Transcripts For CNN The Situation Room With Wolf Blitzer 20240709

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the average of new cases has never been higher as we head into the third year of this pandemic. >> reporter: we keep hoping it will be better. this is not the season anyone wanted. we are over 250,000 average daily cases. that's a record nobody wanted to see. some of the most vulnerable among us are baring the brunt of it. nationwide, hospitalizations of children with covid are up. on average, nearly 50% in just one week. new york city has seen pediatric admissions jump to five times what they were. in washington, d.c., half the children coming are testing positive. that's not because omicron is uniquely targeting them. but because -- >> we see chirp hospitalized because of covid or in the icu because of covid. they are unvaccinated. parents are unvaccinated. >> reporter: that's why some believe the reopening of schools, especially those with covid safety measures, could reduce the spread of among kids. others are not convinced. >> what we will see is once children go back to school, within a week or two of schools opening is when we will see highest numbers. >> reporter: amid the winter weather, the pandemic is roaring across the country. with over a quarter million new cases diagnosed daily. >> it's a game changer in terms of its high transmistransmissio. >> reporter: hospitalizations are half of what they were last winter. among vaccinated, medical workers with breakthrough cases. they are being sent home when demand is sooaring. >> it's a strain. i understand the pressure to get workers back earlier. >> reporter: omicron is spreading so fast, the impact is beyond the holiday travel problems. in new york city, apple closed all its stores. in maryland, courts are cut back thei their winter schedules. >> we can overcome the supply challenge and the cost challenge. that will help us. >> reporter: some health officials think the cdc's guidelines that short isolation periods if you are impacts that maybe that will help. it will get more people dealing with the problems. others are not convinced. they are saying whatever is happening is so aaggressive, no matter what we will the numbers will tick up, for a while. >> tough few weeks ahead. tom foreman, thanks. the demand for covid tests is growing by the okay. leyla santiago is in miami. what kind of lines are you seeing? i suppose, are you hearing frustrations as well? >> reporter: we are hearing frustrations. these are lines that could take three to five hours to get through, according to the workers. they actually had to open two new sites in miami/dade county to meet the demand. where we are right now, one of the busiest sites in south florida. just yesterday alone, they administered about 9,000 tests here. the workers telling me that they expect this level of demand to continue into the new year. >> it's almost like covid started all over again. with the influx of patients that are coming through. a lot of people aren't feeling well, that's why they are coming to us. we understand we have a lot of patients that are concerned. i was exposed or i was next to somebody who was exposed. i want to make sure i'm okay. >> reporter: that's whfor the o site testing. there's the search for the at-home rapid test kits. miami/dade distributed 152,000 test kits. they have put another request in for more. >> people are scrambling for those test kits. leyla santiago, thanks. joining me is dr. jha. great to see you. appreciate your expertise. this is troubling news. the u.s.i hitting a record numbr of average cases. the next month will be dire when it comes to the new infections, particularly for the unvaccinated who have been warned time and again to get vaccinated. what should we be bracing for? >> thanks for having me back. we are basically at our pandemic highs right now. that's with a lot of under counting. a lot of states are not reporting. there's no doubt about it, we have more infections in america than at any point in the pandemic. what i expect is the next couple of weeks we will see increasing numbers of infections. our pandemic high was 250,000 in a day. no doubt we will hit half a million. we might hit a million a day. the question will be the hospitals. what's going to happen there? with a milder version, which i expect it will turn on omicron is mild he th, there are enough have not gotten vaccinated or not a booster that hospitals will be strained in the next few weeks. that's what i'm worried about. we need a functioning health care system for everybody, not just people with covid. >> troubling, coronavirus hospitalizations in children are up almost 50% in one week. how concerned are you about this sudden increase in the number of children who are coming down with more severe illness? we don't want to see kids going to the hospital. that's what we are seeing in big numbers. >> yeah. you know, we know where kids get infected. they get infected from family members who are not vaccinated themselves. we know that a large proportion of kids have not gotten vaccinated. under 5 can't. a lot of 5 to 17-year-olds haven't gotten vaccinated because of misinformation about covid and kids. it's really important to get kids vaccinated. we will havcarefully. a remind they're covid is a problem for kids. kids are affected every bit as much as -- kids can be affected as well as adults. >> let's talk about the new cdc isolation guidelines. recommending people who test positive isolate for just five days if they are asymptomatic. do you think this is the right move? you can explain why? we can't have everybody out sick. from a practical standpoint, we had to do something. >> also, we should think about what the data says about