the public s help. their best lead may be the surveillance video we re about to show you. crime stoppers offering $5,000 for information leading to arrest. this surveillance video shows the four men who may be linked to the murder of ahmed al jamali. the surveillance video shows where the 36-year-old iraqi immigrant was shot and killed. through tears his fatherly said al jamali recently escaped iraq for texas. his daughter s excitement for their life together was no secret. on saturday night jamili had gone out with his wife to watch the snow fall. there is no shortage of sadness for the loss of this beautiful young man, who has of course course only just come to this country 20 days ago. and we don t as texans want that to be the tests are ongoing now to determine if one more rifle was fired and whether the physical evidence that we have been able to get from the crime scene is related to any other offense. as you can see, we have little information to go on. reporter: for now this video may be the best lead police have to find the man responsible for the death of a man who left the threat of violence only to become a victim of it. a vigil for ahmed al jamali will be held in dallas at account is 1:00 local time. do police know whether this family whether he individually or he and his have ever been threatened or has anyone ever made any comments to them? that s what they re looking into right now. muslim community, they believe there s something more sinister here. but police say there s no indication of that they really don t have very much to go on right now. other than that surveillance video that we just showed you. still ahead, could two different terror groups made up of islamic extremism be joining forces? find out why boca haram may be headedy yredady to team up with isis. thanks for the ride around norfolk! and i just wanted to say geico is proud to have served the military for over 75 years! roger that. captain s waiting to give you a tour of the wisconsin now. could ve parked a little bit closer. it s gonna be dark by the time i get there. geico. proudly serving the military for over 75 years. your mom s got your back. your friends have your back. your dog s definitely got your back. but who s got your back when you need legal help? we do. we re legalzoom, and over the last 10 years, we ve helped millions of people protect their families and run their businesses. we have the right people on-hand to answer your questions backed by a trusted network of attorneys. so visit us today for legal help you can count on. legalzoom. legal help is here. a doll fichb trainer may have kimmed himself after video surfaced of him abusing dolphins. spanish police say jose luis barbaro was found dead his vehicle saturday. barbaro was expected to become vice president of the georgia aquarium in atlanta. his employer in spain is denying the abuse allegations. the christian community is mourning the loss of fred craddock. he was also called a preaching generalius genius. 2 the 86-year-old died friday the cause of his death has not been released. and unknown attackers fired dozens of rockets killing a u.n. peacekeeper and two civilians, at least 12 other people are wounded. and could bocako haram and isis be pledging alichbs. the nigeria base islamist terror group has proven to be every bit as cruel and violent as isis has been in the middle east. so nema do excellence officials believe this recording is authentic? well, we re still waiting to hear back from the pentagon but in terms of the idiosyncrisies and the adds pronunciation in terms of the words and the termology that he s keeping, this is what we have heard before. it does sound very much like him, and if it is him, this is the reason it s giving so many people pause for thought. if it is him, this will give boko haram from one all the way now down into west africa to one of the most successful terror groups on the african continue innocent what woumtd boko haram gain by pledging the isis? they re very much in the after can union has actually succeeded in eroding most of their territory. this was some pretty expansive territorial foot print and that is now very much under pressure. what they get from isis is much more sophisticated propaganda machines being deployed here a very different look to their video, and propaganda translates into the lifelines of foreign recruits and foreign donations and if boko haram continues to be squeezed, it s going to need a lot of that to turn back that tide fred. any evidence that the two are indeed coordinating anyone in intel who seems to believe that s the case? not as yet. but what we re seeing just purely from that new media arm, it s very similar to isis and the contacts we have reached out to are using that at the moment as proof that this could very well be happening, but until they run that voice recognition software we re not going to be have any answers. protests in madison, wisconsin after police shot and killed an unarmed 19-year-old. reporter: hi, fred, take a look at the house behind me this is the house where 19-year-old tony robinson was shot. it is still a crime scene two days later. why are police saying that police force was justified and why is the community so angry? next. turn around, barry i finally found the right snack [ female announcer ] fiber one. [ male announcer ] take zzzquil and sleep like. the kids went to nana s house. for the whole weekend! [ snoring ] [ male announcer ] zzzquil, the non habit forming sleep aid that helps you sleep easily and wake refreshed. because sleep is a beautiful thing. no matter who you are, if you have type 2 diabetes, you know it can be a struggle to keep your a1c down. so imagine . what if there was a new class of medicine that works differently to lower blood sugar? imagine loving your numbers. introducing once-daily invokana®. it s the first of a new kind of prescription medicine that s used along with diet and exercise to lower blood sugar in adults with type 2 diabetes. invokana® is a once-daily pill that works around the clock to help lower a1c. here s how: the kidneys allow sugar to be absorbed back into the body. invokana® reduces the amount of sugar allowed back in . and sends some sugar out through the process of urination. and while it s not for weight loss, it may help you lose some weight. invokana® can cause important side effects including dehydration, which may cause some people to have loss of body water and salt. this may also cause you to feel dizzy, faint lightheaded, or weak especially when you stand up. other side effects may include kidney problems, genital yeast infections urinary tract infections changes in urination, high potassium in the blood or increases in cholesterol. do not take invokana® if you have severe kidney problems or are on dialysis or if allergic to invokana® or its ingredients. symptoms of allergic reaction may include rash, swelling, difficulty breathing or swallowing. if you experience any of these symptoms, stop taking invokana® and call your doctor right away or go to the nearest hospital. tell your doctor about any medical conditions medications you are taking, and if you have kidney or liver problems. using invokana® with a sulfonylurea or insulin may increase risk of low blood sugar. it s time. lower your blood sugar with invokana®. imagine loving your numbers. ask your doctor about invokana®. an officer responding to a disturbances call opened fire after police say 19-year-old tony robinson assaulted him. according to public records, robinson pleaded eded guilty of armed robbery last year. and the officer, aa 12-year department vet twrmpb are trafr why is so much being brought inabout the past of the officer and the victim? reporter: if you just look behind me fred it s almost day two and you can see that there s still crime scene, where this incident happened. take a look you see that there are madison police here guarding the crime scene and there are investigators inside of this house, very telling given the fact that it s been almost 48 hours. this the community has been angry, has been in fear, and they are asking for justice. hundreds of00 hundreds of glen trait demonstrate fors hit the streets of tony terrell robinson s mother devastated and overcome by emotion. my son has never been a violent person. never. and to die in such a violent, violent way. reporter: police paint a different picture of her son. scanner traffic capturing the dramatic the chain of events. look for a male black light skin. reporter: police say they received several calls about robinson friday evening, first about the teen jumps in and out of photographic and dodging cars. a call for the same suspect. reporter: then about an alleged battery incident. tried to strangle another patron. reporter: the situation escalating when robinson entered what families say is his best friend s house, officer malt kenny arrived heard a commotion inside and forced his way in. kenny robinson was administered cpr at the scene, but later died at the hospital. he was unarmed. and that s going to make this all the more complicated for the investigators, for the public to accept, to understand that deadly force had to be used. reporter: this is not the first time the 45-year-old officer used lethal force. kenny was commonexonerated for an incident that took blase years ago. he was a beautiful, beautiful young man. he stood 6 4 200 pounds. reporter: reporter: robinson s aunt and grand ma speaking out for him. i m hurt i m frustrated i m angry. reporter: as another family faces an all too familiar with anguish, the community zeals with an all too familiar question. was the use of deadly force necessary? and as we take another live look you can see a small memorial here, a sign of the solidarity of this community for robinson and for his family. as you have seen madison police officers behind me their police cruisers, you might be wondering why are they at the creamime scene, they are only protecting the cream scene. because by law, when there s a department involved shooting the police department doesn t get to investigate it. this was a friend s house, does that mean there were witnesses inside the home with robinson to see what happened just prior to the gun going off? you know, this family members do tell us that this is his best friend s house, that he used to hang out here all the time with his friends. one of the witnesses told us she was next door and she heard the scuffle, and she heard the gun shots, we re actually going to bring you that shortly in a few hours, but she describes the scene, very chaotic, a very thin wall between her home and the home where these shots were fired and she s going to explain what was going through her mind when she was hearing the scuffle. she explains that these kids as she calls them these 19-year-olds they were good kids like any other 19-year-olds sometimes they would be horsing around playing, but never drugs or alcohol, she mentioned, that they were good kids and that they were her next door neighbors. rosa flores thanks so much, we look forward to your next report. still ahead, live coverage of the bloody sunday commemoration march continues, cnn s ryan young is in selma, alabama. huge crowds yesterday and it looks even bigger today. reporter: the crowds here are enormous enormous. you can see all the people that have filled the streets. we ll have a live report. how people feel coming back here 50 years later. i have great credit. how do you know? duh. try credit karma. it s free and you can see what your score is right now . i just got my free credit score! credit karma. really free. and we re continuing our live coverage of bloody sunday our remembrance march in selma, alabama. about one hour from now, marchers will be marching across the same bridge that anchoring our show from selma yesterday bringing to you president obama and u.s. congressman john lewis s speeches live for you, well said as you see in these live pictures a huge crowd ereremains. ryan young, you were in the thick of the crowds yesterday, and it looks like we have huge crowds today. is there something similar to yesterday or is there something different today? reporter: it s different today. i often wondered if the crowds are bigger here today than they were yesterday. look at the bridge, look at all of the people who have floodinged intoflooding edflooding flooded into this area, wanting to come out here to make sure they could cross the bridge on sunday. obviously start was lyly saturday was a presidential bubble so it was hard for people to get in here with so many streets being shut down. there are food trucks that now line the streets and people have come to make sure they re able to commemorate this moment in fact we re bumping into people who were here 50 years ago and we talked about the idea that you wanted to be here with your mother. i was here 50 years ago and so was mom. somehow we got separated back then, but i m termdetermined for us to stay together today but yes e, we re here. reporter: when the president s speech yesterday, how did that resonate since you were here. it brought back so many of the memories of the struggle the struggle that is ongoing, a struggle that we must commit to take an active part in because we want what we deserve, we want freedom, equality for all people. reporter: and we talked about the fact that people are not always voting after people gave up their lives to how does it feel to know that people are not getting out to vote like they used to? if they only knew how many lives were taken, how many lives were lost and the struggle i think they would get out. but we got the keep going out there and reaching the people and encouraging them the significance of the vote and how hard it was to get the right to vote. and i believe that it s going to get better. people have lined up to see how they could do this. i want to walk over here just a little bit. and you said you were also here 50 years ago, and you wanted to be here too. i sure did. reporter: tell me why. i wanted my daughter and my grand daughter to feel what i felt back in those days 50 years ago and 50 years ago, it wasn t this many people. there wasn t. so the people that showed up was really impressive. reporter: when you see this crowd and how large the crowd is how does it strike you that there s all people of all nationalities and race? i never would have thought we would come this far, but we have a long way to go. reporter: when you heard the president s speech yesterday, what stuck out to you? it was a lot. just to even see him up there, you know, to speak in this day and ages to have a black president, i thought that was tremendous. reporter: we have heart that over and over that that hug between president obama and where he was down on the ground and now he s standing tall with the president. so many say that s the picture we will remember. when you look at this crowd, you have to look at this bridge it s more of a festive type mentality. it was an extraordinary moment and we know that march 7 falls on a saturday but today is a day traditionally, for many years now it s become the tradition of retracing those accepts and walking over the edmond pettis bridge and u.s. congressman john lewis and in other foot soldiers were there. have you seen any of them there today? reporter: you know quite honestly, all i see is a sea of smiling people. we haven t really seen the dignitaries, is so to speak, but everyone is walking together everyone wants to be here so we haven t seen the security that was sort of involved in that, but amount of smiley faces. we want to check back with you, and again, the actual march begins an hour from now. straight ahead, what time is it? apple is hoping that next time someone asks you that question that you ll be answering with their latest product. but first this open court report. with 470 straight wins and 7 paralympicic gold medals she is the most decorated player in tennis. she was left paralyzed after a risky operation to correct a birth defect. a prablg kl way of how to use your chair and then also the fact that you realize that you can still be part of it you can still be part of society and still have a really fun social life. r. we ll pretend this is one of those sports that you have to be really fit for, to move your chair, to move yourself on the court and be on time to get the ball. but you have to have the flexibility and the pace in your arm to hit a ball really hard. i think the fact that it s physical it s tactical it s mental and it has everything and that s probably why i love it so much. all right, checking our top stories right now, president barack obama tells face the nation that there s one thing that would make him walk away from a nuclear deal wither iran he says that iran has to have unprecedented transparency or no deal. benjamin netanyahu warned last week that baghdadi must not be trusted. the film has made $3737$37 million. the idea of a commuter watch, it s not new, apple s version will be apple is expected to review it s new watch tomorrow in stv, apple has said that the watch would cost about $350 and the high end version could be as much as $10,000. that would be apple s most expensive product ever. and in a new series for cnn, bill weir is traveling the globe to bring you many of the world s wonderers, now he finds out what it s like to wander the tortoises of reporter: after he tore down those fences and started charging tourists a couple bucks to wanter amongst them she is one of the richest guys in town. $300 a day, that s nice they re good business partners these big guys. translator: i can testify, it is more satisfying seeing a giant tortoise out here than in here. you can see more of bill weir s trip to the gallopagos islands. and a commemorative bloody sunday march straight ahead. normally people wear pants. yeah that s why i m hiding captain obvious. not very well. i found you immediately. you know what else is easy to find? a new hotel with the hotels.com app. i don t need a new hotel room, i just need to get back into this one. gary? it s wednesday gary! i know that janet! hotels.com is more helpful than janet. i am totally blind. and sometimes i struggle to sleep at night, and stay awake during the day. this is called non-24, a circadian rhythm disorder that affects up to 70 percent of people who are totally blind. talk to your doctor about your symptoms and learn more by calling 844-824-2424. or visit your24info.com. don t let non-24 get in the way of your pursuit of happiness. in our house, we do just about everything online. and our old internet just wasn t cutting it. so i switched us from u-verse to xfinity. they have the fastest, most reliable internet. which is perfect for me, because i think everything should just work. works? works. works! works? works. works. i ve lived my whole life here in fairbanks, alaska. i love the outdoors, spending time with my family. i have a family history of prostate cancer. i had the test done and that was when i got the news. my wife and i looked at treatment options. cancer treatment centers of america kept coming up on the radar. so we flew to phoenix. greg progressed excellently. we proceeded to treat him with hormonal therapy, concurrent with intensity modulated radiation therapy to the prostate gland. go to cancercenter.com to learn more about our integrative therapies and how they re specifically designed to keep you strong mentally, physically and spiritually throughout your treatment. i feel great today i m healthy, i have never been in a happier place, i can t imagine being treated anyplace else. fighting cancer has given me opportunities to live. i think i chose extremely well. call or go to cancercenter.com. cancer treatment centers of america. care that never quits. appointments available now. on average more than nine people are killed every day in crashes involving distracted drivers, dr. sanjay gupta has her story in this week s hue man factor. reporter: being stubborn may have saved her life. my mom doesn t appreciate it nearly as much. i think it s my best characteristic. reporter: in 2008 on the day she graduated from college, jaycee and her parents were in a car accident caused by a teenager using a cell phone. i was shattered, i had a damaged liver, my lungs were both partially collapsed and i had a brain injury that put me on the edge of death. reporter: jaycee refused to give in. her call to action came after the driver who caused the accident wasn t convicted, there was no law against the use of cell phones. i tried to get a hand held ban and a texting ban, and finally it went into effect that texting and driving is illegal. reporter: and now the 28-year-old also speaks arrange the around the country to raise awareness. everything i have had? spite of having lost so much. part of life is getting hurt escaping unscathed, i survived for a reason and a purpose. to use my time honored planet to make lives a little bit better. and we have so much more straight ahead in the newsroom and it all starts right now. happening right now in the newsroom new evidence into what happened involving a malaysia airlines flight 370 which advantage vanished one year ago today. reporter: hundreds of pages of documents supporting background information have now been released. and a mystery in dallas police say an iraqi immigrant watching his first snowfall in his new american hometown is shot and killed by an unknown assailant. the news room starts right now. hello and thanks again for joining me. new revelations today in the search for malaysia airlines flight 370. it has been one year since the plane vanished and now a reporter from malaysian authorities is raising new questions. it says the battery or the plane s flight data recorder had been allowed to run out for more than a year before the plane disappeared. they also noungd nofound no stress or unusual behavior leading up to the time of the disappearance. cnn aviation correspondent richard quest has been going over the report. richard, what do we know about this expired pinger battery? how could it be that it went on for so long with common knowledge i suppose and it was dead? no reporter: there s a real controversy over this battery because the paper work fred the paper work said that the battery had expired a year private youly, however, when the investigators went to talk to the people, let me read you what it says, it s on page 60 of the report it was revealed that the computer system was not updated and the update removed the old battery, but didn t show the new battery installed. so what we have here ask the investigator saying i m sorry, the paper work says it wasn t inal stalled, therefore i have to say it was expired. but the airlines saying no just look the computer shows that it didn t update correctly. so we believe that yes the bat battery was changed, what we have here is a snafu on the battery life. even if there was a battery in there, all of the devices, all of the technology used there was no ping that was detect detected but what does this discovery stay about the maintenance of that plane, the airline itself what is being led into this line of information. i think what we re seeing here is that we have got a huge amount of detail on the plane, we know everything that was wrong with it. we know everything that was right with it. the oxygen system had beenwas working, down to what had been repaired and what needed to be repaired. what we also see on this report is how air traffic control handled those first the few hours. one thing i think is most disskreszing and disturbing about what we have learned today, it is the level of confusion, the lack of urgency the black of somebody punishing the big red button about panic and confusion about this. let me give you a brief example they are supposed to alert, put out a distress alert within roughly an hour of a plane going missing, in this case it was more than 4 1/2 hours before that was put out. and what we have is air traffic control going backwards and forwards have you seen the plane, have you heard from the plane, have they heard from the plane? it really is very distressing to read. and here it is i mean there s 400 pages of this sort of stuff. yeah and it seems to underscore kind of messy too. so richard quest, don t go away i want to bring safety analyst and faa david sussy. what does this tell you about the jet or maybe even the airline itself? it tells me a lot because after 17 years of doing surveillance on airlines and doing maintenance inspections exactly for this type of thing, the commuter said one thing, and the paper work said something else. those have to line in if one s wrong and the other one s right i doubt that it s the computer that s right. i think it s the paper work that s right. so the idea that it was in the computer there s actually tags that go with that part and when that part is changed, that s the paper work that has to exist. without that, just simply enter into the computer but without that tag it doesn t even anything. so that tells me there were a lot of problems not just with this airplane but that s maintenance 101. that s the first thing you do. the things that have to be scheduled like that. every airline i have surveilled has done this properly. so there s something wrong flrks s aflrks. there s a deeper problem there. how does this pinpoint where the investigation goes here. there s a couple of things that can happen right now, and i know there s some work going on within asia airlines and the international civil aviation this is the silver lining of an accident. this is where you get to go through your entire airline, all the way down to the details, like richard was saying and divide out what s an airworthiness issue, what an rrr, all those things they may not have been clean on. you can bet right now they re going through that with a fine toothed comb. but as far as the investigation goes i think we re still waiting to hear something about the black boxes, to find out if the aircraft is actually in this intense search area. just stay the course and keep searching is the way they are right now. appreciate it gentlemen. russian state tv says a sixth suspect in the february killing of russian operations liter boris he then blue himself up. meanwhile one of five men arrested earlier as reported pleaded guilty and that man has previously served as an officer in a chechen police nemtsov was shot in the back as he walked with his girlfriend near the kremlin and math eye chance says rushsian police have no rinks between reporter: these people have been charged with this not just of carrying out the attack, carrying out the killing, but also organizing it as well. there are five suspects that have now been for the most part charged, so the suspicion is one was the gunman one drove the getaway car, and the three others were involved in some way of plotting organizing the killing of boris nemtsov, and what we don t know at this point because we re just at to the start of the trial, or perhaps because we ll never know is what may have molt vated them. what if anyone ordered them to carry out this attack against boris nemtsov, so that s still the big mystery hanging over this. as to the russian government says it believes the killing was a moveprovocation to cast russia in an extremely bad light. ridding iraq of islamic extremists but iraqi s future is uncertain if even forces reclaim tikrit. we ll go to baghdad for the latest. sterfest. .red lobster s largest variety of lobster dishes all year. double up with dueling lobster tails. or make lobster lover s dream a delicious reality. but hurry this won t last long. ameriprise asked people a simple question: in retirement, will you have enough money to live life on your terms? 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look at this one. it s got a great view of the lake. it s really nice mom. your dad would ve loved this place. you re not just looking for a house. you re looking for a place for your life to happen. zillow iraqi forces are getting closer to retaking tikrit. less than a mile away from saddam hussein s old presidential palaces. swachbd yesterday tikrit 40 to 50 females were able to plea the area. our ben wedeman is in south iraq. troops have been trying to retake the city since last summer why are they finally making this kind of progress now? i think fredericka the first thing is this time they re organized and they seem to be going about it in a much more deliberate manner. of course, if you speak to people at the front, they ll tell you it s because of the help they have received from iran the iranians have provided ammunition weapons advisors and of course on the scene is casim salamani which is part of the brigade from iran. but in general, i think it is they had some very bad experiences last summer several very unsuccessful indeed catastrophic attempts to retake tikrit so they have had a lot of time to prepare for this. and this time around it seems to be going mitch better than in the past. fled reek can? and then i wonder certainly reese, i know you re standing right next to ben there, but 24 your view why is this so significant that you would have these joint iraqi forces to be able to make this kind of progress? reporter: i really do, i think when we drove inthe other day, we drove up north, with all the iraqi veterans out there, which is mt. tampa, that roms through crick treat up to mosul. i was the way they had that secured with some iraqi police and the iraqi army they had it very well secured. i was very impressed with the leader ship that wiz going and the way they plavned it. again they re doing the same thing we are in tikrit. what explains this better of better coehesioncohesion is there something that has helped those forces work better together? the iraqis are the wurves making decision thals very key. we have met with some folks the other day from the embassy, and they said the same thing, this is the iraqis it s their fight, they are doing it. the americans are ow in mum bar. strategically, regionally some of the larger sunni nations should be having or probably having some issues with the iranians inside and what the this looks like when this is all done technically. is is it being reveal what the next front is? well really they have to count those chickens when they hatch. at the moment the focus is on tikrit. but we heard them talking about perhaps a new operation in the fallujah area as well. there s been a lot of talk about mosul, but mosul is a long way to tikrit and an even longer way to baghdad. a lot of preparation for that which will be the climax of driving isis out of iraq. similar is to what we have seening in tikrit, before they can finally focus their attention on mosul. we did hear pentagon officials talking about late industrial may, now you speak to anyone in the iraqi army brush that off, they say they ve got a lot of preparation to go as i said, we ll see lots more battles like tikrit in mozal suddenly. still ahead, an iraqi immigrant in the u.s. for barely a month now is gun down while it snows in his texas neighborhood nick valencia tells us about the tragedy. he had only been in the united states for 20 days coming up the so much for his killer, you re watching cnn. normally people wear pants. yeah that s why i m hiding captain obvious. not very well. i found you immediately. you know what else is easy to find? a new hotel with the hotels.com app. i don t need a new hotel room, i just need to get back into this one. gary? it s wednesday gary! i know that janet! hotels.com is more helpful than janet. [ male announcer ] after john huntsman was diagnosed with cancer, he founded huntsman cancer institute. to fight cancer in new and different ways like combining 300 years of family histories with health records to treat, predict and in many cases, prevent, cancer. with the vital understanding that cancer moves fast. and we have to move faster. to learn more or support the cause, go to huntsmancancer.org. a mystery in dallas police say an immigrant from iraq just arrived to his new hometown is shot right in front of his wife and kbroer. they just reached out to police a little while ago, still have not heard back but they stay they are increasing controls in that area trying to get more leads, right now they have very little to go off of. crime stoppers offering a $5,000 reward for information leading to an arrest. police say this surveillance video from a camera posted on a nearby school shows the four men who may be linked to the murder of ahmed al jamali. the 36-year-old iraqi immigrant was shot and killed. through tears his father-in-law said that al jamali recent left iraq to escape the growing threat of isis in north texas, he would also be reuniteded with his wife after more than a year apart. his excitement for their new life together was no secret. jahmahly had gone out with his wife to look at the snowfall. well educated. good environment, what he got? one bullet in his heart. there is no shortage of sas sadness for the loss of this beautiful young man who has only just come to this country 20 days ago, and we don t as texans want that to be his welcome. reporter: police are pleading for the public to help. tests are ongoing now to determine if one or more rival was fired and whether the physical evidence that we have been able to get from the crime scenes related to any other offense, as you can see, we have little information to go on. for now this video may be the best lead police have to find the man responsible for the death of a man who left the threat of violence only to become a victim of it. a memorial for al jahmahly will be held about 6:30 local time in dallas. and while police are looking for any kind of direction on this there s also a reward being offered, some sintd ofkind of incentive? any information from crime stoppers police say they have very little to go from but members of the muslim community say there may be something more center at play here. still ahead, our live coverage of bloody sunday the commemorative march continues, look at the thousands of people right there at the foot of the bridge, ready to march across. and stay awake during the day. this is called non-24. learn more by calling 844-824-2424. or visit your24info.com. turn around every now and then i get a little bit tired of craving something that i can t have turn around barbara i finally found the right snack hey pal? you ready? can you pick me up at 6:30? ah. 