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and thank you for watching news night. laura coates live starts now. >> the weekend is finally here. >> it is calling. >> a week from now there could be a government shutdown, where will we be at that point in time? >> deja vu it feels like for us today. >> it does, have a good weekend. we'll see you back here on monday. bye. now, walking down the streets of new york city, imagine this, and then you hear move over, mr. mayor, we're here for your cellphones. that's tonight on laura coates live. so it's america's largest city, and running it comes with a lot of attention, maybe more attention than new york city mayor eric adams bargained for. a federal investigation into campaign fundraising now appears to be inching that much closer to the mayor of new york. and by the way, in a very dramatic and a very public way. fbi agents seized adams' two phones and an ipad not today but several days ago on monday. first telling us that agents approached the mayor on the streets of new york, asked his security detail to step aside, climbed into his suv with him, and then took the man's devices. this all happening days after the fbi, as you well know, raided the home of adams' chief fundraiser. now, investigators are trying to determine whether the mayor's 2021 campaign received any illegal donations from turkish nationals or the turkish government. now, for his part, mayor adams insists that he has absolutely nothing to hide and his attorney is out with a statement saying this, quote, the mayor has not been accused of any wrong doing and continues to cooperate with the investigation. now, if anyone knows the law, should be eric adams. remember, he himself is a former police captain and earlier this week the law applies, he said, across the board. >> we got to follow the law. got to follow the law. almost to the point that i'm annoying. i just strongly believe you have to follow the law. >> if the federal government came one charges against you or local prosecutors charges against you, would you also be surprised? >> i got to be surprised if i'm the one that's leading the cry of following the law. >> now, there's an important side bar we have to mention in all of this. eric adams, as you know, is a democrat. now, why is that important? well, while the mayor is so far not accused of anything, the possible legal implications, they are certainly real. and that cuts at the narrative that's being pushed by fellow new yorker, now a floridian, named donald trump. the whole federal justice system is two tiered and it's unfair and targets only, well, him. >> this is the persecution of the person that's leading by very, very substantial numbers in the republican primary and leading biden by a lot. so if you can't beat him, you persecute him or you prosecute him. >> it's a very, it's a with the-tier system, but it's worse than that. it's a corrupt system. they've weaponized the justice department. they've weaponized the fbi, and they've come at me with the worst indictments. >> and let's not forget another high profile democrat who is also facing federal charges, new jersey senator bob menendez is accused of corruption and acting as a foreign agent of egypt. so while the former president, while he may rail against those carrying out the rule of law, the scales of justice appear to be a little more balanced than maybe even weighted evenly. i want to dive right in now with emily, who is a political reporter at politico. emily is also the co-author of politico's new york playbook and has been covering mayor adams extensively. emily, thank you for joining me this evening. i've got to say, this sounds very dramatic the way that it all unfolded. approaching him, taking his cellphones, his ipad as well, a week after somebody who dealt with fundraising for him at her home actually raided. he is now, of course, trying to distance himself from the investigation, but now that the devices have been taken, can he keep saying that ten-foot pole to distance himself? >> he can say it, whether we believe it is another question. the dramatic escalation into this federal investigation into mayor's 2021 campaign and whether it conspired with the turkish government to get illegal foreign contributions through a process called straw donors, where people who are donating aren't actually those who are giving the contributions. new york city has a very generous matching funds program and the more local donations you bring in the more public campaign financing dollars you can get. and as you've noted, the mayor on monday evening was stop on the street after a public event. he was asked for his security detail to move aside and federal agents climbed with the mayor into his car and took his phones and his ipad, something that he willingly surrendered. and his team has been stressing to me, to politico, to other reporter, that again he has not been charged or accused of wrong doing, nor has his chief fundraiser, who you noted whose home in brooklyn was raided on thursday, caused the mayor to rush back from a trip to d.c. where he was set to have a series of high profile meetings over the migrant crisis that he has said is destroying new york city. >> you know, i remember that very well. and everyone wondered about what was going on and he didn't address it in that moment. sort of surmised later on. but his attorney added this, emily. quote, after learning of the federal investigation, it was discovered that an individual had recently acted improperly. in the spirit of transparency and cooperation, this behavior was immediately and proactively reported to investigators. okay, look, my ears are perking up. any idea who this individual and this person is? >> well, only educated guesses thus far. city hall and the mayor won't divulge who this person is or what they are alleged to have done