Transcripts For CNNW CNN Newsroom With Brooke Baldwin 20150615

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they range with sightings in vermont to a mile from the prison to down to mexico. the trail may be going cold. >> we don't know if they are still in the immediate area or if they are in mexico by now. enough time has transpired but we're following up every lead that we can. >> police hoping that this woman helps get them out of prison maybe she has information that could help catch them. joyce mitchell the prison tailor shackled and in court today. brenden, welcome back. we have a lot of scoops and you have a lot of scoops about what joyce mitchell told investigators on what she and the two killers planned and perhaps involving her husband. >> reporter: that's right a law enforcement official told us on saturday that during two lengthy interviews with state police investigators that miss mitchell had apparently outlined discussions that she had with one or more of these inmates about a possible plot to kill her husband and that everything we could verify because there's so many investigators now saturating that area and there's a lot of information flying around. but the source told us that they are pretty certain that these discussions did take place. it's not unprecedented for mr. matt -- remember he had a case in the early 1990s where another inmate in western new york had sought to soleicit him to kill family members if he bailed him out of prison. >> so she had a quote/unquote change of heart, maybe that involved her husband here and his life as well. also brendan, we know that hearing a little bit more about how -- specifics of the plan. she was to meet them post escape what at a nearby power plant and then drive where specifically? >> well that's yeah near a power plant which is not far from the prison. so each day you're seeing the district attorney andrew wiley give a little more detail about the plot as it unfolded and it's not clear from what he released the other day -- he mentioned nothing about a possible murder plot. but he also said that it was a seven-hour drive to get to this destination. >> uh-huh. >> but he said that they didn't tell joyce mitchell where the destination was either. it could be that was in vermont. if you have to drive around lake champlaine it could have also been west past buffalo where mr. matt is from or who knows. >> okay. >> it's unclear where joyce mitchell you know really knew the two intent of these individuals either. had she picked them up of course there's been speculation about whether she may have been in danger as well. >> right. she might have saved her own life by having this change of heart. >> certainly. >> and then as we talk about geography, as i was reading about potential leads and you mentioned vermont or maybe buffalo or -- i mean to hear the governor of new york -- and i don't know how serious he was in mentioning listen these two could be in mexico right now. one of them has ties to mexico. do you even know if there are investigators in mexico looking for them potentially? >> i would think that they've got the u.s. marshals at their disposal and they have heightened alerts down south or wherever they might be. it's not unusual historically for a manhunt like this for the state police to be concentrated in an area like they have been for so many days only to find out later that the escapee they are looking for had been long gone. it's not unprecedented for them to miss. i think they are going with this search in that area still because they have no information that they got out. so they have to focus but our reporter tells us that she sees a diminished police presence today. fewer streets blocked off and less officers. so it could be at the stage where they are winding down this saturation. >> i cannot believe they have not caught them yet. a price tag on this search each and every day, $1 million. brendan lyons, thank you so much. great reporting on this one. meantime we are now hearing those frantic 911 calls from a beach in north carolina two teenagers were attacked by sharks over the weekend. these two teenagers include a 13-year-old girl and 16-year-old boy maimed. >> 911, what's your emergency? >> there's another one! another one! >> there's another -- someone was bit by a shark. >> okay. where at? >> on the island. >> i'm having a hard time understanding you. what access are you near? >> 55th street. >> 55th? >> yes, ma'am. his arm is gone. >> that sends shivers up my spine. we don't have the names of the victims but these two attacks were fewer than 90 minutes apart and near a popular fishing pier. they were both in waist-deep water about 20 yards off the shore. both had an arm amputated. let me bring in the director of shark research at the marine laboratory in sarasota florida. you brought your props which we'll get to that in a second. when you first heard about two attacks within 90 minutes of each other in north carolina was that a shock to you? >> well i would say it's surprising. this sort of thing is highly unusual for