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(vo) the longest-lasting midsize sedan in its class. the twenty-fifteen subaru legacy. it s not just a sedan. it s a subaru. hello, again, everyone. we re continuing our live cofferagecoffer coverage of the commemorative march of bloody sunday. van jones in the middle of the crowd, ryan you first, give us an idea of who was turned out today? wow, what a turnout so so far, i can tell you, people did sided not to wait until 2:30 for that official march time. people decided to go across the bridge on their own. there was a rumor going through the crowd that they were going to stop the march. but the people stayed no we re going to march across. we re not even sure of the officials who wanted to lead the march ever even reached this location until the swell of all the people who were pushing over the bridge. they re having a good time they re smelling as they go across the bridge. when you re standing there, you know how much history now, because everyone s been talking about it how do you feel the be here today. i feel like it s really cool that we can be here and that we can actually see the bridge that people walked on like 50 years ago. reporter: when president obama talked about the idea of the struggle not being over and the need to vote are you going to make sure that you kperexercise your rights to vote? i personally feel blessed and it s a privilege for us all to be here because at a certain point in history, we were not able to have this right. what . reporter: what s the crowd like to walk around and see everyone in the crowd. it s really crowded, but it s fun to see people come together all races, all ages of people coming together. reporter: you can see the crowd as they kind of swell over the bridge people tell us they were not going to stop to the idea of being able to stand here and walk across the bridge. so many people walked from home yesterday saying they wanted to be here on sunday and that s something they are able to experience a lot of smiley faces, a lot of messages about all civil rights and a lot of communities coming together to have this conversation on this bridge. it looks like many more young people there as well. van jones, you and i were standing there alongside one another when congressman john lewis and president obama came out and hugged president obama paying homage to all the foot soldiers but particularly john lewis, he was one of his biggest heroes and we heard the message from both of them who said yesterday was both a celebration and it was an occasion of renewal. how do you see marked differences between yesterday and today? you know it s really amazing because yesterday people thought we were at a peak moment i think there were maybe 20,000 30,000 people here. today may turn out to be even bigger. again, they have already taken the bridge. and also let s not forget there is a new civil rights movement of the coalition for immigrant justice, you had lois juerta. you also have people here from around the world. we have a bunch of women who are here from africa and they are bringing their protests. i want you to hear some of the music they re bringing to the streets. . so nice. so van, which african nation do they represent? reporter: well listen they represent south africa zambia, again, mozambique libya, so many different countries, beautiful, beautiful global protest culture here immigrant rights represented, women s rights around the world represented. the lesbian, gay, bisexual and transsexual struggle. he impressed upon that word we, being all inclusive, and we know that the ed monday pettis bridge and what happened on that bridge it not of course enlightened a nation those women there singing, represents southern africa southwestern africa so ryan does it appear that the audience is much younger today? many of the foot soldiers came out yesterday, a lot of the sig dpar dignitaries that represented the generation that stepped on that bridge 50 years ago, many of them now in their 80s, 90s, we saw amelia boynton who was 103, but today do you see the youth represented in a very big way today? reporter: i m glad you brought up ms. boynton, and you can see the crowd for yourself so many brought kids and you can see all the different people what are here. so many young people are out with their parents, they of course were telling them they wanted them to be able to experience this. so we talked to so many college kids who say they never, ever nye about this story about recently and that people can understand that that movie helped educate them. so you can see this mix as you re walking this crowd of all nations and all colors and people are really having that conversation about this. that was an incredible moment right there. ryan young, cnn continue and van jones, cnn political comment commentator, in our live coverage, you all did a tremendous s job, and now we see how versatile you two are, and van jones, who knew you re now showing your political as well as your reporting choppings right here on cnn. one more thing. one last thing. the president s speech he hit voting rights really hard and so did eric holder today, so there s a movement not just a celebration of the past but you re going to see, i think a legislative agenda of equal rights this is a moment in history that s not just looking back, it s looking forward to. we saw that message hit home i think to a lot of people. it is an issue of reflection using this event to reflect, but at the same time think about the work that has to correspondent. ryan young. van jones, thanks so much gentlemen, appreciate it. we ll have much more of our live coverage from selma and much more of the newsroom right here. over the years we have all increased the amount of technology in our homes and that s meant increased demands of the electric grid. so we turn to solar and wind power as renewables became all the rage. being energy efficient is just to the start. imagine if your home provided all it s own energy for instance the heat from your tell investigation, powers your kof coffee maker. this house can do just that in the outside, it looks like any other home in suburban washington, d.c. inside it s a laboratory. we take 500 readings a day, every minute. the national institute of standards and technology or n.e.s.t. for shurks built this house that netzero is possible. so netzero energy home is a home that over the curesourse of a year produces as mitch energy as it consumes. we have a virtual family that lives here and they perform all the same functions that you would with your own family. so we have the vices, for example, that emulates a toaster, a blender, a hand mixer and all these devices operate at a precise time according to a schedule so the home is occupied as a house normally would be. in the first year, the house went way beyond netzero. enough information was left to drive an electric vehicle, 1,400 mimes. congratulations. you re down with crestor. yes! when diet and exercise aren t enough, adding crestor lowers bad cholesterol up to 55%. crestor is not for people with liver disease or women who are nursing, pregnant, or may become pregnant. tell your doctor all medicines you take. call your doctor if you have muscle pain or weakness, feel unusually tired have loss of appetite, upper belly pain, dark urine or yellowing of skin or eyes. these could be signs of serious side effects. i m down with crestor! make your move. ask your doctor about crestor. two weeks later. look, credit karma are you talking to websites again? this website says free credit scores. oh, credit karma! yeah it s actually free. look, you don t have to put in your credit card information. whew! credit karma. really. free. we re learning more about the fatal police shooting of an unarmed teen in madison, wisconsin. police say an officer responding to a disturbance call opened fire after police say the 19-year-old tony robinson assaulted him. and according to public records, the police chief says the officer, a 12-year department veteran had used force before. that s being investigated as well as the circumstances surrounding this recent shooting. rosa flores has more in madison wisconsin. reporter: hundreds of demonstrators hit the streets of madison, wisconsin. following the the shootinging death of an unarmed 19-year-old at the hands of police. i want to just let him know that i m there. reporter: tony terrell robinson s mother devastated and overcome by emotion. my son has never been a violent person, never. and to die in such a violent, violent way. police paint a different picture of her son, scanner traffic capturing the dramatic chain of events. look for a male black light skin. reporter: police say they received several calls about rbs friday evening, first about the teen jumping in and out of traffic and dodging cars. then about an alleged battery incident. the situation us escalating when robinson entered his friend s house. officer kenny arrived, heart a commotion inside and forced his way in according to police. officials say robinson attacked officer kenny who then fired the deadly shots. kenny suffered a blow to the head robinson was administered cpr at the scene, but later died at the hospital. he was unarmed and that s going to make this all the more complicated for the investigators, for the public to accept to understand that deadly force had to be used. reporter: this is not the first time the 45-year-old officer used excessive force, officer kenny was exonerated from a police shooting 20 years ago. robinson s aunt and grandmother speaking out, not buying the account from police. and i think the cops shot hem because he was afraid of him. reporter: protesters calling robinson s killing their forget condition. i m hurt. i m frustrated, i m angry. reporter: as another family faces an all too familiar anguish, the community deals with an all too familiar question was the use of deadly force necessary? and cnn rosa florez has been interviews witnesses in this investigation. of course we ll have much more from that interview coming up in the next hour of is newsroom. also straight ahead, what time is it? well, apple hopes the next time someone asks you that question you ll be answering with their lathe latest product. but first this open court report. is computing to empower cancer researchers. it used to take two weeks to sequence and analyze a genome; with the microsoft cloud we can analyze 100 per day. whatever i can do to help compute a cure for cancer, that s what i d like to do. checking our top stories, president barack obama tells cbs s face the nation is there s one thing that would make him walk away from a nuclear deal with iran that iran has to offer a zeal with unprecedented transparency or no deal. israeli prime minister benjamin netanyahu warned last week that iran should not be trusted. and another mile phone for the clint eastwood film american sniper. the film has made more than $337 million, topping the hunger games, mocking j part one. and apple will preview it s new watch in san francisco tomorrow. it s apple s first for ray into into the reporter: one look at big ben will tell you here in london they take time seriously, versus seriously, as we koungd to the debut of apple watch, we re taking in five number word in tech but half have stopped using them. apple must convince millions that their wearable is better. i don t think it s going to be a wild hit of the sort that people are expecting. you know if you think about what the apple watch actually does it doesn t do anything better than the iphone already does. number four, what about asia? iphone sales are up 83% in china and momentum for apple products across asia is growing. sales of the apple watch could be strongest there. asia parts of europe, having the new new gadget is a big status things. in the u.s. i m not so sure. number three, what about the apps. the watch comes in silver stainless steel, aluminum and an 18 karat gold edition costing thousands. it lets you check e-mails, texts an calls. but just like the iphone apps will be the key. if developers don t create eye-popping apps that help improve people s lives, the watch could fail. number two, what s in it for cook? it s the most personal device we ve ever created. apple s ceo is going from strength to strength now, but this launch is crucial. it s the first entirely new apple device under his watch. and the number one question? how will investors react? wall street isn t expecting the watch to just sell millions rather tens of millions as appear the stock hits all-time highs, expectations for the watch may be unrealistic. people are already estimating this to be the fastest-selling product in apple s history, so you know there s very lofty expectations. it s going to be difficult for the company to exceed that. the apple watch proves times really are changing. like some other famous londoners time is on my side yes it is reporter: apple hopes time is on their side. samuel burke, cnn, london. i have great credit. how do you know? duh. try credit karma. it s free and you can see what your score is right now . i just got my free credit score! credit karma. really free. what s that thing? i moved our old security system out here to see if it could monitor the front yard. why don t you switch to xfinity home? i get live video monitoring and 24/7 professional monitoring that i can arm and disarm from anywhere. hear ye! the awkward teenage one has arrived!!!! don t be old fashioned. xfinity customers add xfinity home for $29.95 a month for 12 months. plus for a limited time, get a free security camera call 1800 xfinity or visit comcast.com/xfinityhome. all right. saturday night live didn t waste any times on getting their jabs in over hillary clinton s e-mails. those e-mails are clean as a whistle. this is not how hillary clinton goes down. i mean what did you think my e-mails said? hi it s hillary, i really screwed up on benghazi today. please. ha ha. ha ha. i wasn t born yesterday. i was born 67 years ago, and i have been planning on being president ever since. there will be no mistake in my rise to the top! if i decide to run. who knows? who knows? all right. well jokes aside, president barack obama is speaking out for the first time about the e-mail controversy. in an interviews with cbs bill plant, obama said he s glad that clinton wants to make the e-mails public. mr. president, when did you first learn that hillary clinton used an e-mail system outside the u.s. government for official business while she was secretary of state. at the same time everybody else learned it through news reports. were you disappointed? let me say that hillary clinton is and has been an outstanding public servant. she was a great secretary of state. the policy of my administration is to encourage transparency. that s why my e-mails, the blackberry that i carry around all those records are available and archived. i m glad that hillary has instructed that those e-mails that had to do with official business need to be disclosed. well you say that you have the most transparent administration you said it again just a couple weeks ago. that s true. how does this conveyor with that? well i think the fact she s putting them forward will allow us to make sure that people have the information they need. and while president obama is talking about the e-mails, hillary clinton is not. cnn s erin mcpike joins me from the white house with more on this. erin? reporter: fred political this has deepened some for hillary clinton over the weekend. she has not spoken about this publicly. she had the opportunity to last night at an event in miami. she didn t take it. bill clinton has also avoided talking about it. listen here. reporter: do you think your wife is being treated fairly with the e-mails? i m not the one to touch that. i have an opinion, but i have a bias. tell us your opinion. president clinton, what s your opinion? thanks, folks. that i shouldn t be making news on this. now, more people are speaking out about it including scott gracin the former ambassador to kenya under clinton. he resigned from his post after he came under fire in part for using his gmail account. as i reflitted on it the last couple days it does appear like there was a different standard that was used in my case than has been used in hers. darrell issa the gop congressman who used to chair the house oversight committee was also on the show this morning, he called it a double standard said it was troubling, and diahn feinstein a senior democratic senator, said that is it said that clinton need we should point out that hillary clinton will be on stage in new york city at a theater in times square tomorrow at 11:00 a.m. about women s issues. erin mcpike, thanks so much in washington at the white house. we have so much more straight ahead, and it all starts right now. happening right now in the newsroom new evidence into what happened on malaysia airlines flight 370, which vanished one year ago today. hundreds of pages of documents supporting background information have now been released. plus hiding their faces behind pieces of paper. five suspects who are now behind bars for the murder of one of the putin s biggest critics. right now tens of thousands march across the edmund pettus bridge in selma, alabama. they have come to honor the men and women who made history there 50 years ago this weekend. hello again. thanks so much for joining me. a new report is out today on the search for malaysia airlines flight 370. that report from malaysian authorities is raising new questions about the plane s main nance. it says the battery for the plane s flight data recorders may have been allowed to run out more than a year before the plane disappeared. investigators are also looking more closely into the background of the plane s crew. they found no signs of stress or unusual behaviors leading up to the disappearance, and there still hasn t been any explanation for why the plane went so far off its original course. i want to bring in cnn aviation correspondent richard quest in los angeles, and cnn safety analyst and former f.a.a. safety inspector david psoasie. richard, you first. do we know if the pinger was allowed to expire? or whether it was oversight? i know there s some discrepancy over what s on paper documents versus computer. apparently what happened was when, according to the airline and indeed it seems to be accepted to some extent on page 60 of the record when they changed is the batteries on the flight data recorder the computer registered it had been uninstalled, but didn t register the new one had been installed. therefore, my understanding from malaysia is from people there is that the investigator in charge who wrote the report said the paperwork doesn t comport correctly, we can t say it was installed, therefore we have to say it was expired, but the airline is pretty certain that it was actually installed. by the way, there s no question of doubt on the cockpit voice recorders or any of the other pingers that were involved. so david, is this common that perhaps there may be documentation on paper that conflicts with what s on computer? well you know, when i do safety audits for airlines which i did for 17 years with the faa, you look at the paperwork first. you look at the cards, the tags that come off the pieces and that is the hard copy is what you look for. computer systems aren t necessarily the way to maintain your records, though it can be done if it s approved that way. but the fact there s a discrepancy, i believe as well as richard does that the batteries were changed but that the paperwork wasn t done properly. but that kind of indicates there may be something else down there. so as an investigator when we find things like that we continue to dig and dig and dig, because you typically when there s one thing, there s something else. on it s a tip of the ice birk thing, and most likely the battery was replaced. if theres a record the old one was removed. it probably was, but does indicate to me lacks paperwork, and that can indicate other things when you do an analysis. then richard, what is this about the documentation, talking about nothing that reveals something, you know anything unusual in the cockpit? no explanation as to why that plane turned and went off-course. and that is something we are none of wiser of today. i can tell you about the oxygen system. i mean what they have done i have to be honest fred. what they have done in this report they have stuffed it full of every bit of regulation concerns air traffic control in malaysia and in the surrounding districts. we know how many hours the cabin crew can work. i hate to use the word but they have padded it out with a lot of stuff, frankly that s irrelevant and really just makes it a fatter report to read. what is missing from this report is an honest discussion about air traffic control on the night, about how the alarm was raised about who when the military saw the plane going across the country. when did they raise the alarm and tell the civilians and prime minister and others. that is missing from this report. and i suspect it s missing from this report for a good reason. it s the achilles heel of the whole issue. does this underscore this plane may never be found, if not for by accident? well i do believe the assumptions they are making. there s nothing in it that discounts the base frequently offsets, all of that they used to determine the southern track as opposed to the northern track. i believe they re looking in the right area but remember this is a massive area 28,000 square miles. that s incredibly huge. they have a long ways to go. i wouldn t give up on that area certainly yet, but i do think they re in the right area. the report tells us there were some robs, eye specially as richard points out between the military and radar discussions, which we now have in the united states. we do a good job of that today. malaysia has a ways to go. it all seems troubling. richard, what if anything does this say about malaysian airlines as an entity and if this report threatens its existence. no it certainly won t threaten the existence, and there s nothing in the report that is derogatory in any way. i m not sure there will be to some extent about the airline, there s, you know we learn all about the training procedures. for instance how many hours. you re going to be at the airline before you re allowed to be a captain. you have to have at least 12 to 15 years of experience of flying so there s nothing in here that leads you to assume that there was something systemically wrong with the airline. that s really the problem here fred. we can parse this any way we like, but there s no evidence despite what some people think, there s no evidence one way or the other, and nothing further from this report. all right. richard quest, david soucie, thanks so much. russian state tv says a sixth suspect now in the february killing of russian opposition leader boris nemtsov killed himself today during a stand offwith the police. the report says it hammond in the capital city of the chechen republic as police were trying to arrest him. they say the man pa threw a grenade at police before killing himself. and one of the five suspects two of the men have been formally charge the other three are listed as suspects. nemtsov, an outspoken critic of russian president putin, was shot in the back as he walked with his girlfriend near the kremlin. christopher dickey foreign editor for the daily beast is with us from new york. christopher, we are now talking about six suspects that russia says were involved in this killing. does this have credence? is this believable? well i think you re going to get it get even more unbelievable as they try to spin out the mott investigationsivations for these people to have killed boris nemtsov. the problem here is he does not have a great record opposing islamists. his main opposition has been to putin. he s also been very much opposed to ramzan keterov, putin s man in chechnya. if you listen to what s coming out on russian television you would think this was a wild conspiracy carried out by people opposed to russian intervention in ukraine, in order to blame president putin and discredit him. it s going to get more and more and more confusing, but nemtsov s own family doesn t believe for a minute that this chechen conspiracy has much to do with the murder of boris nemtsov, and they do think that putin or his people probably were behind it. and if anyone were to be were to believe this chechen angle, what would the motivation be as to why chechens would want to go after this opposition lead center leader in russia? on some twitter feeds, you see remarks like nemtsov was jewish he was zionist, he was opposed to islam, et cetera but none of those were major components of his politics. it s much more likely the people who wanted to get rid of him wanted to get rid of him because he was a thorn in the side of the russian administration the putin administration and also of the katarov administration in chechnya. he was a constant and bitter critic of russian actions in ukraine. so i think it s very unlikely that we can find an incredible islami reason for murdering this man basically in the shadow of the kremlin. the mystery just thickens doesn t it? it gets murkier, as opposed to getting more clarity. it does. christopher dickey thank you so much. ahead, thousands of people commemorating the bloody sunday march. ryan young is in the thick of it in selma, alabama. reporter: and the crowds seem to continue to grow. you can see people pushing across the bridge. another hour another hour of people marching together. we ll have it coming up live, next. mouths are watering, and stomachs are growling. or is that just me? 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most definitely. very powerful. i do believe in moving forward. i m hoping that the new generation will forget the old ways of people in the past and just love one another. you know do not, like dr. king said do not judge them by the color of the skin but by the content of their character. please i mean just love. just love. that s all we need is love around here. this is awesome. if you re not here you should be here. this is awesome. reporter: and the crowds have swelled on their own. in fact it was around 2:00 when they decided to go across the bridge on their own. so far you can see that continual push to go up and in facts there are so many who are experiencing this. you love that people are getting along here. yes. normally somebody steps on their foot they get agitated. people is excuse me everybody is saying hello, speaking a lot of love and energy today in this whole area. reporter: what was it like when people started singing. my gosh it brought tears to my eyes. so emotional. i grew up in montgomery. my grandmother worked with rosa parks. she helped make history happen. and all these other elected black officials, it s just an amazing experience. every is coming together something they say they will always remember. everyone is taking pictures and having a good time. fred? thank you for bringing those sentiments and images. it would be a process getting all those people across the bridge and they have to come back. reporter: yes. we continue our coverage right after this. the real question that needs to be asked is what is it that we can do that is impactful? what the cloud enables is computing to empower cancer researchers. it used to take two weeks to sequence and analyze a genome; with the microsoft cloud we can analyze 100 per day. whatever i can do to help compute a cure for cancer, that s what i d like to do. the bed reacts to your body. it hugs you. it s really cool to the touch. this zips off so i can wash it-yes, please. 