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easy. get started today at accustoming.com this is cnn the world's news close captioning is bronchi by you, cora, help

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maintain a healthy urinary tract with you, cora, i can having nietzsche ice for ten years. you, cora, we make uti related beef products. we also make proactive urinary tract health products. you cora, is a life stage right today at you cora.com cnn breaking news a boris sanchez alongside briana keeler in the nation's capital. welcome to our viewers here in the united states and around the world, we begin with breaking news crews walking him palace has just released a new photo and update about catherine, princess of wales, yeah, it's been nearly three months since the princess revealed that she had been dying thank knows. >> with cancer and even longer since she's been seen in public. cnn's max foster is live outside of buckingham palace. and max, we're looking at the photo right now. and i understand you have a statement yes. >> so the photo was taken earlier this week, actually, in the grounds of the winsor estate, which is where they live the statement written by kate, as i understand it, that

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she talks about being blown away by all the kind messages of support and encouragement that she's had. >> she also says she's making good progress, so we know that she's receiving chemotherapy. >> we know the treatment will be going on for months now, so for many people that's more serious than we first thought, but she does feel hill well, she says she has good days. wash has bad days. she has good days. she often feels we and tired and she has to give in to her body resting. but we have been told that tomorrow the king's birthday parade, which is a big event that happens here on saturday. she will be attending that with her children. will sierra in a carriage and all the balcony. so that's gonna get a huge amount of attention. people will be pouring over the images of her and she's not pretending that she's out of the woods in any way, but she is saying the treatments ongoing. she has a few more months and she does feel the joy at one's get well messages as it were. as she's learned to be patient, she says especially with uncertainty taking each

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day as it comes listening to her body, allowing herself to make much needed time to and max help us understand the significance of the timing of this announcement well the king's delighted, i'm told that the princess's able to come she has this treatment than doctors i told her she's okay to start appearing and events, whether announcing it last minute because it's taking each event as it comes, she may feel too tired that day to suddenly turn up even tomorrow. >> she may not be able to turn up. they wanted to speak to us, the media about that because we shouldn't read too much into that. she's really keen to retain her privacy, but she's starting to be able to do more apart from part of her recovery three is being able to live a relatively normal life. so they had been pictures, for example, of that out and about and with the children, we haven't published those pictures giving her that space. they want that

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space to be able to recover properly so at some point she will be able to return to a full rounds of engagements. we may well see her over the summer we're told we shouldn't read too much into that. this isn't her returning to work full time. she just wants to spend time with her family at home. and she wants to spend time with her family tomorrow, but tomorrow's event becomes a lot bigger because we haven't seen her at a public engagement since christmas day. it's been months. >> yeah, it has been it will be really something to see her max thank you. if you can stand by for us, we want to bring in cnn chief medical correspondent, dr. sanjay gupta, who's with us now and sanjay, the princess had started what she called preventative chemotherapy in february. and then she revealed today her treatment will continue for months which is something that i think is max pointed out some people didn't expect. so that was some news there. is that typical for preventative chemotherapy? and what is preventative

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chemotherapy? >> right? right. well, you know, there's obviously a lot that we don't know here and that's understandable so the people who are speculating a lot and we're not going to do that obviously here. one thing i will say is that preventative for a lot of people they think, well, that's something to prevent cancer. in this case. and i think in some of this may be semantics. but i think what we're really hearing and what is become clear in this most recent statement that max read is that we're talking about something that's really more known as adjuvant therapy something that is given to treat cancer that may not have been entirely removed at a previous operation. for example, that's typically what you hear and that sort of fits the timeline as well of several months of chemotherapy, it can be six to nine months of chemotherapy. sometimes even longer than that. it's dependent on a lot of the factors you see there on the screen. again, we don't know the type of cancer or let me the stage. there's different medications depending on what the specific cancer is. and all