improperly. they are stressing, again, that the mayor acted proactively. he's cooperating with this probe. someone familiar with the process and how it unfolded telling me additionally that he actually turned around and voluntarily gave the fbi more electronic devices after that stop on monday night. but we're talking about how serious this is. they could have asked for him to surrender the phone rather than stopped him. they could have subpoenaed him instead of stopping him and surprising him in such a manner. and the same could be said of that fbi raid on suggs' home on thursday. they could have asked her to turn over the documents that they seized. they could have subpoenaed her. but this is a much higher legal bar that's been reached. >> unless, of course, emily, they believe, for some reason, you're not going to be cooperative or they think that the documents that they're seeking somehow might go poof in the night. who knows about why they've chosen to do so. there's always a poll for something, emily, i got to tell you. a poll shows 46% of voters in new york city are favorable towards mayor adams. 39% unfavorable. i'm wondering tonight, given the scope of this, the drama that's unfolded, and also there's been other instances circling him, although he has not personally been charged anything, how are new yorkers responding to all of this? >> with some surprise, but new yorkers are pretty wary of news events like this. and he did -- he has been fighting on behalf of new yorkers in terms of trying to secure federal funding for the migrants that have surged into the city. so he may be popular in that vein. let's remember, this is someone's whose name had been floated as potentially a next democratic contender for president. someone who used d be close to president biden. so no longer a national democrat in that way. >> that's not this moment, that's, of course, the way he went after biden and governor hochul at one point about that central issue around immigration. you're right to remind us of that. emily, thank you so much. i want to bring in cnn legal analyst as well as criminal defense attorney mr. joey jackson is here along with former fbi agent stewart kaplan. i'll add mr. to your name, stewart, i was just having a little affinity for joey jackson as well. let me ask you here, since i didn't give you the respect initially, stewart, how concerning is this development? >> you know, laura, as a former federal prosecutor with the execution of search warrants going up against a public corruption, a sitting elected official it -- this is a full blown, open, active investigation. this investigation is at the highest level of the department of justice and the fbi as well as the united states attorney's office because of the attorney general guidelines. the fact that they have verifiable, credible, and corroborated evidence which would be necessary in obtaining a search warrant against a sitting elected official says this mayor has some big problems and he has something, obviously, to be concerned about. >> or some big evidence, right, joey? there is a standard, of course, to get a subpoena. you can't just walk into a judge and say, i'm nosey, and i'd like to see his phones. if that were the case, you'd have a lot of people who could get access to the phones of their lovers. but the idea here is it's an elected official. there is something about campaigning going on around the scenes, but it's the way they've done it, to stewart's point. they didn't give the mayor the opportunity to hand them over. they didn't say, hey, can you please come on down to the station. by the way, you are a former, i think, captain, you know how to get to the station. they seized them in this base. why do you think there was a drastic step in trying to get them? >> so laura, good evening, let me put on my defense cap in addressing your question. you know, it could be that there's nothing nefarious about it. there's a lot -- it could be an optics point of view. the government has to be fair. and in the event, for example, you give a heads up, you can have the discussion, as you did to start you show, wait a minute, there's a disconnect, why do they go running into mar-a-lago to take donald trump's things but the mayor they allow him to cooperate, they allow him to when he feels like it to hand things over. so i think it could be an optics issue. the government, we have a very robust federal government. the fbi is very adept at doing what they do, and they made the determination that they would get a search warrant to do it. now, i want to say this distinction between a search warrant and an arrest warrant, there's not an arrest warrant, a search warrant, meaning whether or not there's reason to believe that maybe a crime was committed, potentially not by him. so i don't want to jump to those conclusions. i also hasten to add that just because you have a search warrant doesn't necessarily lead to an arrest, right, or a criminal prosecution or an indictment or a conviction. so we're way away from that, but i think the government's investigating, they should, and if there's something amiss, they'll have something to say about it. i'm not ready to throw in the towel as for the mayor's resignation and say he's cohorting with the turkish government on campaign contributions. we don't know that yet. >> he not only put the hat on, he had a little bungee cord. i can respect and applaud that. we know due process is due. he hasn't even been charged. this is now part of a federal investigation into possible illegal donations to the adams campaign from, as joey alluded to, the turkish government so. what sort of evidence might they be looking for? >> well, let me talk and let me respectfully disagree with my good friend mr. jackson. and i will -- >> he's buttering you up, joey, uh-oh, buttering you up. this is going to