the court. the first time we have heard him speak. he rose to his feet, spoke to the court. he complained about the conditions of his confinement, said it was inhumane. he complained that he could not speak to his family, his wife, his twin 8-year-old daughters who have been present in the court from time to time, at least his wife was. he said he will challenge extradition to the united states, which is one of the issues we expect his attorneys to bring up on appeal. the bottom line is this is the end of this chapter, a bizarre trial that revealed an extensive criminal enterprise that lasted for several decades. we have heard all kinds of bizarre stories about heinous murders, torture, alleged sex with under-aged girls, massive amounts of drugs that were being smuggled into the united states. the state, the government, estimates his fortune was worth $12.6 billion, money that
deal because any tariff changes, they need to be put in the federal register, this is important for worldwide business forks global trade. think of the ships out there full of goods, coming to u.s. ports and it is unclear what kind of tariff rates they will somewhe have to pay. it was not a good day for kraft heinz. wrote down the value by 15 billion. they posted a $12.6 billion loss. they cut the dividend by 36%. sales were up 1% in the fourth quarter and the ceo blamed this on higher than expected manufacturing logistics costs. kraft heinz also says it is under investigation by the s.e.c., the s.e.c. declined to comment on that. consumer reports pulling its recommendation of the tesla model 3 citing reliability issues with the car. consumer reports tesla buyers
billion in insured losses and that was only 6800 single-family homes destroyed. we re approaching 11,000 single-family homes destroyed, this is more deadly, destructive fire and insured losses will be greater. his office is educating people about how to avoid getting scammed, for instance by unlicensed contractors, promising quick home rebuild. this recovery will take years and officials say people should be wary of short cuts because they say it could cost more in the long run. now rain threatens to bring another kind of disaster, yes, it will clear out this unhealthy air and put out what is left of the fire. but rain will almost certainly hamper ongoing search and recovery efforts and officials are concerned, that is a heavy downpour could trigger mudslides. shepard: reporting from chico, california. ahead, the killing of jamal
attention and trying to stave off an outbreak of norovirus going around. two more sets of human remains increasing the deaths from the camp fire to at least 79. the number of those unaccounted for has dropped to 700. search crews warn some people may never be found due to the intensity of the flames. with evacuation orders now being lifted in some areas around paradise residents are returning to sift through the rubble of what used to be their home. the state s insurance commissioner says the losses are staggering. in 2017 from all the california fires there was $12.6 billion in insured losses. that was only 68 hundred single family homes destroyed. we re approaching 11,000 single family homes destroyed his office is educating
so this is the week that could mark the beginning of a trade war. on sunday canada slapped tariff on $12.6 billion on american imports and then overnight mexico doubled its tariff on pork imported from the u.s. to 20%. that s huge for american pork producers, the european union slapped 25% taxes on u.s. soybeans, ketchup, whiskey and motorcycle motorcycles and at midnight comes the showdown with china. beijing has vowed to dominate the high tech industries and china promises to retaliate on cars, crude oil and cash crops like soybeans. the big unknown, will the white house follow through on its threat to draw the auto industry into the trade dispute? something car makers say would hurt consumers. let s talk about that with mark preston, cnn s political