seven odd cnn this is cnn breaking news. hello everyone. thanks for joining me today. i m alison chemla, erotic and for frederick a. whitfield, we have breaking news out of florida. nasa scrubbing its plan to launch boeing s starliner spacecraft today you re seeing the aftermath live right now on your screens apparently, and automatic hold was triggered by the ground launch sequencer. that s the computer that launches the rocket. it stopped the countdown clock with three minutes and 50 seconds left. to go. nasa says it is not clear what caused that automatic hold. space and defense correspondent kristin fisher is live at the kennedy space center for us, also with thus we have a colonel chris hadfield, astronaut and retired commander of the international space station. okay. so kristen, what s the latest where do learning on the ground? so right now everybody is focused on the two astronauts onboard this spacecraft, the commander boots hello more, and the pilot, sunny will
anderson cooper 360, weeknight today on cnn close captioning brought to you by ruler law, iconic brands up to 70% off retail at rue la la.com at rubella you never faithful sees the deals on top before their current jobs. today we re following some breaking news. the jury reaching a decision in the penalty phase of chad daybell s murder trial he was convicted earlier this week in idaho for killing his first wife and two of his second wife s children. prosecutors claim was fueled by power, sex, money, and apocalyptic spiritual beliefs. sentence camila bernal joins me from los angeles. so camilla, what did the jury decide? hey, allison, the jury decided that chad daybell, we ll spend the rest of his life on death row. this is the highest punishment that was given by this jury just moments
change things so they could make a difference. and when you feel that when citizens are powered, and that s what i think has to happen again now, it s now up to the citizens to determine that election. what kind of an america we want and what kind of a candidate do we want? you wouldn t even have to mention the former president s name to say, do we want a candidate for president? what do we want a president who cannot accept loss with grace, who cannot acknowledge errors, who does not have resilience, who most importantly is unwilling to put ambition for south. he is a bishop for the greater good above ambition for yourself that s the critical thing you needed a leader. you look at all the leaders i ve studied and all of those qualities, those emotional what qualities are what we re looking for. we have to ask, does this man has shown us qualities? you wouldn t even have to mention his name. just say those are the qualities we want and you d see what s happening. doris kearns goodw
lawyer, former prosecutor, and also former court tv reporter, beth great to see you. so what does all this mean? nice to see you too. allison? well, it s hopeful for scott peterson that the duct tape will now yield a dna profile. in the past 20 years since it was tested, dna testing, the technology has become more sophisticated, so maybe there will be an opportunity to get a profile but the question is, will it be laci is profile scott s profile or someone else, but there s one piece of duct tape is it was already tested as you mentioned and it is the only piece that the judge of the evidence they wanted retested or tested for the first time that the judge found was connected a knock two laci and the crime that it warranted further testing, but everything else was just it was just too speculative. and so she did not allow any other items to be tested, but that s if there s dna belonging to someone other
flight test is four. and this is where the two astronauts are sitting right now and where they re trying to get them out of this is the body of this is the rocket, this whole long piece is the rocket. it s designed, built, operated by a totally different company the united launch alliance. and so the issue with the first scrub on may 6th, that was an issue with a valve on. this part of the rocket, not the boeing starliner spacecraft. and so that may be the issue again today, perhaps this the computer that detected this issue might ve noticed an issue on the rocket itself. but we just don t know. it s just too soon to say it s going to take some time for these engineers to kinda go over all the data and figure out where exactly that a problem was. but allison trust, think if you are butch wilmore, are sunny williams and you get all the way down to three minutes. it s and 50 seconds before launch. for sunny, she s been