abeingttacks to occur like this so close together in time and space. we have to not drop into conclusion we're talking about one shark, the rogue shark that was famous in "jaws," there's no scientific evidence that that exists. this may have been two unconnected incidents. >> what did you bring? show me. >> well i wanted to make the point that in a lot of cases, bites on sharks on people in the u.s. are by fairly small sharks something about this size maybe a little bigger a black tip shark like this. if in fact this was a shark where the limbs were cut through, which it sounds like but we're not sure yet, we may be talking about a larger shark, something like a bull shark or tiger shark. and this is the jaw from a bull shark, about 8 feet long 8 1/2 feet long. and this is the jaw from a tiger shark, about 10 feet long. so these are very different sized animals. we really talk a lot about not using the -- this word attack too often because so many cases in the u.s. are little shark bites but clearly in this case this was a much more serious thing and my heart goes out to the victims. >> absolutely. >> of these incidents. >> waist-deep water, 20 yards offshore let me play -- this is the local fire chief. >> there's no way that we're going to stop people from going into the water. i swim in the water. i would swim in the water today. >> i don't know if i would swim in the water today. robert would you swim in the water? the beaches are open. should they be shut down? >> well, i would say that the local people know best. the fact is the sparks have been there all along. the fact that this incident happened doesn't mean that the risk has gone up. i would definitely be vigilant. i would caution people and be careful. and i would wait a while before letting people just sort of do their normal thing at those beaches up there. >> you know, we talk about attacks in the past massachusetts, cape cod but this notion that they are off not too far from wilmington take note i suppose. again, the beach is open. doctor thank you so much. definitely feel for those two teenagers there. >> you're welcome. coming up next the naacp leader accused of faking her race has just stepped down. hear her explanation and what she's not mentioning in that letter. also he is one of america's most wanted terrorists and now questions about whether a u.s. raid hit its target and an emotional chilling and infuriating story, this innocent youk young man locked up for three years, two of those in solitary. he never got a trial. case was dismissed. he is now dead. he took his own life. the emotional interview with two of his brothers and why this could possibly happen. do not miss that. heart health's important... ...so you may... take an omega-3 supplement... ...but it's the ingredients inside that really matter for heart health. new bayer pro ultra omega-3 has two times the concentration of epa and dha as the leading omega-3 supplement. new bayer pro ultra omega-3. if you have moderate to severe plaque psoriasis. isn't it time to let the real you shine through? 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now if you had a liberty mutual new car replacement, you'd get your whole car back. i guess they don't want you driving around on three wheels. smart. new car replacement is just one of the features that come standard with a base liberty mutual policy. and for drivers with accident forgivness,rates won't go up due to your first accident. learn more by calling switch to liberty mutual and you can save up to $423. for a free quote today,call liberty mutual insurance at see car insurance in a whole new light. liberty mutual insurance. you're watching cnn. i'm brooke baldwin. the naacp leader accused of faking her race says she will never stop fighting for human rights but she will stop fighting for her job. she's resigned from her post in spokane. dolezal came under fire after her parents came forward saying that dolezal is white. in her weekly post she said the controversy has become a distraction and yet the dialogue has unexpectedly shifted to my personal identity in the context of defining race and ethnicity. so joining me right now, i have filmmaker and educator ali michael and author of the opinion piece in the washington piece, what rachel dolezal does not understand that it's more than just what you look like. ladies, wonderful to have you both on here. to have both of these voices. but i have to begin with this. rachel dolezal's resignation letter. you know yes, it addresses what she has accomplished for her community and cause but what strikes me is so much of what it does not say. nothing in here addresses her race nothing addresses why she did what she did. nothing in here says i'm sorry. what was your take? >> yeah. the tone of the piece was a little bit odd. it does not address that there may have been a fraud that was perpetrated. it may be harmful to those who were affected by it and she doesn't acknowledge that race does operate in a very public space. it's a social construct. it is a public thing. we perceive it act upon it