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of that affects not only the types of medications that she is getting but also how she's likely to feel while she's getting those medications, the side effects, for example, those medications. and then as i mentioned, the length but that's symantic point. you're raising using briana. good one preventative versus adjuvant therapy. some people use those terms interchangeably, but a very much sounds like they are still treating her underlying cancer sanjay. >> she also says that she has good and bad days and also says, quote, i am not out of the woods yet. yeah, what's your reaction to that? >> yeah. i mean, just sitting here with you looking at this lovely picture, you mean she it's a beautiful picture, i think to reconcile that with what she's saying, she's still got a long road. i think there's two issues. one is that how well are the medications that she's taken for chemotherapy working are they making a difference? i think that might be some of the

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interpretation of out of the woods. but also how do you feel? good days, bad days. i hear that from a lot of my patients as well. sometimes you feel actually pretty good then the next day it can be very different. even the next hour, it can be very different. and on the screen there, you see some of the things that people often talk about when they're undergoing chemotherapy it's exhausting. you're basically trying to target all these different cells in the body that can be very exhausting people develop what they call chemo brain or brain fog there can be all these things, even your mood can fluctuate wildly. so i think it's these two things. how well is the chemotherapy actually working and how is she doing with the side effects during that time? >> sanjay, can you just talk a little bit? this isn't this is a nice strictly medical condition, but i think it's a question really around what it takes for a family when you're dealing with a potentially very

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serious illness because i mean, we look at the royal family and in particular, we notice they're not being particularly forthcoming about what type of cancer we're talking about. but at the same time, there's this history of the very prying british tabloids being quite injurious to the children of this family with the things that it has said. and so you sort of understand maybe why can you speak a little bit to what is important for a family when they are managing being a complex and uncertain road dealing with an illness i can't even imagine how challenging this must be. >> i mean, again, i take care of patients and i know and they're not two royal family and yet it up and your entire life. so you wind it up and your entire life like that it's very hard to know how to proceed. and as max was talking about and as was mentioned in the statement it's all uncertainty. there's hardly anything you can hang your hat

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on. and so that becomes very challenging because people want answers. kids of the patient want answers they want to know, they want to try and instill as much certainty as possible. and then you add to the fact that you're talking about this very famous family that everyone is curious about. so i see how challenging it is with my own patients who are not in this position you're absolutely right. it's got to be that amplified exponentially for the royal family. but i think just as we're not speculating, part of that is because obviously we don't know, but also because some of this is not known it's not like some of this is known and they're just not telling you it's very unclear. i think sometimes when you're giving adjuvant therapy, chemotherapy, exactly how the patient's going to respond, isn't going to work, and how are they going to tolerate those medications? that is an unknown dr. sanjay gupta, always great to get your perspective on these kinds of stories. >> thanks so much thank you

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let's work in cnn royal historian kate williams. kate, thanks for being with us. what's your reaction to this update? >> well, walden moving statement from princess catherine here. i mean, we were very moved in march march 22, when she came on air and she told us that she was suffering from cancer, which was a great shock. i think people all around the world and now his, she is telling us in these very honest terms about her recovery, good days and bad days. he's not out of the woods yet and this really i think this beautiful photograph of her this wonderful photograph on the winsor estate with one of the fabulous old trees. and i think that that's we've had all these conversation about oil photograph. this is a really beautiful portrait that i think shows a woman who is looking well, but also as she says, going through a lot. and i think most of all it's really wonderful news that we're going to see her tomorrow in the king's trooping the colour, his birthday parade. it's not his birthday till november, but the king gets two birthdays it's a very strange custom. so we're going to see her in this parade because i think many of

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us thought we weren't going to see her for a long time. people will be thrilled to see her and obviously, she's going through a lot, but she's really fighting through it i wonder kate prince harry has been a divisive person. people have their opinions here in the states, there in britain as well. but i think that anyone who's read his book certainly understands that he talks about his childhood been very disrupted by some of the prying that is happened by the press and britain. and i wonder if you think that some of that provides any sort. and maybe the answer is no, but i hope it's yes. any sort of protection? for the children of this family. they are kids even though they're royals yes, we have to have a different system and then prince harry's life was followed, especially as he became a teenager, the prying into diana, i knew it was just

