Transcripts For CNNW CNN Newsroom With Brooke Baldwin 201502

Transcripts For CNNW CNN Newsroom With Brooke Baldwin 20150213



that air base is home to some 320 americans who are there training iraqi military pilots and the u.s. says it has no plans to evacuate them. this huge strategic gain as the pentagon admits isis is now getting a foot hold beyond iraq beyond syria. libya, yemen, pakistan and afghanistan now seeing a rise in isis militants. the reason? deflections by the taliban. they realize flying under the black flag of isis will get them more money and more recruits. let's go straight to phil black who's in northern iraq right now. when you look at the map and see how close baghdadi is to that u.s. training base how close is isis to that base right now? >> reporter: pretty close earlier in the day, brooke. we understand from iraqi officials and the u.s. military there are some eight isis members who plan to attack the air base. they say they were all suicide bombers. they were all stopped and all killed. they say this is a sprawling base a very large facility and that u.s. personnel that you mention, they were many -- some kilometers or miles away from the point of the attack and never at any risk. but this attack became possible because of that progress that isis has made in the last 24 hours in this nearby town you mentioned. al baghdadi. it's now controlled 93%. they've suddenly surged in this town because they have activated sleeper cells as they say. the air base nooebearby has consistently come under attack but this now much more established isis presence certainly is providing a more continued, more sustained security threat brooke. >> from the isis progress that you're outlining can you compare that to where you are in northern iraq and hue that situation differs from there? >> reporter: there are two regions at the moment. al baghdadi and the province west of iraq. it's an area where isis has continued to maintain its ability to go on the defensive where the local city tripebes haven't been able to stop them contain them stop that advance. whereas here in the north of the country, the northern kurdish fighters have been able to stop isis, roll back some of their territory, a significant part of their territory really but isis still controls big towns and cities here and is still able to lash out on daily basis. so still very much a threat. a slightly more contained one, but it is a situation here that is still going to continue for some time yet because it will not be easy. it will take time. and it's going to take really the iraqi army to step up and do that. that's the same iraqi army that's been detain and clearly is not anywhere near the point of readiness to be fit for purpose for such an offensive operation, brooke. >> there was an army veteran not too long ago who helped build that base back in 200034 and he's stunned to see what's happened here in 2015. phil black thank you so much. we'll continue on with that later in the show. but let's stay on the isis threat. how are they at threat and how will the troop reese act if they continue to enkroich on this base? joining me now lieutenant colonel scott mann. colonel, welcome. >> thank you for having me. >> thank you for coming on. we have people who are quote/unquote advisers. i just have to ask you. they would be combat-ready correct, if isis were to get up to those gates and beyond. surely they would be poised to fight back. >> yeah absolutely. i mean these guys are adviser but, you know advising is one of the most dangerous jobs in the military because of the fact that you are up close and personal to the action but you're having to work by with and through indigenous forces in some rough places. i think what concerns me more than anything is not that we're not ready but you're investing in the iraqi military only and not at a community level, especially in a sunni-dominated area. that's how isis is able to exploit things and get close to the base. >> wait a minute. how do you mean? how should we be engaging community-wise? >> well, one of the things that we've learned is that, you know just working with the military as an adviser in a place like iraq where you have a sincere distrust of the military by the population because it is a shoo ya military the fact of the matter is they exploit it within the sunni populations, and if we don't put our advisers out at a community level, at least working with the sunnis and those areas as well trying to resist it makes it easy. we self-'s late when we only work with the military. >> i was hearing from a general who's not coming on the show but he was just sort of saying the acts of isis with regard to these communities and the children and the elderly who they are killing with these suicide bombs is just cowardly. so how capable, really are these isis militants here? >> i mean they're very capable. but they're very diabolical and there are a lot of folks at the community level who want to push back against them who do want to resist. in a lot of these areas, look, this is a place where they like to work. they luke to go in damaged communities. they can kind of coon the systems, whether that's afghanistan, yemen, or iraq. they like to go to the tribal areas. but frankly tribes are pretty autonomous and they will push back and stand up but we're going to have to work with them in those areas, and that's something we're not doing right now. even obama's request for authorization for force, if you look at it, it's just to work with the military. until we close that trust deficit, we're putting our guys at risk by isolated them on the bases. >> colonel mann let me ask you something, too, because it's frightening. now we're no longer talking about iraq and syria. as