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police have gotten back to us within the last hour and say they don t have any new information. we spoke to the council on american/lamic relates. we asked if ahmed had received any threats, they said no. crimestoppers is offering a reward for information leading to an arrest. police say this surveyillance video shows the four men who may by linked to the murder of ahmed al jamali. bullet holes show where the 36-year-old iraqi immigrant was shot and killed. trying to find a decent job to start his life. reporter: through tears his father-in-law says al jamali recently left iraq to escape the growing threat of isis. in north texas he would be reunited with his wife after more than a year apart. her excitement for their new life together was no secret. he had gone outside with his wife to watch the first-ever snowfall. we re looking for a safe place, well educated environment, good environment, what he got was one bullet in his heart. there is no shortage of sadness for the loss of this beautiful young man, who has only just come to this country 20 days ago, and we don t, as texans want that to be his welcome. reporter: members of the muslim community want to know if he was started because of his race. police are pleading for the public to help. tests are ongoing now to determine if one or more rifles were fired and whether the physical evidence that we have been able to get from the crime scene is related to any other offense. as you can see, we have little information to go on. reporter: for now, this video may be the best lead that police have to find the men responsible for the death of a man who left the threat of violence only to become a victim of it. a funeral was held for him yesterday, family and friends will hold a vigil at the scene of the crime today about 6:30 local time. there s been a lot of outreach. they ve raised a lot of money. if you go to a go fund me site more than $20,000 has been raised for the family. from what we understand there s no indication they may go back to iraq even after this happened to them. they re just shocked and surprised. it s traumatizing. it s heartbreaking. they already were living a risky life in iraq and narrowly escaped so much violence there. you see the father-in-law, you can see that emotion on his face like what ahmed had been through to get here, only for this to happen. all right. nick valencia thank you so much. you bed. next protests in madison, wisconsin, after police shot and killed an unarmed 19-year-old. cnn s rosa flores is covering the story for us live in madison. she ll by joining us, next. hello again, everyone. thanks so much for joining me. i m fredricka whitfield. in madison, wisconsin, a family is grieving and a xwhunt is demanding answers. after an officer responded to a disturbance call he shot and killed a 19-year-old. robinson was unarmed at the time but police say he assaulted the officer, who then responded with deadly force. under wisconsin law, police shootings are investigated by an outside agency. cnn s rosa flores is in madison. rhossa you just spoke with the madison police chief, and what did he say? reporter: as you mentioned, here in this state, the police department doesn t investigate, but an independent agency. the state doj is the one leading the investigation. i asked the police chief, i ve been on the ground talked to a lot of people who are from us freighted and angry. you re still the police chief. how are you going to deal with that? he mentioned, fred first of all, we have to own up to what happened. we have to which this police chief has, he s been very forward about it. he s done several press conferences, saying what had happened. the allegations are, of course that this police officer shot and killed an unarmed teenager but he says he knows that it s an uphill battle because a lot of the people in this community are frustrated and angry. [ chanting ] reporter: hundreds of demonstrators hit the streets of madison, wisconsin. following the shooting death of an unarmed 19-year-old at the hands of police. i want to let him know that i m there. tony terrell robinson s mother devastated and overcome by emotion. my son has never been a violent person never. to die in such a violent way. police paint a different picture of her son. scanner traffic capturing the dramatic chain of events. looking for a male black, light skin. police say they received several calls about robinson friday evening, first about the teen jumping in and out of traffic and dodging cars. got another call for the same suspect. then about an alleged battery incident. tried to strangle another patron. the situation escalating when robinson entered what family say is his best friend s house. office kinney arrived, heard a commotion and forced his way in according to police. shots fired, shorts fired. reporter: officials say robinson attacked officer kinney who then fired the shots. kenney suffered a blow to the head. robinson was administered cpr at the scene, but later died at the hospital. he was unarmed. that s going to make this all the more complicated for the investigators, for the public to accept to understand that deadly force had to be used. this is not the first time the 45-year-old officer used lethal force. kenney was exonerated for an incident that took place almost eight years ago, a fact that doesn t sit well with robinson s family and friends. he was a beautiful, beautiful young man. he 6 4 200 pounds. reporter: robinson s aunt and grandmother speaking out, not buys the account from police. i think the cops shot him because he was afraid of him. [ chanting. reporter: protesters calling his killing their ferguson. i m hurt frustrated, angry. reporter: as another family faces an all too familiar anguish, the community deals with an all too familiar question. was the use of deadly force necessary? now, one of the other obvious questions i asked the police chief were about the other tools this police officer had with him that perhaps could have avoided deadly force. fred he did say that this officer had a stun gun with him, but he said he can t comment about the use of deadly force or the use of that stun gun, because, of course the investigation is in the hands of the state doj. fred? rosa what about the events leading up to the confrontation? this confrontation ended up happening inside the house, as opposed to in public view. that only sounds like that further complicates things. reporter: it definitely does. a lot of times when these shootings happening in an open parking lot or an area that s open there are eyewitnesses people who witness, people who take video of the shooting and that gives the police and also the public an assurance as to what happened and what they re hearing from authorities, what authorities are telling them. in this particular case we don t know that there is video. that information has not been released. if that s the case but you re absolutely right. it happened inside so the situation escalates inside four walls, in essence. it s up to the word of the officer and of course in this particular case mr. robinson is dead. do we know definitively whether other people were inside that house at that time? reporter: you know we really don t know those details. what i can tell you is i talked to the neighbor who was who lives literally the walls are paper thin fred that lives right next to where this happened. so it s a house and it s two different rent at units. this woman lives right next door. she said she heard the entire commotion. she said she heard the altercation, it escalating. she heard the gunshots went to the floor, and you know for a moment those these gunshots could go through her wall. thanks god that didn t happen she says but of course perhaps we have a hearing witness, but not an eyewitness that we know about. interesting. rosa flores thank you so much in madison, wisconsin. still ahead, gop presidential candidates go back to iowa again. this time they re talking about corn and the economy. and they re also taking shots at hillary clinton using a private e-mail account while she was u.s. secretary of state. our political panel weighs in next. but first, here s this week s ones to watch. harlem s land of from the tap to the charleston the jitterbug to the twist, more popular dances began life as underground sensations in america s afro-american neighborhoods. every decades it seems these communities create something fresh and vibrant. pop stars have been long tapping into this hidden treasure chest of moves, often transforming them into worldwide crazes. michael did not create the moonwalk. the moonwalk was something done on every street corner in america. twerking and booty dancing, they have done that in new orleans for the last 20 years. you know this is one guy named big freda, i remember he was upset, because he was like wow, i ve been doing that forever and miley cyrus comes on tv and didn t even do it the right way, because i m trying to keep up with the latest dance. the nene is doing the latest i don t know if you know i don t even know why they call it that. like it s wind through the leaves and trees it s long been a laboratory of the street dance, one of the residents, tommy the clown, is credited with creating the clowning style which evolved into crumping. here you struggle it s a struggle dance. these kids go through so much and broken homes, single parents, gang violence, drugs and stuff. it s a lot of anger to be built up that they are able to release through the form of dance. they battle one by one, some might spitfire or flip through the air, literally tear your head off without touching you on the dance floor and the crowd will be the judge. this is my body of proof. proof of less joint pain. and clearer skin. this is my body of proof that i can fight psoriatic arthritis from the inside out. with humira. humira works by targeting and helping to block a specific source of inflammation that contributes to both joint and skin symptoms. it s proven to help relieve pain, stop further joint damage and clear skin in many adults. doctors have been prescribing humira for nearly 10 years. 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. visit humira.com and talk to your rheumatologist. humira. this is a body of proof! in hillary clinton thought the uproared over her use of prifl e-mail would go away leave it to saturday night live to keep the story alive last night. those e-mails are clean as a whistle. this is now how hillary clinton goes down. i mean what did you think my e-mails said? hi it s hillary, i really screwed up on benghazi today. please. ha ha. ha ha. i wasn t born yesterday. i was born 67 years ago, and i have been planning on being president ever since. there will be no mistake in my rise to the top. if i decide to run. who knows? who knows? let s bring in our political panel, ron brown stein, who is also the editorial director at the national journal and doug hyde. gen, you were laughing i wonder if hillary clinton will laugh. it s hard for follow saturday night live. that s not very fair or charitable on a sunday afternoon. look this is going to be a sustained hailed for her. it is a problem. the used personal e-mails, she s certainly not the only public figure. but still the idea that you re a public figure conducting public business, controlling it through your private e-mail and you are deciding what you classify as is in fact the public business and shared with the state department that s an unfortunate i think series of decisions. all right. so doug ron hinted to t there are others who use their personal e-mail. jeb bush governor walker chris christie, even texas governor perry. everyone admits to do it but i guess the difference is being should those things potentially have been conveyed or talked about on private e-mail. though remember there s no evidence nothing has been brought to bear to understand what may have been conveyor in her private e-mail. doug? i think a few reasons. hillary clinton is determining what we re able to see and not see. this is what makes people uneasy about hillary clinton. we don t know the content of it. without knowing the content of it. why is it an issue? she s determine whag we re able to see and not see. she s determining what the select committee is getting. that s not the openness and transparency that the president promised. it s also not what she proned to do. that s why people are uneasy. it reminds people of that immediately. i would say, talk about transparency. the only thing we know there were cops in ferguson that sent racist e-mails is because they had done that from official accounts. if they had done it from private e-mails, those bad cops would still be on the streets. those running for president, and how many found themselves at the iowa summit. who best ron, connected with conservatives? the biggest significant was something that probably won t effect the result. jeb bush kind of doubled down on this argument that he is going to hold to positions that might benefit him in the general election. he s unlikely to win iowa, frederickricka fredricka. but if he you know we ve seen other candidates pulled to the right by iowa in a way that ultimately hurts. he reaformed his support, took positions that kind of clash with iowa and sent another signal that he does sbejd to run this primary process differently from others in the past. so do you, why is iowa still so important? well iowa is important, into you it s first in the country it s what winnows the process down. i think that s why jeb bush was very smart in his remarks. gop voters and not just with the agricultural event, but also jeb bush did very well at the chicken at the pizza ranch in iowa taking questions on every topic possible. that really can be a tense time for a candidate. jeb bush handled it well. because we focus on his last name so much not his first name, we forget he s jeb. if they run a smart campaign and with the staff it look likes they will but also a fresh face someone who is married to a hispanic someone who speaks spanish himself. ron, go ahead real quick. real quick point. iowa is more likely to anoint the chief alternative to jeb bush than jeb bush. the last two times it picked conservatives rick san torn mike huckabee who were limited in their appeals. the big question it would be a huge benefit for bush but if someone like scott walker has shown broader appeal you could have a horse race. fascinating stuff. anything can happen. i know. and it s right around the corner. thanks so much. we ll have much more newsroom right after this. you show up. you stay up. you listen. you laugh. you worry. you do whatever it takes to take care of your family. and when it s time to plan for your family s future we re here for you. we re legalzoom, and for over 10 years we ve helped families just like yours with wills and living trusts. so when you re ready start with us. doing the right thing has never been easier. legalzoom. legal help is here. turn around every now and then i get a little bit tired of craving something that i can t have turn around barbara i finally found the right snack and an early morning mode. and a partly sunny mode. and an outside.to clear inside mode. transitions ® signature ™ adaptive lenses. .now have chromea7 ™ technology. .making them more responsive than ever to changing light. so life can look more vivid & vibrant. why settle for a lens with just one mode? experience life well lit ®. speak with your eyecare professional to. .upgrade your lenses to transitions ® signature ™ . welcome back. cnn s original series finding jesus airs tonight. tonight s episode focuses on john the baptist, and how he helped kickstart jesus ministry. jesus by john is a crucial part of the story. it sells us if nothing else that jesus absolutely endorsed what john was doing. i myself came baptizing with water for this reason. that he might be revealed to israel. and it means that he endorsed john s message that god s people did need to repent. they did need to receive forgiveness for their sins. wow, joining us from los angeles is rabbi joshua garway an early christianity professor. good to see you, rabbi. thank you very much for having me. some might be surprised to see a rabbi featured in a series about jesus. what inspired you to study early christianity? well 50 years ago it would have been peculiar a jew, much less a rabbi studying this field, but in the last 20 to 30 years, it s become not unusual at all. there s at least a handful of rabbis interested in this field. i guess i would say a whole barrel full of jews interested and i think part of it is that most people are beginning to understand that early christianity is very much a part of jewish history, seeing as jesus and john the baptist and all the other early important figures were jews. let s talk about some of the content and some of the discoveries that have been made. relics have been found purr pouring to be the bones of john the baptist. have sciencists been able to authenticate those bones? as far as i know what they can say is a certain group of bones can be securely dated to the 1st century to a man of middle eastern descent. it certainly doesn t rule it out, but it s a far cry from establishing certain proof that they are bones from john the baptist. and then what s your understanding or how do you appreciate the fact that john the baptist and jesus would come together as they would and that it would be john the baptist that kind of gets credit for, you know, inspiring his ministry? sure. actually from a his tornado s perspective. it may well be the relationship between john and jesus was as many forged by the early evangelists, the writers of the gospels, as it was something that actually existed in history. we can say for certain that jesus began his ministry by being baptized by john the baptist, but the nothing that john the baptist understood jesus as the one who would come after here the elijah to jesus messiah, so to speak, may well be the creator of the authors of the gospels. rabbi joshua garroway thank you for joining us and the all-in finding jesus airs tonight at 9:00. we will be right back. 6 whoa whoa whoa! who s responsible for this?!? 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(announcer) built to be there for your family. love. it s what makes a subaru a subaru. . i ve always loved to read. it kind of takes you to a different place. my mom told me when i was 8 that some kids don t have books. that shocked me because everybody should have the option to read. so i started by just doing a small book drive. and then told my parents that i wanted to collect and distribute 1 million books to kids in need by the time i turned 18. so welcome to the reading warehouse. i was 13 when i reached my goal. we have given books to about 16 countries and 40 states. all the pink squash my new goal is to distribute books to every state in the u.s. ends every country in the world. i am a preschoolteacher with english language learners. i m looking for second through fifth grade. meeting the teachers is amazing. i hear all about the kids they serve. thank you, sweetie. thank you. keep up the good work. good afternoon. good afternoon. we have about 1280 students. a large homeless and highly mobile population. they re in great needs. when she came to my school i was so excited. she just gave us books for free. it was amazing. literacy is so important in education. i want kids to have a better life. i know that reading can do that. wow, we have featured a lot of young kids who are doing some extraordinary things this year. books, cups and food tell us about someone you know making a big difference in your community. nominations are open at cnnheroes.com. we ve got so much more straight ahead in newsroom. thanks so much for being with me. i m fredricka whitfield. much more newsroom with poppy harlow is up next. \s . hi everyone. i m poppy harlow in new york 5:00 eastern. well-begin in moscow. a shocking twist into the murder investigation of the high-profile russian opposition leader boris nemtsov. one of the suspects in that brazen killing has been blown himself up following a standoff with police. that s according to russian-state television. who was the suspect and what did he know? we ll go live to moscow in just a moment. also exactly one year to the day after malaysian airlines flight 370 disappeared, the mystery that gripped the world remains unsolved. for the families of the 239 people on board that plane, no words can describe their pain. the global hunt triggered widespread interest from people across this country and around the globe. everyone still wants to know how, how can a jumbo jet vanish without a extra is? we will bring you malaysia s brand-new report on the investigation. also our experts return with fresh insiding on what could have happened to malaysia flight 370. there are still many questions after the shooting of an unarmed black teenager friday by police in madison, wisconsin. the officer who fired the fatal round had used diddley force b. the teen who was killed also had a criminal history. our team just spoke with the police chief. we ll tell you what he said later this hour. first two teenager from australia are being investigated right now after border guards stopped them from leaving the country, reportedly in an attempt to join isis. the two are brothers they were from sydney. police say something found in their wlugage raised a red flag and of course then they were arrested. we don t know many more details, but we do know they were going to what the authorities call a conflict zone. the concept of westerners joining isis is not a new one. the u.s. government estimating there are about 20,000 so-called foreign fighters in the isis ranks from 90 different countries. north americans, europeans, western citizens make up more than 3,000 of them it is estimated. terrorism fills say about 150 u.s. citizens are believed to have joined isis. remember ten days ago two men in brooklyn oneman in florida, all u.s. residents were arrested before they could follow through on their alleged plan to join isis. for the first time you re about to hear the voice of a 20-year-old american man from ohio who said he wanted to carry out terrorist attacks in this country and wanted to kill the president of the united states. we re talking about christopher cornel. he was already on the fbi s radar when he was arrested back in january. now a local television station has exclusively spoken to him in jail by phone. take a listen to this short, edited clip of their one-hour conversation. in which i planned on tuesday september 20th in washington, d.c. would have been a great attack again america. even with my capture, the repercussions will not stop. although it would have been a major attack against america eevents that will follow are dangerous and more enormous. with the islamic state, i have connections, even corresponding for quite some time. the fbi finally caught on the past year was it their idea for you to plant pipe bombs at the capitol and have people running outside to shoot them? how would i contact someone? how did you do that? do you do that through, um you know youtube videos? encrypted messaging. can you give me an idea of other things. how to wage jihad in america. when i say groups you notice i mean what you would call sleeper cells. how dedicated were you to carry out this plan to wage jihad in america? i m very dedicated. i m a muslim. i m so dedicated i risk my life. that should say a whole lot. if you weren t arrested buying two guns and 600 rounds of ammunition what would you have done? what would i have down? i would have took my gun and put it to bama s head pulled the trigger and unleash more bullets on the senate and the house of representatives and i would have attacked the israeli embassy and various other buildings, full of kafir. and wage war against obama is an enemy of aylal allah. you intend to do it if you ever get out? yes. is in retaliation for what? the continued american aggression against our people and the fact that america specifically president obama want to wage war against islamic state. i want to hear what you think is coming. what i think is comeing, many things. there will indeed be many, many attacks. there would be like i said we are raised to over the capitol, you know? i m not going to give away too much. were you up until january in contact with people overseas? i won t give you that information, but i will tell you i m in contact with many. how organized is the islami state? the thing is we are indeed here in america, in each and every state. we are here in ohio we re here in ohio in every state. we re more organized than you think. again, that was part of an hour-long conversation between our affiliate in ohio, and christopher cornel who is in jail an american allegedly planning to terrorize this country in his own words claiming that isis is here as he said in everybody state and as he also said more organied than you think. joining miss is christopher dickey and chris, listening to that what is your what s your takeaway? well he s basically reciting the boilerplate of isis propaganda which is all based on the idea that muslims are under attack being attacked by america, attacked by the west attacked by christians. what they re doing, all this is atrocities, all these things are justified in their own minds as some kind of self-defense. it s a classic thing. i wrote a novel 18 years ago about bringing terror to the united states in which all those same arguments were rehearsed. it s absolutely classic stuff. colonel reese, what do you make of his claims that he repeats a few times that isis is more organized than we think? i believe they are. they do have some organizational skills. i don t think they re as organized in the u.s. i think it s claim that you know, they re in 50 states sure, i believe it. we heard the last couple weeks, the fbi director say they have about 1,000 counter-terrorism investigations going on in every state. can did i lid i think he s blowing a lot of smoke. why do you think in a? again, he s a young kid. he s looking for the spotlight. right now he s sitting in prison, and i think his lawyers are telling him that he s got a long road ahead of him, and i think there s a lot of bravado coming out of him. he might have some communication with folks overseas they re trying to bring that bravado up but at the end of the day when he sits in his cell for a very long time because the fbi did a great job of hunting him down he ll start to realize that. my frustration is i know lots of muslims. they would shake their head at this young man, especially coming from the u.s. knowing these not what islam is all about. no question. he said i m a muslim when indeed what his s trying to do is completely against the faith. he s a muslim convert. you ve heard the frayed the zeal of the convert? they tend to cherry pick things that they think make them a muslim. his name is christopher, after all. not a typical name for muslims. let me ask you this this is one example of what we have seen so much of especially recently. you have the two australians being held by authorities. they thought they were possibly going to join isis. two men arrested in brooklyn one arrested in florida, young women in great britain traveling to sagedly join isis. why is isis so successfully winning at least the propaganda war? it s really good at propaganda even the look at the clips of isis troops training it s like choreography they re all sort of dancing across the screen as if it were in fact some kind of recruiting video. that s exactly what it is. they have beautifully designed recruiting videos that target young men ages say 14 15 to 25 or 30 that are very seductive, especially if you re an aimless loser lice christopher cornel who decides he s going to adopt his idea of the religion of islam and then wants recognition. what he wants is recognition. that s why he calls up a journalist and talks for an hour on the phone, even though it s obviously going to destroy his case in course. colonelees chris dickey was saying to me yesterday we are losing the propaganda war. we re not doing enough whether it s the government or other parties, to fight this on the web, if you will. i just wonder what really can be done that actually these people that are falling into isis s hands would watch and follow instead of the isis recruitment videos? sure. well i agree with you. i don t think we are doing a very good job of countering this information. i mean i said several weeks ago, why wasn t there a public service announcement during the super bowl? why don t we look at these big events where americans and young kids will watch are on youtube where they do these things. pretty interesting, i m over here with ben wedeman s cnn s senior correspondent. several of the commanders he s been talking to and i ve been listening to you know over here the iraqis how they talk about it is that isis is and they re trying to put it in perspective for the u.s. listeners, isis is just like a gang you know the crips and the bloods or whatever. that s all this is is gangs, and young kids are coming to a gang because they re looking for some type of prospect to be part of. i thought that was interesting that they talked about it over here that it was very similar to the gangs in the u.s. colonel reese, chris dickey thank you very much. on the other side of the break we ll get to the breaking news of a critic of president putin, one of the suspects blew himself up rather than being taken into police custody. a live report from moscow is next. 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reporter: well people that doubted anybody would be arrested but people also had doubts that those who may have been arrested would simply be scapegoats in an attempt to distance the authorities from the actual killing. a lot of people who support the oop position in this country believe the kremlin is ultimately responsible, though they deny any links. so far already five in custody, one individual detonated a grin nails in the chechen capital which is in southern russia. a guy called um. dadayev, a ethnic chechen as well from southern russia apparently has confessed to the killing, and the four other suspects one of them has been charged. matthew, does it strike you as odd that one of these suspects would just confess to is so quickly? reporter: um possibly possibly odd. i expect there will be a lot of skepticism out there that this is too convenient. other than the, you know chechnya is a lawless place there are guns for fire there. it s quite possibly these individuals could have been hired by somebody who wanted boris nemtsov dead, to carried out the killing. if these people are indeed responsible for the killing, it doesn t necessarily shed any light on who would have ordered that killing. as i say, it s a very lawless place in which i anyia. there are guns for hire. these could just be the trigger men. it may not give us any more clarity on why or who ordered the killing. this information is coming from russian state television the presumption is they re getting it straight from the reduction authorities. do you believe we can take these names of five people in their mid 30s, as key suspects? can they take them as face value? i think so. i think so in the sense they have all appeared in court today. that s not coming from state television. certainly the investigative committee that s been formed by the russian government which involves all sorts of branches of the russian security services say they have strong evidence from telephone records and from forensic evidence that these people are indeed linked. we have that confession as well. of course it s possible but again, the real issue is not who pulled the trigger to kill boris nemtsov, but who ordered the killing. the big concern is we re no closer to finds out that than we were at the beginning of this process. very quickly, nemtsov s daughter has been speaking about this. what is she saying? well i spoke to her a few days after after the first arrests had been made. she made the point, look it s the kremlin that she believes is u89ly responsible for the killing of her father have a lad mir putin, if not responsible for pulling the trigger or ordering the killing, at least responsible for creating an add motion sphere that opponents of the kremlin are regarded as enemies of the state. she said she did not believe the true killers would be brought to justice, there would be a cover-up, is what she was saying. matthew chance, thank you. when we come back it s been one near to the date sen mh will have 370, the flight disappeared. we re going to talk about a new report from malaysia. also families trying to grieve one year later. what obstacles did they run into in beijing? 