Transcripts For CNNW CNN Newsroom With Carol Costello 20141009

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new concerns this morning as a police sergeant is showing ebola-like symptoms. hospitalize and in isolation. plus, a mother's plea pla toe isis, americanage, peter kassig's mother, tweeting to the terrorist leader, i'm a old woman. abdul rahman is my only child. how can we reach you and call it the cartagena coverup a new report out about the hooker scandal in colombia. what did the white house really know? let's talk, live in the cnn newsroom. good morning. i'm carol costello. thank you so much for joining me. we begin this morning with breaking news and reassuring words for the dallas deputy now hospitalized with what's been called signs and symptoms of ebola. texas health officials now say sergeant michael monig faces no risk of the disease after entering the unsan tides apartment of thomas duncan. he died yesterday after becoming the first ebola case diagnosed on u.s. soil. the deputy woke up feeling ill yesterday and went to an urgent care facility out of extreme caution. >> we were told by federal officials, county officials, that would you have to come in direct contact with duncan or direct contact with bodily fluids and he did not. elizabeth cohen with in story. >> reporter: doctors at the hospital behind me evaluate what exactly is wrong with mr. monig. the family of thomas eric duncan is mourning his loss and wondering about these questions surrounding his care. >> we did not receive any type of emergency equipment. >> reporter: ebola fear escalating as sergeant michael monig, a deputy sheriff who initially entered into the apartment where dallas ebola patient thomas eric duncan was staying before it was sanitized, started experiencing some ebola-like symptoms wednesday. he told wfaa affiliate friday he thought he play is come in contact with the virus. >> touched doors and lights to turn on lights. >> reporter: according to the cdc, ebola can't live on surfaces for mon than just a few hours and he said he was in the apartment several days after duncan had already been admitted to the hospital. a state health official saying, we know he didn't have direct contact with duncan and he doesn't have a fever. and in a situation like that, there is not a risk of ebola. >> overabundance of caution, we're taking several actions to make sure that the public health, safety and welfare is protected. >> reporter: the deputy sheriff was transported to the same hospital where duncan, the first person to be diagnosed with ebola in the u.s., died early wednesday. >> today, we are deeply saddened by the death of the patient in dallas. >> reporter: some community leaders are now questioning duncan's care. >> their concern is that the same standard of identification and diagnosis and safe care applied in frisco did not apply to him. >> reporter: admitted september 28th, duncan lay sickened in his hospital bed at texas health for six days before doctors tried an experimental medication to fight ebola. compare that to nbc cameraman ashoka mukpo, also fighting the virus. he arrived at the university of nebraska on monday and right away, doctors gave him an experimental anti-viral medication. mukpo also received a blood donation from american survivor, dr. kent brantly. blood donations from ebola survivors are believed to provide anti-bodies to patients still fighting the disease. duncan never received a donation. now, while monig is not a contact of duncan's, duncan did have 48 contacts while he was contagious. health authorities carefully monitoring them and so far, good news, none of them are showing signs of ebola. carol? >> that is the best news, elizabeth cohen reporting live from dallas. also in dallas last night, a prayer vigil for duncan at the church where his fiancee worships. she is now in quarantine and unable to attend but local media reports say she was able to watch the service as it was streamed online. the service drew fellow native liberians who lamented that duncan cannot be buried in traditional ways but they conceded that cremation may be the best choice for medical reasons. in australia, a 57-year-old nurse is undergoing tests for the disease after caring for a number of ebola patients in sierra leone. health officials say the woman meticulously limited her exposure to other people after returning home to australia. she kept herself in isolation, she took her own temperature twice a day, she alerted health officials once she became ill is now hospitalized under isolation. her test results are expected late today. here is a world map with countries highlighted if they are dealing with confirmed cases of ebola. in spain, doctors report grim news on the first known case of ebola being contracted outside of africa. the condition of that nurse's aide is said to be worsening. doctors are also keeping a close eye on her husband and the two doctors who treated her. new bombshell allegations circling around the white house this