i mentioned before members of the taliban are apparently defecting and rebranding themselves and swearing allegiance to the black isis flag. you sierras on the map where isis is appearing. do you expect we'll see more of this? >> i do. and i'll tell you why. these guys understand the importance of narrative and story. they understand if properly spun that islam is under attack by the west am it's the duty of every muslim to defend it they can push that all over the world and it resonates. one of the things we're going have to get our head around we're going have to decide we want to win and stop dabbling in it. we're going to have to -- >> you think the air strikes are dabbling? >> i'm sorry? >> you think air strikes are dabbling? >> yeah i do. if that's your sin fwu lar strategy you provoke tribal revenge back against you. we're going to have to push a narrative and story out there that competes with what isis is doing out there. doing air strikes and retaliation for that in a tribal society when we have no local presence that plays into their scenario every single time. >> lieutenant colonel scott mann appreciate you. thank you. >> thank you. coming up the neds look into whether the murders of these three young muslim students were motivated by hate. you'll hear how one felt in her own words. >> plus the dramatic murder trial on aaron hernandez. the judge ruling today the jury can see hernan does just after the murder of his friend. hear what he was doing. and much more stories from brian williams, raising eyebrows from the pope to them. stay here. you're watching cnn. and it's not a ticket you're upgrading it's your entire operations, from domestic to international... which means you need help from a whole team of advisors. from workforce strategies to tech solutions and a thousand other things. so you call pwc. the right people to get the extraordinary done. ♪ ♪ ♪♪♪ stouffer's mac and cheese with real aged cheddar now in a convenient cup. new stouffer's mac cups. made for you to love. [ male announcer ] at northrop grumman, we know in the cyber world, threats are always evolving. at first we were protecting networks. then, we were protecting the transfer of data. and today it's evolved to infrastructure... ♪ ♪ ...finance... and military missions. we're constantly innovating to advance the front line in the cyber battle, wherever it takes us. that's the value of performance. northrop grumman. major: ok fitness class! here's our new trainer ensure active heart health. crowd: yayyyy! heart: i'm going to focus on the heart. i minimize my sodium and fat... gotta keep it lean and mean. pear: uh-oh. heart: i maximize good stuff like my potassium... and phytosterols, which may help lower cholesterol. major: i'm feeling energized already. new delicious ensure active heart health supports your heart and body, so you stay active and strong. ensure. take life in. you're watching cnn. i'm brooke baldwin. the fbi is opening an investigation to see whether the murders of the three muslim students should be labeled a hate crime. deah barakat and his wife and sister all went to north carolina state and they say 5,500 mourners packed that campus to take a moment and grieve for these victims who were all shot in the head tuesday. police have not ruled out a hate crime. but they say at this point it appears the suspected shooter here craig hicks, went after the students over a parking dispute. and as so many people are questioning that motive the certainty in this is how monumental the loss is to friends, family and community. last summer there was a recorded conversation on npr's story core and her words are patriotic yet so painful. now to hear. growing up in america has been such a blessing and you know in some ways i do stand out such as the hay job i wear on my head the head covering i wear on my head i feel so embedded in the fabric that's our culture. that's the beautiful thing here. it doesn't matter where you come from. there's so many different people from so many different places of different backgrounds and religions but here we're all one, one culture, and it's beautiful to see people of you know different areas interacting and being familying being, you know one community. >> one of the victims here. my next guest knew yusor well. he was her husband was a second year student at dental school. thank you so much for being here and i'm so sorry. >> thank you for having me. >> i understand the funeral was last night. can you take me inside that room? >> yeah. so basically we all got together at one of our friend's houses and rather than mourn the loss of diae deah instead of talking about his funeral, we wanted to share his life. it brings a smile tomy face and the things that were said. we tried to remember those things instead of what's happen happened a couple of days ago. >> i understand you two were inseparable in college and it was basketball that bonded you and you have a pair of pretty fancy basketball shoes deah had and he wanted your signature? >> yeah. so it was kind of early. he walked into the library and he had a new pair of shoes, brand-new pair about $150. he said do you like them? and i said yeah they look really nice. and he said you sign them for me. my first reaction was no. i didn't want to mess up the shoe. it was a very nice shoe. i said you'd probably want your favorite basketball player or local celebrity to sign your shoes so you'll have them forever. he said you're my favorite basketball player and you're my local celebrity. at that time you know it was -- it was definitely something i didn't expect him to say, and that was kind of early into our friendship friendship like when we became really really good friends. it's something amazing i'll never forget. >> i