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works. works! works? works. works. well if you can believe it more heartbreak for grieves families of flight 370. one year to the day that plane disappeared, some families wanted one simple thing, to honor their loved once at a chinese temple. they are denied. our david mckenzie was with them. reporter: this is family members trying to grieve and you re stopping up? 239 people died on this plane and you re telling me they can t come here to commemorate? more on that culling up but first, a kruvl battery on the plane expired more than a year before the flight s disappearance. the battery was on the underwater locator beacon and as you know a global hunt nothing, not one sing the piece of debris has shown up yet. people wanted to learn about and i have jails, ocean searching, radars the lack of answers still seems pretty unreal. we re bringing back or experts with the latest opinions. joining me to discusses also miles o brien, and richard quest joins me as well. one of key things that starts out to a lot of people is the battery for the underwater locator beacon expired, maintenance made a mistake, they didn t replace it. is that a big deal or not necessarily? it is if it s true. it s on page 60. some are saying the battery actually was replaced but the paperwork was fally, but the reality is the inspector says in this report that the battery was not replaced. he has to go on the computer files on the data and there s no record. it expire? 2012 2 probably still was working, we just don t know. the pinger was working, yes, it is serious if it s true. it s serious, because so much effort had to go into finding this plane and it reliesed on pingers, which might not have worked. they are supposed to work for 30 days. to you, les, you believe possibly they were carrying some key batteries. others have said you have no way of knowing, you think that could be part of the cause? it s definitely part of the we re talking about the big one. they came from the island of pa nang the western edge of malaysia and were electricitied by 739. . 5400 pounds is a lot of batteries. the f.a.a. has revisited. from the fact when they go in a cargo pallet that s completely enclosed it creates its own little bomb inside. they have a characteristic of reigniting again. so this set something off in my head that my particular airline does not even allow any lithium batteries in the cargo hold. miles, you wrote an op-ed and talked about outdated technology and that may be part of the history here. why? it s interesting. you think about this pinger for example, the fact in this day and age we re looking for a multimillion declare airliner by dropping a microphone in the water and hoping we heard a distant ping. they we re verified that wasn t where the wreckage is so it s really scandalous the aviation industry that is allowed this to go on where we don t have some way, its of making it impossible to turn off transponders or additionally creating some sort of capability to stream data from an airport that s in fourth quarter. in canada first air is doing it right now. it costs money. it does cost money, but in the grand scheme of things a search like this costs more. i know you talked to the governing body in this. when will this happened when we ll have the real-time streaming data? whoa real-time streaming data is not coming yet. there are quite serious issues about bandwidth, computer and satellite capabilities. what we are looking at is all air krafl over oceans will have to be tracked at least once every 15 minutes. they re not prescribing a tick what are way in which it has to be done. this is a performance-based rule that will say every airline has to be able to be tracked every 50 minutes. miles is absolutely right. the scandal and disgrace post-447 it wasn t done and it s taken a year to get so-called ikao consensus. les, you are a pilot who flying 777s. is it scandalous? is it something that could not be allowed to happen again? i do fly with this. i go across the pond to longan with that technology. i wouldn t call it scanned louse. we found a hole in the system that should have been covered a long time ago. i don t see anybody conspiring to have ignored the situation. it s just a situation that s been going on for years, and we just discovered it with this incredible mystery that we re still dealing with. miles to you, final word on if you re hopeful that things are going to changes? you know i see a lotin indianaer indianaerin in inertia. there s technical details that need to be ironed out, but it can be done. if we all insist upon it meaning all of us who fly, there s a chance. miles, richard, les, thank you very much. much more throughout the evening. coming up next i m going to speak with the wife of a passengers on board flight 370. she refuses to call herself a widow. she wants answers, because she you see the picture there of her with her husband of 20 years and their children. she will join me live, next. 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. we ve made hiring anyone from a handyman to a dog walker as simple as a few clicks. buy their services directly at angiealist.com. no more calling around. no more hassles. and you don t even have to be a member to start shopping today! angie s list is revolutionizing local service again. visit angieslist.com today. for the families members of the passengers on flight 370, the pain is still for the families of chinese passengers even just the process of trying to pay ares for their loved ones is different. here s our david mckenzie. reporter: the family members of those on board flight 370, had planned to come here to the tempt in beijing to pay their respects one year on but frankly there are more police here than family at this point. some of them say they intimidated, normally i would be able to get through this area excuse me. norm i could, but through here are some family members, and they re not letting me get in. just come inside please. don t touch me. this is this is family members who are trying to grieve and you re stopping us 239 people died on this plane and you re telling me you can t come here to xhn rate. translator: i just want to know why the police are treating us like this. we re just looking for our families. why are they doing this? translator: march 8th last year my husband was on m 370. it was supposed to land at this time. he never came. eye just looking for my husband. reporter: though they wanted to come and commemorate after mh-370 has vanished they re basically intimidating the families. many of the families say they have been detailed several times by the chinese authorities. it s pretty tragic, a year on. david mckenzie, cnn, beijing. extraordinary. 239 people on board, 239 families lives changed forever. joining me by skib, jennifer chong. thank you for being with me. thank you for asking me. your husband of more than 20 years, the father of your children was a passenger on this flight. what do you want people to know about him one year later? um yeah i want people to know that the family ands a horrific year for the family so much just to find answers of where our loved one is and it is so frustrating that one year on we still don t have answers of what happened that night on the plane and the whereabouts of my husband and the rest of the passengers. i know you said you do not consider yourself a widow. um yes, i don t consider myself and i hope that. until i see the evidence even one piece of wreckage. are you satisfied with the search so far? um no. they sent so much on the search. from the search not even one piece of wreckage. so obviously i m not justified. this big record just came out from the team investigating what happened to the plane. i know it s long and i m sure you haven t read through the entire thing, but from some of the headlines, is there anything that stands out about it that concerns you? yes, one would be the on the the flight recorders, i find that the airlines actually allows a plane to fly with dead batteries, and yet they are not treating the families properly. this is i m speechless. you know malaysia airlines is getting a new ceo to come in and take over. i wonder what you can say in terms of being a voice for a lot of these families. what do you want to happen differently? um we hope that the airlines support the families for keeping the search on until they found and el hope what we want from the airlines is transparency transparencies and answers. and more care and sensitivities, and tried to provide more support to the families and organizations as well. to the individual names. jennifer i m so sorry for your loss. we re thinking about you and all of the families of the 239 people on board, especially today. thanks for being with me. coming up next we re going to take you live to madison, wisconsin. that s the site of the shooting of an unarmed teacher. a live can you pick me up at 6:30? 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(vo) the longest-lasting midsize sedan in its class. the twenty-fifteen subaru legacy. it s not just a sedan. it s a subaru. . is one of the most fascinating places on the planet fast becoming a paradise lost? tonight on the wonder list questioner or bill weir takes us to the ga lap goss where he found a bird with quite the evolutionary back story. i am headed to a deserted island with a cold-blooded killer. all right. this is cool. people don t get to step on this. no no people don t get to come here. champion island. his name is carl campbell big-hearted in his love for animals, but cold-blooded in what he s willing to do to save them. i hear the cheep, the chirp. there s one up here. look he s right here. he s brought me to this tiny haven to look for the one creature that inspired darwin s ideas more than any other. what s up buddy? we came a long way to see you. the floriana mockingbird. he doesn t even seem to mind. when darwin came here he collected these guys with a stick. just whacked them with a stick? whist whacked them with a stick. this is didn t know to fear man. they didn t know how to fear anything. they don t have predators out here. there s maybe 90 left in the word. total. this is one of the world s rarest birds. bill weir joins me here. i love this episode. i love that your clothes had been tore quarantined. amazing. they re so airful. even anner rant seed or one fly or mosquito if it sneaks in on a plane, it can throw the hole eco system out of whack. we were the first human beings to set foot there in a couple years. we had to take all the clothes, give them to the ecuadorian government, and we didn t get them back. and this is the story how charles darwin got there, after divinity school. the captain of the beagle was sort of a manic-depressive and his family wanted him to have a traveling companion. the captain was a devout christian, and gives a ship to sail and he said this is my chance to prove the book of genesis. little did he know that who he was bringing look would change the views. i ve not been the the ga lap goss. this is lava purposes create very different islands. that s the seed of darwin s theory on this island which has high mountains, that means clouds stop more rain grass, so there s tortoises that come there. on this island it s flat and desert so more iguana country, and each creature more adapted to the conditions around. if you re an animal love this is like the happiest place on earth, going back in time. even not at species are able to survive forever there, right? the last of this certainly type of tortoise that a lot of us associate with this ga lap goss eventually died so you talked about this inner battle of having to play god, basically on the island and what species to keep alive. sure. and what may have to be sacrificed. you ll see more later tonight, but in the case of these giant tortoises, goats, they invasive goats brought to the islands by whalers and pirates had eaten all of the turtle food. so they were starving to death. they realized my goodness, there s less than a hundred theft. they hired snipers and helicopters to shoot a quarter million goats over the course of five years in order to save this one creature. that worked. that was sort of a groundbreaking experiment in species survival. tourists are allowed. yes. i think 240,000 a year which is actually not a lot. compared to most resorts, yeah. did you think at all whether we humans should even be allowed to be in such a special place? absolutely. that is a real sort of faultline debate among conservations right now, sort of garden of edenists who believe some parts should no-go zones for human beings but others say that s not realistic. we re headed towards 10 billion. we have to learn how to coexist with these amazing creatures and be respectful but still progress and that s what this hour is really about. it s beautiful. you re pretty lucky you got to go. i am. exception appear cinematography. only here on cnn tonight. the wonder list. thanks, poppy. meet the world s newest energy superpower. surprised? in fact, america is now the world s number one natural gas producer. and we could soon become number one in oil. because hydraulic fracturing technology is safely recovering lots more oil and natural gas. supporting millions of new jobs. billions in tax revenue. and a new century of american energy security. the new energy superpower? it s red, white and blue. log on to learn more. 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[prof. burke]when you re really only covered for this. or how you figured you were covered for this. when you re actually paying for this. you might be surprised at what s hiding in your coverage. talk to farmers and get smarter about your insurance. we are farmers bum-pa-dum bum-bum-bum-bum questions in madison, wisconsin, tonight following friday s shooting of an unarmed black teenager by a white police officer. matt ken he used deadly force before shooting a man in 2007 but that he was cleared of any wrongdoing in that case describing the incident as suicide by cop. on friday kenny was responding to a call when police say he was attacked by 19-year-old tony robinson and forced to fire. where does the case go from here? let s discuss it? joining me live in madison, rosa flores and also christian bar barbarisi. rosa to you, what more do we know about the circumstances of what really happened on friday night? reporter: you know poppy, if you look at the house that s behind us where this incident actually occurred it s actually two units. it s a house, but two units. i spoke to the woman who is right next to the unit where this incident happened and she tells me she heard everything unfold. so while we haven t heard from an eyewitness this is definitely a hearing witness. she says she heard all of these events unfold the situation escalated. she heard the gun shots and she has talked to authorities about all of this but it s just very telling because she says, you know these walls are paper thin and so you know, i deadasked her, were you afraid for your life? she said of course i was and she went to the ground because of it. again, investigators still here which is very telling. you see the crime scene tape and you see investigators and one thing that s important to know poppy is the police cruisers that you see are from madison, police. they re only protecting the perimeter because let s not forget that the investigation agency in this particular case is a state doj. right. right. right. of course the police can t investigate their own incidents and that law in wisconsin. christian, to you. i think it was interesting that madison police chief chose not to discuss robinson the teen s criminal history saying, quote, i am not here to do a character work up. what did you make of that? reporter: well the police chief has tried, even before this incident happened to really kind of let people express themselves and not really inject himself into what s going on beyond what he says his duties are which are to protect the right to assemble and the right to free speech and the chief after meeting with robinson s grandparent which is he did do he s sensitive to what they re going through and he just doesn t really want to i guess, play off their grief and intensify the situation. he said i m not going to do that with a kid this young, right? a teen this young. rosa do we know if this officer was wearing a body camera because that got so much attention after ferguson. you know i just talked to the police chief, poppy, and i asked him that question and he said indeed no his police officers do not have body cameras. the obvious question is would he want body cameras for his officers and he said you know if the community wants body cameras he s not opposed to it but he did say that a lot of the times what happens is it gives you transparency but it might not give you what people believe is accountability and i said what do you mean? transparency is always great. what do you mean about accountability and what he said was it s about the laws. because what people see in this video might be lawful but people might not agree with it. so he says it might add some tension, and we were talking earlier and she was telling me that this police chief is very forward and you can probably talk about this more but regardless of what the circumstances are he s been out here and you were telling me regardless of day or night, he s out here talking to the media. any time we ve had any kind of shooting not just by the police, but shots fired and the police chief does come out, addresses the public and lets us know what s going on and that s been his policy since he took office back in april for. lady thank you both. we ll stay on top of this story and bring you more when we have it. quick break. we ll be back in a moment. t, and stay awake during the day. this is called non-24. learn more by calling 844-824-2424. or visit your24info.com. nobody told us to expect it. intercourse that s painful due to menopausal changes it s not likely to go away on its own. so let s do something about it. premarin vaginal cream can help it provides estrogens to help rebuild vaginal tissue and make intercourse more comfortable. premarin vaginal cream treats vaginal changes due to menopause and moderate-to-severe painful intercourse caused by these changes. don t use it if you ve had unusual bleeding breast or uterine cancer blood clots, liver problems, stroke or heart attack, are allergic to any of its ingredients or think you re pregnant. side effects may include headache pelvic pain, breast pain vaginal bleeding and vaginitis. estrogens may increase your chances of getting cancer of the uterus, strokes, blood clots or dementia so use it for the shortest time based on goals and risks. estrogen should not be used to prevent heart disease heart attack, stroke or dementia. ask your doctor about premarin vaginal cream. turn around every now and then i get a little bit hungry and there s nothing good around turn around, barry i finally found the right snack [ female announcer ] fiber one. captions by vitac www.vitac.com you re in the cnn newsroom. i m poppy harlow joining us ging you live from new york. we begin in russia with the murder mystery that keeps getting more bizarre. accusations that go all of the way back to the kremlin and more people are dead. russian police trying to arrest a suspect in the killing of this man, a loud critic of russian president vladimir putin, his name boris nemtsov. one of the suspects in the killing blew himself up according to russian state television rather than be arrested. this happened in the city of chechnya. the five other suspects in nemtsov s murder are chechen, as well. the man who killed himself was one of a growing list of people that happened february 27 nothing moscow. let s talk to michael weiss, a fellow with the institute of modern russia and buck sexton former cia counterterrorism official and chris dickey editor of the daily beast, let me begin with you, michael all of this coming from russian state television and as we discussed last week a lot of people were skeptical as to whether anyone would be arrested and now we have six suspects. right. look it s important to put all of this in context. putin s ascension to power came after appearing tough on islamic extremistism and he had the famous comment we ll rub them out in the out houses and his consolidation of power and also the result of cracking down on islamic extremism. so people in rush a at least those who van oppositional bent don t buy this at all and they think this is part of the same scenario. possibly pressaging another state crackdown or getting tough or security measures and not really aimed at terrorism and aimed at the opposition or what remains of it today. it s interesting, buck that one of the people who has been arrested and detained has apparently admitted to this. what do you make of that? i would expect something like that has happened. that s not surprising at all and they re checking off all of the boxes. one person didn t allow himself to get captured and another person has already confessed and it s almost as if this is playing out to a clear script. a play scripted by well that s what we re trying to find out still. the big absent issue here and the big thing we haven t been told is who gave the order or who could have given the order. i don t think anyone believes that these individuals came up with this plot and by themselves. you find the triggermen and they do tend to be chechen, the killing was another time when you had this but you never find out who actually said let s go engage in a behind a hired gun and who is behind it. we re trying to find the don, the mafia don, the head the guy who gave the order and we have the alleged triggermen and that doesn t get us closer to who did this? who ordered this? chris dickey will we find that out? i would like to start with the question of motivation. i mean why would these guys kill nemtsov? why would chechen islamists kill nemtsov? i can think why chechens might especially if they were working for ramzan bakhayev the right hand of vladimir putin and i don t understand why they would have an interest in taking him out. do you think, michael, that the kremlin would have to provide that answer the motive answer very quickly for people to side with them and believe them or no? let me go out on a limb and i think they have that answer. i think they had it the minute this was perpetrated. or even before. indeed. by process of elimination, the one they wouldn t consider is someone that s pro-putin. look at what they did within minutes of his being assassinated. this is a provocation designed to destabilize the russian government. chris says what is the motivation? they already have the answer. they re with the victims the charlie hebdo massacre. i was talking to andre, a russian journalist and probably the foremost expert on the russian security services. he said to me you would need at least three teams to perpetrate an assassination like this one of the most heavily vigilated places in moscow. the message. it sends a message if you re somebody that wants to silence opponents of the kremlin, obviously. they shoot nemtsov, six shots and four of them meet the target in his back and they spare his ukrainian girlfriend. train killers? clearly train. in terms of sending a message, messages have been sent and nemtsov is not the first here and also his opposition allies and those who have marched with him and marched by the way, in the streets of moscow less than 48 hours after his assassination are not quieted by this. we may not be quieted, but i can tell you they re very damn scared and they feel their lives are on the line and some are speaking out boldly and saying i ll double down and i ll take more risks and a lot of people are intimidated. i know people in russia who are getting calls from parents saying don t go out anymore. really? people not affiliated with the government or opposition? people that may be affiliated with the government or affiliated with the opposition one way or the other. journalists are intimidated and dissidents are being intimidated after davidenko. he s a former deputy prime minister and a representative of an entirely different direction and yeltsin doesn t go with putin and he goes with nemtsov and door number two and maybe it s a different country and his assassination is not just another politician or another journalist that s being silenced. it s the highest and biggest name. it s a change and it s a sea change. and nemtsov certainly was not on charlie hebdo, his focus was on ukraine. and in this kind of a hit this way in front of the kremlin? this makes no sense. the kremlin wants to throw cold water on the idea that anybody in the russian government had anything to say to this. he was irrelevant and he doesn t matter. that s false, if you look at sanks passed by russian officials in favor of the ukraine and the dollar amounts of money that they were worth, stolen stolen whatever tracks with the work that nemtsov was putting on russian corruption. does putin care about what the west thinks about this? really? i think he does. he cares what happens internally. if this is designed to say we re at war with islamic extremism, the goal with the west is this i am your partner in counterterrorism. the same threats that you face isis al qaeda, i face them here and facing them since day one. putin was the first lead tore call george bush after nech. you need me russia and the united states need to work together. guys thank you very much. we ll have to leave it there. more on this story coming up. this evening, also very big story today. it has been one year to the day since malaysia airlines flight 370 disappeared. we just got this new report from malaysian awingorities and reveals a number of crucial things including a critical battery on that flight was apparently expired. it was the battery on the underwater locator beacon attached to the flight s data recorder. our anna koran is covering the story in kuala lumpur. reporter: hi poppy. you are absolutely right. that battery expired in december 2012. it s a maintenance issue which is a major oversight. did that hinder the search operation because that battery had expired? well we really don t know. obviously, the battery will still operating in the cockpit voice data recorder and there was some sort of beacon pings being emitted and as far as the flight data recorder that battery had expired. in that interim report which came out on the very day of the anniversary, the other things that it revealed was that the state of mind of the pilot and really poppy, it cleared him obviously of what has been going around which is the rogue pilot theory that perhaps it was the captain of the plane and mh370 that decided to steer it off course and commit swissuicide. this is something that has been thrown around and the cause of much speculation and have you spoken to officials throughout the week from malaysia airlines and also from the malaysian government. they said it was baseless and false and obviously that there was a report coming out saying that the pilot and all the crew none of them were stressed. the behavior was exactly the same as it had been on previous flights, poppy. i think it s interesting we heard australian prime minister tony abbott answer some questions that were posed to him today, asking about the search and how long it will go on. he said look we re 40% through this search area right now, but he didn t exactly say it was going to go on forever. yeah. no he didn t. he said it cannot go on forever, but i thought what was interesting in that interview is that he said we are willing to consider another search if nothing is found in his priority area and a thought nautical miles off the coach of australia, this search is conducted by both countries are putting $60 million toward finding the wreckage and this sort of terrain is 400 miles deep and there are trenches and volcanos and it s proving to be a logistical nightmare for the search crew but despite that they are still searching and tony abbott saying if nothing is found this time they will continue with another search. ink its certainly good news for the families who are desperate, poppy, for some answers. that s a good point as you just heard from some of the family members in the last half hour. they want this to happen until that plane is found. anna coren joining us from kuala lumpur lumpur. where is the plane? one next guest says maybe in kazakhstan who wrote a huge extensive article and others say no way, no how. our panel weighs in next. normally people wear pants. yeah that s why i m hiding captain obvious. not very well. i found you immediately. you know what else is easy to find? a new hotel with the hotels.com app. i don t need a new hotel room, i just need to get back into this one. gary? it s wednesday gary! i know that janet! hotels.com is more helpful than janet. your eyes really are unique. in fact, they depend on a unique set of nutrients. that s why there s ocuvite to help protect your eye health. as you age your eyes can lose vital nutrients. ocuvite helps replenish key eye nutrients. ocuvite is a vitamin made just for your eyes from the eye care experts at bausch + lomb. ocuvite has a unique formula that s just not found in any leading multivitamin. your eyes are unique so help protect your eye health with ocuvite. for many prescription nexium helps heal acid-related erosions in the lining of the esophagus. it s my prescription. there is risk of bone fracture low magnesium, and vitamin b12 deficiency. side effects include headache abdominal pain and diarrhea. if persistent, contact your doctor right away. other serious stomach conditions may exist. avoid if you take clopidogrel. it s my prescription. nexium 40mg is available only by prescription. pay only $15 a month. visit purplepill.com today. in the wake of malaysia flight flight 370 s disappearance, theories about what happened to the flight were and continue to be frankly, endless. you have to ask, though without a shred of evidence any debris can any theory really be thrown out? let me bring in cnn aviation analyst and business correspondent richard qwest who joins us from los angeles and also 777 pilot and contributing editor les abbott and pilot jeff is with us. jeff i have to begin with you because your theory and you just read about it in new york mag is controversial and you ve been getting feedback on it. you wrote this long article how crazy am i to think that i actually know where the malaysia airlines plane is? where is it? the only data we have about the last six hours of the plane s fight is seven handshakes pings exchanged between the many and the satellite and they definitively say that the plane went south, but since we haven t found any floating debris and we searched the sea bed and i wanted to ask the question is there any way that this evidence could be construed that the plane didn t go south? that it went north. that it went north. the electronics way of a 777 is accessible and the bay is often left unlocked and you can reach it through a hatch in the passenger compartment and if you got in there jowled access to the electronic brains and the machinery that sends the signal back to the antenna. it s conceivable that that data could have been tampered with and in fact a report issued today i think lends support to this idea. you believe it could be in kazakhstan. if the data remains and wasn t spoofed, and the path takes you to kazakhstan yes. richard? well i disagree with jeff that the report gives any credence to his theory. in fact i would say the opposite. the report actually says quite clearly that the satcom unit is not accessible for maintenance as jeff would have it and so the idea that look jeff has come up with a theory. jeff has been right. he was right on the pings. i ll be the first person to say hat s off if i was wearing one. he was right on that and i think he s slightly off the round with this one and if only because it accepts that somebody would come forward, two people or several passengers would come forward and they would be able to hike help you the carpet get into the bay, perform an extremely complicated satellite maintenance operation in a part of the equipment that might not be accessible or available and then land the plane, but i hand it to jeff. you have come up with a theory and i suspect time will prove you right or wrong. les? you are a 777 pilot. you know these planes. what do you make of jeff s theory? does it have potential? well jeff and i have debated this sparred. sparred a little bit back and forth and richard quest took the words out of my mouth and to get into that compartment is a total operation and you would have to disrupt the service and get down there and then you would have to have someone who had absolute knowledge of the a and ebay. there are a lot of electronics and i m not familiar with it and even as a pilot it s not a place i would go on a normal basis and there are only a couple of occasions that my checklist would have me go down there. as a matter of fact my airlines policy is not to go down in this compartment. for you to write something like this i just want to know what you went through deciding whether you should write this or not, putting out a theory knowing that you would have critics and really? we all know this those of us who are on television right? yes. for you, you felt a real need to put this out there because we have so few answers. it s a mystery i ve spent most of the last year going eyeball deep into the data on this and trying to break it down and trying to understand what it all means and frankly, the deeper we go into this the stranger it looks and frankly, what les just said i agree with it the case that most airline pilots don t know how to get in there and mess with the stuff in the way it appears it was messed with and that is a very sophisticated hiejjacker and very weird and my theory is preposterous. we have to look at the kind of theories that just are very strange because the case itself is very strange. richard quest, to you, looking at this one year in all of these theories that have been floated, what do you make of them and if they have helped in any way or if they ve been painful for the families? i think the moment i mean i m pleased to say that at least jeff does agree that the an mar sat datein the results show the plane did transmit the seven handshake handshakes and the extrapolation of that puts it in the south indian ocean at the moment. it is just going to be a punishingly slow process to find it. if that inmarsat data is right, and i think you and i can probably find common ground here, if it s wrong and if for some reason they ve gotten that around their neck then you ll never find it. they ve got no idea. they have absolutely no idea where this plane is and frankly, 600 pages of documents released today give us not a shred of evidence of where it is. that s what is so disappointing. richard, les, jeff stand by and we ll take a quick break. more on flight 370 when we return. hey pal? you ready? can you pick me up at 6:30? ah. 