morning. they had to do with a trip president obama took to colombia in april of 2012. secret service agents in colombia, ahead of the president's visit, allegedly got drunk and partied with prostitutes. actually, they did. eight secret service employees lost their jobs because of this. sources tell cnn, investigators examined a hotel sign-in sheet that indicates a woman also spent the night in the hotel room of a white house intern in colombia. the "washington post" is reporting that the white house tried to cover this up. white house press secretary, josh armest, shrugged off that report, tweeting last night, "suppose "washington post" exclusive was previously reported two years ago. "cnn justice reporter, evan perez, joins me with more. good morning, evan. >> reporter: good morning, carol. this is a really big story here for the white house to have to deal with, two years after this allegation first surfaced. it has to do with a former intern for the white house. he was 25 years old at the time. a law student and he was working, doing advance work for the president's visit to cartagena. now, we know a lot about what happened to the -- to the agents, the secret service agents and officers who were there. we also know there was another dozen military members who were punished for wrongdoing or for improper behavior during the same trip. but we don't know a lot about what happened with this -- with the white house and that's what is bringing this back, because a lot of people, sources we have talked to, have said that they don't have any faith that this was handled properly, that they know that the secret service and the military punished people who did wrongdoing, but they don't have any assurance that this was handled properly by the white house. >> so, this white house intern, his father is a big donor to the obama campaign, am i right? >> that's right, carol. he was also a former lobbyist, the father. look, there's no allegation -- there's no allegation that the father did anything wrong, and even this allegation against the former intern, the white house says it did a thorough investigation, and it couldn't find any wrongdoing, it interviewed him, it looked at these records that were brought over from colombia and they could not verify that, indeed, anyone, anyone had even spent the night in this -- in the room of this intern. so that's where this stands, never any proof offered and looks like there was never anything found in the investigation to prove any of this. >> all right. i know you keep digging though h evan perez, thanks so much. what would you do if your child was held hostage by isis terrorists and threatened to be killed? well, an indiana mother is so desperate now, she tweeted to you the a letter to the leader of isis, becking for information. of course that mother, paula cassie, wrote "i'm an old woman and abdul rahman is my only child. how can we reach you?" abdul rahman kassigs, is a former u.s. army ranger who returned to the middle east to help syrian refugees. he was taken captive by isis on october 1st. last night, kassig's parents attended a vigil at butler university where kassig went to school. a suburban chicago teenager will appear in federal court this morning to determine if he will stay locked up until his trial. 19-year-old mohammed khan is accused of trying to assist the terror group, isis. he was arrested saturday night at chicago's o'hare airport. he was about to board a flight that would have eventually taken him to turkey. there, he supposedly was to meet an isis contact who would help him get into syria. ted rowlands live in chicago with more. good morning. >> reporter: good morning, carol. we are expecting this hearing to be relatively short. the main focus of this hearing is detention. the prosecution, the federal government wants khan to remain behind bars, his defense will argue for some sort of bail. and that will be the bulk of this relatively short hearing. they will also likely set a trial date. but today's focus should this 19-year-old be detained until trial or should he be out on bond? >> all right, ted rowlands at the federal courthouse in chicago. you will keep us posted. thanks so much. taking a look at other top stories this morning, protests erupt in st. louis after a police officer shoots and kills an armed 18-year-old black man. the police chief said the suspect approached the officer in an, aggressive manner, a fight ensued, the suspect then fired three rounds at the officer. the officer, who was not injured, fired 17 times, fatally wounding the man. the supreme court is allowing new voting restrictions in north carolina to go into effect. the justices reversed a federal appeals courts decision that would have allowed same-day registration and counted votes cast mistakenly in the wrong precincts. at&t will give $80 million back to its customers it has to do with improperly charging for celebrity gossip and flirting tips sent to your phone. talk about the big am. the second year in a rocker the