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terrible and katie we need she needs to have purposely and just as max was saying, there have been photographed, cnn has not published them because they family needs their space as the princess kate was saying, sometimes she's feeling well enough to engage in school life and sometimes she isn't. >> it is a joy to her and she does need that space. and obviously we saw hysteria of conspiracy theories earlier in the year and that was very, very unfortunate, very distressing. i'm sure for kate as well. and we have a situation now where she's giving us an update, she's saying, thank you for all the wonderful cards, but i still have a long way to go. and what i hope is exactly as you say, briana, that we're not going to have any prying photos if they take a holiday over the summer, a little holiday? but i they long, long lenses will not be there that george and louis in charlotte, who it's tough having a parent going through cancer. it's really hard and that they can have some family time together because there is a belief that the royals are

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our property, that their bodies have our property. we've seen that throughout history and it's not the case kate is a woman who needs space and should be left alone and certainly, there have been a lot of it has been too much coverage in the early stages of the year, and i hope it's not going to happen again. >> there was an enormous amount of speculation before the announcement. and it seemed like the announcement, as you said, what was an attempt to sort of counter some of that stuff that was just out there in the ether. would you ever expect the palace to be more open about her diagnosis? >> i do think that maybe a few years down the line, kate may talk further about what kind of cancer tissue may have it it is her is her private business. we don't ever have to know and she's told us a lot i think my expectation is that perhaps when she's come through recovery, she made you an event with a charity connected with that kind of cancer and talk a little bit about her sufferings because as she says in her

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statement, the end of our statement, you said that people have been sharing their stories with her. she's had college, he's had letters from obviously from many cancer sufferer as many cancer survivors. and i think that she will want to talk about that a few years down the line and this community that was created with so many cancer sufferers, tell me about this wonderful community. it's the upside of people who bond together to talk about what they're going through so i do think we will see some transparency a couple of years down the line, but certainly not for awhile. and as she's doesn't have statement, she's not back to work now. she might do a few more engagements, but this isn't kate back to work. we we probably won't see her going back to work maybe an a full-time sense maybe in autumn or maybe not until the beginning of next year. she's got her she says a lot of treatment to go through yeah. >> look, there's valid interest and curiosity. this is the royal family, but where does that curiosity and where does it start actually being hurtful towards the healing and also the kids in this family kate, thank you so much for

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talking with us. let's go back down to max foster, who's outside buckingham palace and max, where you're standing is actually where the world will be very curious as it sees the princess tomorrow for the first time since september what does that go into be like, do you think? >> well, attributing the cola is spectacular event. it's all full recovery coming down here the mao up to horse guards parade and there's a military event that happens and kate is going to be part of that precession. so she is doing more than we expected. she would do. she was going to come to this event, so we'll see that come out in the palace in a carriage with george louis and charlotte should be in the carriage with them, shall get up to horse guards, parade, and watch this trooping, the colour, which is based around on the military fac, or won't go into all the detail and she'll watch that from a balcony up there. and when she comes back to the palace in the carriage will see her up there on the balcony for the big

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family photo, which is always a big event at british occasions. and i think we're going to see quite a lot of her and his kate was saying it does feel sometimes is if she's not giving much in terms of her appearances. but on this occasion, she's actually giving quite a lot when you consider the background to this and how they've been so keen to protect her privacy. and i think that's just part of the deal with the media shall appear at certain events will let you know about that. just leave her to her private life away from that but as you were suggesting, the conspiracy theories are going to be a problem, i'm sure this is in the palace is mind because as soon as she appears, these very odd conspiracy theories turn up, i might be sitting here seeing her on the balcony and the conspiracy theorists say she's not so they are aware that that will really blow up afterwards. but they're really working with the mainstream media if you like, to try to avoid all of that and just stick to the facts here. and this is a human, as they call her, who is suffering from

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cancer, has got months of treatment left, and she wants to get back to normal primarily for her kids and her husband's and now she's moving out to show support for the king and a wider family and showing yourself in public, but just not to expect too much. and they really worried about the speculation around exactly what sort of cancer she's got. they're never going to tell us or they don't want people to discuss it. they feel it's distasteful. they feel they are giving some information about her her medical condition, which in the past the palace hasn't given any details, so they feel they aren't going some way towards that. and just as a human patient as it were, she does have a right to some medical privacy. >> yeah, she certainly does. max. thank you so much. obviously, we'll be looking forward to the trooping of the color. thank you so much as well, kate and andrii, we appreciate it and it had this hour on sandi, a new central the supreme court striking down a trump era ban on what are called bump stocks as one justice ominous leslie warns and her dissent that the move