love that story. and i love that i talked to family members and friends who talked about the love he had for his wife and you were there being his dear friend. you were there from the get-go right? you watched this relationship blossom and he told you at first that he was talking to a girl right? >> yeah. anyone that knows deah knows he would never talk to girls on any type of level other than maybe a hi or a bye because that's the kind of guy he was. he wasn't super outgoing when it came to thinks like that. so he told me in the car after lunch one day he had mentioned that. he said, hey, i'm talking to a girl and i was -- i didn't believe it when he first said it. i said you were talking to a girl? >> he said i didn't talk to garrell. i was talking to the father of a girl. i thought, that was more like deah. he was giddy, telling us all kinds of things about yusor. said you don't know her that well. just by seeing her smile and all she had done he felt happy with her. >> and so what? weeks later -- they dated, the big wedding full of love and laughter, i understand, that was in december. so it was pretty quick. >> yeah. what was that sorry. >> it was pretty quick, this courtship. >> yeah. i mean with our -- the way our religion is that's how it works usually. dating isn't something that really happens with us. yurkly we go directly to the father and from there things move on. >> let me just pivot what leads to really the big question i know that even is asking. why, why did this happen these three senseless murders. i know one of deah's neighbors spoke and said the suspect had a lot of encounters with a number of different people at this apartment complex. take a listen to this. >> i have seen and heard him be very unfriendly to a lot of people in community. >> basically he yelled at evening everybody. >> yeah, he did. equal opportunity anger. >> equal opportunity anger. did deah every mention this guy hicks to you? you knew there was an issue with the parking. >> yeah there was an issue with the parking because mainly when -- usually -- we didn't know what extent it was when we came over. all we know is deah said make sure you don't take these spaces this is where you can park. we never had an issue with it. we knew where to park. if we had to move it we went ahead and move it. this wasn't a problem for us. >> this is your best friend. what does justice look like for you? >> on that i have to let the fbi and judicial system do what they need to do but i just think personally this is just my view of that to take three lives away over parking disputes is rather heinous and i don't agree with that. i don't understand the thought process he had, nor will i ever. i think i just want to leave it at that. >> again, our condolences to you, the friends, the community the family. thank you so much. >> thank you for having me. let's move on to president obama. live pictures here. silicon valley pail low ail toe. watching and waiting for the president. you see the sign. cyber community protection. here's the thick. not who's going but who's not going to be there. some of the biggest players. google yahoo! facebook. we'll tell you why. new developments today in the murder trial of former patriots player aaron hernandez. stay right here. asian debt that recognizes the shift in the global economy. you know, the kind that capitalizes on diversity across the credit spectrum and gets exposure to frontier and emerging markets. if you convert 4-quarter p/e of the s&p 500 its yield is doing a lot better... if you've had to become your own investment expert, maybe it's time for bny mellon a different kind of wealth manager ...and black swans are unpredictable. >> > i want to get to this key ruling today. former new england non-patriot player. the judge sided with prosecutors saying the prosecution absolutely can show this video of the nfl star who's taking apart his cell phone in the police parking lot a day after lloyd oden was killed. here's part of what he told thethe prosecutor told the judge. >> the driver's door is open. he then sits down and dismantles the phone. he breaks it down into three pieces. the phone, the battery, and the cover taken apart. he then being a lawyer goes to the trunk, the trunk's open and the back's open as well. he's recovering something, but ultimately you see him hand a different phone to mr. hernandez. mr. hernandez then takes that phone and begins to operate it you know texting and putting it up to his ear. his phone is broken down. >> is it clear it's a different phone? >> absolutely your honor. >> this is my legal panel. joey jackson and ester. we talk about the video of this dismantling of the phone. why is it key? >> it's huge. it's beyond key. think about this. i think the judge got it right on the legal issue because it comes down to a right of an expectation of privacy. you're out in public. they didn't bulldoze their way into his home. the legal issue, she's got it right. what's the effect of that. i'm aaron hernandez, i did nothing wrong, i was merely present. the prosecution doesn't have to show he pulled the trigger or did the crime but that he actively participated. so his whole argument is look i'm merely present. you're saying i'm there, that's not enough legally. but if i was only there and had nothing else to do what am i calling my co-defendant for and what am i not only calling him for, but why am i destroying the phone? at the end of the day you have injuries that have common sense. it may be circumstantial but, boy, oh, boy, as you sit and listen to this the reality is what else are you going to think. >> she's nodding it is huge. what about the attorney unsuccessfully arguing he has a right to privacy. its was his car and his privilege. the