Transcripts For CNNW CNN Newsroom With Brooke Baldwin 201810

Transcripts For CNNW CNN Newsroom With Brooke Baldwin 20181030



pruitt before he left office as the epa's administrator. this inquiry was also opened up after referral from the epa inspector general regarding whether pruitt took any action to benefit an energy lobbyist that he rented a condo from for under market value on capitol hill. you'll recall that reporting several months ago that for six months at least that pruitt had rented this condo on capitol hill for undermarket value. so this lobbyist benefited. but we are told from our sources that investigation seems to have stalled ever since pruitt left office over the summer, brooke. >> thank you so much. now we continue on. welcome. i'm anderson cooper. welcome to pittsburgh. the first funerals taking place for those killed in the deadliest attack on jewish people in the united states of america. david and cecil rosenthal buried today. they lived together in life and they are together in death. and for dr. jerry rabinowitz as well, an extraordinary physician. the city of pittsburgh has been divided among some over whether president trump should be visiting today. moments ago the president, the first lady, ivanka trump and jared kushner boarded air force i. congressional leaders have declined a white house invitation to pittsburgh. president trump is said to visit six of the victims but they have opted not to see the president and instead healing with the community. kaitlan, any idea what the president will do when he lands? >> reporter: no. they just have a general block of time, three to four hours, that the president is scheduleding to in pischeduled ing to be in pittsburgh. we do know president trump wants to go to a nearby hospital and visit with the first responders, the police officers injured in this shooting here on saturday. that is certainly something he wants to do. we do know he's coming with the first lady, melania trump and we saw ivanka trump and jared kushner board the plane but they did not take any questions. the consensus is that this visit is ill timed. they've said if the families don't want them to come and the members don't want them to come, then the president should postpone this visit. the white house aides see this as the best time for them to come because starting tomorrow president trump is going to kick off this campaign rally swing right before the midterm elections and they think it would be in bad optics if he did come to this period of grieving and went on to a politically charged campaign rally. some have said it's not just they don't want the president here, it's the logistics here. they say if the president is here, they also have to have officers for the president's arrival and also the founerals going on and they're concerned it cou it could interfere with the families coming to visit. whether he's going to come to the synagogue behind me is still an open question. we'll likely find out once he hits the ground. >> cate lykaitlan collins, than very much. that picture of people singing is one of the memorials, you see people there sing and embraing embracing. the crowds are probably the biggest they have been as the funerals have begun as well. david and cecil rosenthal. david was on the left, 54 years old, cecil was 59, they were brothers. sort of considered of unofficial ambassadors of the tree of life synagogue. you talk to anyone in the neighborhood, they knew them, they saw them. they would greet congregants for years. and dr. rabinowitz is legendary in this community for his work early on for people who were suffering with hiv/aids at a time when many in this country, even in the medical community, were afraid to touch them. i'm so sorry for all of your losses of your friends and those you know in this community. first of all, how are you doing? how are you both holding up? >> it's hard. our children who live out of town both came in over the weekend when they heard the news. so we've been surrounded by family and members of the congregation have been gathering either formally or informally together, to spend time together and to provide comfort for each other. >> you went to the funeral for dr. rabinowitz. >> we went to the funeral this morning. >> reporter: what an extraordinary man he seems like. >> he's so big. he's a little guy and he's bigger than life. he has impacted probably three quarters of the people of this city. >> reporter: wow. >> not to mention his family. but everyone knows him, everyone's been touched by him. he was one of the leaders in our congregation. we do not have a rabbi, we have a lot of lay leaders. he's one of many. but anything you wanted done, jerry was there to do it. always helped out. and he also, as i knew him over 20 years or so, because i attended the tour study also with him, which is what was going on when the shooting started, i've seen him grow spiritually. that was his focus. he wanted to learn. he married a very spiritual woman, and he has since then become a great torah study and -- >> reporter: it's so great to be here and hear the sounds of people singing at the memorials, which is just half a block away. there's to me such a sense of obviously sadness and mourning but also of resolve, hope and determination, that this will not divide people and will not scare people. >> well, we've suffered from persecution for thousands of years, the jews, and we've always survived and we will survive and each generation recommits to continue on to prove to those that would harm us that we're here to stay and we're going to stay. >> reporter: one of the