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will lead to more deaths. >> plus we're following president biden at the g7 summit, where he met privately with the pope. we have the latest details from overseas and why a recent arrest is raising terrorism fears among national security officials will discuss and just moment debate night in america as biden that trump meet and only cnn has complete coverage with unrivaled access and exclusive we can reimposed to beat analysis follow cnn for every countless moment, followed debate night in america begins june 27 at seven with armor all a little bit of this protects you from a lot of that armor all less work, more clean in two seconds, eric will realize her space. >> got to sell the house or skip the hassles and sell directly to open door when life

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killed 60 people at a country music festival in las vegas back in 2017, that gunman use 12 bump stocks on an arsenal of weapons to fire more than 1,000 bullets from a hotel room window onto the crowd below, more than 400 people were wounded by gunfire. another 400 were hurt just trying to run away from it. former president trump push through a ban on the bump stocks which the supreme court just throughout in a 6-3 ruling, we have seen as paula reid with us now, a poloche. tell us about the ruling here and the reasoning behind the ruling and the dissent so it's interesting is this is the latest decision from the high court to side with gun rights owners. as you just laid out the focus here was a question about bump stocks. it's not only the second amendment question which is usually what you think of when you think of a gun case before the high court. but here they're talking about bob stocks and whether they should be classified as machine guns.

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because as you just said, bumps let's allow us shooter to convert a semi-automatic rifle into a weapon that can fire at a rate of hundreds of rounds per minute. but here the question was, okay, it does that then make this a machine gun because during the trump administration they reclassified these and bob ban people from, from owning them. but here the court in a 6-3 decision, decision the opinion was written by justice thomas disagreed in reverse this. so in the majority decision, justice thomas really focused on the mechanisms here, right? the actual mechanics saying quote, firing multiple shots using a semi-automatic rifle with a bump stock requires more than the single function of a trigger. and what's interesting is while he was really focused on the mechanics, there's a scathing dissent by his liberal colleagues. it was written by justice sonia sotomayor, and she said, quote, today's decision to reject that ordinary understanding will have deadly, calm consequences. she said, when i see a bird that walks like a duck swims like a duck and quacks like a duck. i call that bird duck.

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she said a bump stock equipped semi-automatic rifle fires automatically more than one shot without manual reloading by a single function of the trigger because i like congress call that a machine gun. i respectfully dissent so she obviously very upset about this opinion. this is one of two gun-related cases that we are waiting for in these final weeks of the supreme court opinion season. the other question is interesting. it's about whether you can own a gun if you have a restraining order related to a domestic violence let's charge. now this is a little similar to what we saw in the hunter biden trial, right? he was of course, convicted for lying about using or being addicted to drugs and buy a gun and a lot of these questions are going. but for the court now that they've sort of expanded gun rights, it's okay. well, how far does that expand? and who can and cannot own a gun? that other question though that is one of 20 some odd outstanding cases we're still waiting for from the high court of the next few weeks. >> and sotomayor read this from the bench right? how rears that to have a dissent read from the

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bench, it's not that it's not that rare. i mean, you go in and it's very antiquated the way we get this we have to wait for them to actually come out at boxes. that's how we know how many there are colleagues are over there at the court. so if you feel strongly and you want to read what you've written, you can absolute you can absolutely do that. >> she was making a point. yeah, absolutely. she has just choose really strong feelings about this clearly. yeah. >> all luck. thank you so much for taking us through that. we appreciate it for us right now, the site of a school massacre is being demolished. >> crews are tearing down a building at marjory stoneman douglas high school in parkland, florida. that's where 14 genes students and three staff members were killed in that horrific shooting on valentine's day in 2018. the building has remained untouched until now. walls were still riddled with bullet holes in the floors were stained with blood because it was used as evidence in the murderers trial cnn's got a low. suarez is live for us outside the school catalyst. what do you seeing there and what are you hearing from people in that area while