be good. >> that's the butter. >> i will put my special agent hat back on. there is a technique that we will implement, and my thought process is that once the search warrants were executed against the chief fundraiser, brianna suggs, last week, there was a decision, an investigative decision to leave the mayor in play, meaning leave his digital devices in play. now, there's one of two things that could happen. this investigative technique was used to see who the mayor would reach out to or who was reaching out to the mayor, obviously, with respect to the information now knowing that a multiple search warrants was executed against his chief fundraiser. and so we would always be interested i in seeing who would be burning up the mayor's phone or who he would reach out to. or given the execution of those previous search warrants, they then were able to obtain additional, credible, verifiable, and corroborated evidence directly related back to the mayor and this is why they executed these search warrants against the mayor of the city of new york. now, i agree with mr. jackson, a search warrant is a far cry from an arrest warrant. but let me be clear, given the rules of engagement in trying to initiate this type of open investigation against a sitting elected official, you have to have a lot of good evidence against that individual to be able to implement the most intrusive measure, and that is the execution of a search warrant. >> joey, last point for you here, not evidence against that, but evidence a crime could be found on a particular device in some respect. go ahead, joey. >> yeah, absolutely. and that could be the case. but there's another thing to it, and that could be because when they executed the warrant for the fundraiser they didn't find what they thought they could have or should have found, and therefore they took the investigation further by going and looking at the mayor himself. and so, again, there are nonnefarious, noncriminal reasons relating to potentially an investigation which is active, it's concerning, but i'm not ready to say mayor adams, you're in trouble. we don't know that yet. the fbi is doing their job as well they should. >> ladies and gentlemen, i had joey jackson and stewart kaplan on. you've entered the hallway of some courtroom in a city in america. glad you're both here. >> my pleasure. >> thanks. up next, he is charged with attempted murder for trying to crash an alaska airlines flight. now that pilot is speaking out about a magic mushroom trip gone bad and how he thought that he was not actually living in reality at the time. i've got the repeporter who intervieiewed him asas my guestt next. so tonight we're hearing for the first time from that off-duty pilot who was accused of trying to shut off a plane's engines mid-flight. do you remember this story? in a wide ranging interview with "the new york times", joseph emerson paints a picture of this flight. one where he told other pilots, i am not okay. that was moments before yanking the shutoff handles only to be stopped just in the nick of time by the crew. he has been charged with 83 counts of attempted murder. now, he's pleaded not guilty, saying he had no intention of hurting anyone that day. i'm glad you're both here. i'm beginning with you mike, as well. god, even describing this, what a terrifying account. and he says that he took some psychedelic mushrooms two days before the flight and that was why he did it? >> yeah, it really was this gathering he was having with friends to remember the death of one of their peers. his best man at his wedding. someone offered psychedelic mushrooms, he decided to take it. that was on a friday night. his flight out wasn't until sunday. you know, most of the people at the gathering, they had their trip, they got back to normal, had the rest of the weekend as planned. and for him it just -- he describes just really not being -- not recovering, not getting back to reality. he felt really all weekend that he was stuck in some sort of hell or purgatory or feeling like he was dead. and really struggling to discern what was real and what was not. >> i mean, you actually write in your article that he said that -- and this was what he said, explaining his actions, quote, i thought it would stop both engines. the plane would start to head towards a crash, and i would wake up. it took five days, he said, five days, for these mushrooms to clear his system. what did he tell you about what he was thinking all that time? >> yeah, i mean, all that time he described really feeling like sometimes he would sense something was real. you know, you mentioned him reaching up and grabbing the shutoff handles in the cockpit. and at that moment he just had come to the conclusion that nothing around him was real. it was all conjured up by his imagination. he pulled the handles, but then he felt the other pilots grab his wrists and to the point on one wrist he felt it bruised later. and at that point he had a sense of maybe this is real and sort of going back and forth. at times his brain convincing himself that he's not in reality and at times sort of having this sense that maybe what's happening around him is the real world. >> wow, dr. hoffman, i'm going to bring you into this. it's stunning to think about this. only the amount of time that had elapsed between the taking of the mushrooms and what happened, but what do you make of his explanation? >> we find that these really difficult stories that we've seen historically come up in the last couple years are -- speak to the broader issue we see in the data about the perceived barriers that pilots face in seeking medical care. and that is that pilots are required to meet certain medical standards to maintain a flying status. if they seek care and disclose health information during their periodic assessment, they run the risk of, usually