tech giant has toppled google as the world's most valuable brand. third on the list, coca-cola, followed by ibm and microsoft. those are your headlines, but first, your late night laugh. >> new survey found that more than half of americans see president obama's time in office as a failure. while the rest said, you saw him in his office? when? when was that? >> "newsroom's" back in a minute. ♪ i remember when i wouldn't give a little cut a second thought. when i didn't worry about the hepatitis c in my blood. when i didn't think twice about where i left my razor. hep c is a serious disease. take action now. go to hepc.com or call 1-844-444-hepc to find out how you and your doctor can take the next step towards a cure. because the answers you need, may be closer than they appear. ♪ (vo)solver of the slice.pro. teacher of the un-teachable. you lower handicaps... and raise hopes. and you...rent from national. because only national lets you choose any car in the aisle... and go. you can even take a full-size or above, and still pay the mid-size price. 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(vo) well played, business pro. well played. go national. go like a pro. once there was a girl who even in her laundry room. with downy unstopables for long-lasting scent. and infusions for softness. she created her own mix, match, magic. downy, wash in the wow. police in hammond, indiana, under into irthis morning after video of a violent traffic stop goes violent, goes viral. >> oh! >> awful, right? this video was taken last month and it shows the terrifying moments for a family of four after they were pulled over for a seat belt violation. the situation escalated when one of the officers allegedly smashed in a car window and then tasered passenger jamal jones. in the back seat, two children, including a 14-year-old who caught the whole thing on camera. >> he cussed jamal out and he was getting very, aggressive with my mom and then he called backup over a seat belt violation. so, i start videotaping it, because i knew that he was doing wrong. then when the window shattered after he hit it, i felt scared -- i was scared, but that's what really gave me the courage to keep videotaping it. >> the family is suing for excessive force. cnn's national correspondent, susan candiotti, has more for you. >> oh [ bleep ]. >> reporter: a chilling end to a 13-minute standoff between an indiana family and hammond, indiana, police. it starts with a simple traffic stop in broad daylight. police pull over driver lisa ma hone and her front seat passenger for not wearing seat belts. she was on her way to the hospital to see her dying mother. the way she was pulled over, she says, scared her from the start. >> from left to the right. i'm like, oh, my god, i don't even know which way to pull over, because he pulling me over like i robbed a bank. >> reporter: before this cell phone camera rolls, ma hone hands over her license for a possible $25 seat belt ticket. but things go down hill, she says, when her companion, jamal jones, doesn't have an i.d. and reaches in the back seat to grab a ticket with his name on it. police say that move makes them worried about their safety. >> step out of the vehicle. >> this is crazy. >> ma hone calls 911. by now, her 14-year-old son in the back seat is rolling video, sitting next to his 7-year-old sister. >> step out of the vehicle. >> the phone, man. >> step out of the vehicle. you need to step out of the vehicle. >> ma hone stays on the line with 911. >> i feel like my life is in danger. >> jones still won't budget. >> they had their weapons drawn. i felt to protect my family, i should have stayed in that vehicle and not moved. >> reporter: about a minute later, jones still not moving, a supervisor steps closer. >> how you say somebody not gonna hurt you, people out there getting shot by police. >> oh, damn. ah. >> on the ground. [ crying ] >> reporter: police also have a dash cam video and audio recording made by another officer at the scene. that video has not been released. hammonds' mayor stands by his 200-member police force. 20% of his officers are minorities. in a statement, the police department says the officers were following procedure by not keeping his hands in plain sight and going into a backpack, officer safety was threatened. the officer who smashes the window is identified as lieutenant patrick vicari. records show he has been sued twice for excessive force. in 2007, court papers say the plaintiff suffered permanent brain injury. the case was settled. in 2008, a family accuses the same officer of pointing guns at them, battering the mother and putting a choke hold on a child during a traffic stop. that family also settles out of court. a second officer involved in this incident was also sued in 2003 for offensive contact. the outcome is unknown. neither officer could be reached by cnn. now, another family is suing the city, accusing officers they went too far. susan candiotti, cnn, new york. in morning, leaders of three