and sometimes people's lives are in danger as a result of it. i think it would have been ideal if she acknowledged that in the letter. >> ali, i want to dig right in this with you. you call it your rachel dolezal face in your early 20s, shaving your head and wearing head wraps. why did you do that? >> well that was a very short time in my -- in the period of my history, but i can relate to this feeling of not wanting to be white, feeling like there are no positive ways to be white. and once you've learned the history of racism in our country which is so dire and serious and really casts white people so badly, you start to feel like i don't want to be white. it doesn't feel like there's a positive way to be white. i think that's why that urge was coming from for me. to be honest it only lasted a couple hours, maybe a day or two. it wasn't a long period in my life. and yet i relate to her and i want to just name that feeling that like maybe it feels like there is no place for white people in the racial justice movement and that's the sad thing about her letter that she doesn't own her whiteness. it continues to perpetuate this idea that if you're white you can't work for social justice. trying not to be white is not what social justice is about. it's about, working towards living in healthy multiracial community and in order to do that we have to be who we are and we have to be responsible to who we are. so it's important for me to be able to name and own my whiteness just as it is important for rachel dolezal to do and to recognize that i can also work for rachel justice but not unless i'm aware of my own rachel identify and i recognize that maybe -- go ahead. >> you make great points in terms of owning whiteness. if only we could talk to rachel dolezal herself. if this is more about identifying with being black or less about not wanting to be white and i honestly -- because i haven't been able to talk to her, i don't know what that question is. here's my question. in reading your opinion piece, professor, and your thesis which is essentially saying listen the way in which she portrays her blackness is really more a stereotype. can you explain your point? >> i think she tried to choose the most typical or the images of black femaleness or womenhood that we most automatically associate with black women. >> be specific. what do you mean? >> i thought her hair. so then she changed her skin color. i saw a lot of pictures where she was pouting to make her pictures look fuller even the way she styled her hair. yes, those are associated with images of black women but i felt like she used a very limited notion to claim to maybe make her claim to black more authentic. but it's a much more wider spectrum. it's not just your makeup and clothes. sometimes i thought to myself i might have been less offended if she had just been herself and then said there was a claim to blackness. in the community, there are people who might pass for white but still have claim to the black community and there's nothing wrong with that. but she went to the images that we automatically assume are about blackness. they are very limited. she claimed those and to me this is about making her claim more authentic. that has nothing to do with social justice. or advancing inequality. >> this story has so totally -- i don't know if it's evoked so many emotions and all people wanted to talk about and i read a colleague's piece on cnn.com. this is the lead line-up of her piece. in this day and age, who willingly wants to be black? i jokingly said that to my husband when the news of rachel dolezal broke. is this part of the reason it's resonated with so many stories about race making headlines recently? what do you make about her point? >> so she said it as a joke and i think i certainly understand why anyone would want to be black. black people have a claim to an amazing history and legacy in this country and there are things she wanted to do she could access that identity. the reason why it's gotten so much attention, especially from people of color, is because in the context of a black lives matter movement identity matters. the stakes are very high. so it's difficult when people feel as if they are being killed for their racial identity for a white woman to pick up that identity and put it on like a costume and put it on later if it became too heavy. >> but it's not a costume. it's so not a costume. >> definitely it's not costumes. >> ali, i'm hearing you agree and nod. final thoughts from you on all of this? >> well you know as a white person trying to live an anti racist life it's also about looking at people like rachel dolezal and say, how am i also her or george zimmerman? how am i like george zimmerman? how do i have fear of black men that endangers them and recognizing that this racism that really circulates in our society is not something that i'm immune from once i decide i want to live an anti-racist life. it's something i have to work against every day. so recognizing that being white has meaning and it may not have meaning for lots of people