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(vo) the longest-lasting midsize sedan in its class. the twenty-fifteen subaru legacy. it s not just a sedan. it s a subaru. ah! come on! let s hide in the attic. no. in the basement. why can t we just get in the running car? are you crazy? let s hide behind the chainsaws. smart. yeah. ok. if you re in a horror movie, you make poor decisions. it s what you do. this was a good idea. shhhh. be quiet. i m being quiet. you re breathing on me! if you want to save fifteen percent or more on car insurance you switch to geico. it s what you do. head for the cemetery! it is without question one of the greatest aviation mysteries of all time. the disappearance of flight mh370. back with me to discuss cnn aviation specialist richard quest and also with me in new york author and pilot jeff weiss. let me begin with you, we were just talking about this. jeff has penned this ebook arguing this plane may be intact and may be in kazakhstan. you take issue with that saying where is the motive? oh absolutely. look jeff may be right and i m going to keep an open mind on that but i m or a partial open mind or a little open mind and i ll have a scintilla of openness to jeff s theory if i may, jeff but there is no motive and let s face it we went through all of the pilots motive suicide, marriage breakup, all of which the report today says is not true. so until we are prepared to sort of suggest that some putin-esque conspiracy took place on an aircraft you do have to legitimately say, jeff what was the moatisttivemotive? and answer that question and this huge 600-page report came out from the malaysian authorities today. does that lend any credence or does that oppose your argument? okay. so two questions. motive first, there is no i mean ooh very hard to discern a motive and that s a criticism you can apply to any theory is this was intentionally done by someone and the leading theory seems to be pilot suicide. there are problems with that theory too. there s no good clear, obvious theory that makes a lot of sense that doesn t have any holes and so that sa i a problem. it s not the theory doesn t start with motive and the motive falls out of the back that the mathematics take you to kazakhstan. no jeff. richard wants to jump in. you can t have your argument both way, jeff. you were the one who constantly has been looking for motive from the beginning. what was the reason? why did they do it? but now motive becomes irrelevant to your theory because it won t fit into your theory. is that fair? well no look. there s a bunch of potential if you say it s intentional doesn t it need a motive? no. if you find a guy standing over a dead body with a smoking gun you don t say what s the motive? you say did he shoot the person? you say was there motive or was this someone who was insane or one or the other? no. you re both missing the point here? we re both missing the point, yes, richard! you re both missing the point. oh come on you wouldn t have had time following crime, jeff. following crime here and the sanctions and all of that you would not have had i ve read your theory you would not have had time to throw this together with the complexity involved to have actually done this if you are pro-putin, anti-western thing. you are both missing the point here. this was a highly complex event. it can t just be dismissed into the somebody did it without motive. if you re right, jeff if you re right nobody goes into the bay and reprograms the bfo, lands in kazakhstan and does it all because they do it on the whim of a thursday. richard, i have to ask you this before i let you go. can you give us the main important headline that you took away from this report out from the malaysian authorities today one year later? yes. the really sears point is the shambles of air traffic control that took place that night and the hours that went by before anybody really raised a distress flag add it to which the battery may or may not have been expired on the underwater locator beacon but the air traffic control, that s what we need to be concerned about tonight and not whether the plane is in kazakhstan. jeff weiss, richard quest, back in a moment. mouths are watering, and stomachs are growling. or is that just me? it s lobsterfest. .red lobster s largest variety of lobster dishes all year. double up with dueling lobster tails. or make lobster lover s dream a delicious reality. but hurry this won t last long. the real question that needs to be asked is what is it that we can do that is impactful? what the cloud enables is computing to empower cancer researchers. it used to take two weeks to sequence and analyze a genome; with the microsoft cloud we can analyze 100 per day. whatever i can do to help compute a cure for cancer, that s what i d like to do. i am totally blind. and sometimes i struggle to sleep at night, and stay awake during the day. this is called non-24. learn more by calling 844-824-2424. or visit your24info.com. nbc news struggling to regain its footing after a series of missteps and behind the scenes drama. its latest troubles as you know have centered around the network s top anchor brian williams but there is a lot more to this story. brian stelter reveals some of the surprising troubles on his program reliable sources . there is breaking news about the turmoil inside nbc news. this addition of new york magazine outside tomorrow has shocking stories about what led up to brian williams suspension and we have gabriel sherman s story. sherman reports that many nbc journalist his been frustrated with williams for years before the embellishment accusations. in fact they d been frustrated that williams had gained so much power internally and sherman paints a picture of a news division in disarray and with the today show on friday with nbc well aware that sherman s story was about to come out, burke moved has news chairman out and moved andy lack in. every single person in the tv news business does. he was with nbc during when katie couric and matt lauer became stars and when they made meet the press a sunday morning staple and now he s back to clean up the news division and has to figure out what to do with brian williams. he joins me on set for his first interview about the news story. number one most importantly, you re saying that brian williams is not the news division s only problem. this is about the today show and others as well. the brian williams scandal pulled the lid off of a cauldron of messes that have been going on at nbc news. which is why we see andy lack which come in. you can understand the brian williams crisis in the news division that has been reeling in the last year. it is unclear if he ll be allowed that the head of nbc has not made up his mind. truly has not made up his mind and the internal frustration with brian. he got so much power that there was no checks and balances which is how a discredited story like his iraq anecdote got on the air and where were his executive producers? where are the people fact checking brian williams? they were not there. he doesn t have a lot of fans internally right now. i heard many stories and one example is that he suppressed difficult reporting and investigative reporter michael isikoff was doing on the obama white house s drone program. he got an exclusive look about the justice department s memo about how the justification of killing american citizens with drones and brian williams did not want that on nightly news and he did not want a tough lisa meyers investigative segment on obamacare. you have the biggest platform at the network for news and you don t want our tough reporting and that will be a tough bridge for brian williams to cross to come back and not only did i get the story wrong and now i ll roll up my sleeves and welcome the tough reporting on to the show. i just spoke with someone there and they ll let it speak for itself and i did not see an article that might be wrong. the first is about tom brokaw and let s put on the screen part of what you wrote about tom brokaw brokaw. around the time chuck todd took over as moderator meet the press, at least your ghost is dead meaning tim russert and mine is still walking the building meaning tom brokaw. it s a very cold situation. how could brian williams get himself into this mess and the story i heard over and over again is he tried to live up to the brokaw s legacy. tom brokaw is an icon in the tv news business and brian williams followed him. so he always felt this deficiency that brokaw traveled the world and was a reporter and trafrled washington and trafrled the fall of the berlin wall and williams tried to inflate himself into brokaw s shoes and he told people that brokaw was frosty to him and that is one of the events that led to where we are today. this week we asked brokaw for comment and he declined. david letterman, the thing that got me most surprised is that williams pitched les moonves about succeeding david letterman. you attribute this to a high-level source and moonves wasn t interested and cbs declined to comment. he was choosing news or comedy? yes. the trouble he got into was once he decided to stay in the news business his, you know his heart was still in comedy. he loves late night. he was on letterman last year where he made a 2013 where he made some of those comments. right. there he is there. there he is and he re-signs his contract with nbc and he still wants to be in the comedy world and you can t be an entertainer or journalist. one, a journalist has to be willing to anger people. entertainers want to be liked. they re fundamentally two dint roles. last thing i want to say, there is still an opening at the daily show when jon stewart leaves. good to see you. thank you for that. you can watch brian on reliable sources every sunday at 8:00 a.m. pacific right here on cnn. coming up next cnn s special series finding jesus and this looks at john the baptist and it is fascinating and the creator joins me next. an unprecedented cnn event. he didn t vanish without leaving a trace. for the first time in history we are able to place these relics. and grasp at things that changed the world. this is really the moment of truth. this is the story of jesus. the rock upon which the church is built. an icon of skients i think obsession and it defined an archaeological piece. what do we really have here? why did judas betray jesus? somebody chose to write this. is this the burial shroud of jesus? what are the clues he left behind? faith, fact, forgery. finding jesus tonight at 9:00 on cnn. did someone say burn? try alka seltzer reliefchews. they work just as fast and are proven to taste better than tums smoothies assorted fruit. mmm. amazing. yeah, i get that a lot. alka seltzer heartburn reliefchews. enjoy the relief. meet the world s newest energy superpower. surprised? in fact, america is now the world s number one natural gas producer. and we could soon become number one in oil. because hydraulic fracturing technology is safely recovering lots more oil and natural gas. supporting millions of new jobs. billions in tax revenue. and a new century of american energy security. the new energy superpower? it s red, white and blue. log on to learn more. my tempur-pedic made me fall in love with mornings again. i love how it conforms to my body. with tempur-pedic the whole bed is comfortable. it s the best thing we ever did for ourselves. it s helping to keep us young. (vo) visit your local retailer and feel the tempur-pedic difference for yourself. he was a prophet and a preacher his message so powerful his name is revered centuries later, but who was the real john the baptist? it is the question explored in cnn s new series finding jesus. here is a clip from tonight s episode. i think the baptism of jesus by john is a crucial part of the story. it tells us if nothing else that jesus absolutely endorsed what john was doing. i myself are baptizing with water for this reason and he might be revealed with israel. that he embraced god s message that people did need to repent and receive forgiveness for their sins. and just as he was coming up out of the water he saw the heavens torn apart and the spirit descending like a dove on him and a voice came from heaven. you are my son, the beloved. with you i am well pleased. it s at that moment that something profound changes in jesus and now he feels this vocation to go spread his own blessage. this is the beginning of jesus ministry. joining me now, david gibson and co-author and creator of the series finding jesus, faith, fact forgery. congratulations, by the way, it had a lot of viewers on the premiere episode. there is a real appetite for this. what s been the reaction? it s been overwhelming popular and there are believers and non-believers and not just those antagonistic to christianity and those who don t have education in the faith. they want to know who jesus was. is this the guy who changed history? so i watched this episode and it s very much sort of literally drilling into bone. you are literally drilling into one bone that is believed to be a finger bone of john the baptist. there are so many relics and we focus in this series and in this chapter in particular the bones of john the baptist in part because there are so many of them throughout the world, throughout europe. there was a joke even in the middle ages that john the baptist must have had six heads and 12 hands. because there were so many. and this trade in relics and it was a corrupt trade. that s one of the fingers that was just shown. and there are so many and the astonishing thing is can any of these be real? can they be? well i think so. you ll be surprised at what you find but they found some in recent in recent years that we looked at that you know people thought they must be you know more recent maybe a few centuries old drilled into them found dna that showed they were from a man living in the middle east. right. and the radio carbon testing showed it was 2,000 years ago. and the hard thing to prove or to jump is the time era, but what about same person? with all of these things like last week s episode on the shroud of turin, even if it s 2,000 years old and even though it s an image on the shroud of a man who was crucified there is always going to be a leap of faith that you have to make. we can take you right up to the edge there, but you know in the end if you want to believe that s an image of jesus and if you want to believe this is a relic of john the baptist. this is a series that marries science and belief. faith in something that is that is not tangible and faith in signs that it can proof that that belief. for you, personally was it hard to marry the two? no. because i m personally catholic and we as christians believe in faith and reason. these are two things that go together and i think we so often see on the thing i love about the show and the book and this whole endeavor is we see skyness and religion at odds and they attack the critics and the believers. this is a rare patch of common ground that you have to come together and say okay let s do this research and let s explore and deepen our knowledge. if you re a believer i think it will deepen your faith and if you re a skeptic then you can at least come at this with a certain respect and a certain attitude of learning. did you face have you faced critics who look at this and say this is not what needs to be done? yeah. you get you know you get fundamentalist soss istists on both sides and we shouldn t be looking at the context and the historical jesus and just go by what s on the page and then the fundamentalists on the skeptical side and on the atheist side who say why are you even discussing this? some even ascribe to this theory that jesus was a myth. that he was made up by the first-century jews. can you give me a speak peek. tonight s episode is john the baptist. what else really surprised you in the series as we look to the episodes in the weeks ahead? well i think, a lot of what we re doing here is kind of debunking the debunkers. you see a lot of this stuff that pops up once in a while, the gospel of jesus wife that jesus was married and he was married to mary mag dalen, they say. is that really the truth? we go back and look at these things and we poke holes in what needs to be examined more closely, but all of them i think are windows into the gospels and the jesus of history. so you know, not everything is a forgery, but some things are interesting fact as well. have you heard anything from the catholic church? they love it. we have a catholic priest farther jim martin is one of our experts. faith and reason we have a lot of people who are both believers and the top-notch scholars. if anything it is just fascinating because it s really a history lesson each and every one. it is. absolutely. congratulations. i look forward to it tonight. cnn special series finding jesus, faith, fact forgery 9:00 eastern here on cnn. you won t want to miss that. coming up in the next hour the miracle baby really a miracle, how this young baby survived hours alone in a car submerged in a river. we re back after this. in new york state, we re reinventing how we do business so businesses can reinvent the world. from pharmaceuticals to 3d prototyping, biotech to clean energy. whether your business is moving, expanding or just getting started. only new york offers you zero taxes for 10 years with startup ny business incubators that partner companies with universities, and venture capital funding for high growth industries. see how new york can grow your business and create jobs. visit ny.gov/business normally people wear pants. yeah that s why i m hiding captain obvious. not very well. i found you immediately. you know what else is easy to find? a new hotel with the hotels.com app. i don t need a new hotel room, i just need to get back into this one. gary? it s wednesday gary! i know that janet! hotels.com is more helpful than janet. in the places where isis rules, the treatment of gay men and women is beyond cruel. the terrorist group has released new images meant to shock and of course to terrorize. we are including them in this report because we think it s important to show you how isis carries out its twisted form of justice. the names of the men in this piece have been changed. here s cnn s senior international correspondent arwa damon. reporter: these stills purport a man being thrown from the building. according to the last caption, he was stoned to death. his alleged crime, being gay. these images were posted by isis in the strong hold of raqqa. the series as well from january show an older man seated in a chair and then tumbling to the ground. also in january, these from isis in mosul. two men murdered in the same manner. in all the photographs dozens of people are seen watching the killings seemingly unfazed. that makes the atrocious act even more nauseating. the facial expressions are really scary because they re not scared of what s going on. they may be a little bit excited or happy to get rid of homosexuals in the city. reporter: syria was never a nation that accepted its lesbian, gay, bisexual and trans community. the country s laws criminalize homosexual acts punishable by up to three years in prison. since the revolution turned war, life for syria s lgbt community has become even more dire. it was not isis that forced noor to leave syria, well before isis emerged as a significant force. in 2012 noor saw this video. this was the only frame that is not too gruesome to show. the video depicts two men being beheaded. they re accused of being spies, but then towards the end of the clip a voice references a verse from the koran and noor says when he heard that it became one of the main reasons why he decided to leave. according to the posting the video was filmed in noor s home province. there is a very specific verse that says only the sin of homosexuality would shake the throne of god. so whenever we hear this on video or audio we know exactly that this meant for gay people. it was the moment of clarity, a moment of understanding that this this place is not safe anymore. reporter: sami and his partner consider themselves already married. they fled after sami s family found out they were together and a car tried to run them over. two hours later, sami s phone rang. there was a man that was first said this time you could make it and you survived but the next time you will not. in istanbul the couple lives in shared housing with other syrian men. when the isis photos emerged one of their syrian housemates made a sickening comment. he made the very absurd joke about he was so so amused and he had so much fun watching homosexual and he say now gay men can fly. fear of persecution continues to haunt them here. arwa damon, cnn, istanbul. fascinating, troubling report from arwa. thank you for that. coming up a police standoff in chechnya ends with a high-profile murder suspect blowing himself up. the details next. and an early morning mode. and a partly sunny mode. and an outside.to clear inside mode. transitions ® signature ™ adaptive lenses. .now have chromea7 ™ technology. .making them more responsive than ever to changing light. so life can look more vivid & vibrant. why settle for a lens with just one mode? experience life well lit ®. speak with your eyecare professional to. .upgrade your lenses to transitions ® signature ™ . captions by vitac www.vitac.com you re in the cnn newsroom. i m poppy harlow. the hunted for perpetrators in what some are saying is a political killing is ongoing. five suspects have been detained in the shooting death of putin critic boris nemtsov, one man who russian authorities tried to arrest blew himself up and thatta cording to russian state. our matthew chance is in moscow this evening. police have named the suspect who killed himself as beslan shavanov a 30-year-old man from the chechen capital grozny according to state television. the building in which he d been hiding was surrounded and there was a fire fight with the police. when he detonated a hand grenade that killed him. meanwhile, here in moscow investigators say they have now at least five suspects under arrest in connection with the killing of boris nemtsov, one of the five a chechen plan named zaur dadayev has confessed to the killing and the plot thicken, as well because the pro-kremlin leader of chechnya has now issued a statement essentially praising dadayev saying that he was a russian patriot, but also a muslim who was angered by

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launch a pre-emptive nuclear strike against the united states. it is the latest escalation in the ongoing war of words. both the north and south have traded threats of military action in recent days. in a few hours, the united nations security council votes on new sanctions against north korea. the resolution is a response to p yongyang s third nuclear test in february. a show of solidarity in p yongyang just hours after the vote at the united nations. tens of thousands of north koreans gathered in the capital to protest against the sanctions. top officials told the crowds that north korea was ready to act. as long as the u.s. imperialists are turning upon us with nuclear weapons, we will also make a counterattack with diversified, many to rise, and precision nuclear weapons. p yongyang has also balked at joint military exercises between south korea and the united states. about 10,000 u.s. soldiers are taking part in the drills. north korea accused the countries of preparing an attack. in response, p yongyang threatens to cancel the p yongyang armistice ending the korean war, and it said it would retaliate with a more powerful and precise attack. tensions on the korean peninsula have spiked in recent weeks. the north korean leader has dashed hopes of reconciliation, resorting instead to threats and provocations. in december, p yongyang launched a long-range rocket, and last month, it staged another nuclear test. now, the united nations security council was expected to put its foot down. even p yongyang s closest ally, china, is on board. we are now joined in the studio. is this political brinkmanship by north korea, or do we need to take the threats seriously? we have to differentiate between a technical point of view. it has developed nuclear warheads, but only to a limited degree and has a limited ballistic missile capability, which is not capable to reach the continental united states. politically, there are increase tensions and the korean peninsula, which have risen of the past few months. why the threat? is it not make the country look ridiculous if it does not have the capability? it illustrates the isolation of the communist leadership in north korea. nuclear weapons are more or less political weapons used to put political pressure on other policy. in this case, south korea, the united states, and even china, as a member of the united nations security council. china is supporting this in the united nations. how significant is that? china is one of the biggest losers in the last couple of months. we are operating under the assumption that china can influence north korea. north korea has become a liability for chinese foreign security policy in the region. you mentioned before the isolation of north korea. does this make the nation feel cornered and under pressure to take some sort of action? strange as it may sound, i think it is more a sign of weakness than strength, and it illustrates how isolated the leadership is and how much it has to rest on the power of the military class in north korea. thank you very much for that analysis. frantic diplomatic efforts are under way to secure the efforts of 21 united nations peacekeepers taken hostage by a syrian rebel group. they are being held in golan heights where there were put on a mission to monitor the syrian border area. they have been ordered to treat them as enemy prisoners. the rebels purportedly posted this video on the internet at the kidnapping the united nations troops. the rebel group calls itself the martyrs of the armored brigade, and they accuse the peacekeepers of working with the syrian government. they say that is the only reason the government has been able to station troops near the golan heights. we are holding the united nations disengagement observer force until a shock assad withdraws from the skirts of the village. the village has been the scene of heavy fighting between rebels and government troops in recent days. it is close to the cease-fire line between israel and syria. israel has occupied the golan heights since 1967, a move condemned by the united nations. the peacekeeping mission has been in place since the 1970 s. the security council has condemned the kidnapping. family members of the security council demanded the unconditional and immediate release of all the detained united nations peacekeepers and called upon all parties to cooperate in good faith to ensure security of its personnel. the mission has dispatched a team to diffuse the matter and prevent the conflict from widening. our correspondent is following that story and joins us now from jerusalem. could the conflict widened? how worried are these developments for israel? bamut is real is certainly very closely watching these events right now, but there has been a certain reluctance in commenting on the situation, but the israeli government has made clear that they will not accept any spillover of violence on to their side of the cease-fire line of the occupied golan heights. i think what appeals to us is the smaller as they call islamist groups affiliated with al qaeda or other terrorist groups, which use the ongoing chaos and tried to infiltrate onto their territory to get hold that is the discussion in israel because it could mean that a new front for israel is open in a region that used to be rather quiet over the past decade. are questions being asked about if this hostage-taking, could undermine the opposition s credibility? it shows the difficulty in dealing with all the different groups that are right now operating in syria. we understand the mission is in contact with this particular rebel group in order to secure the release of the peacekeepers, but it is not clear if the leaders of the syrian opposition have enough influence over these groups and if they can actually mediate over the question about the demands of these rebels because it is difficult to fulfill them as a mutual mission. thank you very much for that update. back to europe now, and italy s former prime minister, silvio