western african countries hit hardest by ebola, guinea, liberia and sierra leone, met with imf and world bank officials about the spread of the virus. the head of the world bank says the crisis could top more than $32 billion by the end of next year. and he is calling on the international community to do more to stop the spread. nearly 4,000 people have died from ebola so far. christine romans is here with more. >> you know, the head of the world bank, he said the international community has failed miserably in its response to ebola. they need more beds, they need more doctors. a lot more doctors. they need health care aides who can be trained quickly on how to properly take care of and dispose of the linens and the bed clothes of people being treated, they need money to educate people. some of these countries, you have half-itilogical raissi rate, go doer to door and explain into people what the symptoms are and what to do and break down some of these terrible barriers of trust there you are talking about hundreds of millions of dollars that you're going to need. the u.n. says $1 billion and quickly. there's the fact that some of these countries, they already have very stressed finances. they are coming their tax revenue, out of covers and paying for the response, they are running out of money. people can't go to work because they are quarantined, they don't have any money. it's really a matter of life and death. >> how much money have they spent so far? >> so, tens of millions of dollars have been pledged from foreign governments and from -- and frankly, from, you know, the international aid community try to help this u.n. says we are going to need 1 billion and only gonna grow from here. here's something that's interesting. this story doesn't pull -- this disaster doesn't pull at the heartstrings of people who want to give money the way say a haiti earthquake does or the tsunami. money's actually trickling in to charities, specifically for this ebola crisis. some of these experts are saying, these countries are saying it is going to take governments, governments and an international community to really focus on this and find the money to fix it. and it will affect everybody. one of the things world bank says, talking about aversion behavior, worried about if you don't get it contained, you're going to have closing borders, closing down of air lines, isolating these countries and it only get worse. >> christine romans, thanks so much. still to come in the newsroom, hundreds of tips flow into the fbi after the agency calls in the public to help identify this man, an english-speaking isis fighter who appears in a chilling propaganda video. any of the tips useful? we will talk about that next. when salesman alan ames books his room at laquinta.com, he gets a ready for you alert the second his room is ready. so he knows exactly when he can check in and power up before his big meeting. and when alan gets all powered up, ya know what happens? i think the numbers speak for themselves. i'm sold! he's a selling machine! put it there. and there, and there, and there. la quinta inns & suites is ready for you, so you'll be ready for business. the ready for you alert, only a laquinta.com! la quinta! no. not exactly. to attain success, one must project success. that's why we use fedex one rate. their flat rate shipping. exactly. it makes us look top-notch but we know it's affordable. 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[ male announcer ] ship a pak via fedex express saver® come from all walks of life. if you have high blood sugar, ask your doctor about farxiga. it's a different kind of medicine that works by removing some sugar from your body. along with diet and exercise, farxiga helps lower blood sugar in adults with type 2 diabetes. with one pill a day, farxiga helps lower your a1c. and, although it's not a weight-loss or blood-pressure drug, farxiga may help you lose weight and may even lower blood pressure when used with certain diabetes medicines. do not take if allergic to farxiga or its ingredients. symptoms of a serious allergic reaction include rash, swelling or difficulty breathing or swallowing. if you have any of these symptoms, stop taking farxiga and seek medical help right away. do not take farxiga if you have severe kidney problems, are on dialysis, or have bladder cancer. tell your doctor right away if you have blood or red color in your urine or pain while you urinate. farxiga can cause serious side effects, including dehydration, genital yeast infections in women and men, low blood sugar,kidney problems, and increased bad cholesterol. common side effects include urinary tract infections, changes in urination, and runny nose. ♪do the walk of life ♪yeah, you do the walk of life need to lower your blood sugar? ask your doctor about farxiga and visit our website to learn how you may be able to get every month free. happening now in the newsroom, the fbi needs help identifying who this isis terrorist is. and it looks like you may