but doesn't mean that it has meaning for people and to be able to own that and work from there. >> i've got to go. >> i just want to know that rachel as a white woman could have done that work in white communities. she didn't have to do that farce. >> that's a great point. ali michael and professor, thank you. i really appreciate it. >> thank you for having us. >> you got it. today, thousands of schools across south korea warning students and teachers to wash their hands as they finally reopen after 16 are dead from the mers outbreak. health officials believe the outbreak is slowing. next the suicide of a young man who spent years in solitary confinement because his parents couldn't afford bail only to have the charges dismissed. his two brothers and attorney join me after the break. world with a shout and we see no reason to stop. so cvs health is creating industry-leading programs and tools that help people stay on medicines as their doctors prescribed. it could help save tens of thousands of lives every year. and that would be something worth shouting about. cvs health, because health is everything. ♪ the goodness that goes into making a power kale chicken caesar salad is rivaled only, by the goodness felt while eating one. panera. food as it should be. this next story will infuriate you, it will sadden you, make you ask questions, it will make all of us question what happens behind bars in our criminal justice system. kalif took his own life two weekends going at his mother's home in the bronx. he was only 22 years old. as a teen he was sent to rikers one of the most notorious jails. he was locked up for three years, two of those in solitary confinement. he was accused of stealing a backpack and never had a trial. he suffered at the hands of other inmates and even a guard. >> reporter: chaos inside new york's rikers island prison. gang members assault a 17-year-old who never should have been there. this disturbing video footage shows the gang beating him and then beating him again in an isolation cell. >> this seems like "lord of the flies." what's going on here? >> utter confusion. there is obviously a lack of control. they do not have the capacity and this is not to demean the officers. they are clearly out numbered and don't have the capacity to totally protect the inmate. >> reporter: "the new yorker" magazine covered this story. two years after the gang beating, his head was smashed by a correction officer after he appears to say something to him. >> verbal assaults don't count. if we in corrections responded to every verbal statement that was made that was derogatory in nature we would be fighting every minute of every hour. that is common places. it's part of the culture. >> he was sent to rikers for allegedly stealing a backpack in the bronx. he always maintained his innocence but was kept in prison for three years without a trial, two in solitary confinement. he was ultimately released the charges dropped. >> no apology, no nothing. they just said oh case dismissed. don't worry about nothing. what do you mean don't worry about nothing? i just spent three years of my life. i didn't go to go to prom graduation nothing. i'm never going to get those years back. never. >> reporter: and he never did. he committed suicide, hanging himself out a window of his mother's home. his family is now suing the city the police department the bronx d.a. and the new york department of corrections for $20 million. a former commanding officer at rikers is baffled by what happened to this young man. >> i cannot fathom why a person would be in that type of isolation for so long a period of time. >> reporter: contacted by cnn, an official with new york's department of corrections said kalif's death is a tragedy, that their thoughts and prayers are with his family. >> the official said the officer who slammed him to the floor is being retrained, that the inmates who beat him were disciplined and that the gang incident is still being investigated. since his release, new york mayor bill de blasio has introduced reforms, moving to limit the number of cases where inmates are held at rikers for a year while their cases are still pending and ending solitary confinement for teenager detainees. brian todd, washington. >> joining me to talk about kalif's life i have his brother, kamal and rahim and the family attorney who has filed suit against the nypd the bronx d.a. and department of corrections. welcome you all for being here. so sorry for the loss of your brother. kamal and rahim, to you first. i can't imagine being in your shoes. i can't imagine the loss being furious over this whole loss of your brother. this past weekend would have marked one week since he took his life. how did you hear what happened? >> i was working and i found out through my next door neighbor. >> and when you heard, knowing your brother as well as you do were you surprised? >> yes. >> were you surprised? how did you hear? >> my other brother called me and he told me what was going on and i just came back in from my house. i rushed over there and by the