berlusconi, has been handed a 1-year jail sentence. that does not mean he is heading behind bars. that s right. a court found berlusconi guilty of publishing leaked transcript of a police wiretap in a newspaper that he owns. berlusconi can appeal the conviction. he faces two more court hearings this month for tax fraud and for sex with an underage prostitutes. in venezuela, thousands of mourners turned out to pay their respects for the late president, hugo chavez. his body now lies in state at the military academy in caracas. he died after a two-year battle with cancer. under the constitution, venezuela must now hold an election within 30 days. his death has sparked an outpouring of grief and sorrow among his supporters. venezuelans saying a final farewell to their former leader. they filed past the casket quickly to make way for the tens of thousands still waiting outside. many are still taken aback by the news. if i did not see it, i would not believe it because i could not believe such a strong, courageous man had passed away, but it is so. i feel bad because he was loved. my family and i really loved the president. if it were not for the president, we would not have a decent apartment. chavez was a key figure in latin american politics. fellow leaders from across the region have come to caracas to join in the morning mourning. chavez s funeral will take place on friday. the country must hold an election within 30 days. polls suggest the vice president will win, yet the opposition already questions the fairness of the vote. the anniversary of the fukushima disaster is approaching. hundreds of thousands of displaced people in japan are still living in temporary housing. there are also concerns about the long-term impact of the catastrophe. particularly about the consequences for children. what will happen to children living in the shadow of the fukushima nuclear plant? experts are not sure. experts say any increased cancer rate would be too small to detect, but others say it still too early to draw conclusions. in the case of chernobyl, thyroid cancer started to appear four or five years later. it does not show up straightaway. long term, even more than 25 years on, there are still cases of thyroid cancer appearing in chernobyl. the group international physicians for the prevention of nuclear war has conducted their own survey, and they fear many more children could be affected. we would predict that 25% of the 55,000 children, are around 14,000 of the children that we examined, could develop thyroid cancer during the next eight to 10 years. the physicians group also expects cancer rates throughout japan to increase markedly. but the united nations-backed study disagrees. however, experts did agree further opposition further investigation will be needed for years to come. germans could be facing higher energy bills. since 2011, industrial power users in germany have saved hundreds of millions of euros a year. because have been passed on to german consumers until now. the european commission is also looking into if the government local amounts to a hidden subsidy of german furloughs. reports on a gang shootings and riots have received pulitzer prizes, but this photographer says this is the most important work she has ever done. the exhibition women and war is going on display in berlin. this woman lost three sons. setsuko s body was badly burned in the hiroshima bombing. for the past 20 years, melissa roth has traveled the world, documented how war changes the lives of women. she arrives when the fighting is over and most other journalists have moved on. there s no blood and no guns just a silent record of suffering. i see these women as survivors. i do not see any of them as victims, but they have to live their entire lives and future lives of their children and grandchildren with the backdrop of war. some more active in war themselves. martina anderson was a convicted ira bomber. now she is working for peace. all the women are named. marissa knows each one s story, but it is only now that she has begun to process the pain. it just hit me like a ton of bricks. i thought i was having a heart attack one day, and i realized it was all this emotion. it was like backing up, i almost could not breathe. finally, i ve been crying. widow, raped, scarred by war, and yet, determined not to give up. she says all these women are heroes. at the end of the exhibition, she serves shows laughter and young women, the next generation hoping for a better future. you are watching the journal on dw. stay with us. welcome back. 26 countries are part of the reset it to be set free zone in europe. bulgaria is also key to be part of it. the interior ministry in brussels are expected to defer a decision until later this year. both countries are said to of met most technical requirements required by the eu. but some members including germany strongly oppose the accession just yet. they fled poverty in the hope of a better life, but germany s interior minister fears too many would follow if rumanians and bulgarians were granted passport free travel in europe. it is those doubts from berlin that led to the postponement of a vote on admitting the two countries. there are still shortcomings in some areas. especially in the way the judiciary works. that means we are unable to say, remove the border checks. let me be quite clear the time has not yet come. romania and bulgaria have been eu member since 2007, but because of opposition from germany and others, the issue of membership is off the agenda until the end of the year. the countries reject the criticism and say they have made progress in the fight against corruption and organized crime. we want an agreement in the future that allows bulgaria and romania to join the shannon s own. we have fulfilled all the criteria for membership two years ago. europe without borders for some. others, that is the message from brussels, will just have to wait. coming of, a new look for a very old attraction in san francisco. first, a roundup of other news making the headlines. the party of a leading candidate in kenya s presidential election has called for a vote counting to be stopped because of what he says are irregularities. the running mate of the prime minister has told a news conference that he has evidence some results have been doctored. a russian dancer accused of masterminding an acid attack on the artistic director of the bolshoi ballet has admitted to giving the go-ahead for the assault, but he denies ordering anyone to throw acid, saying he had agreed to have him beaten up. a powerful earthquake has hit taiwan. the 5.6 magnitude quake struck near sydney in the east, causing buildings in the capital to sway, though no reports of damage or casualties. a plane crashed in northern peru has killed all nine passengers and crew. the plane hit power lines in bad weather on its approach to land a. the plane was carrying workers for a gold mining company. business news now, and the eurozone s recession is likely to worsen before it gets any better. that is according to the latest forecast from the european central bank. the ecb chief says the bank will revise its expectations down words for the eurozone economy. expecting a contraction of 0.5% this year, but he said a gradual recovery would begin later this year. draghi also announced that the ecb was keeping interest rates unchanged at a record low of 0.75%. reaction now from our correspondent in frankfurt. i do not like the looks of digraph in the background. yes. i do not like it either. it looks more dramatic, though, that it is. the dax plunged around 30 points a couple of minutes ago. this drop had to do with statements of mario draghi at that press conference. he keeps holding here in frankfurt. he said something about the recapitalization of the banks. he said that it would be a good idea to include creditors of the bank s when it comes to recapitalization and for people on the markets, this means cyprus. this means that after euro finance ministers have decided on helping cyprus and its banks, this does not mean that the private creditors and owners of these banks are at it again with their money. they might have to take part in that recapitalization. that is not something that is pleasing people here. in terms of monetary policy, druggy did not have many new things to say. big corporations in germany out with results. any trends emerging? yes, there is one trend. companies are doing a lot to please investors raising dividends, buying back shares, cost cutting. they are not saying exactly where their businesses are really heading, so the outlooks for their core businesses are not very convincing at the moment. still, investors are buying some of these shares. the dax pretty much unchanged. euro stoxx 50 index trading slightly higher. the euro is heading towards $1.31 again. an unfortunate story now there s been a dramatic twist into the investigation into an italian bank over alleged corruption and fraud. an official was discovered dead late on wednesday. the 14th century headquarters of the bank. david rossi s body was found here over night lying in a side street beneath his office. he was pronounced dead at the scene. prosecutors are investigating weather it was suicide. the italian media are already convinced it was. investigators have searched his home and office 10 days ago as part of a probe into the bank into allegations of fraud and corruption. the probe is focusing on how hundreds of millions of euros went missing in a complex acquisition deal and risky derivative trades dating to 2006. the bank won approval last month for a 3.9 billion euro bailout from the government to keep it afloat. the case has angered many ordinary italians as they struggle to make ends meet following successive government austerity measures. a change of pace now, and it is our chance to show off a lot of shiny new cars to you. the geneva international motor show has opened its doors to the public. some automakers fear it could take years, that has not stopped them from rolling out the blank. people are in two minds about this car. bmw calls it the grantor is no and is selling it as a new model. it is based on the three series, but the gt is noticeably bigger and more expensive. for years, the bavarian car maker has been developing successful niche models based on established lines, customized for the target market, they generate hefty profits. in the u.s., saudi arabia, and asia, bmw knows how to please customers with deep pockets. a lot of decisions during our strategy in 2007, we decided to build a new plant in china and double our u.s. capacity. we also decided on new products. if you want them in 2013, you have to make the decisions five or six years in advance, and that is what we did. the chinese car maker is trying again to establish itself in europe. the company hopes to avoid previous mistakes with the help of german executives this time around. they want to market an entirely new brand in china and europe using more traditional designs. european safety standards and asian labor costs. the government decided to develop some global manufacturers who can match the established players, and, of course, the most important market in europe is germany. you can say that if you make it here, you can make it anywhere. but the ceo of audi takes issue with the name of the car. he has filed a lawsuit because for years, it has meant off-road at audi. we put a lot of energy into establishing the brand. it is logical that we test that in a court of law. mercedes is not interested in fuel economy right now. it prefers money, and that is easiest to make with luxury and sports cars. instead of electric motors, it is marketing deceptive power packs like this with its 360- break hp kick. cars like that also boost the company s sometimes static image. an automobile remains an emotional product, and keeping these emotions running at high levels is a recipe for success. agree that 2013 will be a difficult year, but the optimists among them say the worst will be over by next year. runcie will go through on aggregate. finally, the golden gate bridge is without doubt san francisco s most famous landmark and draws thousands of tourists every year. but right now, another bridge in the city is stealing the limelight. for decades, the san francisco/oakland bay bridge has been derided for its drab design until this week. dusk falls over san francisco, and the city s bay bridge comes out of the shadows. it is being billed as the largest eliminated sculpture in the world theill illuminated sculpture. each of the thousands of lights program, allowing an almost infinite array of patterns. my goal is to create a communal experience. it becomes a digital campfire that people can gather around. his team for the lights to the suspension cables more than 150 meters up in the air. it was back in 1936 that the bridge was first opened to great acclaim, but just five months later, it lost the limelight with the opening of the more majestic golden gate bridge. now after more than 75 years being outshone by its clamorous neighbor, san francisco s other bridge is finally getting a chance to shine. the lights will now come on every night for the next two years. that is it for us. thank you very much for being with us. captioned by the national captioning institute www.ncicap.org

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remove poisonous gas from the area first. reuters also says at least 14 people are injured, and right now the cause of the explosion is not yet known. we will update you with any now information this hour as we get it of course. meantime, israeli prime minister benjamin netanyahu didn t pull any punches in his highly anticipated and controversial speech to the u.s. congress. he said the nuclear deal the u.s. and other countries are negotiating wouldn t stop iran from developing nuclear weapons you but actually may pave the way for it down the road. mr. netanyahu called iran the enemy. he blasted u.s. negotiators for promising to use sanctions and not doing more to stop iran s support for terrorist organizations. take a listen. now we re being told that the only alternative to this bad deal is war. that s just not true. the alternative to this bad deal is a much better deal. [ applause ] now the white house is firing back claiming there s nothing new in mr. netanyahu s speech. u.s. president barack obama challenged the israeli leader to come up with a viable alternative to the current approach. it was successful negotiating, then in fact this will be the best deal possible to prevent iran from obtaining a nuclear weapon. nothing else comes close. sanctions won t to it. even military action will not be as successful as the deal that we have put forward. [ applause ] for more on mr. netanyahu s speech and reaction in israel, let s bring in cnn correspondent orrin lieberman. he is live in jerusalem. good to see you. so the reaction has been mixed in the united states where prime minister netanyahu came to lobby against a sitting president. and then have that same president fire back all seem so publicly all seen so publicly. where does this leave the u.s.-israeli relationship, and can the damage be repaired? reporter: good morning rosemary. we ve seen the same reaction here in israel where you have about half the people here and half the politicians supporting netanyahu s decision and half of blasting it as a bad idea. and that has been what you mentioned perhaps the number-one criticism we ve heard in fallout from the speech that netanyahu has done damage not only in the relationship between the u.s. and israel but also the relationship between the prime minister s office here in jerusalem and the white house. netanyahu chose his words carefully. he started by praising president obama and the white house and tried to make this not a partisan speech. here s what he had to say in his speech. i know that my speech has been the subject of much controversy. i deeply regret that some perceive my being here as political. that was never my intention. reporter: of course with two weeks until the israeli elections, there was no way the speech of going to be viewed as nonpolitical because of just the nature of how close the elections are and how close they re expected to be in terms of polling. lie kud, his party likud, his party, has been polling neck in neck, a few votes ahead of the rival of labor that team up in the zionist camp. that s the biggest rival coming up in less than two weeks now. the very point that i wanted to ask you about. prime minister netanyahu the saying that politics was never his intention. his speech to congress comes just two weeks before that critical election in israel. so how was his speech how s it being received in israel? did it boost his chances perhaps of re-election, or did it go the other way and perhaps backfire? reporter: the real question is what happens to the undecided voters which was about 20% of israeli voters. those that like netanyahu before certainly like him even more now. they viewed it as a charismatic, critical speech. those who didn t like him before certainly aren t changing their minds after the speech. they view it as purely political. it s the undecided voters who may have looked at the speech and thought it could shift them one way or the other. we have to wait and see. the politicians here the main rival for prime mior&ier, wasted no time. came out in a speech after netanyahu s speech and blasted the prime minister s decision to speak in front of congress and the damage he has done to the relationship with israel and the u.s. here s what he had to say. translator: the painful truth is that after the applause netanyahu remained alone. israel remained isolate and negotiations with iran will continue without the involvement of israel. this speech therefore greatly undermined the relationship between israel and the united states. even hertzog s location for the speech of symbolic. he said this in hue brew at the beginning over and over again, that while netanyahu is in washington he was in a small town which is a small town outside of gaza. a town this knows very well what it s like to live in constant worry. that in and of itself was a political move. that choice of where to give the speech to say here is where i am in the middle of where we worry about security the most in israel. so this speech perhaps it wasn t netanyahu s intention to make it political, but it s certainly become political now. indeed. a lot of politics and fallout. orrin lieberman reporting live from jerusalem, many thanks to you. a split opinion and reaction in israel. but over in iran you d be hard-pressed to find anyone who agreed with the israeli prime minister. tehran insists the nuclear program is peaceful, and the country has a right to develop it. here s fred pleitgen reporting from iran s capital. reporter: it s not a surprise that benjamin netanyahu s speech didn t get much live airplay in tehran. many here certainly followed what israel s prime minister had to say, and the vast majority didn t like it. america is trying to reach something with iran you know agreement. but netanyahu, israel is trying to make it like stop dog it they re banning us. reporter: nuclear negotiationsnegotiation s and the looming deadline for a framework agreement are among the biggest topics in iran these days. while most are cautiously optimistic, say they don t believe a deal will come through. are you confident that there will be an agreement? yes. reporter: why? because iran exists to finish this problem. also the america exists to finish this problem during the president obama. they made us lose hope in everything. i don t think so. i don t have belief in anything. reporter: tre mains unclear how much it remains unclear how much of its atomic capabilities iran is willing to give up in exchange for sanctions regular. most iranians believe their country has a right to develop a nuclear program, especially a peaceful one. nuclear technology is a thing of national pride for many here. if you talk to people, they ll tell you they badly want the sanctions to be lift so they can get direct investment into this country and have a chance for economic development. the southwest worried that iran could work to make a bomb if its uranium enrichment isn t effectively controlled. the iaea has said they don t have enough information to prove that the program is for peaceful purposes. some fear the fear is overblown. in a poll carried out in iran a month ago, 70% of iranians believe that the nuclear program is completely peaceful. and in addition to that, the fact that the religious authorities in iran have given fatwas against nuclear weapons adds to this argument. reporter: but fatwas will do tloitd ease the skepticism in western countries. while many iranians hope an agreement will come together that will ease their economic pain. fred pleitgen, cnn, tehran. and we will have much more reaction from mr. netanyahu s sweep whiching my interview with a former member of the israel defense forces. and that is coming up in our next half-hour of cnn newsroom. don t miss it. now two australian may soon face a firing squad in indonesia. andrew chan and myuran sukumaran were sentenced to death for leading the so-called bali nine. a group accused of plotting to smuggle heroin from indonesia to australia. the two men have been transferred to an island where they are expected to be executed. stand ground from sky stan ground from sky news in sydney joins us with the latest. things don t look good. what options are left for the australians, and when might their execution take place? reporter: it s been a decade-long ideal for andrew chan and myuran sukumaran since they were first arrested and then vicand then convicted of being ring leaders in a heroin smuggling smuggling group. all appeals have been rejected. there s one final legal appeal outstanding, and the lawyers are saying they hope that there s a stay of execution while that plays out. indonesian authorities are saying they want to carry out the execution as soon as possible. the moment they were move under heavy security from the prison in bali to the execution island in the eyes of many the clock has started to tick. there they ll be health in solitary confinement until they ve received 72 hours notice of facing the firing squad. in australia, the australian government continue to appeal for mercy. the foreign minister directed directly appealing to indonesia s president widodo to a stay of execution. and the prime minister tony abbott saying there are millions of australians ahn now feel be sick in their stomach. we abhor drug crime but we abhor the death penalti. we not the australians deserve to be punished but don t deserve to be executed. now the families are on their way to the island. during that period they will be able to meet family member speak to legal representatives and also receive past older care speak to any pastoral care, speak to religious representatives. the indonesians saying they want these carried out as soon as possible. in the words of the legal team that are representing the pair while there is life, there is still some hope. errol errol, rosemary? it s upsetting to watch this unfoal. prime minister on, got has spoken out forcefully and done so almost on a daily basis. why has he taken on the wish such force? he seems to have placed himself at the forefront of force to save their lives. and at this moment it appears that that didn t make a difference. reporter: there s been a lot of momentum billioning here in australia. a lot of simple theme as the date has drawn nearer, as attention has focused more on the plight of the two men, the prime minister has stepped up and become more forceful and direct in his language. he s made a direct appeal to the indonesian president, as well. it has fallen on deaf ears. the president in indonesia, widodo,ness to take a hard line on drug crime. it is something that plays very much to the indonesian public. it s very popular, a very popular stance for him to take. also brings into question here the indonesia/australia relationship. the largest close neighbor. it s a relationship that s gone through so many trying times. just last year indonesia withdrew its ambassador from australia amidst salgz of australia spy allegations of australia spying on the family. the prime minister tony abbot saying regardless of how people may feel about the impending execution he warnings that anger must not impede and undermine what is a crucial relationship. all right. reporting from sydney as options continue to be him for these two australians approaching the death penalty there in indonesia. thanks. still to come on cnn newsroom, a federal probe finds widespread discrimination against african-americans in the u.s. city of ferguson, missouri. we explore the root of the tensions between police and the community there. plus, the feds raid dozens of apartments in california which neighbors say were filled with pregnant women. great rates for great rides. geico motorcycle see how much you could save. 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tourism in southern california. on tuesday they raided more than three dozen so-called maternity hotels where foreign women get ready to give birth. the alleged purpose is to have children born with american citizenship. officials say the businesses catered largely to women from china who paid up to $50,000 to give birth in the states. now we want to get to this damning report for the u.s. city of ferguson, missouri. a federal civil rights investigation has found a pattern of discrimination against african-americans boy the police and by the city s courts. as cnn s randi kaye respects tensions between the police and community have like deep roots. no just! no peace! reporter: in michael brown, the people of ferguson found their voice. what are we going to do to get justice? because you see the whole ferguson [ bleep ] the whole city in an uproar. reporter: still, in the weeks that followed brown s death, it became clear the anger here extended far beyond the shooting death of the unarmed teen. it had been brewing here for years. there was a broken trust between the government local police, and the community. reporter: thousands took to the streets as a nearly all-white ferguson police force tried to keep protests peaceful. though 67% of ferguson s population is black, there are just three black police officers in the city. three out of 53 officers. and their response tanks and teargas, riot gear and rubber bullets hardly bridged the racial divide in this community. this is not right! this is not right! we are trying to get unity, and this is what you all do? reporter: it only got worse from there. listen to what this officer says to protesters bring it. all you beep beep animals bring it. reporter: and there s more. ferguson police chief thomas jackson, who is white for days refused to release the name of the white police officer who shot and killed michael brown which only fuel more anger. we need for you to clean this up! if you are not part of the solution are you part of the problem! reporter: many found the police chief tone deaf. it s never been the intention of the ferguson police department or of any police department that i know of to intentionally target individuals because of race. if there is that happening, it s a crime, and it need to be addressed. reporter: it was never really an if. even before the michael brown shooting, missouri s attorney general found in 2013 that ferguson police were twice as likely to arrest african-americans during traffic stops as they were whites. that same report also found that african-americans were the target of 92% of searches and 86% of traffic stops. after the initial miscues in ferguson, captain ron johnson wlosh s black, was brought in to try to johnson who s black, was brought in to try to calm the protesters. our kids know they ll grow up in a better place and that their voice means something, no matter what your race is no matter what your age is. stop the killer cop! reporter: in a city where the police chief, mayor and five of the six city council members are white, promises like those tend to fall on deaf ears. randi kaye, cnn, new york. justice! we ll take a break now. still to come after repeated attempts, a landing at kathmandu s airport takes a path off the runway. details on the turkish airline s flight still to come. the thing we all dread, a difficult landing, a plane skidding off the runway this kathmandu. there were 224 people on board. thankfully officials say all of them evacuated safely. one passenger reported poor visibility. an airline spokesman said a small technical problem during landing send the plane into a grassy area. we re tracking developments and have the latest. of course we heard about this technical problem be. it appeared earlier when we talked last hour this the weather seemed to play a major role. have they changed their minds on that now? reporter: certainly low visibility seems to be the main reason here for the crash landing. it s been raining nonstop for the past two to three days. this is unusual at this time of year. this is a time when the skies are completely clear, a lot of trekkers and climbers from aboard come to nepal to try to go to everest and nepal having eight of ten highest mountains in the world. and this is the best time to come to nepal to see the mountains when the skies are completely clear. one official there said in the airport said this this plane actually circled kathmandu valley for about an hour and a half trying to land. one eyewitness, one passenger who was inside the plane we spoke to a while ago, said the plane tried to circled the kathmandu valley seven times. tried to land once, got close to the runway, and took off again. and then for about 45 minutes circled again the kathmandu valley and landed. that s when it crash-landed on to the runway skiddeded for 15 to 20 seconds according to the passenger and on to the grassy area which you re seeing in those pictures. and those, of course hitting nose, foushes hitting the ground. the front area seem to have collapsed. the evacuation slides are out, of course. all passengers have been evacuated safely. the airport now is shut for all international flights. rosemary? monitoring the situation there in kathmandu, nepal. many thanks to you. malaysia has formally declared the disappearance of mh370 an accident. and that infuriated family members of those on board because they had to hear about this from the media. yeah. and almost one year later, they say they are still being ignored by getting the government ignored by the government and malaysia airlines. we have the story. everything they do they seem insensitive about. we wonder who s who are they really who are they trying to help? themselves or us? translator: they are failing to tell you the truth. not only do we not get information of any substance, we don t get any response to our queries. reporter: at all? at all. reporter: one year after flight mh370 disappeared, the families of the missing say they re still being ignored by the malaysian authorities. sound like your mother would have been hugely proud of you to have this grace nathan s mother, anne daisy, office board. for almost a year she s kept silent. this announcement by malaysia s department of civil aviation on january 29 was the final straw. with the heaviest heart and deepest sorrow that on behalf of the government of malaysia, we officially declare malaysia airlines flight mh370 an accident. reporter: grace and other family members furious over how they had to find out about the announcement. we really don t care about how we feel, what we have to say. if they did, they would have asked how we