contagiousness. we know is that people are most contagious a couple of days before they have symptoms and two to three dazesymptoms. masks up for five more days, that's the guidelines, i think it's reasonable. we have argued that we should be lower it to five days. there are ways of getting people back into society, back to their families. >>. the cdc says there's no need to test out of isolation after five da days. can people confidently return to work know theing they are not endangering others? >> i really think a negative test would help enormously. that's why i have been calling for it. the cdc's response is we are going to ask people to wear a mask. that's a reasonable alternative. it's also reasonable to ask the question, do we think people will do that? wouldn't a negative test be better? i understand the cdc went down this road. >> we see an emphasis on mask wearing. let's talk about the kind of masks people should be wearing. is there a problem in that we have a stubborn segment of the population that won't get vaccinated, won't wear masks? isn't that a huge part of the problem. >> there's been a ton of misinformation. it's a tool we have to control the virus and how it spreads and to protect ourselves. if you are indoors, you should wear a mask. you should be wearing a high quality mask, which are available, not expensive. that is what people should be doing to protect themselves. i'm sorry to see this has become a political symbol as opposed to a basic health tool. >> with the number skiess skyrocketing. dr. jha, thanks. we preesappreciate it. the biden administration pushing back on the house january 6th committee's request for some trump white house documents. ready to turn your dreams into plans and your actions into achievements? 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[upbeat acoustic music throughout] ♪ i'm gonna keep on lovin' you ♪ turns out everyone does sound better in the shower. and it turns out the general is a quality insurance company that's been saving people money for nearly 60 years. for a great low rate, and nearly 60 years of quality coverage, go with the general. i always dreamed of having kids of my own. ♪ ♪ now i'm ready for someone to call me mom. at northwestern mutual, our version of financial planning helps you live your dreams today. breaking news in the house investigation into the january 6th insurrection. the panel standing down a request for some trump white house documents after some pushback from the biden administration. how significant is this from the biden administration? i suspect this has to do with executive privilege. >> reporter: that's right. this is a bunch of documents they are tasked with reviewing before the national archives sends it to the committee. the house select committee paring back that request from the trump white house aftered bide -- after the biden administration pushed back on that. they worked in lockstep and continued to do so as the house select committee is acquiescing to what the biden administration wants. the biden administration determined that documents were not relevant. in that case, the house select committee said, we won't even try to go after those. in other cases, the committee is deferring its request for documents, the administration decided were highly sensitive and originated outside of the white house. they are deferring the request. there's a chance that they could come back to this and actually get those documents. these are the kinds of developments that show the committee is still working really at warp speed to collect and analyze this information for what we think is possibly an interim report in the summer with the possibility of a full report this fall. the committee is going to enter a new phase with plans for public hearings next year. as we move forward through next year, there will be a public phase. most of the work has been behind closed doors. >> absolutely. a lot of folks out there have been waiting for. stand by. thanks for that. we want to bring in defense attorney and federal prosecutor shan wu. this is a first. the biden administration limiting the scope of the documents and this document request. what does that tell you? they're not slamming the door on the whole thing. >> exactly. in some ways, it's a return to some normalcy. normally, this is how these types of requests would be handled from congress, with white house counsel's office looking over it, asserting some privilege, releasing others. i think what's important here is that the biden administration is not slamming the door. but they're not throwing out the baby with the bath water. they want to be careful about not opening up a precedent where anything involving national security could be looked at from congress. i think it plays up some important differences between a congressional investigation versus a criminal one, which would have more security and privacy for the white house. >> it doesn't sound like the committee has a schedule yet for public hearing. they don't plan to release their final report until the full. what do you make of that time line? are you concerned this is just taking too long for the public to be able to absorb all of the details of what happened on january 6? >> i think i share a lot of the impatience that so many of us have to want to know the full narrative, what they have been building. they have been building so much evidence and interviewing so many people that they can't really just throw it all out there in a hearing. it has to be carefully prepared for, carefully organized. otherwise, they run the risk of having a meandering hearing, bogged down in different narratives. it takes a lot of work to present the hearing in a way that will be truly educational for the american people