things as a reporter i've always believed in very strongly is bearing witness, bearing witness to the struggles of others, to what is happening all around the world. that's also something that's very important to you. today as an act of bearing witness, i think it was yesterday, you wanted to go to the court proceeding to just be there and witness it. can you talk to me about that? >> yeah, bearing witness is a way of making something real. we bear witness to happy events, but you have to bear witness to the unhappy events because we don't want to forget them. that's how jews have survived over thousands of years is by remembering our past, not being brought down by it but remembering it and taking strength from it and moving forward. and these people over here are bearing witness. everybody's bearing witness around the city and across the country. we know of caravans of buses of people, jews probably, coming to pittsburgh just to attend the funerals to bear witness, to support people and to bear witness, that you are not alone, we are one. >> and for me it was important that the people who were killed and the people who were injured were unable to be in the courtroom to show that they are here. and so for me it was important to be there as a personal representative for those who were unable to be there themselves, either because they were killed or are still in the hospital. >> reporter: so many times when one is confronted with hate and you meet people who have hate in their hearts and have committed horrendous acts, they don't look like we think they might. and we're not showing this person -- i'm not showing this person's picture, i'm not saying this picture's name, but when you were in the room, what struck you? >> i was so -- it was so underwhelming. i was prepared to see the devil. i didn't know what. but he just looked like a regular man, just nondescript, regular man. >> when we were riding up the elevator to the eighth floor, i said to my wife, steel yourself, prepare to look evil in the eye. and when this person was brought out into the courtroom, i thought unremarkable, saw nothing. so it was not what i thought i'd see. >> so often the people who do this kind of thing, they are not remarkable. in fact, they are anything but. up kn you know, they have not done anything with their lives, they have not contributed, they are just pathetic. >> yes. good word. >> i can't say they're humans. it's really bad to speak badly of them because there are people and there's something going on with them that, you know, it's horrendous. i don't know what his life was. >> reporter: do you have fears that this community will divide, that this community -- you know, we had mr. mohamed on earlier along with a rabbi, they worked together for a long time the muslim community here has raised more than -- more than $150,000. it doesn't seem like if that was the desire of this killer to divide, it seems to have had the opposite impact. >> it's pittsburgh. >> and it's the world, too. >> right, but in pittsburgh, the diverse communities come together and stand together. i can't tell you the muslim community, as you said, has been fantastic, how many churches have offered to open their doors to allow the congregations to use their space until we could go back into our home. it's just great. it's everyone standing together. >> well, jon and jean, thank you so much for talking with us and letting us bear witness. let's toss it back to you, brooke. we'll take it. and hearing the woman say "i was prepared to see the devil and he was quite unremarkable," her point about bearing witness was pretty profound. >> meantime, one of the most notorious mobsters has been killed. we'll talk live to the man who wrote the book on whitey bulger. and president trump claiming he'll end birthright citizenship in this country with an executive order. we'll explain why he cannot -- cannot do that. aranteed 4pm chet at over 1,000 fine hotels and resorts. it's another way we've got your back. the platinum card from american express. don't live life without it. should happen everydred five hundred years, right? fact is, there have been twenty-six in the last decade. allstate is adapting. with drones to assess home damage sooner. and if a flying object damages your car, you can snap a photo and get your claim processed in hours, not days. plus, allstate can pay your claim in minutes. now that you know the truth... are you in good hands? captured lightning in a bottle. over 260 years later as the nation's leader in energy storage we're ensuring americans have the energy they need, whenever they need it nextera energy. ♪ (electronic dance music)♪ ♪ ♪ billions of problems. sore gums? bleeding gums? painful flossing? there's a therabreath for you. therabreath healthy gums oral rinse fights gingivitis and plaque and prevents gum disease for 24 hours. so you can... breathe easy, there's therabreath at walmart. we're back. you're watching cnn. i'm brooke baldwin. here's more breaking news. the notorious boston mob boss and fbi informant james "whitey" bulger has been killed in a maximum security prison in virginia one day after being transferred there. he eluded authorities for more than 16 years before his arrest. the 89-year-old was serving the rest of his life in prison for a catalogue of crimes, including his role in 11 different murders. > the author of "black mass" is with me. here's a clip from his movie. >> what's bulger done? >> what's he done? everything. >> it was a good movie. it's good to see you, sir. 16 years on the run, basically hiding in plain sight, having been convicted of 11 