hold the answer, as investigators pore through hundreds of tips that could uncover that masked man. front line testing for ebola, as america's entry points get set to start special screening, but will it actually prevent this global epidemic from spreading here in the united states? plus, the nfl looks to knock out domestic violence ands's calling on a former player for help, with a unique education geared toward nfl owners. hear the powerful interview in just a couple of minutes. "newsroom" continues now. good morning, i'm carol costello, thank you so much for joining me. checking our top stories now, police are revealing more details about handwritten notes left by an alleged cop killer in the pennsylvania woods. eric frein is accused of ambushing two state troopers last month, killing one of them. officials say the notes are quite chilling and go into great detail about the ambush and treme's escape, as police closed in on him. the judge presiding over the felony child abuse trial of nfl star, adrian peterson, is apologizing this morning after referring to both the defense and prosecution teams as "media whores." the trial is scheduled to start december 1st if the judge is not forced to recuse himself. opening bell, happened just moments ago, watching the markets after wall street had its -- had a really bad day yesterday, one of the worst of the year. on wednesday shall the dow rallied though, nearly 300 points. alison kosik is here with more. so what's up this the stock market? >> it is crazy, after having one of the worst days of the year, a total reversal, then jumping 274 points, like roller coasters? there's been one on wall street. we have watched the dow swing from hawaiis to low lows. you looking at how the dow has performed just this month. i want to show you, this is by the minute. look at that it's like whiplash. so, what happened yesterday was everybody got the minutes from the fed's latest meeting in september and that's what really gave investors reasons to buy in. what the fed said is it's going to go slow in raising interest rates which means the fed do look to raise interest rates next summer instead of next spring. now, there are a few real reasons that the fed's going to go ahead and tiptoe into raising rates. for one, it's because of a slowdown in growth in europe and china. also, the stronger dollar, which could hurt u.s. exporters because it makes u.s. products less competitive. it could also weigh down inflation, which is already below where the fed wants it. so, longer for lower, as -- lower for longer, i should say exactly what wall street wants as far as interest rates are concerned, because you're seeing wall street addicted to cheap money, interest rates are historically low, they have been low for the past six years, making cheaper to take out a car loan. >> the fbi sifting through hundreds of tips to try and identify a possible american who appears in a gruesome isis propaganda video called flames of war. the masked fighter appears to help execute syrian soldiers and can be heard speaking in fluent english. he also has what some are calling a north american accent. listen. >> they lie. the one, we are the -- and the flames of war are only beginning to intensify. >> earlier this week, the fbi called on the public to try to help identify who this man is and where he might be from. it's all part of a builder effort to track down individuals who might be trying to travel overseas to fight for isis. so, let's talk about that with cnn global affairs analyst and managing editor, bobby gauche and former fbi assistant director, tom fuentes. welcome to both of you. >> good morning, carol. >> good morning, thanks for being here. tom, i will start with you. how do you determine which tips are credible? >> i think you have to just check them out really. and in some it might be obvious by the caller who calls in, but you know, even -- even tips that come in that sometimes might seem crazy turn out to be real. so, really, the fbi and the police have to check out practically every single thing -- tip that comes in. >> it still seems like such a difficult task, bobby to try to identify this guy, who is wearing a mask, so you talked about triangulation in the break. explain. >> well, as tom well knows, it's a question of figuring out -- the fbi having seen that video will have come to some conclusions about this guy. they will have a good sense of his height, his weight, his skin tone, they will have a close look of his eyes, somebody is calling in and says, oh, that's tom smith and i went to high school with him and 6'2" and 200 pounds, and the fbi has figured out this guy is probably 5'8" that is one tip you can sort of put in the low priority box. and if the tips sort of add up to a profile that is close to what the fbi's already figured, that gives them -- that makes them a little more credible. it is a needle in the haystack, but the fbi is good at finding this kind of needle and this kind of haystack. this is what they do they