debris of that shot down balloon off of the south carolina coast. and now, residents are forced to evacuate from that train derailment that is a massive inferno. that is what we are watching this hour. i m kristen fisher in for kate bolduan, and we are beginning with the story overseas. a power 7.8 magnitude earthquake has killed more than 2,300 people in turkey and syria, and the death toll is expected to rise significantly possibly into the tense of of thousands. and this is rescue crews frantically searching to survivors, but the efforts are hampered by big aftershocks. we begin with jomana karadsheh in istanbul, turkey, and bring us up to date with the frantic search for survivors. it is an absolutely devastating situation, kristen, and across the border as well, and we have seen the death toll continue to steadily rise over the past few hours where more than 2,300 people confirmed kill and more than 1,500 of them here in turkey and hundreds killed in syria, both in r
team now filing a response to that fbi search for all of those boxes of classified material in his florida home two weeks ago. we ll start with the fbi seizure of classified documents at mar-a-lago. the former president wants a neutral third party called a special master to review the documents taken by the fbi and return anything not within the scope of the search warrant. we re also getting new information about how much sensitive data was at mar-a-lago and the concern at the national archives months ago, which set off this entire investigation. all right, so, let s get to cnn s senior crime and justice reporter, kaitlan. we know in january, the national archives retrieved 15 boxes of material from mar-a-lago, and we are learning, thanks thao the reporting, about exactly how much classified info was in those boxes. one of the things we re learning now is because the national archives is making public a letter back in may that fills out our timeline a little bit more,
know what the russians are there, and if they are capable of helping, so it is very stark on the syrian side. and this is going to need an international response from search and rescue, and humanitarian aid, and as kiylie atwood reported, many countries are giving aid, but as a former ambassador, it is one thing to talk about providing help, but it is another to give the help and deploy the resources effectively, and so how do you go about doing that? the well. it is hard to speak of anything good or even a silver lining of such a dark, dark situation, but the fact is that these disasters can refocus the countries to set aside the political differences, and lord knows even in the united states and turkey, the nato allies have very troubled
he was carrying with him cannabis substances, and that is why he was taken in by russian authorities. and so, what these senators and the family of mark fogle are saying is that the state department should really look at this case and put the wrongful detention label on it, because that enables the administration to do is then engage with russia in terms of trying to figure out a way to diplomatically get him out of the country before that 14-year prison sentence is up. okay, kiylie atwood, david mckenzie, thank you both. a twitter executive turned whistle-blower speaks exclusively with cnn. he says security vulnerabilities at the site pose a threat to national security and democracy. the fallout from his claims next. and prosecutors set to decide on whether to pursue charges against two atlanta police officers connected to the shooting death of rayshard brooks. we have a live update ahead. ( i swear by all-4-one ) jaycee tried gain flings for the first time the other day.