murders and this is how it ends for him? what do you think? >> well, he lived violently and he apparently died violently. i think it marks the full circle of a terrible life. >> walk us down memory lane. remind us of what he did. >> i think his greatest notoriety or mark in history is the fact that starting in the mid 70s and carrying on into the early 90s, he was at the center of the worst informant scandal of the fbi's history. he succeeded in turning the tables and having a band of corrupt fbi agents be an extension of his gang. we're not talking about a single case or incident. we're talking about what became a way of life that caused incalculable harm to their victims and families, to the city of boston and the nation's top law enforcement, the fbi. there were so many tipoffs and cover-ups. he had a license to kill in effect. >> so how did they finally find him? >> that was the 2011 surprise in santa monica, california. he was living under the radar as an apparent retiree with his girl friend. periodically on cnn there are public service announcements regarding he was the fbi's most wanted at that point and someone from santa monica, a woman from iceland, who vacationed in santa monica, recognized his girl friend. that set in motion very quickly his and senpprehension in the n hours. >> that's incredible. i remember we covered it and he was living a couple blocks from the beach, thinking he was living the good life until the knock, the bang came on the door. >> he was from -- >> southie, right? >> santa monica, he walked the beach tl beaches there, just like he walked the beaches in boston, just gone california. >> right. we covered this so extensively years ago and his side kick, steven "the rifleman" flemmi, he's still serving a life sentence, correct? >> yeah. he ended up folding and a number of bulger's former sidekicks became government witnesses. and flemmi in exchange for his life frankly, he faced the death penalty in a couple of states, gave testimony against whitey bulger and is in prison without the possibility of parole. >> this is from brian kelly, a former prosecute who tried this case against bulger said hopefully the seven years he spent in prison and his death brings some closure to the families of his victims. can you imagine, at 89, he was killed in prison. >> no, i can't imagine what it's like. it was a huge home when they did captu capture him, when a lot of unsolved murders involving a family, a brother, were finally solved. this does end a life of whitey bulger. >> dick lehr, thank you. appreciate it. >> you're welcome. >> coming up next, a member of the jewish community will join anderson live. we'll hear how the community is coping seven days after 11 lives were lost in the tree of life synagogue. ♪ all the tools you need for every step of the way. make it, squarespace (door bell rings) it's ohey. this is amazing. with moderate to severe ulcerative colitis, are you okay? even when i was there, i never knew when my symptoms would keep us apart. so i talked to my doctor about humira. i learned humira can help get, and keep uc under control when other medications haven't worked well enough. and it helps people achieve control that lasts. so you can experience few or no symptoms. humira can lower your ability to fight infections, including tuberculosis. serious, sometimes fatal infections and cancers, including lymphoma, have happened; as have blood, liver, and nervous system problems, serious allergic reactions, and new or worsening heart failure. before treatment, get tested for tb. tell your doctor if you've been to areas where certain fungal infections are common, and if you've had tb, hepatitis b, are prone to infections, or have flu-like symptoms or sores. don't start humira if you have an infection. be there for you, and them. ask your gastroenterologist about humira. with humira, control is possible. welcome back. i'm anderson cooper in pittsburgh. we continue to cover the aftermath of the deadliest attack on the jewish community in american history. it was an assault, not just on the tree of life synagogue behind me, but all of pittsburgh and the diverse squirrel hill neighborhood. one person who lives is the executive editor of the "pittsburgh gazette" newspaper. he lives just three blocks away from the synagogue. his phone rang shortly after the gun fire started. he's written three pieces, "dispatched in squirrel hill." he wrote "because this was our neighborhood caught in the crossfire of the strains of global village, and for once, sadly, the hurt was ours and the victims were ours and the need to heal was ours. for now it has happened here; for millions across this wounded nation, we are the focus of the anguish and anger and solace." david shribman joins me. what do you want people to know about this community? >> i think it's becoming known this is a remarkable community. it's a mix of jewish people and people who are not jewish, who have respect for each other, who have respect for the way we live here. it's more than tolerance. it's welcoming. it's a community that cares about itself. it cares about more than just the steelers, though it does devoutly care about the steelers. it cares about the fact that we can walk these very streets right here ordinarily in peace and total comfort and security. i remember my first week here, i was driving up the street just about two blocks from here and i ran into a young woman who i knew from washington where i used to live. i stopped and i said i need to give you a ride. she said why? i said i thought it was unsafe to be on the streets. she looked at me as if i was