have sophisticated tools to do this and the tools now with the computers and so big -- computers that are able to crunch a lot of data, the tools are better than ever before and they have all kinds of specialists. >> seems as if isis has its own tools, you listen to that man's voice, tom, it sort of sounds tampered with, it doesn't quite sound like a real voice. what do you think? >> well, you know, when i've heard this many times and i don't -- i don't hear him as a native american or canadian speaker. he sounds to me like someone who may have been from some country in the middle east and was taught english or came here at an early enough able where he has a slight accent and speaks very good english. other people have told me that the arabic isn't that great when he switches back and forth between english and arabic. so, you know, i'm not sure that they can say exactly he is a native american speaker or north american speaker. interesting. i want to show our viewers another shot from this video, because there's another man in the background and he is looking straight into the camera. can we put that up right now? he is wearing this yellow shirt. i'm sure the fbi's also looking at that man, right, tom? >> yeah. they would be looking at that. and that, also in that situation, someone might recognize the shirt. oh, yeah, that's my best friend and he always wore that shirt all the time. you know, so, but there's not much of that individual's face showing either. you can determine, as bobby mentioned, the difference in the height between the two. it appears that the yellow shirted kid is shorter, but, again, it's really gonna take somebody looking at the video, where not only you hear the voice but you see the mannerisms, the tilt of the head, the way a person expresses himself. oftentimes, people will recognize that even without hearing the voice, the way person stands and holds himself as he speaks is a major clue also for a lot of people. >> i was just going to bring up for bobby to address the body language of the people standing around this guy. >> well, they are clearly, he is clearly in charge the guy in the yellow shirt is standing around, sometimes looking straight at the camera, but he is not in charge. the man -- he is -- he seems to be there to help, to face sis tate, as part of the rest of the group, the man in the mask, in the military uniform is clearly the one in charge. >> that's just, um, fascinating in a gruesome kind of we, right? bob, tom, thanks so much for your insight. i appreciate it. >> welcome. >> any time. still ahead in the newsroom, coming to america. u.s.-bound flights not only carry newcomers but also the potential for new cases of ebola. cnn's rene marsh is at washington's dulles international airport. good morning. >> good morning, carol. preparations are under way for these ramped up screening measures. coming up, we will tell you who will be targeted and why some say the new measures give a false sense of security. 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[ male announcer ] it's how edward jones makes sense of investing. ♪ u.s. health officials are turning their attention to airports as potential entry points for the ebola virus. five of the nation's biggest airline hubs will implement special screening for people arriving from the nations hardest hit by ebola. rene marsh is cnn's government regulation and aviation correspondent. she is at dulles international airport. the screening begins this weekend at jfk and at other airports but not until next week. why? >> reporter: well, carl, that's the big question, what's with the delay? we can tell that you customs officers, they are going to be on the front lines, asking these very detailed questions, receiving their questionnaires, have in their hands something that looks like this, a laser, non-contact thermometer, but we all know, customs officers are not doctors, so they have to get trained. once they are trained, the new ramped up procedures will be rolled out. in just days, ramped up screening of passengers will begin at new york's jfk airport and expanding to atlanta, newark, chicago and here at washington dulles. the five airports receive about 95% of the 150 passengers arriving in the u.s. every day from ebola hotspots, guinea, liberia, and sierra leone. under the new screening measures, all passengers traveling from those countries will have their temperatures checked with a laser thermometer, no touching necessary, just held close to the forehead. a new cdc questionnaire must also be filled out upon landing. >> there's a 21-day inc., cube base period. people may not have a fever when passing through the airport. invariably, people compassing through, we had this temperature screening set up why did this happen? i'm telling people it's completely predictable it will happen, this is not a fool-proof way to prevent ebola from coming into the country. >> reporter: similar screening is already in place in west africa but the goal of these new u.s. checks