and also, of course, really lay out a narrative and road map for the potential criminal charges that could be pursued by the justice department. >> is the committee feeling -- are members of the committee feeling any pressure to get this done sooner? i suppose they are hearing some of this from their constituents, progressive activists out there and so on. is there concern among democrat democrats? >> this is what we know today. what we have seen reporting on this committee for several months is that what we know today can change tomorrow. we see news all the time coming out of the this committee. it's possible that this time line will change. it's not news to anybody that there's an election in november of 2022. you have a lot of people working long hours to try to make this report the historical record of what happened on january 6. they don't want it mpoliticized. there's work to do and this time line could change. >> select committee investigates the justice department who is trying to prosecute rioters. a federal judge gave a green light for a conspiracy case against leaders of the proud boys. that sounds significant. >> it is very significant. that's a cornerstone of the justice department's theory here is the obstruction of a congressional proceeding. were that theory to have been knocked defense it would have been a problem. the judge dismisses that you can claim violence in an attempt to overthrow the election was a first amendment expression. that's been put to recht here. in the criminal case, that appeal is not going to be available to them normally until after there's a conviction. this should clear the road for the prosecutions. >> what can we expect from some of the high profile january 6th trials that are set to begin in january? when are we going to see big names from january 6 be put on trial? >> exactly. what we will see are the highest profile cases that aim at this idea there was a coordinated effort to undermine the election in a violent way. that's what they are going for with the major conspiracy cases. this effort, that's the thing that doj is drilling down on. as we get to february and see higher profile cases, we will see how successful they are in bringing forward this idea this was a coordinated effort. >> thanks for joining us. we appreciate it. coming up, two experts weigh in on the rapid rise in hospitalizations of children with covid-19. what it reveals about the pandemic right now. so we offer e exam and x-rays free to new patients without insurance - everyday. plus, patients get 20% off their treatment plan. we're on your corner and in your corner every step of the way. because your anything is our everything. aspen dental. anything to make you smile. book today at aspendental.com, walk in, or call 1-800-aspendental. as a dj, i know all about customization. that's why i love liberty mutual. they customize my car insurance, so i only pay for what i need. how about a throwback? ♪ liberty, liberty, liberty, liberty ♪ only pay for what you need. ♪ liberty, liberty, liberty, liberty ♪ my name is douglas. i'm a writer/director and i'm still working. in the kind of work that i do, you are surrounded by people who are all younger than you. i had to get help somewhere along the line to stay competitive. i discovered prevagen. i started taking it and after a period of time, my memory improved. it was a game-changer for me. prevagen. healthier brain. better life. get your personalpoints plan! i'm james corden and i'm here to tell people that ww is getting even more personal. keep on shopping. ignore us. i've lost, like, 28 pounds. you look great! wow. i love that my clothes fit better. but i just love ice cream a little bit more than that. the new ww personalpoints program is particular to you. so what kind of foods do you like? avocado. ice cream. sandwiches. no food is off limits. when can i start? start the new year with three months free. join today at ww.com. hurry, offer ends january 3rd. moving is a handful. no kidding! fortunately, xfinity makes moving easy. easy? -easy? switch your xfinity services to your new address online in about a minute. that was easy. i know, right? and even save with special offers just for movers. really? yep! so while you handle that, you can keep your internet and all those shows you love, and save money while you're at it with special offers just for movers at xfinity.com/moving. we are following breaking news on the spike in covid cases here in the u.s. the average number of new infections just hit an all-time high. hospitalizations among children are surging. elizabeth cohen will join us in a few moments. first, let me bring in some experts to talk about this. dr. stanley spinner at texas children's urgent care and with us dr. roberta diviasa at children's hospital. we will join elizabeth in a moment. as we were talking about earlier in the program, we are seeing this nationwide spike in hospitalizations of children right now with the coronavirus. can you tell us what you are seeing in texas? are more children falling seriously ill? what are the cases like that you are seeing? >> here in houston, we are seeing more and more kids getting infected. our positivity rates are higher than they have ever been. we have over 45 kids in the hospital. not quite the record that we have saw with delta. that number keeps rising. it's probably just the fact that more kids are getting infected. as a result, whatever percentage that is is then resulting in more kids being hospitalized. we are seeing the same types of symptoms that we have seen before. respiratory primarily. oxygen -- need for oxygen or assisted breathing. we are having kids with the multi-system inflammatory condition that require hospitalization after they have covid. >> we don't want to see that. does that sound similar to what you are experiencing at children's national hospital? how worrisome is this? >> it's similar with a slightly different twist. i think one thing people should know is that children have been hospitalized with this disease throughout this entire pandemic. we have had children through every one of the four waves. what we see now is that since the overall number of infections is so much higher, because this is such a contagious virus, that the percentage -- the percentage of kids that end up hospitalized has not gone up. it's around 2% of any child that gets sick will end up hospitalized. if you have a lot more infections, you will have nor kids hospitalized. we are up to 6,100 children that have come to children's hospital in d.c. with symptoms. 