judge said not so it's a hail mary. you need to make some argument in the issue of an appeal. you're in a police department parking lot. if you think -- you know where else would you be surveilled but for a police parking lot. so he had to make the argument, but it's not an effective argument at all. again, to joey's point, the prosecution will harp on this as consciousness of guilt. if you have someone who runs way after a crime, even if they were only merely present, it shows consciousness of guilt. calling your co-defendant all the things joey described fit right into that prosecution theory. why else he would do it it's not that you were guilty of the crime to which you were charged. >> it's worth reminding everyone in the state of massachusetts you don't have to have pulled the trigger but as long as you were taking part that then would qualify. what about, joey in testimony today. the whole thing has been there's no murder weapon right? so the state trooper identified there was a small handgun, found in the wooded area near an industrial park near the murder scene. prosecutors are not saying that it was the gun, just that it looks like the gun they cannot find. if it's not the weapon why was it brought up at all? >> listen. first of all, i'm less concerned about that if i'm on a defense team because you're in a secluded area in an industrial park. there are lots of guns presume presumably that could be there. there are lots of tire tracks that could be there brooke. there are lots of shoeprints. show me the dna and the connection that this gun actually is to my client otherwise don't show it to me at all. so apparently the judge felt it had some value and it was otherwise relevant, but that could be explained away. far less damaging than the cellphone that we just talked about. >> all right. thank you both very much on the aaron hernandez trial. also just in, president obama releasing a statement moments before taking the stage about the triple murders in chapel hill north carolina. remember we watch and waited for him to speak at the cyber security summit in northern california but he did speak about these murders in north carolina saying in part yesterday, the fbi opened an inquiry to the brutal and outrageous murders of dia shahdy bar a cat, yusor abu salha and razan abu salha. the fbi is taking steps to determine whether federal law was violated. no one in the united states should ever be targeted because of who they are, what they look like and how they worship. michelle and i offer our condolences to the victims' loved ones. much more news today. isis militants surrounding a base an air force base that houses some american troops. some of the terrorists may be wearing iraqi uniforms. we'll speak with one former soldier who built the base more than a decade ago. he got emotional. stand by for that. [ male announcer ] we know they're out there. you can't always see them. but it's our job to find them. the answers. the solutions. the innovations. all waiting to help us build something better. something more amazing. a safer, cleaner brighter future. at boeing, that's what building something better is all about. ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ [ male announcer ] you wouldn't ignore signs of damage in your home. are you sure you're not ignoring them in your body? even if you're treating your crohn's disease or ulcerative colitis an occasional flare may be a sign of damaging inflammation. and if you ignore the signs, the more debilitating your symptoms could become. learn more about the role damaging inflammation may be playing in your symptoms with the expert advice tool at crohnsandcolitis.com. and then speak with your gastroenterologist. two weeks later. look, credit karma-- are you talking to websites again? this website says "free credit scores." oh, credit karma! yeah it's actually free. look, you don't have to put in your credit card information. whew! credit karma. really. free. all right. let's take you to palo alto, california. the president just got to the podium about hacking scandals. he's talking cyber security at the summit. >> nigh othermy other members of the cabinet are here. i want to acknowledge my tireless homeland security adviser who helped and continues to shape our cyber security efforts, lisa monaco. thank you, lisa. so you know i'd always heard about this campus and ebb's riding bikes and people hopping into fountains and the current holder of the ax. this is the place that made nerd cool. i was thinking about wearing some black rimmed glasses with tape in the middle. i guess that's not what you do anymore. i was told if i came to stanford you talk nerdy to me. but i'm not just here to enjoy myself. as wi gather here today, america's seen incredible progress that we can all be proud of. we just had the best year of job growth since the 1990s. over the past 59 months -- over the past 59 months our businesses have created nearly 12 million new jobs which is the longest streak of job growth on record and a hopeful sign for middle-class families wages are beginning to rise again. meanwhile we're doing more to prepare our young people for a competitive world. our high school graduation rate has hit an all-time high. here at stanford and across the country, we've got the best universities best scientistings, best researchers in the world. we've got to the most dynamic economy in the world, and no place represents that better than this region. so make no mistake. more than any other nation on earth, the united states is positioned to lead in the 21st century. and so much of our economic competitiveness is tied to what brings me here today, and that is america's leadership in the digital economy. it's our ability, almost