temporary, loss of their ability to fly. this can result in negativing onpational and social repercussions for the pilot. this can leave some pilots weighing the risk of seeking care against what it could mean for their career hobby. >> that almost incentivizes silence, which means you cannot get the help you need. and then, of course, you've got passengers. this is a vicious cycle. >> this inadvertent paradigm, the intention being to optimize safety, can have implications about health behavior. the first and most important thing is aviation is exceptionally safe. we feel that these data are less of a story about safety and more a story about a health barrier that this very unique patient population, one that we all need to trust, faces. >> one of my colleagues did this excellent piece on the whole story on magic mushrooms in oregon. i learned so much about it in that context. but even the amount of time that it's taken, he says, for it to wear off or be able to shake this particular effect of the drug, is that normal? >> well, these types of medications and these types of substances can have varying effects on different people. but more importantly, we find that these stories that these individual events, you know, are part of a bigger pattern that taking, you know, action after individual pilots, well, we need to make sure people are following the rules to maintain safety, you know, instead that we should maybe be rethinking how do we meet the unique mental -- how do we build mental wellness into the aviation of the future while maintaining the safety record. >> i wonder, when i heard he had told his story, the prosecutor in me went back to, did his lawyers know he talked to you. were you surprised he told his story? >> yeah, i mean, as you know, it's pretty rare to hear someone charged with really significant crimes. i mean, 83 counts of attempted murder among other crimes that he's been charged with, really rare to hear from those types of people speaking publicly before their case has completely gone through the system. >> yeah. >> but you know, he was just really of the belief -- and his lawyers also -- of the belief that his story is consistent. the facts really are not in dispute here. >> interesting. >> and he wanted to convey in full transparency what had happened, what he had done, how he got to the position, and what was on his mind when he pulled those handles in the cockpit. >> mike baker, dr. william hoffman, thank you both so much. >> thank you, laura. well, coming up, cnn's presentation of hbo's overtime with one bill maher. you want to be able to provide your child with the tools or resources they need. with reliable internet at home, through the internet essentials program, the world opened up. fellas, fellas. that's how my son was able to find the hidden genius project. we wanted to give y'all the necessary skills to compete with the future. kevin's now part of this next generation of young people who feel they can thrive. ♪ ♪ now let's turn it over to our friends at hbo. every friday after realtime with bill maher, bill and his guests answer viewer questions about topics in the national conversation. so here is overtime with bill maher. >> hey, great to be back on cnn. we have texas senator, author of unwoke, ted cruz. okay. and former psychology professor jordan peterson, an opinion columnist for "the new york times". okay, so, here we go. this first one is for you, do republicans have a good answer to address the border crisis other than busing migrants to liberal cities. oh, a little dig there, ted. >> it's actually very simple. which is secure the boarder and when you apprehend someone send them home. when joe biden started we had the lowest rate of illegal immigration in 45 years. and he came in and he immediately reimposed catch and release. and it produced the worst rate of illegal immigration in our nation's history. i spent a lot of time at the border. i go out on midnight patrol with border patrol agents. >> really? >> many times. you should come. >> no, i'm good. >> i'm good. no, no. >> if you want to see, i will tell you this, actually, bill, if you saw what was happening, you would be horrified, because the people being abused by traffickers, you don't understand it until you see it firsthand, and it is immoral what's happening at our southern border. >> i take your word. >> okay. >> i don't have to go. >> but it is easy to fix because what actually worked is we had an agreement with mexico that was called the remain in mexico agreement, which says that if someone crossed into mexico illegally from typically central or south america they would remain in mexico while their asylum case was proceeding in the u.s., and the numbers plummeted. we had the lowest rate, as i said, in 45 years. and then biden came in and ripped that international agreement to shreds. >> boy, i walked right into that one, didn't i? >> yes. >> i know you know. all right, let me ask in a different way. do you think if the -- we attacked frit the reverse angle, if we punished the employers -- >> absolutely. >> you think we should? >> i am all for e-verify. i would punish the employers. i've introduced legislation to do that multiple times. >> your party must not like that. we know cheap labor is good. >> a lot of republicans don't like that. they're fewer, but i do think the republican party is changing. i think we're becoming much more of a blue collar party, which i think is a very good thing. >> okay. this is for -- they are switching, aren't they, yes, it's interesting. the parties are kind of switching like who the elitists are. it used to be the country club republicans, and now it's the chardonnay sipping democrat. it's -- i know you've written about it. it's an interesting do-si-do. >> it's almost happened completely in canada now. the conservatives are basically the working