mad. >> you mentioned the steelers. over 100 members of the steelers went to the funeral today for david and cecil. >> i'm not surprised. right down the street there's the home of the coach. so he is about two blocks, about a long field goal on a good day from the tree of life. >> reporter: people talk about community a lot. one of the things that really strikes me here is that it is not just tolerance. it is welcoming, as you said. we talked to a rabbi earlier, rabbi mohamed, who has helped raise more than $150,000 through the muslim community at this point. they've had a long relationship. it's not a relationship that just suddenly blossomed in front of television cameras in the last two days. the rabbi tells me he's had a relationship since 9/11. >> this is not a photo opportunity. this is how we live. >> reporter: i think there is such an important message in that. this person who committed this horrific act wanted to divide people and wanted to sow division and fear and that did not happen here. >> you wonder whether he knew to come here because this is the epicenter of tolerance and respect. >> reporter: it's also, as you wrote in one of your pieces along with the lower east side of new york, it's one epicenter of jewish life in america. >> it's impossible to talk about the jewish history in america without talking about four or five blocks around here. there are 11 synagogues within a fi five-minute walk of where we are. this is where reformed judaism was created, jews were comfortable, they had ceremonies sometimes in church halls and sometimes in fire stations. it's a place they came with comfort and ease. >> one thi . >> reporter: one thing with dr. rabinowitz's funeral -- >> dr. rabinowitz was the doctor of the local editor. >> reporter: the two brothers, david and cecil, who were pillars of this congregation, for so many people to come to the funeral of two brothers who maybe they didn't even know personally or who they met or felt they knew -- >> they saw in line in probably the only ice cream place in kth country that is certified as kosher, we've seen these men walk our streets. they're part of the landscape of pittsburgh. >> and su-- >> reporter: and such a turnout. it says a lot about our country. brooke, back to you. the president will be arriving soon. we'll cover that. the president claiming he can deny citizenship to anyone born in this country. we'll see if this is a stump to rile up his base before midterms. hi, my name is sam davis and i'm going to tell you about exciting plans available to anyone with medicare. many plans provide broad coverage and still may save you money on monthly premiums and prescription drugs. these are affordable, all-in-one plans that help pay for doctor visits, hospital stays and emergency care. but they also include prescription drug coverage. in fact, last year humana medicare advantage prescription drug plan members saved an estimated $6,900 on average on their prescription costs. call a licensed humana sales agent or go online to find out if you could save on your prescription drugs. this plan delivers coverage for the three things you may care most about; prescription drug coverage, doctor visits, and hospital stays. plus, potential cost savings on your plan premium. humana has a large network of doctors and hospitals. so call us, or go online to find out if your doctor is part of the humana network. ready to learn more? 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there's a therabreath for you. therabreath fresh breath oral rinse instantly fights all types of bad breath and works for 24 hours. so you can... breathe easy. there's therabreath at walmart. since you're heading off to dad... i just got a zerowater. but we've always used brita. it's two stage-filter... doesn't compare to zerowater's 5-stage. this meter shows how much stuff, or dissolved solids, gets left behind. our tap water is 220. brita? 110... seriously? but zerowater- let me guess. zero? yup, that's how i know it is the purest-tasting water. i need to find the receipt for that. oh yeah, you do. president trump is doubling down on his scare tactics to voters one week before the midterms. just take the immigration issue. he is calling asylum seekers invaders, joining a chorus echoing the same talking points. this week fox news used the word "invasion" in relation to the migrant caravan more than 60 times and on fox business, more than 75. president trump is now threatening to end birthright citizenship with an executive order. >> how ridiculous. we're the only country in the world where a person comes in, has a baby and the baby is essentially a citizen of the united states for 85 years with all of those benefits. it's ridiculous. it's ridiculous. and it has to end. >> to be clear, he's wrong. the u.s. is one of at least 30 countries around the world with birthright citizenship. we go now to a federal prosecutor who clerked for supreme court justice breyer. i've got some sound, house speaker paul ryan commenting on this moments ago. >> well, you obviously cannot do that. you cannot end birthright citizenship with an executive order. we didn't like it when obama liked changing immigration laws with executive action. as conservatives we believe in the constitution. as a conservative, i'm a believer in willing following t text of the constitution and that would involve a very, very lengthy constitutional process. but where we obviously totally agree with the president is getting at the root issue here, which is unchecked illegal immigration. >> so again, to quote speaker ryan, this obviously cannot be done, correct? >> no, that's