time i got there, the officer came to me and he said sorry for your loss. i said what do you mean sorry for my loss? and he said, nobody told you? i said tell me what? and then i look and i see my brother laying face down. >> you saw him? >> yes. he was laying face down and they put the sheet over him. >> did you have a moment with him? >> i had to hug by -- i had to hug my brother's deathless body. it was warm and i kept on thinking that he was going to turn around and look at me but he didn't. >> tell me about your brother. this goes back to -- here you go. this goes back a couple of years to when he was a junior in high school. tell me about your brother before he went to rikers. what kind of young man was he? >> he was a fun-loving guy. we used to play and have a game night every weekend where my friends came over my older brother's friends came over and we had like a competition to see who could outsheenine each other. >> you were boys. >> we used to have video games and have competitions. on the weekends we used to play basketball. sometimes i beat kalief and sometimes he beat me. that's how it went. >> so competition, video games, playing hoops. raheem what was your relationship like with him? >> it was the same thing. we did things together. >> he was the baby? >> yes, he was the youngest. like kamal said with basketball he tried. >> i'll take your word for it. so this is kalief before rikers. >> yes. he goes into rikers having no idea he would wind up spending so many years in there, especially in solitary which i want to get to. kamal, you visited him. >> yes. >> i was reading this phenomenal article where it talked about his 634th day on rikers he said i can't take it anymore. i give up. he tried to take his life at rikers. did you notice a decline in his personality, depression despair? at what point did you notice that? >> i noticed that when he would be there for like going on two years, he used to tell me how the guards used to stalk him and how he used to beg for food but they wouldn't give it to him. >> and when they gave it to him, they gave him like half-eaten portions like somebody had already dug into it. it was horrible. >> he was losing weight. did you notice his physical appearance changing? >> no. sometimes i did. sometimes i didn't. >> and how was your mother through all this? >> my mother she was very upset. she was crying a lot and she couldn't take it. she visited him every day faithfully. >> every day? >> every day my mother went to visit him. she would be in pain. she still went to go visit him and she had -- kalief didn't tell her everything but he told her enough. like my brother said, with the starving he was beaten just about every day. we would give him money to put in his account so he could buy stuff and use the phone and then all of a sudden you know we get no phone calls from him because they took his money. they took his money and gave it to somebody else. >> the question that everyone who is familiar with this story wants to know how does somebody go away to rikers for three years, spent the bulk of it in solitary confinement, the case up and gets dismissed, he walks out of there. >> without an apology. >> with nothing. >> right. >> how does that happen? that's my question. >> brooke it's inexplicable. you would never see this again in your entire lifetime. it was just a massive failing by the criminal justice system at each and every level. it was like a perfect storm and it was horrific. it was horrific. you had the district attorney's office essentially abusing whatever speedy trial laws we have in this state, in the city almost as if they didn't care that kalief was in jail. i really don't think they did. and that's not really too far-fetched, to be honest with you, because all they do is have his rap sheet and some paperwork about the arrest. they know nothing about him. they probably didn't know he was in solitary but they knew he was in jail and i'm sure they hoped that he would just take a plea or they thought he would. >> but he refused to because -- >> they didn't want to try this case but he didn't unfortunately for them. >> raheem both of you bring up this guard abuse. i would be remiss in saying that three rikers' guards were fired for their behavior. we'll follow this story with all of you. really my final question to you kamal and then raheem no amount of money will bring your brother back. what does justice look like for you? >> to me justice is finding out why it happened why he commit suicide. he never should have been in there for three years for a case that wasn't even accurate. i just want justice for my little brother and i hope that all the people that go through this needs to speak up stand up for themselves and come forward. >> raheem? >> my brother was arrested and sent to jail for something he did not do. the person he committed the crime with wasn't even in the country. every officer gave a different story. this entire system needs to be redone. there's no reason in the world why you're going to hold somebody in prison you keep on prolonging