is to identify passengers airport officials missed or who developed symptoms while traveling. >> this is an additional layer of screening that can be targeted to that small population in a way that will enhance security, but also minimize disruption to the broader traveling public. >> reporter: i spoke with two infectious disease experts who both have the same opinion. they say this is not foolproof, it is not 100%. if someone has a low-grade fe r fever, they simply need to pop a tylenol or ibuprofen to mask this fever. the point is you will not catch every person who comes through or arrives on u.s. soil who may have early symptoms of ebola. cdc also admitting that they realize this is not 100%. carol? >> rene marsh reporting live from dulles international airport this morning. thank you. still to come in the newsroom, temperatures running hot after st. louis police kill an unarmed black teenager. rosa flores tells us what's ahead. >> well, carol, good morning. police saying that this teenager fired at a police officer three times and then police firing back, hear this, 17 times. how the situation escalated and why police say this teen actually kept on pulling the trigger, next. narrator: these are the skater kid: whoa narrator: that got torture tested by teenagers and cried out for help. from the surprised designers. who came to the rescue with a brilliant fix male designer: i love it narrator: which created thousands of new customers for the tennis shoes that got torture tested by teenagers. the internet of everything is changing manufacturing. is your network ready? 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>> according to police, the circumstances of this shooting are very different from the shooting death two months ago of 18-year-old michael brown in nearby ferguson. rosa flores has been following the story. she joins us with more. good morning. >> good morning. you know, here's what we know. here's how police say this all went down. and they say that there was an off-duty police officer working an approved second job and he sees three teenagers. those three teenagers start running. a short chase ensues. there's a tussle. and then one of those teenagers starts running, circles become and fires three gunshots at police. overnight, protests erupt in st. louis. angry residents charging at police. kicking at police cars, shattering windows and shouting for police to leave their neighborhood. >> [ bleep ]. [ bleep ]. >> reporter: this after an 18-year-old black man was shot and killed by an off-duty st. louis police officer wednesday night. >> how y'all kill that little boy? y'all not finished killing babies? >> reporter: according to the st. louis police department, the 32-year-old officer, a white male, and a six-year when he came across three black men who started running from the officer's vehicle. police say, eventually, one of them fired shots at the officer. >> a police officer today chased an individual armed with a gun. the individual shot at the officer at least three times and the officer returned fire. >> reporter: authorities confirm the officer shot at the suspect 17 times. the officer was not hurt. and police say a .9 millimeter gun was recovered from the scene. >> you shot! >> reporter: this shorting happening just miles away from where michael brown who was unarmed was shot two months ago, and just ahead of a weeskd resistance in st. louis where activists will public for a movement into the investigation into that case. all this, as demonstrators continue in a community already reeling and seeking answers to another young man's death. >> think about your own child. >> now, as you just saw those protests, very intense. very face-to-face with those police officers. they do say that no looting has happened. now, about that gun, carol, what i was saying about how police believe that that teen kept on pulling the trigger. the reason why they say they know that is because they recovered the weapon. and according to police, that weapon was jammed. and so, of course, they're looking at that now. >> so there are going to be protests over the michael brown shooting this weekend. so how does this shooting impact those protests? >> you know how social media works. ed mely tweets started being exchanged on people going back and forth. some of the protesters saying they should combine some of these protests. but i think what doesn't change about the protest is the message. they want an end to racial profiling and an end to police violence. >> rosa flores, many thanks. still to come in our "newsroom," required viewing for all nfl teams on domestic violence. it's pretty powerful. wait till you hear my interview were with that man next. ♪ who's going to do it? who's going to make it happen? discover a new energy source. turn ocean waves into power. design cars that capture their emissions. build bridges that fix themselves. get more clean water to everyone. who's going to take the leap? who's going to write the code? who's going to