exactly right. there is no precedent, no legal authority, no legitimate basis to this suggestion. the last time this argument was taken seriously was literally dre dread scott. it would require an amendment to the constitution to try to open the door to evaporate birthright citizenship. >> gor gloria borger, you were writing about the president's attempts to fire up his base. that's really what this is all about. >> sure. he bemoaned after the pipe bomber he was losing momentum in the midterm elections. he's trying to get his momentum back. it's this. it's republicans are saying we're going to protect preexisting condition, i'm going to pass a tax cut for the middle class when congress is not even in town. sending 5,000 troops to the border. also, i went back and looked at president trump's twitter feed because there's always a tweet for everything, and in 2012 after president obama issued the executive action on dreamers, he called it -- he called these actions major power grabs of authority. >> how about that. how about that. twitter works for him, works against him. you talk about momentum. then the momentum would be a total abdication of responsibility. this is the president of the united states supposed to be in office and uphold the constitution. he is trying to defy the constitution, tieing it to the caravan, it's fear mongering, gloria. >> elections are always about fear to a certain degree but donald trump likes to campaign on that. that's what he does. he gets people riled up. it works for him. he has to have an enemy in order to succeed. the caravan has to be the enemy. the democrats, of course, it's an election, have to be the enemy. so he finds things that he can latch on to as he's, you know, doing here saying we should not allow birthright citizenship because he wants to rile up his base and the democrats want to let all these people in. you know, this is his m.o. we've watched it for years now. in a way we shouldn't be surprised by it, except he can't do any of it. >> he can't do this -- hang on. if you flip the script, wouldn't this be the same thing as if you had a democratic president who wanted to sign an executive order to change the second amendment on guns. you can't do that. >> that's exactly right, brooke. and it's even worse. i think he knows he can't do that. this is one of those things where whether it's building the wall at the expense of mexico or passing a big tax cut when congress isn't in session, he just says these things because he knows he's going to get a reaction. what i think is so troubling is not just the complete lack of precedent for this, it's also the fact that the timing comes -- of course it's a preelection stunt but the country is reeling from politically motivated threats, from hate-infused slaughter in pittsburgh. our leaders in history have come forward to try to bing ring us together in these moments and to instead inject chaos is so irresponsible. but, as gloria said, it's spaktspak exactly what we've come to expect from the president. >> i think people are confused. empathy is not his strong suit. >> read the article yesterday from patty yesterday. thiru, final question, is it not the president's job to uphold the constitution and not try to sit there and change it? >> absolutely. every one of us who are lawyer, public officials, take an oath to uphold the constitution and to right to write out something as important to the citizenship clause to the 14th amendment is just irresponsible. i think he thinks americans aren't going to figure this out, that we can't walk and chew gum. we're going to vote against anyone who supported it tomorrow. >> gloria, thiru, thank you very much. we'll take you back to pittsburgh where the president just landed moments ago. also, the justice department is now investigating interior secretary ryan zinke for possibly using his office for personal gain. those details ahead. (vo) this is not a video game. this is not a screensaver. this is the destruction of a cancer cell by the body's own immune system, thanks to medicine that didn't exist until now. and today can save your life. ♪ ♪ as one of the nation's largest investors in infrastructure, we don't just help power the american dream, we're part of it. this is our era. this is america's energy era. nextera energy. this is america's energy era. ♪ (electronic dance music)♪ ♪ ♪ first, it continues to pay paramedics while we're on break. second, it ensures the closest ambulance can respond if you call 9-1-1. vote yes on 11. proposition 11 "proposition 11 is a vote to protect patient safety." it ensures the closest ambulance remains on-call during paid breaks "so that they can respond immediately when needed." vote yes on 11. ♪ as a community is mourning in pittsburgh, we are just now getting the first images of about 100 members of the pittsburgh steelers organization paying their respects at the services for david and cecil rosenthal, the two brothers killed in the synagogue shooting saturday morning. the rosenthals' sister, michelle, used to be a community relations manager for the football team, and their presence just another symbol of how greatly this tragedy has really touched this entire city. and i also just want to take a moment just to remember, 97-year-old rose mallinger, another one of those 11 lives lost at the massacre of the tree of life synagogue. and her family released a statement, and i'd like to read the whole thing for you. rose was bubby. that's yiddish for grandma to everyone in our family and our beloved community. she was a pillar of the jewish community and the tree of life synagogue, which