the case when no evidence whatsoever and then the guards be -- the guards need to be retrained. something needs to happen. there's no reason in the world you should be abusing these inmates. we send people there for them to try to -- they did something wrong, nine times out of ten. there are innocent people but it's supposed to be a way to change their lives so when they come out they will be rehabilitated. but that's not what they are doing there. they bring you in there, they try to break you and then they try to keep you down they treat you like animals. that needs to change. >> please stay in touch with us. thank you. let us know where the case goes. >> thank you, brooke. next here on cnn, air strikes aimed at this man, responsible for a deadly attack in algeria two years ago. the question, was he killed? that's next. also the blockbuster reboot of "jurassic park." "jurassic world" broke records. could this actually happen in the future? you total your brand new car. nobody's hurt,but there will still be pain. it comes when your insurance company says they'll only pay three-quarters of what it takes to replace it. what are you supposed to do, drive three-quarters of a car? now if you had a liberty mutual new car replacement, you'd get your whole car back. i guess they don't want you driving around on three wheels. smart. new car replacement is just one of the features that come standard with a base liberty mutual policy. and for drivers with accident forgivness,rates won't go up due to your first accident. learn more by calling switch to liberty mutual and you can save up to $423. for a free quote today,call liberty mutual insurance at see car insurance in a whole new light. liberty mutual insurance. . he was the $5 million man. that's how much the reward was for information leading to al qaeda terrorist wanted for more than a decade and now mokhtar belmokhtar is dead at least according to the libyan government. but while libya is claiming success, the u.s. isn't going there, at least not just yet. our chief national security correspondent jim sciutto joins me again. so we hear what the libyan government is saying. what is the u.s. saying on this? >> the u.s. is saying they are reserving judgment at this point. they believe their intelligence was good. they have been watching this compound for two months knowing that he used this compound. they believe when they dropped these bombs -- and there were a lot of them dropping several bombs at the center of the compound they believe he was there at the time but the u.s. has a higher standard. they want proof and that could come from dna results if you were able to get remains or an announcement on jihadi websites. but they tend to be slower in announcing for sure that a target has been taken out. and this is an important target. why 5 million bucks on his head? two years ago he spearheaded an attack on a major oil refinery in algeria. several foreigners and three americans were killed. it shows the reach of the organization today. he was a big target. they believe they got him but they are not going to say definitively yet. >> got it. jim sciutto, thank you so much. >> thank you. coming up the blockbuster reboot here, more on "jurassic world" smashing box office records. we'll talk to a dinosaur geek on this one coming up. also ahead, we heard about the announcement to the announcement in mere minutes, the official announcement jeb bush jumping in the race. we have an entire panel ready to talk about this. talk through the significance of where he's announcing why finally now and what's next. you're watching cnn. i'll be right back. n pretty good shape. >>chuck, i know i have a 798 fico score thanks to experian.com. kaboom... get your credit swagger on. become a member of experian credit tracker and find out your fico score powered by experian. so you're a small business expert from at&t? yeah, give me a problem and i've got the solution. well, we have 30 years of customer records. our cloud can keep them safe and accessible anywhere. my drivers don't have time to fill out forms. tablets. keep them all digital. we're looking to double our deliveries. our fleet apps will find the fastest route. oh, and your boysenberry apple scones smell about done. ahh, you're good. i like to bake. with at&t get up to $400 dollars in total savings on tools to manage your business. 