felt about such an announcement being may. they would have talked to us first. none of that happened none of it. and for us to hear from the members of the media, first to receive a call saying can we come and record you when the declaration is made? and our response being, what declaration? we didn t know anything. reporter: the families dispute the declaration itself. this man whose son was one of 153 chinese nationals on board, rallied next of kin to fly to calla call to the city. the announcement has no legal pace basis he says, it s not effective. we want evidence. for sarah bejack, whose partner phillip was on 370, the facts have been impossible to come by. they still haven t produced the cargo manifest. they still haven t produced air traffic control records. they haven t given any rationale as to why they ve determined it to be an accident yet they have. reporter: asian authorities say they have not learned from what happened with the initial disappearance. if you look at the response to the international catastrophe, it s a shambles, absolute embarrassment to the country the way the leadership and the military responded to the situation. y understand why the world community accepted it. what about a year on have they learned their lessons? of course not. if anything they ve gotten worse. reporter: families say they will ton for access to information. they stayed in touch and plan their next moves on social media. do you feel that you are a lone voice or minority voice amongst the passengers family, or is this a majority view? i m sure i don t speak for every single person but i know whatever i m saying is definitely the consensus of a large majority of us. reporter: they draw strength from each other but their burden doesn t get lighter. we hope that they keep us informed. we not that s not a lot to ask for, to ask for transparency and to be treated in a humane manner. reporter: cnn, malaysia. now malaysian officials and malaysia airlines did not answer cnn s request for a response to what you heard there, how family of passengers say they are being treated. isis sparked fear and revulsion across the world with its violent videos. now another group is playing copy cat using some of the techniques to spread their twisted message. we will show you how that is next. and hups of parents are arrested for refusing to vaccinate their children against a deadly and preventable disease. it doesn t cover everything. only about 80% of your part b medical expenses. the rest is up to you. so consider an aarp medicare supplement insurance plan, insured by unitedhealthcare insurance company. like all standardized medicare supplement insurance plans they could save you in out-of-pocket medical costs. call today to request a free decision guide. with these types of plans, you ll be able to visit any doctor or hospital that accepts medicare patients. plus, there are no networks, and virtually no referrals needed. join the millions who have already enrolled in the only medicare supplement insurance plans endorsed by aarp. and provided by unitedhealthcare insurance company, which has over 30 years of experience behind it. with all the good years ahead, look for the experience and commitment to go the distance with you. call now to request your free decision guide. reliability, is now an american thing. introducing the all new chrysler 200 america s import. and a warm welcome back to everyone. you are watching cnn newsroom. i m rosemary church. i m errol barnett. our headlines begin with a developing story out of eastern ukraine. we not that at least 30 may have been killed in a mine explosion according to the reuters news service. local officials say they re trying to remove poisonous gas before they get to the site of the explosion. that s why we should note this is preliminary information. reuters reports at least 14 other people have been injured. all 224 people on board a turkish airlines flight were able to evacuate safely after the plane skidded off the runway in kathmandu. there was heavy rain at the time of the landing a passenger reported the plane attempted to land twice before but poor visible prevented it. israel s prime minister says negotiations underway with iran could pave the way for a nuclear nightmare. benjamin netanyahu addressed the u.s. congress tuesday saying a deal in the work would all but guarantee iran develops nuclear weapons. for over a year, we ve been told that no deal is better than a bad deal. well this say bad deal. it s a very bad deal. we re better off without it. and for more perspective on mr. netanyahu s speech and its impact we re joined by the director of the american jewish committee in israel and a former spokeswoman for the israel defense forces. thank you very much for talking with us. israel s opposition leader, isaac herzog, says every israel opposes a nuclear iran. he says prime minister netanyahu unnecessarily sabotaged israel s relations with the u.s. by deepening the rift with a strategic ally. is he right and of the speech worth the damage done to u.s./israeli relations? i don t believe so. i believe that the u.s. is israel s closest ally. just last summer where five million israelis had to seek shelter of thousands of rockets that were fired here by hamas from gaza, their lives were saved actually because of the help from the u.s. from the iron dome batteries and the intercepttors that were funded by the u.s. so i don t believe that this kind of nitty-gritty politics can really affect a strong and deep pact between israel and the u.s. actually this began in the 60s, of course. and so israeli politicians on the right, they have attacked isaac herzog for his comments and said his views will not serve him well politically. what does it mean politically, and what impact is mr. netanyahu s speech likely to have on the march 17 elections do you think? well, it s not a secret that netanyahu s party, the likud, has weakened in the last couple of weeks. and therefore there is no question that the timing of this speech has to do with this current campaign. i do believe that looking at the mood of the israeli streets, the speech of addressed maybe to those 20% in the israeli population that still did not decide who to vote for. in this aspect they do have some chance to vote for the likud following the speech so it was positive. herzog on the other hand tried to contradict the speech by speaking publicly 20 minutes after netanyahu finished his speech near the gaza border, trying to pretend as if he is a security expert. this i m afraid did not bring herring on any suspense. a lot of olympics breathe side. why did mr. netanyahu lobby so publicly against a sitting u.s. president and offer no alternative to the deal being worked out in regards to iran? what is his end game do you think? i think that netanyahu spoke out of an apocalyptic kind of feeling. he believes that he has to do everything in his power in order to save the people of israel. and you know what the end of the day, the speech is over. maybe the media will deal with it for another 24 48 hours. but the big question remains what will happen with iran next? what will happen next week? what will happen in march, 24 i think this is the critical issue. and most israelis in the streets and especially in two weeks when they will vote will go to the voting places and place their votes there. they re concerned with two things two primary things. the first one is security issues, especially security for israel. and the second would be economic welfare social issues. this is something of great concern here in israel. come march 17 we ll see if the speech in congress paid off for mr. netanyahu. thank you very much for joining us on cnn. pressure it. want appreciate it. want to get you the latest on the shadowing isis figure. his masked face and angry voice are all too familiar are from isis execution videos. now an advocacy group that works with convict religious extremists released a new clip. it s a 2009 phone recording of the man who would become known as jihadi john. he looked at me and he said muhammad, what do you think about 7 about 7/7? i said innocent people have been hurt. this is extremism. he said i said what happened is wrong. you know, what you want to say? if i make the last comeback i make it and i don t think i think what happen is wrong. it recording portrays a man frustrated by questions from law enforcement. the group says he felt houstoned by authorities but that may only be part of the story. when you re in an interrogation situation and are a radical you d be the stupidest radical alive to top to having extremist views with a law enforcement official. so he wanted to get out of the situation as fast as he can. some analysts say investigators targeted emwazi because they already knew he had links with terrorist groups. nigerian islamist group boko haram has taken note of the provocative messages released by isis. now they are beginning to mimic the violent isis videos. that s right. boko haram released a video showing the apparent beheading two of men similar to isis killings. we want to warn you some may find the upcoming report disturbing. diana magnay has the story. reporter: bodies executed one by one and then thrown into the river. militants doing wheelies in their tanks. and now this the apparent beheadings of two men by boko haram militants, posted on line. almost the mirror image of the beheadings isis has filmed and published on line since the summer. two distinct jihadi entities strikingly similar imagery. boko haram is an extremist group predates isis by several years. it s clearly been watching and copying the isis formula. since late last year upgrading the quality of its videos, adding the stamp of a production house and using the same islamic chance for soundtrack reporter: even down to the professed leader of boko haram assuming the role of teacher. the alcove setting, a mirror image of isis leader al baghdadi preaching in mosul. for boko haram, i think emulating islamic state is of a lot of benefit. obviously it gains the group prominence and places them on the same platform. as the islamic states. then we cannot discount the possibility that there are discernible linkages between the groups and that using islamic state s imagery and making references to the lord might be a preamble to a more established linkage between the two organizations. reporter: there s no clear evidence of any direct link yet. in its magazine dabiq, isis writes of groups including one in nigeria swearing allegiance but doesn t specify which. operational success is less easy to copy. and boko haram is capturing and seizing territory. it s not using the same governance tools as isis does. and it doesn t control the same kind of economic resources the oil wealth, that isis does. crucially so far, it doesn t have a trail of would-be foreign fires flocking its way. analysts say it may changedenting on how it s dealt with. if you see a more visible, more active international response from this, at that point, you could risk truly internationalizing boko haram which has to date actually been really more of a nigerian terrorist movement. reporter: for now, the u.s. and others are limiting their assistance to training and intelligence leaving the nigerian and neighboring power to take on the group militarily with hope this a regional force can succeed against boko haram where the nigerian army could not. diana magnay, cnn, london. a new film is on an online sensation in china. coming up, a closer look at the documentary on the country s air pollution and why it s just gone viral. gives you home security and control in a new and revolutionary way. introducing plug & protect from livewatch security, an easy to use wireless security system customized just for your home. control from any smartphone, tablet, or computer and monitored by professionals 24/7. go to livewatch.com to get plug & protect interactive security delivered to your door. arm or disarm your system from anywhere. lock or unlock your doors, turn your lights off or on even oversee your home with live video. with plug & protect your security system is configured, tested, and then 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home security and control you want for your family. try plug and protect in your home for a full 90 days. included is our hassle-free guarantee. go to livewatch.com. plug & protect is not available in stores so go to livewatch.com right now. that s livewatch.com. pakistan on a mission to eradicate polio. officials are locking up parent who refuse to get their children vaccinated. arresting more than 500 in just the past couple of days. now despite vaccination dpans, pakistan campaigns, pakistan lead all others in the number of new polio cases. you see this, in twouft, the country had 327 cases. the next closest country was nigeria with just 36. for more we re joined boy journalist michelle stock man. she is in islamabad today. and michelle lack of trust and suspicion surrounding vaccination campaigns is a real problem in many parts of pakistan. but why do police decide to arrest parents? this seems like a real dramatic step. reporter: it is a dramatic step. this is seen as a last-ditch effort to reach parents who have refused to let health care workers administer the polio vaccine to their children. first, what happens is that the workers go to the house if there s refusal, supervisors go. then if there s another refusal, respected members of the community will go to the house and try and convince the parents. these parents who have been arrested still refused after those continued efforts. really there s a lot of political pressure on nationally and internationally to address this issue to get the vaccine to the 2.7 million children in this province where these reaves were made that they receive it. and there s a real issue with how to get that done. there s rhetoric being spread that vaccines are a bigger evil than the controversial u.s.-led drone strikes. how can pakistani officials counter that kind of commentary? reporter: it is scary to have this threat of the taliban. and i m sure many parents feel that. and they perhaps feel there s eyes on them as the polio workers go to their home. and that s maybe why they refuse. public health officials have used many tactics. they try and get people in transit at bus stochs at train stops. when they re crossing to different cities, they try and get to the children that way. outside the eyes of people who might be watching. also they ve tried to recruit clerics who can discuss the vaccine and actually say it s a good thing. also popular politicians in the province like the imam he s led polio vaccine campaigns. so they re trying everything they can but it s hard to say what s going to convince one individual parent or the next. but officials really are trying these are, again, a last-ditch effort. yeah it s frightening when people agree with locking up parents because it s such an important issue. and of course if polio gets out, it continues to spread. michelle stockman live in islamabad on the story. thank you very much:now the debate over air pollution in china is heating up with a documentary that s gone viral. it s called under the dome and is produced by a well-known chinese journalist. she says she took on the subject because her daughter was born with a tumor. but critics say they re suspicious the video is a government public relations move. it s gotten over 100 million views since it went on line sudden. for more on the situation of solution, let s it turn again to our meteorologist pedram javaheri. it has been a constant problem for china. and it s difficult to see whether the government s doing very much about it. talk to us about the film. you know, it seems like coal is the culprit obviously. you go to 2013 360 million ton of coal were burneded in chen alone. more than every single country in the world combined. that tells you what s going on there. but just back last year 175 days in beijing in particular were considered unhealthy or hazardous. so do the math. that s almost every other day. dangerous air quality across portions of beijing. and it s expected that coal could exceed oil as well as the number-one energy in the world. coal and the factories the steal factories, as well, in homes the heating source for home. but let s show what s happening across portions of china. the setup certainly not good. when you have the most densely populated the most populated nation in the world in china the 500 million people that live north of the river, that s the area of concern. we know back in 1950 for a 30-year period the chinese government gave away free coal to people north of the river because that s climatologically where theest temperatures occurred across china in the winter months. studies have been done, and we know pollution levels north of that line some 55% higher in other portions of china. and all air pollution cutting life expectancy in this region by 5.5 years. so again you do the math not a good setup. we know the air equal index typically gets up to the hazardous category across this portion of the world. the good to moderate scale, that is very unusual to find. there it is this hour oddly enough. much of china is from shanghai toward hong kong sitting in the unhealthy scale as we speak. 20 times higher than what is considered holiday is what they routinely deal with across areas of china. so here it goes as far as the inversion. typically warmer air because it s less dense. gets to the top. the cooler, more den air at the surface traps the pollutants. that becomes the issue across here. guys we touch on how the official there have we touched on how the officials there have tried to put policies in effect. heavy our pollution of developed in 2013. a color-coded policy that says that schools have to be shut down if you have three consecutive days of unhealthy air and excavation on construction sites, they cannot continue. unfortunately it seems like they stretch the rules. so sometimes if business had to go on, business will go on with even polluted days. that s very unfortunate. everyone gotten used to wearing masks to protect themselves. thank you very much. it is the last day of prince william s trip to china. we will have an update on his final stops before he heads back home. discover our newest breakthrough and bask in the glow healthy skin hydration. see what everyone is raving about at neutrogena.com [ male announcer ] eligible for medicare? that s a good thing, but it doesn t cover everything. only about 80% of your part b medical expenses. the rest is up to you. so consider an aarp medicare supplement insurance plan, insured by unitedhealthcare insurance company. like all standardized medicare supplement insurance plans they pick up some of what medicare doesn t pay and could save you in out-of-pocket medical costs. call today to request a free decision guide to help you better understand what medicare is all about and which aarp medicare supplement plan works best for you. with these types of plans, you ll be able to visit any doctor or hospital that accepts medicare patients. 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you find the aarp medicare supplement plan that s right for you. there is nothing that can make me feel worse than what i feel right now. and for what i feel for the family. we are so sorry that this happened to them. an apology there from radio deejay mel gregg. back in 2012 after a royal prank went terribly wrong. now the station she works for could lose its license. sydney station today f.m. sparked outrage when gregg and fellow deejay crank called a london hospital where kate middleton of being treated for morning sickness. the nurse who took the call later killed herself. it was tragic. on wednesday, australia s high court upheld a ruling that the broadcaster had broken the law. now today f.m. may lose its license or be taken off the air temporarily. and now more on the couple that you see there. prince william is wrapping up his week-long asia tour with a topic close to his heart felt wildlife conservation. the prince visited an elephant sanctuary before going on to speak about the importance of protecting them in the wild. elephants are being slaughtered at an alarming rate to supply the illegal ivory trade. mac foster joins us live from london to talk about the prince s most recent activities in china. max, let s start with an overall feeling of how this trip has gone so far. it is being drawn to a close now. what s the sense? reporter: i ve been looking at the chinese media actually. this is the sort of test really. s to whether william could tread the diplomatic line between the u.k. and china and to promote the cause that s are closest to him. the cause that is closest to him is the protect of endangered species. the problem he s discovered while in africa on that is the demand for illegal wildlife parts largely comes from china. chinese medicine. so using parts of endangered animals in chinese medicines, a huge, huge problem. that fuels a lot of the poaching in africa. he wants to address that issue but doesn t want to offend his hosts in china. they don t like to be told what to do. you have images there a successful project in china. a sanctuary for rescued asian jen elephants. so the way he s handling this is by promoting what china s doing positively in the area of conservation rather than being too negative. you mention he s about to hold a speech. that speech will be his last moment in this tour really. there s lot of speculation that he will address this issue which say risk for him. but hopefully the chinese will understand that from his point of view. apparently this discussion did come up with a meeting with the president, as well. so he s taking it pretty seriously and taking risks there. considering the risk it is fascinating. you re speaking of a diplomatic balancing act the prince will need to do. and bringing attention to the wildlife issue, particularly interesting because of what you mentioned. the demand, what keeps poaching going on the african continent is that demand mostly in china and other parts of asia. what might we expect then from him during his speech his farewell speech before he departs? reporter: i think it s a long-term process to make chinese people who use these medicines think about what they re actually doing. he did actually hook up with yao ming the famous sportsman from china. the basketball player. had a very successful campaign in china. i think perhaps modeling it on that. this was around shark fin soup. basically telling people in china this actually it doesn t have healing qualities that you think it does. and democrat dropped massively. that was with the support of the chinese government. so i think prince william will try and reflect the success of that campaign in relation to ivory for example. so that s what he s trying to do. and he is quite a powerful cultural figure in china. so he hopes that just by changing thoughts and feelings around illegal wildlife parts that will have the impact that he s looking for. it might do it. absolutely. max foster, thank you very much. appreciate it. you have been watching cnn newsroom. thank you very much for being with us these past two hours. i m errol barnett. i m rosemary church. stay with us. early start is next for viewers in the united states. for those watching elsewhere cnn newsroom with max foster begins after the break. have a great day. reliability, is now an american thing. introducing the all new chrysler 200 america s import. the dire warning from israel s prime minister creating new controversy this morning. warning congress that iran will acquire a nuclear weapon if white house negotiations end with a deal. but will benjamin netanyahu s unprecedented stance backfire? we have team coverage in washington, iran and israel ahead. morning, everyone welcome to early start. i m john berman. and i m christine romans. it is wednesday, march 4th. it is 4:00 a.m. in the east. reaction developing across washington to israeli leader netanyahu s capitol hill speech where he blasted a nuclear deal with iran. the prime minister holding nothing back in an address to a joint session of congress that drew repeated repeated standing ovations. the speech also drawing

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Transcripts For CNNW CNN Newsroom With Carol Costello 20150309



providing some sort of logistical support. what s most interesting part of this group that s just been rounded up in the last few hours is that there is a policewoman among them and not only that she worked as a police intelligence center to the east of paris and it s not clear exactly how she was involved although she was reportedly the girlfriend of one of the other people who have been rounded up in the last few hours. he was thought to be a good friend of coulibaly. they are sweeping through this network of coulibaly trying to find out-tensive it was and if the policewoman was involved before the attacks, that could be quite extensive indeed. jim bittermann reporting live for us this morning. thank you. president obama sends a message to critics of the u.s. led talks with iran over the nuclear program. he says if tehran won t budge on its refusal to allow inspection inspections, the deal won t happen. this is what he said on cbs. if we cannot verify that they are not going to obtain a nuclear weapon that there s a breakout period so that even if they cheated, we would be able to have enough time to take action. if we don t have that kind of deal we re not going to take it. in the meantime 47 republican senators have sent an open letter to iran. in a heavy handed move to discourage iran from making a deal the lawmakers bristle at the prospect of being bypassed. we ll consider any agreement regarding your nuclear weapons program that is not approved by congress as nothing more than an executive agreement. the letter goes on to say, the next president could revoke such an executive agreement with the stroke of a pen and future congresses could modify the terms of the agreement at any time. we re joined now live from the white house with more. reporter: the strong words from president obama are coming at a key time. negotiators are getting close to a deal. president obama himself said that progress is being made but gaps do still exist, he says. the president knows he s facing a vocal and unhappy congress. they want to stay in these negotiations and are wary about a deal with iran that does not include them but does not go far enough. this message from president obama was a message to iran in these high level negotiations but also of course to congress itself saying that he will walk away from any deal that is not good enough. here s a little more of what president obama said to cbs. over the next month or so we re going to be able to determine whether or not their system is able to accept what would be an extraordinarily reasonable deal if in fact as they say they are only interested in peaceful nuclear programs. and if we have unprecedented transparency in that system if we are able to verify that they are not developing weapon systems, then there s a deal to be had. that s going to require them to accept the kind of verification and constraints on their program that so far at least they ve not been willing to say yes to. reporter: meanwhile, president obama says there is an urgency to get this done. of course he says the u.s. has been negotiating for over a year now and most importantly, that deadline is on march 24th to get a deal. earlier i mentioned this letter that was penned by republican lawmakers. what more can you tell us about that? reporter: this was such an interesting letter carol. really unprecedented. really giving iran almost a history lesson in how the u.s. and balance of power works here in washington. this was sent by a freshman senator from arkansas signed on by 46 other republicans. really the message to iran s leadership here is basically that they want more say and that they say that any deal would be nothing more than an executive agreement if it s not approved by congress. here s what tom cotton had to say on fox news this morning. many senate democrats have been strong on this issue and that we need to approve a nuclear deal with iran but the white house is putting a lot of pressure on to hold their fire. we know so far that susan rice the president s national security adviser, already conceded that iran will have a robust uranium enrichment capability. the terms make the deal unacceptable and dangerous to the united states and dangerous to the world. reporter: you saw tom cotton there mention the word that this deal would potentially be only ten years long. in that letter they really warned iranian leadership that if it was only ten years in duration the next president, carol, would be in place before that deal so that means potentially congress could make news with a new president. sunlen serfaty reporting live from the white house this morning. thank you. also unfolding, iranian officials are meeting with the united nations watchdog group that overseas nuclear perhaps. iaea sent fight members to meet with one of iran s top nuclear officials. iran says it previously allowed inspectors access to sites they wanted to investigate. to iraq now and the fight against isis the u.s. military s top officer is in the capital of baghdad today. chairman of the joint chiefs of staff, general martin dempsey arrived earlier this morning expected to meet with high ranking officials including iraq s ambassador the prime minister and the country s chief of defense. dempsey s visit comes as the battle in tikrit rages on between iraqi forces and isis militants. let s bring in suzanne malveaux with more on general dempsey s visit. good morning. reporter: this trip is critical. it speaks volumes that the top general is on the ground in iraq today. the chair of the joint chiefs of staff arrived just a couple hours ago. he ll meet with the prime minister the u.s. ambassador and iraqi military u.s. military leaders. over the weekend he said something very important. he was with his french counterpart and he expressed a great deal of confidence that the fight against isis to take back tikrit is going to happen rather easily. he noted that there are roughly 23,000 iraqi soldiers and shia militia men going up against these isis fighters who really number in just the hundreds. but more important than this aspect they have not given the land back to sunni who live there so they ve been involved in sectarian violence and ethnic cleansing. a problem for iraq because it promotes instability and a big concern for arab allies in the region who fear that iran s growing influence in iraq and syria will continue. so dempsey is there to urge the iraqi government to step up militarily and politically after the battle is one to make sure the situation on the ground does not devolve into an ethnic blood bath which it has been in the past. suzanne malveaux reporting live from washington. thank you. in other news this morning, teenage brothers from australia being investigated by police after they were stopped at a sydney airport believed they were on the way to the middle east to join isis. the boys were called misguided youth lured in by a death cult. did isis hack more than a dozen businesses across cincinnati st. louis and pittsburg? websites were taken over by someone claiming to be with the terror group. homepages were replaced with the black isis logo and a message reading, hacked by islamic state. we are everywhere. still to come protests erupting in wisconsin after a white cop fatally shoots an unarmed biracial teen. cnn s rosa flores is following that story for us. reporter: carol, good