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a boras said it has been an incredibly difficult and emotional day for the parkland community kennedy especially the families of the victims that came out to watch as the demolition got underway, this morning, crews are at this hour. >> as you can see here behind me, still in the early processes of tearing down the 1,200 building, the site of where this shooting happened. now some of the family members they've long wanted this building to be torn down and others wanted it to be preserved. as you noted, that the 1,200 building has not been touched since 2018. it was preserved as a crime scene for the trial of that shoot are now in the past that year, the families of some of the victims they've coordinated he's tours of the 1,200 building with bipartisan members of congress, the vice president, kamala harris, was out here even the fbi director, they all got to look at the engine side of this building where this happened, all of this was in an effort to try to pass a school safety measures at the state and federal level. they were also advocating for stricter gun control laws. here now is a

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max schachter who son alex, was killed in the shooting in 2018. he led a lot of these tours. he's been inside of this building the many times and he talked to us about the emotions of watching the first part of it coming down whether the whether the buildings here or whether it's not i will always remember this space. >> i will always remember the horrific images in my head that i saw walking through that building knowing dependent theme that alex was going through when he was being shot and murdered by the parkland school shooter. so it doesn't close. there's no closure for me it's it's it's a progress through through this journey that i'm on and my mission is to make sure that everybody night states understands what happened in parkland, understands the failures. >> so that never happens again maxar said if it was up to him,

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he would have continued the tours of the 1,200 building if it meant making schools across the country safer. >> the broward county public school district has not said what plans, if any, he will be done at the site of the building. a lot of the family members want a more permanent memorial two, honor. the victims of the shooting from 2018 the 17 students and staff members here in parkland boris we're actually going to be speaking to the father of one of the students that was killed that day in a couple of hours. >> so stay tuned for that godel suarez thanks so much it is a historic first on the final day of a crucial summit, hope francis becomes the first pontiff to attend and speak at a g7 gathering. straight ahead, we're going to tell you what he spoke about with president biden plus a new warning from law enforcement, isis isn't done with the united states. why the recent arrest of eight men is raising concerns about a potential so terror attack

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day and good free shipping anywhere nationwide close captioning brought to you by meso book.com if you or a loved one have mesothelial mac will send you a free book to answer questions you may have call now and we'll come to you 808 to 14000 we are tracking president joe biden's busy final de at the g7 summit in italy. here you can see the president greeting pope francis after the pontiff made a historic address, francis was the first pope ever to speak in front of the group of world leaders where he gave a dire warning about the dangers of artificial intelligence it's while also calling for a ban on automatic weapons, also on the pope's agenda, a private sit down with

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president biden, cnn, international diplomatic editor nic robertson is in italy. they're covering the g7 and is with us now. so nick, how significant was this visit and the speech by the pope? >> oh, it was really significant if you think yesterday, it was president zelenskyy and there was so much that was achieved for support for ukraine a, security packs $50 billion loan additional sanctions on russia. the pope bought that today the big focus on a, on a subject that could really have got lost at a big, at a big format summit like this. and the pope coming to talk about it and address the leaders and give them his ideas about it, saying that this was a tool and it's a tool that can be used for good or bad. he gave an example of automated weapons where ai can work with a gun to select a target pull the trigger, kill someone. he

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said, never should we be in a situation where a machine can just decide to kill a human. he said what we need to do is develop this technology and the systems for the good of people know community no country should be left behind the haves should not get advantage of this over the have-nots and this was really reflected in the conversations that came after white house officials telling us that what the united states was trying to achieve here on the back of the pope's comments was get some alignment among these g7 leaders for ai governance. it's a global wish so you bring together these big, powerful economic democracies to try to set some guardrails, some guidance for how ai is going to be used. and the other re-aim as well, really reflecting what the popi and to make sure that the scientific benefits that come from it, the developments in health care, the developments in agriculture all of those go to the developing world, the