unique across the planet our ability to innovate and to learn and to discover and to create and build and do business online and stretch the boundaries of what's possible. that's what drives us. and so when we had to decide where to have this summit the decision was easy because so much of our information age began right here at stanford. it was here where two students bill hewlett and dave packard met and in their garage they built one of the first personal computers weighing in at nearly 40 pounds. it was here in 1968 where a researcher douglas engelbart astonished an audience with two computers online and the hypertext you could click on was something called a mouse. a year later a computer received the first message from another computer 350 miles away the beginnings of what would eventually become the internet. by the way, it's no secret that many of these innovations built on government-funded research is one of the reasons that if we want to maintain our economic leadership in the world, america has to keep investing in basic research and science and technology. it's absolutely critical. [ applause ] >> so here at stanford pioneers developed the protocols and architecture of the internet dsl, the first web page in america, innovations for cloud computing, student projects here became yahoo! and google. those were pretty good student projects. your graduates have gone on to help create and build thousands of companies that have shaped our digital society from cisco to sun microsystems youtube to instagram, stubhub. according to one study, if all the companies traced back to stanford graduates formed their own nation you would be one of the largest economies in the world and have a pretty good football team as well. [ applause ] >> and today with your cutting-edge research programs and your cyber initiatives, you're helping to navigate one of the most come employ indicated things in the nation. that's why we're here. i want to thank everyone for being here members of congress government academia privacy and consumer groups, and especially the students who are here. just as we're all connected like never before we have to work together like never before both to seize opportunities, but also meet the challenges of this information. and it's one of the great paradoxes of our time that the very technologies that empower us to do great good can also be used to undermine us and inflict great harm. the same information technologies that help make our militaries in the world are targeted by hack irs in china and russia who go after contractor systems that are built for our troops the same social media we use for government to advocate for democracy and human rights around the world. it can also be used by terrorists to spread hateful ideology. so these cyber threats are a challenge to our national security. much of our critical infrastructure, our financial systems, euroour power grid, health system run on networks connected to the internet which is hugely empowering but also dangerous and creates new points of vulnerability that we didn't have before. foreign governments and criminals are probing these systems every single day. we only have to think of real life examples. an air traffic control system going down and disrupting flights or blackouts that plunge cities into darkness. to imagine what a set of systematic cyber attacks might do. so this is also a matter of public safety. as a nation we do more business online than ever before. trillions of dollars a year. and high-tech industries like those across the valleys support millions of american jobs. all this gives us an enormous competitive advantage in the global economy. and for that very reason, american companies are being targeted their trade secrets stolen intellectual property ripped off, the north korean cyber attack on sony pictures destroyed data exposed thousands of pictures and disclosed personal information of sony employees and this is hurting american companies and costing american jobs. so this is also a threat to america's economic security. as consumers, we do more online than ever before. we manage our bank accounts, we shop we pay our bills, we handle our medical records. and as a contry one of our greatest resources are the young people who are here today. digitally fearless and unencumbered by conventional lists and debates and they're remaking world every day, but it also means that this problem of how we secure this digital world is only going to increase. i want -- >> so the president, i thought it was interesting. i was just jotting it down. referencing young people especially in his audience not just speaking to members of congress or private sectors in silicon valley saying the young people today are digitally fearless but in the wake of, you know several major companies being hacked the big challenge the cyber security. this is what the president is addressing here at stanford, you know really touting government funding critical investments in science and technology but also saying listen it's a tough world out there with the challenges to cyber security so hoping to build this bridge right, between the government in between these businesses when it comes to protecting and preventing hacking. a quick little note before i move along. it's a big audience. apple's ceo tim cook is there. but there are three big names who are not. the top executives at google yahoo! and facebook not there just because of a little context, background of these three, the strange trade relations over security and privacy concerns between silicon valley and the white house. isis militants coming up. surrounding the base in iraq that houses american troops. moments ago we were watching the pentagon daily briefing referencing some of the terrorists may be wearing iraqi uniforms. we'll talk with one former soldier who helped build the base more than a decade ago. plus, it's become a key piece of evidence in the american sniper video. it shows the fleece chasing down the killer of chris kyle and chad littlefield. we'll take you live to texas. d minerals. 