1,000 have been hospitalized. about one-third of those have needed intensive care support. two-thirds are in our isolation unit needing oxygen. what's striking about this omicron related surge is that the amount of kids coming in every day has almost doubled. our peak number of admissions, coming into the hospital to stay every day, peaked out at around 20 when we were in the other waves. now we are getting almost 45, 50 kids in the hospital as what we call our census, the kids that are in the hospital. sometimes up to 18, 19 in a single day. that's the difference. it's not because the virus is more severe. it's because the overall infection and number of cases has really shot up. >> coronavirus cases in children are already skyrocketing. when we see the impact of the holidays, combined with the return to school, in january, how much do you fear this is going to get? how much worse do you feel this will get? >> i think we fear it's going to get a lot worse. between getting together for the holidays and back to school, here in texas, masking is not necessarily as popular as in other parts of the country. a lot of schools don't have mandatory masking. that will allow for more -- i think a more widespread skep ar yo. >> can you describe the difference between a child vaccinate and tests positive compared to a child not vaccinated and catches this virus? do you see a difference? >> yeah. if luook at the chirp that need to be sick enough that they need to come to the hospital, the vast majority are either p partially vaccinated or unvaccinated. the mortgality in children is very low. there are interventions we can do. the mortality rate remains less than a half a percent in children. a big difference than adults. >> i spoke with dr. fauci about vaccinations for children last night. let's listen to what he told me. >> i appeal to parents that if your child is 5 and over, get that child vaccinated. not only for their own safety of, because there's a lot more infections in children. some of which result in hospitalizations. that's one of the things you don't want to happen. >> is that your message as well? >> absolutely. we talk to our families every day and explain to them the importance of protecting their children, which helps protect the rest of the family and others around them. one of the things that we talk about -- yes, the incidence of children being hospitalized is lower than adults. as a parent with a child in the hospital for any reason, it's a traumatic event. even though they may be hospitalized and come home, just being in the hospital is absolutely just terrifying. it's so important to try to minimize that risk by protecting them. >> i suppose in those kinds of cases, you probably are hearing from parents from time to time who say, i wish i had gotten my kid vaccinated. maybe i would have prevented this. do you get stories like that? >> yeah, we do. of course, we never try to say that to someone with a child in the hospital, because it really is a traumatic event for the whole family. i think one thing i would add is that even though the kids do well and thankfully don't have a high mortality, what we don't know yet is what are the long-term affects of this on children? we are studying 1,000 children over three years to look at the long-term affects, whether that's cardmental health, how t develop. these are children that are in a really key developmental stage of their life. we don't know yet how this virus affects the kids. we know that long covid occurs in kids. it happens even in children who have had very mild infections. we have a dedicated clinic to take a look at those kids and help them with their variety of symptoms that we are starting to catalog. many of them have problems thinking, fatigue. they have abdominal pain, headaches. we are fully booked out through march. it's not a rare problem. there's a lot to be learned about this affect in children. getting them vaccinated is the way to prevent this. these kids are eligible. we don't have the uptake we need to have, particularly in the kids in the 5 to 11 age group. we need to get rates up. that's our number one group for infections right now. we look at our daily lab data, it's that 5 to 11 that's really the highest group. >> absolutely. a top priority. something they could get done during the holiday break here for a lot of kids before they go back to school. thanks so much to both of you. we appreciate it. >> thank you. >> thank you. just ahead, the family of a 14-year-old girl killed by an officer's stray bullet shares their grief as police release dramatic bodycam video. with our unique tub over tub installation in just a day, bath fitter doesn't just fit your bath, it fits your busy schedule. why have over two million people welcomed bath fitter into their homes? 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works on that too, and lasts 12 hours. 