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poorer parts of the world. as well as the better off developed nations. so this was the pope really bringing his star power, his charisma his conviction, if you will, that this is a technology that can be used for good. but that leaders must get a grip on it that was really communicated today. >> and nick yesterday, the major focus for g7 liters was shoring up support for ukraine. what other issues are they tackling so immigration was on the table today. >> so was china the indo pacific, pacific concerns about how to control or if you will limit and work together as a g7 to try to curb china's a trade practices they're employment of uyghurs and taking advantage of uyghurs and their manufacturing industries these

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sorts of areas recognizing that the europeans and the united states still on slightly different footing when it comes to how they're trying to sort of deal with with china through trade relations and trying to get some alignment there. but also the understanding as well. and we heard this from president biden yesterday when president zelenskyy was talking about, he'd had a phone call with president xi and president xi said that it assured presidents alike penske that russia, that china was not giving weapons to russia. president biden chipped in then and he said, yes, china may not be supplying the weapons, but they're supplying, supplying the technology to make those weapons. so i think this was again, an issue that we'll probably see reflected in the communique that will come out after the summit is finished. >> all right, yeah, we'll be looking for that. nic robertson live force from italy. thank you for the report. >> and we'll be right back i voted buttons every little kid. >> it's like your generation

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again, that's 1871 230800 and rafael romo, the georgia state capitol in atlanta. >> this is cnn terrorism fears are growing among national security officials after the recent arrest of eight people from tajikistan with suspected ties to isis sources tell cnn that immigration authorities made the arrest and los angeles, new york, and philadelphia, these men initially entered the us at the southern border. >> they were vetted when they requested asylum. we have cnn's katie bolus, who is joining us now. details on this. katie, but what are you hearing from us officials about this growing threat? >> yeah. so briana really important to understand that at this point, us officials tell us that they have no evidence to suggest that any of these eight men were sent to this country by isis as part of a specific plot, or to do a specific kind of violent let's right? but us intelligence

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officials did pick up on some really concerning rhetoric, some extremist rhetoric from at least some of these people either on their social media or indirect to communications. and the concern for us officials specifically was that these men could have been radicalized by isis-k kaye once they were in the united dates feeling potentially isolated, homesick, financially vulnerable, right? exactly the kinds of things that we know make people vulnerable to terrorist propaganda and so officials are very concerned in particular about isis k, the group that these men are believed you have to have links to. because the strategy that isis k has been pursuing is rather than training and fielding operatives the way that al-qaeda did with the 911 attacks, for example, what they're doing is they're really emphasizing their propaganda networks and their online recruiting when efforts in an effort to try to inspire so-called lone wolf attackers. and so that's exactly what us officials were concerned about here. they watched these men

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for a period of time. but once this information came to light about their rhetoric, they moved to go on and pick them up an arrest them because of course in an environment in which in a global environment in which us officials are warning that the possibility of a terrorist attack against the united states, particularly a lone wolf attack of somebody perhaps inspired by the violence so once in gaza, for example they're worried that that level is particularly high. and so out of an abundance of caution wrapped these guys up, there's also something about the story that highlights the vulnerabilities at the southern border. >> yeah. so these guys did come with these men did come across the southern border. and one thing that you'll hear from national security officials right now is that immigration at the southern border used to be hemispheric issue, right? like you were seeing people that were coming from central and south america by enlarge. now the number of countries that have nationals that are presenting at the southern border requesting asylum has gone up dramatically, and us officials in particular had been paying attention two people coming from tajikistan and other areas in central

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asia. in fact, there was a group of migrants from his beca stan just last year who were later found once they had been under the country relate are found to have some potentially troubling ties to isis as well isis kaye, this sort of splinter group of isis that is the number one concern for us officials right now, based in afghanistan. it's actually made up primarily tajik nationals and the group has recruited really heavily out of tajikistan. it's a really poor country, it's a country where the population lives under an enormous amount of religious repression question both things that we understand, again, are real factors for extremist recruiting. >> us officials. i think particularly after that episode last year with the uzbek nationals have really been keeping an eye on central asian migrants that are arriving at the border. >> kitty both thanks so much for the report we're continuing to follow a breaking news out of buckingham palace. we have new details about the health of the princess of wales. and when she will make her first public appearance since her cancer diagnosis say with cnn news central, we're