9 grams of protein... with 30% less sugars than before. ensure, your #1 dr. recommended brand now introduces ensure active. muscle health. clear protein drink and high protein. targeted nutrition to feed your active life. ensure. take life in. if it could monitor the front yard. why don't you switch to xfinity home? i get live video monitoring and 24/7 professional monitoring that i can arm and disarm from anywhere. hear ye! the awkward teenage one has arrived!!!! don't be old fashioned. xfinity customers add xfinity home for $29.95 a month for 12 months. plus for a limited time, get a free security camera call 1800 xfinity or visit comcast.com/xfinityhome. back to breaking news. isis militants are surrounding this base. they tell cnn isis seized this town. now they're getting closer and closer to this al assad air base nine miles west. >> he helped build this base before he launched his career here at cn. this is the base that isis hat now encroached on. you got out beyond your air force base gates. what was it like? >> it was -- it was actually really really nice. i mean the iraqi people were really nice. this was as the invasion was happening. you could see the strong hold it had on their country once we stepped foot over there and they realize thad i were no longer in power. they would give us hugs and tell us thank you and tell us we love you and it was tremendous support around the area. >> now flash forward more than a decade later, we were talking before about your losing a friend and knowing what you know now about everything you fought for and built and now isis coming in, how does it make you feel? >> i feel disenfranchised. i was talking with one of my old army buddies i was in with. like i said i had a good friend that was killed when i was over there. you know, brooke, i'll never forget that day. he died. and, you know, seeing that humvee come back to us that had been hit with a roadside bomb and knowing that's where sergeant williams, you know breathed his last breath here on earth and we were towing it back at the palisades base. it feels safe and secure but fast forward to ten years later, it's going right back to where it was. >> saddens you, frustrates you, angers you all of the above? >> all of the above. you know i know that the marines there, you know are definitely willing to fight, and if it does cost them the chance -- you know, if they do have to end up paying the ultimate sacrifice, you know it's really going to be hard on me knowing that i had already done that ten years ago and saw a good friend die because of it. you know one of my oldest memories from al assad was when we were cleaning out the humvee that had just been attacked and hit with a roadside bomb. as we were getting all of the gear off of it and putting it in our storage units there on the base we were taking some of sar yenlt sargent williams' gear he could no longer use because he lost his life. >> i am so sorry. joey thank you for talking. >> all right. thank you. alright, so this tylenol arthritis lasts 8 hours but aleve can last 12 hours. and aleve is proven to work better on pain than tylenol arthritis. so why am i still thinking about this? how are ya? good. aleve. proven better on pain. ♪ etta james "at last" sometimes, at last doesn't happen at first. ♪ your dad just kissed my mom. ♪ turning two worlds into one takes love. helping protect that world takes state farm. just a heads-up. the all-stars is kicking off. the face-off includes lebron james, carmelo anthony and klay thompson. coming up next prosecutors say the man accused of killing the american sniper talked about voodoo, hell and the apocalypse. all of this as we see video of the chase just after chris kyle's murder. stay here. as i share this video with you, it is stunning video if the trial for the man accused of killing american sniper chris kyle. what you'll see is officers ramming kyle's stolen truck as eddie ray routh sped. there he is speeding through this cloud of smoke. a former marine. they arrested him. he allegedly killed kyle and his friend chad littlefield at the shooting range. he stole kyle's truck after a murder stopping at a taco bell and during a standoff with police, officers say he made strange statements including, let me quote here saying this i've taken a couple of souls and i have some more souls to take. he goes on. satan is walking on the earth with us right now. is the apocalypse upon us right now. ed lavandera, he's following all these twists in turns in steebtexas. what is all that about? >> they're taking him inside the home of him hours after he was arrested and finally turned himself over to police. they found a trove of drug paraphernalia inside the house. glass pipes they say that are consistent with the use of methamphetamines as well as some of the drug paraphernalia hidden away in an old-fashioned hershey's chocolate tin can. his uncle has even testified in the hours before he went to the gun range of chris kyle and chad littlefield, they had smoked marijuana and drank whiskey together all of this very important because the prosecutor said it was the abuse of recreation drugs, not the abuse of prescription drugs and alcohol that led to the deathay that chris kyle and chad little field were killed. >> ed lavandera. thank you. here we go, top of the hour. i'm brooke baldwin. right now isis terrorists are

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