and i don t think everyone was prepared for anything. my heart is broken for them. how do you recoup? we couldn t cross our fingers and hope for the best. we have listened and have listened. this is a huge defeat for moscow. this is not going well. he s facing an unprecedented amount of criticism from within. announcer: live from london, this is cnn newsroom with max foster. hello on this tuesday, october 4th. 9 a.m. here in london. 4 a.m. on the u.s. east coast. it s been six days since hurricane ian made landfall. the number of people killed has climbed past 100. authorities are holding out hope they will find survivors. so far the governor says they ve made close to 2,000 rescues including this one here. incredible video shows the u.s. coast guard saving a man and his neighbors from flood waters on sanibel island. that s in heavily damaged lee county where recovery efforts have been very difficult. that region accounts for about half of the state s 450,000 powe
we will bring you that speech live. and in florida, grim new details about how many people were killed by a different hurricane, ian of course. and the new number just coming in. some officials now responding to criticism about their initial response to ian. we ve got our team standing by live on the ground. also this hour, we re live in district court in dc with opening statements happening now, in the conspiracy trial of leaders for the oath keepers. why the defense is hanging its case on something former president trump didn t do, and what prosecutors are saying today about what the defendants said were not enough weapons. we will talk about it coming up. and october, not spooked yet. rare good news lately from the market. the dow up 800 points. we will talk about what is behind the rally on wall street later in the show. i m hallie jackson on assignment for a story you will see later on in the month. joining me is gabe guiterrez in san germane puerto rico and shaq bre
they questioned the court s legitimacy if precedent continues to be overturned. it could be yet another tense term for these nine justices. jessica schneider, cnn, washington. a damning investigative report shows verbal, sexual misconduct by the u.s. women s soccer league. the very first page details a disturbing encounter between a coach and a player reviewing game footage together. quote, he told her he was going to touch her for every pass she f d up. he pushed his hands down her pants and up her shirt. this is very emotional for me and honestly i m having trouble absorbing everything in the
coaches would take jobs with other teams, even with these allegations having been reported to the initial team, and instead of notifying the other team of the problems, it s like a congratulatory press release that goes out. so, part of the recommendations in this report says you got to have individual teams, report coaches misconduct to the u.s. soccer federation and the national women s soccer league so this can t happen, this under-the-radar movement can t happen. what else do these recommendations entail, and do you think they have enough teeth? in other words, now we know how bad the problem is. how can it realistically be fixed? yeah, i think, well, we know, to some extent, how bad the problem is. there s still a whole second investigation that is in the works that s happening between the nwsl, the league itself, and the players association. we know about three coaches, three teams, kind of three points through history. there s still a lot more that we don t actually know and
believe, a player over to look at allegedly game tape, ended up watching porn and that is one of the horrific details we re seeing. the women s national team players association said it should not have taken an independent investigation to bring light to these practices. tell us more about what struck you from what i think is fair to call a bombshell report that is out today. i think what really strikes me about this entire situation is it s more than one person, one player, one coach. who knew what and when. this is truly a systemic problem across women s soccer and the main takeaway is that it extends beyond the nwsl itself. it goes into roots with youth soccer. players are learning behavior that is normalized at the youth level and then bringing that assumption into the pro level where, you know, verbal abuse is common. so, it s not just limited to the nwsl. it s not just limited to women s soccer or women s sports. it s really endemic, and yes,