do it? engineers. that's who. that's what i want to do. be an engineer. ♪ [ male announcer ] join the scientists and engineers of exxonmobil in inspiring america's future engineers. energy lives here. if it doesn't work fast... you're on to the next thing. neutrogena® rapid wrinkle repair has the fastest retinol formula to visibly reduce fine lines and wrinkles in just one week. neutrogena®. to visibly reduce fine lines and wrinkles in just one week. an unprecedented program arting busithat partners businesses with universities across the state. for better access to talent, cutting edge research, and state of the art facilities. and you pay no taxes for ten years. from biotech in brooklyn, to next gen energy in binghamton, to manufacturing in buffalo... startup-ny has new businesses popping up across the state. see how startup-ny can help your business grow at startup.ny.gov commissioner roger goodell sat down with nfl owners for their fall meeting. not so unusual. but this time around there was little about this meeting that was normal. no talk about rules on the field. but rules off the field. social responsibility is how the commissioner put it. and in the wake of ray rice, greg hardy, greg mcdonald, jonathan peterson, ray mcgwire, there's a lot to be responsible for. the league included a video shown to every team. take a look. >> think about the women in your life. the women that you love and care for. the women that have nurtured you. our mothers, our grandmothers, our wives, our daughters, our nieces. take a moment and just think about them. think about the love, the care that you have for them and them for you. and now just imagine that they're at a party and there's some man there that starts to assault them, when that is physically, sexually or verbally, they start to assault a woman that you love. think how that makes you feel. think about your feelings toward that perpetrator of that violence. and not only that, as you think about that, think about the role that you have to raise up a generation of men that are going to have the clarity or have the moral courage to call out that. >> joe errhman is the author of "inside out coaching." how was the video received by the owners? >> i think it was extremely well received. i would say the league and the owners have made a real commitment to address the issue. they've been handed leadership. i'm excited for them. >> some say they don't quite get it yet, do they really get it? >> well, i was in the meeting after the initial two-game suspension for ray rice. roger brought in some of the leading domestic violence people in this country. there was an authenticity and integrity. roger came in with his heart on his sleeve. very powerful. i don't think anybody in this country exactly knows. not like roger can call military generals or presidents of universities and colleges. where as a country, we're so miseducated on this, somebody's got to get it. >> a lot of people are watching him and will hold him accountable which i think is a great thing. let's talk about the video i thought it interesting because you didn't address the perpetrators of domestic violence, but you addressed men and brought up their masculinity. why did you go that route? >> when you talk about violence against women. women can't end it, all women can do is reduce the risk. it's not going to end until we raise up a generation of men that have the moral courage to call out other men. >> when your video is shown to player it's and other teams, how do you think it will be received? >> well, i'm in the nfl all the time. i do workshops. i've already done the ravens and the saints, i can't even think of the other team now. it's extremely well received. the problem is, i'm never left an nfl locker room where i haven't been filled with hope. the vast majority of young men who get tainted by three or four players on the team. i think there's a great misconception of who is in the locker rooms and who's on the field. the media highlights the negatives and they ever highlight the positives that they're doing in the nfl. >> thank you for your message. thank you for sharing it. thank you, joe. myself to meet you. and "newsroom" starts right now. happening now in the "newsroom," america's busiest airports cracking down to keep ebola out as a dallas deputy who helped enforce a quarantine starts showing symptoms of the disease. plus, a california congressman claims isis fighters are trying to cross into the united states from mexico. the feds say no way. this hour, the truths, the next border agent joins us. them bombarded by bogus texts. you're right, you may have been illegally charged. now it's payback time. let's talk. live in the "cnn newsroom." good morning, i'm carol costello. thank you so much for joining me. we start this hour confronting a growing ebola crisis head on. a dallas deputy shows symptoms and waits in isolation. did he contract ebola inside the unsanitized apartment of the

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