welcome to all of you watching here in the united states, canada and all around the world, i m kim brunhuber. coming up on cnn newsroom. the search is on for a suspected killer in texas. ahead, what we re learning about the victims of this latest mass shooting. plus, evacuations are happening in sudan, but many say it s not easy to get out. hear one woman s story about how the u.s. government did nothing to help her parents leave. plus, tv stars mingled and mixed amid the white house correspondents dinner, president biden had a seriousage message about freedoms. announcer: live from cnn center, this is cnn newsroom with kim brunhuber. we begin in texas where the federal bureau of investigation is assisting in a manhunt follow a shooting rampage north of houston. at least five people after detectives say the neighbor francisco oropeza is at large. we consider him armed and dangerous. we re not going to stop until we actually arrest him and bring him into custody
i don t drink coffee at all. tastes like a puddle. i can t do it. that s because you re not drinking it correctly. you have to prepare it a certain way and with creamers. that s not coffee anymore. no. all right. at least 23 people are dead after russia unleashed a deadly attack on ukrainian civilians. our cnn team is live at the scene where rescue efforts are continue this morning. more than 50,000 people have left sudan after fighting broke out there just a couple weeks ago, including hundreds of americans. one of them shares her story. millions are facing the threat of severe storms. where we could see those storms fire up today. we begin in ukraine, where the death toll from a russian strike on an apartment building is expected to rise. the attack killed almost two dozen people, including five children, and is believed to be the deadliest strike on civilians since january. it targeted more than ten apartment buildings and other civilian targets. but ukra
our thanks to wxyz for that. hello, everyone. thank you so much for joining me this saturday. i m fredericka witfield. we begin with this breaking news on the manhunt undway under way cleveland texas for the suspect accused of the shootings of five including an 8-year-old. ryan young isle toing all of this for us. what more are we learning about the suspect? troubling details on this. we ve been following this for hours. we ve been given a name. francisco orpeza is the name police are looking for at this point. they are still actively looking for him. this all started with a 911 call over a noise disturbance. apparently he was on his porch file firing a well. neighbors asked him to stop shootings. he went to the home and started shooting people execution style. listen to the sheriff early on in this investigation. when they got here, they found four people deceased inside of the residence. there was an 8-year-old that had been shot. everybody that was shot was shot fr
shares of mufg, mizuho and smfg were all down around 8% in trading. the nikkei exchange was down over 2% overall. here in europe, we ve seen credit suisse drop another 5% in early trading. on monday, major us banks lost around $90 billion in stock market value, bringing their loss since svb s collapse to nearly $190 billion. many are now speculating the federal reserve will pause its plans to keep raising interest rates, designed to tame inflation. we re nowjoined by greg swenson, who is an international investment banker and founding partner at brigg macadam. good to have you with us. let s pick up good to have you with us. let s pick up on that thought about rate because that progressive increase increase in interest rates has been one of the things cost for the collapse in svb. will the federal reserve be looking at this closely? i think the key word is maybe. goldman sachs came out yesterday suggesting that they would pause and not raise rates at the next meeting, but tha
appreciate your insights on this. my pleasure. a pilot program that used trained dogs to detect covid infections at 27 california schools showed promise. though a year later there s talk about training the dogs to detect other diseases. bekaa howard has the story. it was just last year when california public health officials used training dogs. two yellow labs, scarlet and rizzo were trained to detect compounds associated with covid-19 infections. and then they were spent to 26 schools where the dogs lined up and sniffed their ankles and feet. the dogs were trained to sit when they detected the compounds associated with covid. then the person that the dog sat next to would complete a naval