class party in canada. >> the heart of the republican party are truck drivers and steel workers and cops and firefighters, and i think that is a fantastic shift. i think we should be the party of jobs. we should be the party of people who want to work hard. >> okay, okay. for jordan, are men more susceptible to loneliness than women? >> no. no. well -- we know this. so at puberty women become more sensitive to negative emotion than men, and then that's permanent, on average, through the entire life course. and it looks like it's associated with hormonal changes. and so cross culturally, women experience higher levels of depression and anxiety and shame and guilt. all the negative emotions that clump together. and so loneliness is a pain-related emotion. and women are more susceptible to that. >> now, everybody recognizes that women, girls, mature faster than boys. this is why they've been going out with the upper classmen. at any age they usually don't want somebody exactly their age, even though this country is crazy for age appropriate. god forbid we go out of that. but what do you think, if you had to name a number, pick -- of like how far ahead the women are yearswise -- >> well, we know women prefer men four years older cross culturally. >> four. >> it's not necessarily only a matter of maturation, women are attracted by socioeconomic status and activity. >> how many years head start does a man need to match his maturity level to a woman's level? i think 40. >> there are individual differences in that too. >> learning a lot about women here. >> am i wrong about that? >> well, i'm -- yeah. i would say i have a different view of women from jordan. >> but what do you mean different? >> well, i mean, the depression, anxiety, what else do we have that's -- >> negative emotions. >> anything negative. >> no, not everything negative, just because men are much more likely to be agressive and end up in prison and be alcoholic. and they're overrepresented in learning disabilities. like there are sex differences in psychopathology, and they're not all tilted negatively towards women. definitely not. but negative emotion, it's absolutely clear that that's the case. and it's the biggest differences are in countries that have the most gender equal economies and socioeconomic structures. so the differences between men and women in terms of sense toift negative emotion maximize in scandinavia. >> wow. >> scandinavians are also much happier than we are, though. >> comparatively their women are less happy, so. >> i mean -- i've seen those surveys too. i find it a very difficult thing to quantify happiness. it's kind of like that pain chart in the hospital. one to ten, like somebody's three is somebody else's eight. you know what i mean? how happy are they really in scandinavia? i don't know. >> well, it's happiness -- >> i know this is the greatest country in the world, right, ted? >> amen, hallelujah. >> all right, how well -- >> i'm not going to get that one wrong. >> how will joe manchin's decision -- oh, this happened today -- joe manchin, west virginia senator, decision not to seek re-election impact the balance of power in the senate? i saw a lot of gleeful democrats. we got rid of joe manchin, good luck trying to elect another democrat in west virginia. john fetterman will win "dancing with the stars" before -- >> yeah, he succeeded robert bird. >> i guess he's making noise about a third party run? >> i think that he is one of the several democrats now who have decided that something has to be done, you know, to offer an alternative to biden. i mean, unfortunately, jill stein has also jumped into the race, and that worked out really well last time. so -- but i think that the balance of power in the senate is the bigger threat, honestly. >> what do you think about joe manchin? >> i like joe personally, he's an affable guy. >> but he's so much more conservative than most democrats. is there a place -- >> republicans will win that seat. and i would be willing to bet the democrats -- >> could you vote for a guy like joe manchin? >> no. >> he's not conservative enough for you? >> he votes on 90% of the times for things that are terrible. for example, i watched the panel discussion you had. you were talking about iran and hamas and i said at the end of our interview that i thought biden had direct responsibility for this attack. and you said why. let me give you one reason why. joe biden is responsible for $100 billion going to ayatollah. he made a decision to do that, and iran funds hamas. the "wall street journal" reported in september they brought hamas terrorists to iran and trained them to carry out the attack. i start from a really simple principle, don't give money to terrorists who want to kill us. and that, unfortunately, the democrat party's on the other side of that. >> it's -- you went to harvard, as you pointed out. you know -- >> you're a cornell man, not exactly a man of the people. >> i try not to mention it, though. but you know it's more complicated than that. >> no, i actually don't think it is. >> okay. >> when the ayatollah chants death to america, i believe him. >> the people of iran is different than the regime. >> he didn't give the money to the people, he gave the money to the ayatollah. the person he's giving it to is the one who has pledged he wants to murder as many jews and as many americans as possible. obama gave him $100 million, and biden gave him $100 million. that was foolish. >> i'm against that. >> agreement. >> no, i'm against killing americans. and i don't care who knows i. all right. in less than one minute, because we're on cnn. jordan, you created an app that teaches people how to write, is that an effective way to teach them to be critical thinkers? >> yes. >> yes. >> the most profound way of learning to think is to learn to write and edit in