morning. i m live in madison, wisconsin. take a look behind me. the memorial growing in support of tony robinson and his family. why police say that this shooting was justified. denver international is one of the busiest airports in the country. we operate just like a city and that takes a lot of energy. we use natural gas throughout the airport - for heating the entire terminal generating electricity on-site and fueling hundreds of vehicles. we re very focused on reducing our environmental impact. and natural gas is a big part of that commitment. the lexus command performance sales event has begun. come experience what s made lexus the fastest-growing automotive luxury brand on the road. featuring the stylish es sporty ct hybrid and versatile rx. with more new models than ever there s never been a better time to drive a lexus. during the command performance sales event. get great offers on your favorite lexus models. now through march 31st. see your lexus dealer. major: here s our new trainer ensure active heart health. heart: i maximize good stuff like my potassium and phytosterols which may help lower cholesterol. new ensure active heart health supports your heart and body so you stay active and strong. ensure, take life in. mouths are watering, and stomachs are growling. or is that just me? it s lobsterfest. .red lobster s largest variety of lobster dishes all year. double up with dueling lobster tails. or make lobster lover s dream a delicious reality. but hurry this won t last long. if you have moderate to severe rheumatoid arthritis like me and you re talking to your 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 giving me new perspective. doctors have been prescribing humira for ten years. humira works for many adults. it targets and helps to block a specific source of inflammation that contributes 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 day three of anger and frustration in wisconsin after a white police officer shoots and kills an unarmed biracial teenager in madison. over the weekend, demonstrators demanded answers and chanted black lives matter. this morning protesters plan to rally at the wisconsin state capitol and local high school students are vowing to stage a walkout. on the surface, this case seems all too familiar but the fatal shooting of 19-year-old tony robinson has its own unique set of circumstances. rosa flores is live in madison. good morning. reporter: good morning, carol. we ve seen the number of people demonstrating in favor and in support in solidarity for tony robinson s family grow. we ve seen them on the street you see behind me. take a look. i want to show you a memorial that s been growing throughout the weekend. some of the signs read ferguson to madison black lives matter. unarmed black child. this just kind of shows some of the tension that is brewing between the community and police. charged protesters unloading anger and frustration at police officers guarding this madison, wisconsin, house turned crime scene. innocent black children. reporter: this is where unarmed 19-year-old tony robinson was shot and killed by police friday. no one is allowed inside except for kathleen buffton. she lives a thin wall away from where the gunshots rang out. on this wall of the kitchen. reporter: buffton ways she was in the kitchen when she heard a scuffle next door and then pounding on the door, she says. was that the police? yes. he forced the door open. reporter: what she didn t know according to police was that there were multiple calls into dispatch regarding robinson including an alleged battery incident. look for a male black, light skin tan jacket and jeans outside yelling jumping in front of cars. reporter: police say officer matt kenny responded, herd a commotion in the home and forced his way in and then gunfire. you could hear it. right here. nothing went through. reporter: police say robinson attacked kenny provokeing the officer to use deadly force but buffton has her doubts. i wonder if it was a white person if they wouldn t have got shot. she would have got tased. reporter: her thoughts echoed by robinson s family. the cop shot him because he was afraid of him. reporter: this is not the first time the 45-year-old officer used deadly force. officer kenny was exonerated for an incident that took place eight years ago. the police chief says he s working to regain public trust. we need to start as any healing or reconciliation would with an i am sorry. reporter: hundreds gathered throughout the weekend demanding more than apologies. this investigation in the hands of the wisconsin department of justice. i did talk to the police chief yesterday about a very obvious question. did this police officer have another tool that he could use? did he have a stun gun? he tells me that he did have a stun gun. this police officer. but the police chief tells me that he can t comment further because he is not in charge of this investigation. carol? all right. rosa flores i m sure you ll continue to dig. thanks so much. still to come in the newsroom, a miracle in utah. a baby girl survives 14 hours strapped in her car seat after an accident kills her mother. her incredible story next. ride away (by roy orbison begins to play) i ride the highway. i m going my way. i leave a story untold. he just keeps sending more pictures. if you re a free-range chicken you roam free. it s what you do. if you want to save fifteen percent or more on car insurance you switch to geico. it s what you do. two wheels a turnin . if you haven t heard about the latest sale at hotels.com, then you haven t seen this commercial. book now and save during the spring break sale at hotels.com. the real question that needs to be asked is what is it that we can do that is impactful? 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[cars honking] and one day soon we ll see the last one ever. cisco is building the internet of everything for connected cities today, that will confine the traffic jam to yesterday. cisco. .tomorrow starts here. an incredible story of survival in utah. an 18-month-old baby girl found alive still strapped into her car seat hours after an accident that left the car in which she was riding upside down in a river. new day s michaela pereira has more for you. a very interesting story here. baby girl in utah defying the odds surviving a crash that claimed her mother s life after some 14 hours that 18-month-old baby girl was found alive by a fisherman still strapped to her car seat upside down but fortunately not submerged in a freezing river. survival and tragedy along the spanish fork river in utah. this 18-month-old baby girl lily was rescued from an overturned car submerged in frigid waters suspended in her car seat for more than 12 hours. her mother 25-year-old lynn jennifer groesbeck was killed the night before. where the war casscar was at you couldn t see from the roadway. reporter: first responders working quickly to turn the car over. as we did that it became apparent that the driver was deceased. we also noticed that there was a small baby in the back seat. reporter: incredibly the young baby girl trapped inside was unconscious but alive. grabbed the baby in my arm and raised its head up out of the water. as i tried to release the seat belt. reporter: rescuers passed baby lily from one responder to the next. the child was passed to me. i just ran up and climbed in the ambulance with the child. reporter: according to officials, the mother was believed to have been headed home friday night when her vehicle struck a cement barrier before careening off the road and plunging into the river. the officers responding to the scene all say they heard a distinct voice from inside the car calling for help. i remember hearing a voice that didn t sound like a child. just saying help me. reporter: it s unclear why the vehicle careened off the road and plunged into the river. seven of the rescuers were treated at a hospital for hypothermia. they ve since been released. the baby is recovering in a salt lake hospital and is in fair condition. many wondering why and how those rescuers heard the words help me coming from that vehicle. michaela pereira, thanks so much. if you want to help the groesbeck family a gofundme page has been set up in their name. if you have moderate to severe rheumatoid arthritis like me and you re talking to your 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 giving me new perspective. doctors have been prescribing humira for ten years. humira works for many adults. it targets and helps to block a specific source of inflammation that contributes 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 when salesman alan ames books his room at laquinta.com, he gets a ready for you alert the second his room is ready. so he knows exactly when he can check in and power up before his big meeting. and when alan gets all powered up, ya know what happens? i think the numbers speak for themselves. i m sold! he s a selling machine! put it there. and there, and there, and there. la quinta inns and suites is ready for you, so you ll be ready for business. the ready for you alert, only at laquinta.com! la quinta! [ female announcer ] we help make secure financial tomorrows a reality for over 19 million people. [ mom ] with life insurance, we re not just insuring our lives. we re helping protect his. [ female announcer ] everyone has a moment when tomorrow becomes real. transamerica. transform tomorrow. nobody told us to expect it. intercourse that s painful due to menopausal changes it s not likely to go away on its own. so let s do something about it. premarin vaginal cream can help it provides estrogens to help rebuild vaginal tissue and make intercourse more comfortable. premarin vaginal cream treats vaginal changes due to menopause and moderate-to-severe painful intercourse caused by these changes. don t use it if you ve had unusual bleeding breast or uterine cancer blood clots, liver problems, stroke or heart attack, are allergic to any of its ingredients or think you re pregnant. side effects may include headache pelvic pain, breast pain vaginal bleeding and vaginitis. estrogens may increase your chances of getting cancer of the uterus, strokes, blood clots or dementia so use it for the shortest time based on goals and risks. estrogen should not be used to prevent heart disease heart attack, stroke or dementia. ask your doctor about premarin vaginal cream. good morning. i m carol costello. thank you so much for joining me. controversy at the university of oklahoma after video is released of fraternity members singing a racist chant. the so-called men in this video are from a frat that shut down the chapter on sunday and this morning students in the community gathered in protest calling on the university s president to take more action. miguel marquez is following the story for us. good morning. reporter: good morning. this is like a rifle shot through the university of oklahoma. this has caused so many issues for the university already this morning. the s.e.a. chapter has been disbanded. the president of the s.e.a. chapter at the end of his statement said he hoped that they might be able to reconstitute the chapter at some point. i think everybody involved at this point thinks it s a little early for that. the president of ou has called for an investigation. it s not clear what the scope of that investigation will be. he does have a press conference on the steps of evans hall at the university. we hope to hear from him then. he spoke briefly to the press this morning talking about the incident and we re hearing from students. students are up in arms over how stupid and disgusting this episode is. here s what one had to say. at the beginning of the semester we wrote an 11-page letter to the president and administration and sent it to every dean of every college voiceing grievances and our concerns with things we see going on around our campus and that includes the student experience which directly touches fraternity life and situations exactly like this. reporter: it was at 4:38 or so, 4:30 on sunday that this video was sent unanimously. other organizations picked it up and posted it and it s just exploded. the idea of them singing such nastiness to if you re happy and you know it clap your hands, i don t know if you can make that out. i m trying to figure out on what planet that would be funny. s.e.a. is a fraternity that got in trouble and they stopped them from pledging nationwide because of drinking issues and young men dying from overdrinking. it s possible the president of the university could announce disciplinary action against the students. we don t know. that s probably the least of it. groups out there, certainly the african-american fraternities and a group that we heard from a moment ago, they want something wider. they want something more to be done and to look at the entire system and that s where this may be headed. miguel marquez, many thanks. unbreakable and unshakeable is how the jerusalem mayor describes the relationship between the united states and israel. earlier this morning, i talked with the mayor about a potential iran nuclear deal and prime minister benjamin netanyahu s controversial decision to address congress last week ahead of israeli elections. prime minister netanyahu had two choices. to voice out before a deal is signed or maybe a decade from now people will ask him why didn t you voice out your voice before the bad deal? so netanyahu had two bad choices if you like to voice out and get criticism or not to voice out his voice and say what he s concerned about and forever be blamed for not speaking up for the israeli state. i think that if you look at it in perspective, he s doing his job. he s protecting israel. he s coming out to the united states and to anybody that wants to hear and raising a red flag. don t do a bad deal. i appreciate him for that. couldn t you argue, mr. mayor, that don t talk about the process. talk about the message. couldn t you argue that benjamin netanyahu is being used by the republicans and the american congress? no no. not at all. the subject matter focus on the subject matter a second. if you were an israeli and you knew that iran the biggest enemy of israel supporting all of the terrorists groups that haunt us and fire rockets at us would they blink twice in giving or sending or firing a nuke at israel? they wouldn t blink twice. they don t care what america thinks. it s his duty prime minister netanyahu s duty to come and raise that red flag regardless of the criticism he may receive from one party or another. this is something deep into the future of israel. we went through one holocaust. we won t go through another one. if he s got to go out there and say and voice that he s got my support and he s got the majority of the jewish people supporting him on this and hopefully he ll understand it s the iranian regime that doesn t like america. i ve been there september 11. i saw who was happy when the twin towers fell. it s the same regime in gaza and other places in the world. they are not your friend. they re not our friend unfortunately. president obama warns that the u.s. is prepared to walk away from any deal with iran that does not include tight inspections. still to come in the newsroom a credit report overhaul set to impact hundreds of millions of americans. christine romans will break it down for you next. what s that thing? i moved our old security system out here to see if it could monitor the front yard. why don t you switch to xfinity home? i get live video monitoring and 24/7 professional monitoring that i can arm and disarm from anywhere. hear ye! the awkward teenage one has arrived!!!! don t be old fashioned. xfinity customers add xfinity home for $29.95 a month for 12 months. plus for a limited time, get a free security camera call 1800 xfinity or visit comcast.com/xfinityhome. checking other top stories, more emotional witness testimony expected today as the trial resumes for accused boston marathon bomber dzhokhar tsarnaev. a father who lost his 10-year-old son testified last week. president of south korea is making a surprise visit to the u.s. ambassador. the ambassador has been recovering in the hospital since his face and arm were slashed by a man who opposes the joint military drills. two female tourists from california arrested for vandalizing rome s famous coliseum. the women, ages 21 and 25 are accused of carving their initials into the ancient landmark. police say they posed for selfies to show off their handiwork. the last person to deface the amphitheater was fined $25,000. the state of florida is not acknowledging climate change at least not in official correspondence. according to a new report the florida department of environmental protection is banned from using the terms climate change and global warming in e-mails reporting or any other official communication. the florida center for investigative reporting says the unwritten policy went into effect after governor rick scott went into office in 2011. credit reports are undergoing major changes. according to the wall street journal, the big three credit reporting agencies are overhauling the way they handle errors in unpaid medical bills. what does that mean for you and me? our chief business correspondent christine romans is here to tell us. it means big changes. your credit report is so important. if there are mistakes on that it could mean you have a harder time renting an apartment, a harder time getting a job. you have to pay more in interest on an auto loan. accuracy of these reports is critical. new york attorney general working with three major credit agencies to get these changes. you can get up to two free credit reports a year if you go to annualcreditreport.com you find a mistake, you can get another free credit report to make sure that mistake is fixed. credit agencies have to wait 180 days before adding medical debt to these reports. it can take so long to get that organized with the insurance company and payment reimbursed. that s important that medical debt part of it there s more time for you to address mistakes and also these credit agencies have to have trained personnel. when you call them and write them and say there s a mistake here they have to do a better job of helping you figure out what the problem was and get it fixed. the medical part of this this is why it s so important. 52%, 52% of the debt that is on credit reports is medical debt. medical debt is this huge burden for so many people. some of that has been paid. some of it hasn t. that s got to be fixed. that part of it has to be fixed. it s a number that s really credit score is important. some is in dispute. i heard this from so many people. they go six months before they ll buy a house or a car and get an apartment and there is some mistake. some unpaid bill on a target credit card from 20 years ago or something that takes a lot of time to cross the ts and dot the is. the credit agencies have to do a better job. it will take the next three years. it s not just new york. it was a new york attorney general who got this deal with them. it s going to be nationwide they will do this. you should see some help in getting those errors fixed. if you don t know if you have errors you should find out. annualcreditreport.com. find out. don t click on anything to pay for it. it s free. thanks, christine. i appreciate it. still to come in the newsroom those e-mails are clean as a whistle. this is not how hillary clinton goes down. hillary clinton gets the snl treatment but the latest scandal over e-mails may be the least of her worries. we ll talk about that next. 40% of the streetlights in detroit, at one point, did not work. you had some blocks and you had major thoroughfares and corridors that were just totally pitch black. those things had to change. we wanted to restore our lighting system in the city. you can have the greatest dreams in the world, but unless you can finance those dreams, it doesn t happen. at the time that the bankruptcy filing was done, the public lighting authority had a hard time of finding a bank. citi did not run away from the table like some other bankers did. citi had the strength to help us go to the credit markets and raise the money. it s a brighter day in detroit. people can see better when they re out doing their tasks, young people are moving back in town the kids are feeling safer while they walk to school. and folks are making investments and the community is moving forward. 40% of the lights were out, but they re not out for long.they re coming back. the world is filled with air. but for people with copd sometimes breathing air can be difficult. if you have copd, ask your doctor about once-daily anoro ellipta. it helps people with copd breathe better for a full 24hours. anoro ellipta is the first fda-approved product containing two long-acting bronchodilators in one inhaler. anoro is not for asthma. anoro contains a type of medicine that increases risk of death in people with asthma. it is not known if this risk is increased in copd. anoro won t replace rescue inhalers for sudden copd symptoms and should not be used more than once a day. tell your doctor if you have a heart condition, or high blood pressure. tell your doctor if you have glaucoma, prostate or bladder problems, or problems passing urine as anoro may make these problems worse. call your doctor right away if you have worsened breathing chest pain, swelling of your mouth or tongue, problems urinating or eye problems including vision changes or eye pain while taking anoro. nothing can reverse copd. the world is filled with air and anoro is helping people with copd breath air better. get your first prescription free at anoro.com. you total your brand new car. nobody s hurt,but there will still be pain. it comes when your insurance company says they ll only pay three-quarters of what it takes to replace it. what are you supposed to do, drive three-quarters of a car? 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sources tell cnn that clinton will likely address the e-mail scandal at some time this week but the e-mails may not be her biggest problem. clinton will have to struggle with appearance of hypocrisy concerning donations to her family s foundation. to date it s accepted money from saudi arabia the united arab emirates kuwait, oman qatar al algeria and brunei. they built a great university with nyu open to people around the world and they have helped us support the work that this foundation does. do i agree with all of the foreign policy of saudi arabia? no. i think it s impressive that the recent king who just died built the first co-educational institution in saudi arabia and they have more women than men in colleges. will female voters buy that explanation? with me to talk about this is cnn political commentator and sirius xm host margaret hoover. is the explanation enough? hypocrisy is the unforgivable sin in politics. they have to stand by what they say. it doesn t make sense to take money from these countries and using your platform to taut women s rights and then receive funding from countries who are not letting women drive, not letting women vote not letting women really exert the human rights that we support and advocate in the developed world. is it possible that hillary clinton could say my foundation is one thing and my presidential campaign is another thing. i don t know. even as you say that i feel like it s hard to wrap your head around. i agree with you in this sense. i think while the e-mail scandal is an assault against transparency and government what is tied up in the clinton foundation really is going to be the larger question for voters to see. it s not just hypocrisy issue. it s the question of were they taking money from foreign governments while sitting secretary of state and using that position in government to pedal influence that they were directly enriched by. these are questions that are incredibly important and if we don t have the e-mails, there s no way of knowing whether they were misusing or abusing power. so this gives those who want to subpoena her e-mails that added something-something to make that possible. when you re the secretary of state, you know transparency is the sunlight is the best disinfectant. this is what we stand for this this country. all of jeb bush s e-mails are public because it s the law in florida and it s the spirit of the law at the federal level. they found this loophole around it and it doesn t sit right with people. hillary clinton will come out later this week and they just expected the e-mail thing to go away but now there s this added thing with taking donations from saudi arabia and such. do you think that she ll have to address both issues in the days to come? all of it will have to be addressed. if you re going to be a presidential candidate, i think on the democratic primary, it looks like you know she s going to have to answer questions. i think the democrats are going to be easy on her. i don t think this is going to hamper her pathway to the nomination. dianne feinstein said she says she has to clear the air. many democrats have said that. but you better believe when you get to a general election, when you have independents and young people who are not solid for the democratic party, they are overwhelmingly independent and not locked in for hillary clinton, they weren t for the first time around either. people are going to need to hear young women you talk about? 33 and under are not locked in for democratic party. he was more this transcendent figure in politics rather than a party partisan and that s why they liked him. he represented their generation. hillary will have to answer these questions. margaret hoover thank you for being with me. i appreciate it. gadget lovers around the world are awaiting apple s big media event today when the tech giant is expected to reveal those secret details about the new apple watch. dan simon is in san francisco. good morning. reporter: carol, good morning. apple going hold another one of its mega events today. the line is already starting to form. it s all about the apple watch. those details coming up. the real question that needs to be asked is what is it that we can do that is impactful? 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[ female announcer ] stay strong, stay active with boost. if you haven t heard about the latest sale at hotels.com, then you haven t seen this commercial. book now and save during the spring break sale at hotels.com. gadget lovers today is the day. in just about two hours, apple is expected to reveal all of those secret details about the first wearable device. that would be the apple watch. behold. dan simon live from the site in san francisco where the big announcement will come down. good morning, dan. reporter: good morning, carol. this is apple s first new device since the ipad came out in 2010 believe it or not. stakes are very high for the company today. we ve already seen this watch but today we ll get a lot more details including when it will go on sale. there are going to be three models here. an aluminum steel and gold version. the aluminum version, sport edition, will debut at $349. the gold watch, this is going to set you back a little bit. we re told the price could go anywhere from $5,000 to $10,000. aside from the price, we should get more details about what the watch will do. we already know the basics like messaging, fitness tracking things of that nature. just as the app store has been key to the success of the iphone, you would expect the same to apply here. now, we know at this point the smart watch industry hasn t been particularly successful. there has not been a megahit yet. this could be a huge game changer today. we should get details and see how long the battery will last as well. here s the thing. you need to carry your phone with you for the watch to fully operate. some say it s not a great idea and that ultimately this watch will flop because of that. what are you hearing? well you know i don t think it would be very wise to bet against this company. people thought the iphone would fail. people said the same thing about the ipad and you have to remember there are a lot of doubts about tim cook and the company just had the most successful quarter in history. not smart to bet against apple in my opinion. probably right. dan simon, thanks so much. still to come in the newsroom, take a look at this sleeping pooch. i bet you never guess he weighs in at nearly 175 pounds. we ll introduce you to this supersized pit bull after a break. maybe you have seen him on television. the 175-pound pit bull total media ham, on his way to becoming the largest pit bull on earth. seriously. jeanne moos spent the day with him. reporter: with his towering height those sensitive eyes no wonder new york is bullish on this pit bull. this thing is beautiful. gorgeous. reporter: want to meet him? yeah. reporter: who wouldn t want to meet hulk one of the largest pit bulls on earth and at 18 months still growing. hello there. hello. yes. what a good boy. reporter: pinning me up against his van hulk made a weighty impression. 175 pounds of weight. get yourself together. reporter: normally he lives up on a farm in new hampshire. the home of dark dynasty canines where they guard breed dogs like the tv hulk this hulk has his tough side. most of the time he s so placid that he let his owner s son ride him and just plop down during his tv appearance. so chill that hulk tends to sleep right through it when the boy pulls on his tongue. they want people to know that even a giant pit bull isn t vicious. with these dogs it s about leadership and how you raise them. rules, boundaries limits. reporter: onehulk howls to the harmonica. hulk was reluctant to sing on the view. he s being constantly sized up. he s been in new york with this publicity. his head is probably swollen now. hulk seemed like a breed apart from all of the new york city dogs dressed in their winter coats. yet we discovered one of his best friends is our five-pound chihuahua. reporter: this bruiser has a taste for little dogs and when hulk the pit bull met max, the toy poodle instead of dining on max, hulk tried to sniff. both ends. that poodle s jacket would probably fit hulk as a hat. jeanne moos cnn, new york. that s a gigantic dog. amazing. a reminder if you want to watch the unveiling of the new apple watch, i guess apple is going to stream it on its website so you can catch it there. as we ve been telling you, this apple watch is the newest biggest thing from apple. goes on your wrist. you have to carry your phone along with it right? or it kind of won t work. a lot of people are saying well, maybe it will be a big flop. others say i wouldn t count apple out because it comes up with terrific products. most expensive apple watch to be on the market sells at $10,000. i don t know how many of you will be in line for that one but there are cheaper versions and they are still expensive. 395 bucks. dan simon will cover it all for you. thank you for joining me today. i m carol costello. at this hour starts now. hillary clinton e-mails. she stayed largely silent so far but chatter surrounding her is only getting louder. she s speaking at this hour. will she finally discuss the controversy? we ll take you there. disgusting and disgraceful. that s the scathing reaction to a repugnant racist video blamed on a college fraternity. this morning we ll speak to a representative from that fraternity. we ll get some answers. a fisherman, a car upside down in a freezing river and the baby that was found alive inside. almost impossible to believe. the 18-month-old is thought to have been there for 14 hours. how did she survive?

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