12 hours?! who studies that long? mucinex dm relieves wet and dry coughs. a scene of deadly chaos released by the los angeles police department. it shows their attempt to capture an assault suspect. a girl's family is speaking out. >> reporter: searching for strength no parent should need. something struck my daughter, she says. it threw us to the ground and she died in my arms. it was a bullet from a los angeles police officer. the lapd was responding to calls of an attacker in the burlington attacker. in the chaos of 911 calls were reports of a shooter inside. >> there's a guy with a gun. >> reporter: police say the attacker did not have a gun. this metal bike lock, which he used to strike female shoppers, hitting one so violently she was bleeding on the floor. >> she's bleeding. >> reporter: the lapd says as they shot the suspect, one of the bullets ricochetted off the floor and rwent through the wal striking a 14-year-old in the chest. she was hugging her mother in a dressing room as they hid. they were praying. you can hear the horror in the seconds after the bullet struck her. our sweet angel is gone forever, she says. give us the strength to give us justice. my daughter, i love you. her father held up a skateboard, the present she never opened. i'm going to leave it at her grave, says her father, so she can skate with the angels. they are immigrants from chile. the 14-year-old wanted to stay in america believing it was safer here. >> they came to america from chile to get away from violence and injustice. they can't believe this happened in america. >> reporter: the lapd says it is early in the investigation. promises a thorough, transparent investigation and examination of the officer-involved shooting. the california attorney general's office is also going to be involved. as far as what the parents are going to do, their next step, they weren't specific about that. they said that what they wanted today is for the public to learn a lot more about their little girl. she was 14 years old. loved school. her favorite subject was robotics. she dreamed of becoming a u.s. citizen. >> a shame. a sad story. thank you for that report. let's dig deeper with charles ramsay and joey jackson. this one breaks your heart into a million pieces. it's awful. let me play this body camera video of the moment these officers arrive on the scene. i'm sure you have seen it a few times. what stands out to you now that we see this video? we were talking about it last night. you wanted to see this. what stands out now? >> this is incredibly tragic. any heart goes out to that family. it's unbelievable tragedy that took place. when you look at the shooting, you have to look at in its entirety. from the time they got a call, which started off as an assault, upgraded to a person with a gun. they think they have an active shooter. they form up as they are trained to do. they go upstairs. they encounter the woman bleeding and the suspect. the issue becomes whether or not the use of deadly force was justified against the suspect. in my opinion, it was. he was armed with that bike lock and chain. he caused serious injury to several people. the officer had no way of knowing that that young lady or anyone was behind that wall. you are trained to fire if your field of vision is clear. there's no way he could see behind that wall. it's an absolute tragedy that bullet penetrated. i heard on an earlier show someone questioned the type of weapon the officer had. actionive active shooter, that's the weapon you would use and draw in that type of situation. that's consistent with their policy. it doesn't bring her back. it's a tragedy. this is not a kim potter type of situation as i see it. >> joey, you can hear the officer's instruction, slow down, slow down. could that be used against the officers? i assume that will come up during the course of the investigation. >> yeah, good to be with you and chief ramsay. i think there are two dtracks. the one is the criminal, the other what the family will be doing is a civil approach. civil involving monetary problems and structural reform. as it relates to the criminal aspect of it, i don't see any crikcriminality criminality. state of mind was informed with respect to the belief this was an active shooting. they saw blood. there were indications this person was very violent, was attacking people, engaged in an attack with a chain. on the civil side, however, i see liability for the following reasons. you never want to send guess officers. they are there on the ground. they are doing the best they can under very difficult circumstances. the questions are going to be, did they need to shoot at that specific time? was there an opportunity for deescalation? was anyone in specific harm at the time that the shot was fired? was there an opportunity to have other reasonable alternatives? with regard to someone being -- this girl -- heartbreaking, tragic, of course the police wouldn't know that. the issue for me is the risk perceived is the duty defined. you are in a public place. you are in burlington coat factory. you have no know, could there be a probability there would be a protective that would go elsewhere? based upon those circumstances, the family will be looking for reforms. in addition, money will never bring anybody back. that's what our system has. that's what they will look to do with respect to a civil litigation for monetary damages. >> thank you. a sad story. we will stay on top of it. thanks for the insights. a vile voicemail threat. the climate of hate against lawmakers one year after the capitol riot. e a combo of stressed, dry and sandpaper. strypaper? why do we all put up with this? when there's biotrue hydration boost eye drops. biotrue uses naturally inspired ingredients like an electrolyte, antioxidant, even your tears' own moisturizer. and no preservatives. these ingredients are true to your eyes' biology. see? 