she was part of for over six decades. the synagogue was the center of her very active life. she was there every weekend, and the people of the congregation brought her great joy as she brought to them. her involvement with the synagogue went beyond the jewish religion. it was an integral part of her life. it was her place to be social, to be active, and to meet family and friends. family was everything to bubby. she was one of six siblings. she had three children, five grandchildren, and one great grandchild. she loved us and knew us better than we knew ourselves. to bubby, age was truly just a number. she retained her sharp wit, humor and intelligence until the very last day. no matter what obstacles she faced, she never complained. she did everything she wanted to do in her life. we will truly miss her presence and company. they end with this. this is a time for our family to be together and to grieve the loss of a loved one. we request that the media respect our privacy. we will not be granting any further interviews at this time. so just one of the stories and just how this community has wrapped themselves around this synagogue. and really, i think the world is feeling so much of this. gloria borger is back with me. and, you know, it's the feeling and it's the faith of this community. and now it's a little bit of the politics in the sense of the president, live pictures of air force one waiting to see trump as he is now in pittsburgh today. and i know a number of local leaders, even members of congress, you know -- either didn't want him to go or aren't going with him. and what's your reaction to his desire to be there? >> first of all, i have to talk about that letter. you know, i'm jewish. and, you know, everyone has a bubby in their family. and, you know, it's hard. thinking of the president, look, he wanted to come. he wanted to pay his respects. the jewish community is divided. and some felt that today is a day of burial. as you know, jews bury their dead quickly and that he shouldn't have inserted himself into this. but he is the president of the united states, and some said, you know, he should be welcome in this community, as david shribman was talking about earlier. what we're watching for is a president who has been unable to be empathetic and a consoler and play the pastoral role that presidents are very often required to play. >> there they are. >> and here he is with melania. so we'll just -- you know, it's a very, very somber moment. not only for this community, but for the country and for all of us for whom family is so important. >> you know, listening to the rabbi from the synagogue, would welcome this president. this is a -- it's a welcoming faith. it was shabbat services saturday morning. anyone could have walked in those synagogue doors and attended. and, you know, to see the president and the first lady obviously there to pay their respects but after this, the president has the different rallies, and this was the day that he could make it. 60 seconds, what do they need to say? or is their presence enough? >> i think they just need to embrace everyone. i think there needs to be a sense this cannot happen, should not stand in this country. i think you just leave the politics aside. we'll see what happens later in the week. but, you know, this is a moment for mourning and it's a moment for community. and it's a moment for the country. and i think that everything else kind of has to fade away when you think of someone like bubby, who got murdered. at 97 in a temple. that's all you can do, is try and hug people back. >> gloria, thank you. we're back in a moment. fact is, every insurance company hopes you drive safely. but allstate helps you. with drivewise. feedback that helps you drive safer. and that can lower your cost now that you know the truth... are you in good hands? big corporations are making and just got a huge tax break. but the middle class is struggling. prop c is a common-sense plan. the top 1% of businesses pay their fair share to tackle homelessness for all of us. companies with revenue greater than $50 million pay, not small businesses or homeowners. the prop c plan is supported by the democratic party, teachers, and mental-health professionals. vote "yes" on c. big corporations pay for it, not you. comcast business built the nation's largest gig-speed network. then went beyond. beyond chasing down network problems. to knowing when and where there's an issue. beyond network complexity. to a zero-touch, one-box world. optimizing performance and budget. beyond having questions. to getting answers. "activecore, how's my network?" "all sites are green." all of which helps you do more than your customers thought possible. comcast business. beyond fast. so president trump is sending more u.s. service members to the u.s./mexico border than there are fighting isis in iraq and syria? do i have that right? "the lead" starts right now. too soon. president trump in pittsburgh right now. an uninvited guest for many local leaders as funerals begin for the victims of the worst anti semitic attack in american history. president trump trying to change the conversation with exactly one week until the midterm elections. his new promise on immigration that experts say is wholly unrealistic, and by the way, likely unconstitutional. plus, he went from telling trump to go to hell to competing with mike pence for teacher's pet. why has senator lindsey graham gone all-in for president trump? welcome to "the lead," i'm jake tapper. president trump just moments ago arriving in

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