good morning. good morning. welcome to cnn this morning. it is sunday. april 16th. i m victor blackwell. camera walker. thank you. so much for spending a part of your sunday with us. and if you do catch me sniffling a little bit. the pollen has, like really been getting to me and not for you coming from new york and resettling. no good. well, here is what we are watching for you this morning. congress returns from recess this week with a laundry list of to do items among them coming up with a plan to fund the government look at the other major priorities for both parties. in the coming days. at least 56 people are dead in sudan. there were explosions throughout the night clashes between the military and armed groups are escalating will tell you what we know about how this started and the global response i want to give up but not family . i don t give up if you give up. what about your keys, but force out as pandemic era programs expire more and more people who have fallen beh
bianca nobilo live from london. max foster has the day off today, but he ll be back tomorrow just ahead on cnn newsroom. this is the worst i ve ever seen. this is an unbelievable amount of rain pull on the side. streets were flooded everywhere. we have the threat for flooding, as well as the threat for severe weather and record warmth on top of it all. this person murdered my friend. but still i can t imagine how his parents must be feeling amazing grace. how sweet the sound we will get through this together. if you can see the smoke, you re in the smoke. get out of the smoke. this person has been negligent and irresponsible and it s led to putting a lot of people in danger. live from london. this is cnn newsroom with max foster and bianca nobilo. it is thursday, april 13th nine am here in london at four am in south florida, where historic amounts of rainfall have caused what one city has made describes as the most severe flooding he s ever seen. up to 20 inches of rain have
from louisville, where a vigil to honor the victims is getting underway. how do you know you have an active shooter on this site? just lost. you watched it on teams meeting. we re having a coordinating the suspect? yes tonight we re hearing dramatic. 911 calls from monday s mass shooting in louisville that killed five bank employees. including one call from the mother of the gunman compared you couldn t have a gun and he s heading toward the old national at the louisville main street. old national that his mother, i m so sorry. i m getting details secondhand. i m learning now. oh my lord. okay and what exactly is going on with him? what he s saying he s doing? i don t know. i m getting this information from from never heard anyone really good kids. his roommate called me. burned please. he is not violent. never done anything. okay and you don t believe he owns guns. i know he wasn t own any guns. in another call, you can hear a woman inside the bank talking to a 911 operator.
leaving him to raise their daughter alone. oh, girl. it scared to several cities, including houston, evictions are surging even beyond pre pandemic norms. more than five million u. s households are behind on rent . experts blame a perfect storm rents keep rising amid high inflation. covid moratoriums on evictions are ending and pandemic programs, especially rental assistance are running dry. in mid march, a texas rent relief program had to stop accepting applications just two days after starting overwhelmed. by the demand. it s just it s simple, hard times, brown says she fell behind on rent in february after losing her job. a photo of her kids in one hand on eviction notice in the other. she says she wants to pay off her debt but fear she may have to move tried to make it and, um , you know, it s tough to do it
gabe cohen visited housing court in texas and spoke with some who face eviction from their homes. once a week, houston residents pack into one of the busiest eviction courts in texas. good morning on this day more than 200 cases before noon for possession of the premises to the plaintiff. favor of the plaintiff has landlords take back their properties and families plead to stay in their homes. most jonathan morrison is being evicted. he s been struggling with rent, he says, since his wife, the family breadwinner, died in december, leaving him to raise their daughter alone. oh, girl. it scared to several cities, including houston, evictions are surging even beyond pre pandemic norms. more than five million u. s households are behind on rent . experts blame a perfect storm rents keep rising amid high inflation. covid moratoriums on