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doesn't there need to be more accountability and more urgency before then? >> well, i think you have seen a sense of urgency of the people that they are talking to. uh, the -- they are trying to get the facts and i think now, more than ever, the facts matter. and i am not going to tell someone what timeline to do their investigation on because i think it's more important that it be done in a thorough and factual, nonemotional, nonpassionate way. >> and meanwhile, the situation on capitol hill is still very toxic nearly a year after the january 6th attack. you came on cnn. you shared a threat you got over voicemail, similar to what some of your colleagues are experiencing. let's play that for our viewers and talk about it. >> you god damn old, senile [ bleep ]. you are as old and ugly as biden. you ought to get the [ bleep ] off the planet. you [ bleep ] foul [ bleep ]. they ought to try you for treason. you and every one of your scumbag friends, i hope your family dies in front of you. i hope to god if you have got any children, they die in your face. >> it -- it pains me to even listen to that. it's just so awful, congresswoman, i mean, how do you do your job, help your constituents, you know, carry on the work of your office with this kind of vitriol coming in? and i mean, is this just the tip of the iceberg? >> so, jim, i kind of want to -- this was shared in a, as you know, when we were talking about civility. in the congress in america. you know, this is just unfortunately several threats i probably get a week, and that doesn't talk about the written facebook or mail comments that we get. and many other offices are getting these. but it's also happening in our communities. we need to think about what is happening. i was at a coney island in my district and a waitress who had been there for 35 years said i can't take the insults anymore. someone at the airport was in tears at how rude people have been this last week. frontline workers, doctors and nurses. we all have to take a deep breath and think about our words and that they have consequences. our communities are seeing a lot of fear, anger, vitriolicness. it's not okay. it's not okay for us as a country. >> and -- and quick, very quickly, what is the solution? >> we got to think about it. we all got to work at it. we got to remember what we were taught as children to treat each other with respect and dignity. and all of us need to take responsibility for trying to -- to treat each other with the courtesy we want to be treated -- treated with. do unto your neighbor as you would have done unto yourself. a great message. congresswoman debbie dingell, we are short on time but such an important subject. thanks for sharing that experience with us. we hope it strikes a cord and people get back to some decency. thanks for your time this evening. we appreciate it. >> remember, united we stand, divided we fall. >> absolutely, that's right. thank you. and up next, the death toll climbs in a killing spree that rocked the denver area. i answer questions about my goals and the foods i love. i like that the ww personalpoints plan is built just for me. start the new year with three months free. join today at ww.com. hurry, offer ends january 3rd. - i'm norm. - i'm szasz. [norm] and we live in columbia, missouri. we do consulting, but we also write. [szasz] we take care of ourselves constantly; it's important. we walk three to five times a week, a couple miles at a time. - we've both been taking prevagen for a little more than 11 years now. after about 30 days of taking it, we noticed clarity that we didn't notice before. - it's still helping me. i still notice a difference. prevagen. healthier brain. better life. and we are just learning that a fifth person has died in a denver area shooting spree that also injured three people, including a police officer. cnn's omar jimenez has the latest. omar, what more are you learning about the investigation? some -- some new information has come in? >> that's right, jim, well we just learned from police the suspect has been identified as 47-year-old lyndon macleod and he allegedly shot and killed five people over the course of a little more than an hour monday afternoon, injured others, as you mentioned, including a police officer. but police also revealed that these people may have been known to the suspect. they believe he had a connection, at least to some of them, and that's not all they revealed today. take a listen. >> we would like to confirm that this individual was on the radar of law enforcement, that there were two previous investigations into this individual's action. neither of those investigations resulted in state or federal criminal charges. these previous investigations took place in 2020 and early 2021. they will be part of this ongoing investigation into this violent crime spree that took place. >> and a lot of what the information that's coming out in the past 24 hours has been tied to what happened. now, the next step, jim, is going to be looking into why. >> cnn's omar jimenez, thanks for staying on top of that. i am jim acosta. thanks very much for watching. "erin burnett outfront" starts right now. good eke, i'm poppy harlow in for erin burnett. out front ton tonight, breaking news. a new record high number of covid cases. seven-day average now topping 256,000. that is the highest that number has ever been in the nearly two year long pandemic. the previous high, nearly 252,000 in january. so far, hospitalizations and deaths have not seen a similar increase in pace, but there are concerning signs

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