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[announcer]stay in the flow with quickbooks self-employed. start your free,thirty-day trial today at join-self-employed-dot-com. meet the world's newest energy superpower. surprised? in fact, america is now the world's number one natural gas producer... and we could soon become number one in oil. because hydraulic fracturing technology is safely recovering lots more oil and natural gas. supporting millions of new jobs. billions in tax revenue... and a new century of american energy security. the new energy superpower? it's red, white and blue. log on to learn more. plenty of hypes surrounding "jurassic world" and you have boom summer movie magic. >> every time we've unveiled a new attraction attendance has speaked. >> spiked. >> she was designed to be bigger than the t-rex. >> what happened to the sibling? >> she ate it. >> the film broke both u.s. and global box office records pulling in more than $524 million in its opening weekend. wow. educator at the museum of natural history in atlanta where i took many a field trip in my youth. so brooks welcome. >> hey, brooke thanks for having me. >> i mean i remember when "jurassic park" came out, i remember reading the book and being so psyched for the film and that was in 1994. now it's 2015. this seems to be the biggest yet. what do you think it is brooks about our obsession with dinosaurs? >> you know they lived for some a long time in our geological history. there's a lot we don't know about them and there's interpretation for us to make about them because we're not finding fossilized whole specimens. we're finding fossilized bones. it's based on the bones that we're finding and also on the trace fossils, things like footprints and where they may be dragging their tail and things like that. >> so it's a mystery. >> it's the mystery, exactly. >> so you saw it. you saw the movie a couple of nights ago and let's not give it away if you haven't seen it. but at the lab, at this "jurassic world," i know these scientists created this genetically modified hybrid dinosaur. what is it? >> i think there's some spinosaurs in there, the t-rex and the -- >> i'm sorry, the what? >> giganotasauris. a little bigger than the t-rex or the gigi. >> the t-rex. >> a big mixture of dinosaurs and they threw in other dinosaur d in dnas. i'm not sure how plausible this is. >> this is movies. this is the fantasy. >> exactly. >> remember the whole t-rex seen with the outhouse and chomp, chomp, away he went. >> oh, yeah. >> are there other dinosaur villains in this one? >> let's see. you know actually, it seems like there are some that wreak havoc but in this one, some of the dinosaurs turn out to be the good guys, if that makes sense. >> are you seeing more people at fern bank? the fascination is already there for dinosaurs but this summer is it going to be gang busters? >> i expect so. we're going to have a palentologist give a speech and i saw two people walking around with "jurassic world" shirts and they were eager to talk to me about it. i think you'll see a huge influx of interested guests coming here just to see our dinosaurs and ask questions. >> too cool. i appreciate the fascination in science. go to the earth science fernbank museum of natural history. brooks mitchell thank you so much. >> thanks for having me. next in mere moments, jeb bush will officially be announcing his run for the white house. it's a big moment. we'll take it live and discuss. also did president obama host a secret party at the white house with celebrities like prince and stevie wonder? here why the white house press secretary just got hit with some pretty interesting questions. we'll be right back. shopping online... ...is as easy as it gets. wouldn't it be great if hiring plumbers carpenters and even piano tuners... were just as simple? thanks to angie's list now it is. start shopping online... ...from a list of top rated providers. visit angieslist.com today. no artificial flavors, colors sweeteners preservatives, and no artificial smiles. because clean dressings, taste better. panera. food as it should be. hi, i'm henry winkler and i'm here to tell homeowners that are sixty-two and older about a great way to live a better retirement... it's called a reverse mortgage. call right now to receive your free dvd and booklet with no obligation. it answers questions like... how a reverse mortgage works how much you qualify for the ways to receive your money... and more. plus, when you call now, you'll get this magnifier with led light absolutely free! when you call the experts at one reverse mortgage today, you'll learn the benefits of a government-insured reverse mortgage. it will eliminate your monthly mortgage payments and give you tax-free cash from the equity in your home and here's the best part... you still own your home. take control of your retirement today! kids are expensive. so i'm always looking to get more for my money. that's why i switched from u-verse to xfinity. they have the most free on demand tv shows and movies on all my devices. it's perfect for me because my kids are costing me a fortune. i'm going to cabo! ♪ don't settle for u-verse. xfinity is perfect for people who want more entertainment for their money. and we continue on with hour two. i'm brooke baldwin. you're watching cnn. two sociopathic killer who is seemingly vanished without a trace, here we are now nearly ten days after they tunnelled out of prison. there are now growing fears that the trail to find them has grown cold. >> we don't know if they are still in the immediate area or if they are in mexico by now. enough time has transpired. but we're following up every lead the best we can. >> police hoping if this woman

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