years, brian said he and denise kept a mafia-like oath of silence. it is riveting testimony. this first-person story of taking a best friend out and killing him. there s so much emotion tied into that. i ve heard the testimony numerous times and i was riveted. and you could tell from the jurors, that they re on the edge of their seat. it was strong, emotional testimony. but would it be strong enough to convict? that would be for the jury to say. now defense attorney ethan way rose with his goal set upon demolishing the star witness credibility. mr. winchester, you re a murderer, isn t it true? coming up will there finally be justice for mike? we didn t have a slam dunk case. we the jury finds as follows does it come to a matter of jurors? it s he said, she
ever. time to reverse the effects of climate change more than ever. showing nearly one in three americans live in a county hit by weather disaster in just the past three months. it is february and feels like summer up and down the california coast. the heat advisory. heat warnings during winter. it is happening everywhere. look at this map courtesy of the guardian. a third of mens facing above average warming. dark red and black show parts of this country where temperature rates have breached 2.7 degrees. why is that a big deal? the goal set in the 2015 paris climate accord for participating nations to avoid exceeding yet we have. beyond this point, nearly 500
projected to fall short of the world health organization goal set in december to vaccinate at least 70% of their population. the united states is among the high income countries on the list as very many central european nations. polo sandoval, cnn, new york. polo, thank you. profession over university medicine and cnn analyst dr. jonathan weiner. i want to show you. all of the green across the country with the exception obviously tof tennessee, i want to ask you, do you believe we are now on the edge of an endemic versus a pandemic, and how does that change daily life for us in your opinion? good morning, christi. i think we re still far from
in communities. it s called the national waste water surveillance system, 400 testing sites in the united states with more to come. researchers say the new data flags possible covid surges to get resources in place and to warn hospitals. the rates of coronavirus in the waste water goes up before the attention in the hospitals or in the clinics outside. really interesting. and the reverse is true, too. those levels start going down even before the case levels start going down in the local area. so it s really a great indicator of what s going to happen. the truth is cases are going to continue to decline. reporter: nearly two years later, a new analysis paints a clear picture of the human toll of the pandemic. more than 200 residents and staff at long-care term facilities died from covid-19 since march 2020. that s nearly a quarter of covid deaths in the u.s. despite the global progress on the vaccination front, more than 100 countries are projected to fall short of the world health
1800s. so why is that a big deal? 2.7 degrees is a goal set in the 2015 paris climate accord for participating nations to avoid exceeding. yet, we have. beyond this point, where nearly 500 counties in the united states, where now scientists say we face increasingly punishing heat waves, storms, flooding, and societal unrest. it is clear, we need action, but where will it come from? a new political morning consult global sustainability poll reveals citizens here and abroad feel they are being left to go it alone on climate change. and that countries and governments contributing most to climate change, with the resources to help should shoulder the burden. the president has several plans to combat climate change and he s constrained and legislatively speaking running out of time, not some with the