particular. that's how you get rid of the stupid ideas. >> i agree. there's thinking and then there's talking and then there's writing. each one makes you better. writing, you really do edit. >> yep. >> talking is better than just what's going on in your mind. >> other people edit when you're talking. edit you. >> yes. and you don't -- obviously lots of people say lots of stupid things, but at least you have some mechanism, but what goes on in your mind, this is the problem with people saying, you know, god talked to me. he didn't. you talked to him. he didn't answer. those are called thoughts. anyway, thank you, cnn, great to be back. thank you, panel, we'll see you next week. >> well, you can watch realtime with bill maher on friday nights on hbo at 10:00 p.m. and watch overtime right here on cnn friday nights at 11:30. up next, americans preparing to honor the nation's veterans tomorrow and the first african american woman to reach the rank of major general in the army joins me to talk about her service and the road to further inclusion in the military. that's next. now, did you know that today there are more than 18 million living veterans here in the united states of america. on the eve of veterans day, a day when we honor those who have served our armed forces, including those who've sacrificed their lives for us and our country, i'd like you to meet the first african american woman in the united states army's history to achieve the rank of major general in the u.s. army reserve, major general marcia anderson joins me now. general, thank you so much for your service. i must say, even in announcing your title, my -- i stood up, my spine was that much higher talking to you. what a fantastic accomplishment. what led you to even want to serve? >> it was very serendipitous. i needed some science credits when i was in college, so i ended up signing up for rotc, which was in the department of military science. so that's how i ended up in rotc and later got my commission and was part of the army for over 36 years. >> and in that, i mean nearly four decades, tell me what has it meant to you to serve that long. >> i made some lifelong friends, and as a person who was never on a team, i learned how to be a teammate. i learned to test myself. i learned how to be a leader. i learned to be able to adapt to changing circumstances and also to work with people from different backgrounds, many of whom i would never have met if i never joined the army. >> when you think about the idea of inclusion and who's on that team, so important. and you've seen efforts to be even more inclusive in the armed forces, has been met with a lot of political backlash, why do you think it's so important to really have representation in our armed services? >> well, one of the things i like to say is that if you're not at the table, then you're on the menu. and by that, i basically mean you need to be in the room, you need to have the ability to share your thoughts, your experiences, and i think diversity of thought makes any organization better. because if we're all thinking the same, if we all have the same lived experiences, the organization may do okay, but it could be so much better if you had more diverse people managing it and leading it. >> you know, i read that prior to your retirement, general, you had the option for another assignment, but you opted instead to pass the baton. why was that so important? >> i felt very content with what i'd accomplished, and i thought it was important to step aside and give someone else an opportunity. i think sometimes we overstay our welcome, and i did not want to do that. and i knew that there were people serving with and behind me who would do just as good as job as i could have done in that next assignment. so i thought it was just important to, you know, open the door, let someone else walk through it, demonstrate that they could be successful and just let the organization continue to move forward. it didn't need me to do that. >> well, your humility and your strength and your bravery and your service is so awe inspiring. and i'm so glad to have a chance to meet you today. thank you so much for all that you have done and continue to do to lead by example. thank you. >> thank you for sharing -- letting me share my experiences. >> well, happy veterans day to you and to all those who have served as well. we'll be right back. tonight's cnn hero, dr. stewart, made it his mission to offer veterinary care to pets that belonged to the growing numbers of homeless people on the streets of california. >> i've seen people give up their last meal for their pet. and people who have $3 to their name and after i'm done with the treatment, they will try and give me that $3. this is your partner, obviously, huh? >> this is my best friend. >> they see me with my stethoscope and my bag. >> yeah, you look good. >> this little dog was days away from dying. >> and then they start sharing stories about their dog and the history. >> it makes me feel good. and he loves me. and i knowow he loves s me. >> i i can treat about 80% of te cases i see out of a small bag. >> you do vaccines too? that's really cool. >> it's antibiotics, antiinflammatories, flea and tick, heartworm prevention. it's all there. it's at no cost to them. it's free. i'm building a network of trusted volunteers, technicians, hospitals and clinics we can go to, call on. doesn't matter what your situation is or what your background or past is. i see a pet in need, and i see a person who cares for them dearly who just needs some help. >> go to cnnheroes.com to vote for your favorite cnn hero. hey, thank you all for watching. our coverage continues. nice footwork. man, you're lucky, watching live sports never used to be this easy. now you can stream all your games like it's nothing. yes! 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