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back and just moments wednesday, cnn celebrate juneteenth next performance is by john legend, hadi lewbel, smokey robinson. we still have a lot of work to do. >> juneteenth, celebrating freedom and legacy wednesday attend on cnn trains planes that sense what isn't on the schedule train sees the power of del ai and intel the hundreds of miles of track clearing way so you arrive exactly where you belong. if you have chronic kidney disease, you can reduce the risk of kidney failure with bar sega because they're places who'd like to be or secular can cause serious side effects,

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>> fred fuel up to seven brain health indicators, including your memory, joined the neretva brain health challenge one second, grandma, this guy's going to buy my car, okay. you need car bomber entering plate number no accidents, right? no generating offer. >> carbonic can pick it up tomorrow

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find your why for a better. the cnn presidential debates, june 27, nine live on cnn and streaming on max closed captioning is brought to you by sokoloff law mesothelial more victims call now $30 billion in trust money has been set aside. >> you may be entitled to a portion of that money all when 8085920400. that's when 8085920400 it's a natural disaster that only comes as a surprise. tsunamis they can strike with little warning. they send waves in the ocean traveling at the speed of a jetliner crashing into homes and businesses 20 years after the deadliest tsunami in history, scientists are still trying to crack the code for better forecasts. meteorologists he's a rafah

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has the story at lisa. >> yeah, it was incredible learning about how little we knew about tsunamis before the indian ocean tsunami in 2004 at the time we really only had pictures from the 1960s to reference that were either black and white or poorly colored and even now today, 20 years later, we're still learning a lot notion tsunami as a singular event. >> and the sense that it's changed everything. >> december 26, 2004 destructive waves caused by a 9.1 magnitude earthquake claim nearly a quarter million lives from southeast asia to the horn of africa, prompting a worldwide wake-up call. >> hey, immediately made tsunami a household word everybody knows about tsunamis around the world. now, water heights reached an astonishing 167 feet in sumatra, one of the locations closest to the

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earthquake. >> but devastation stretched from asia to africa with impacts felt in 17 countries, tsunami scientists, hermann fritz deploys into the damage zone to learn from these disasters hoping to put some sense into scientific simulations. and his lab at the georgia institute if technology in atlanta, you could also think of this experiment here, like a tsunami on a treadmill okay, so essentially we have this role hello, here it will be approaching the coast line and we'll essentially devastate the buildings, marsh people away, drown people, and clear everything in its path. >> the indian ocean tsunami was the first of its kind in the digital age tourists with camera phones were able to capture the first quality color images of these rare waves basically gave tsunami an image, gave tsunami a video, gave tsunami a face. >> it also gave tsunamis are more universal warning system at the time, scientists, we're only focused on shaking along the pacific ocean rim.

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>> and there are no warnings issued. and that is really the big failure. but the world was not prepared for tsunamis in 2004. >> can we predict for tsunami unfortunately, that is the billion dollar question and geophysics is that we cannot predict the next first place only once the ground starts to shake in waves move can scientists then plugged the observations into super computers to calculate the size and speed of the possible tsunami a lot of science needs to happen really fast. imagine not knowing where hurricane will go until a couple of hours for landfall. the national oceanic and atmospheric administration has significantly increased buoys to detect these deep ocean waves, there were only four deployed into thousand. now, there are more than 70 stations monitoring tsunami activity worldwide. >> a lot of new buildings go up, along the coast. leinz there are more and more people in harm's way simulating tsunami waves in a lab can help improve forecast better understand the impacts of

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damage and create more resilient building codes. but until we can pinpoint the next big earthquake shakes morning is 30 seconds evacuate inland or do high ground public education and awareness is key it's antoninus evacuation, even the age of technology is, is the most efficient at saving lives i really learned a lot from dr. france and i even said to him, i thought we had it hard as meteorologists are trying to get data and do our forecasts, but at least we're surveying the atmosphere every single day in our models can get back matter because of that, they need to wait for the earthquake to get the data so it's really interesting to see where the science can go in the next 20 years. >> and he's excited about that to boras, marianna. >> so interesting, he's, he's saying that pays to be careful elisa, thank you so much for that report. it was such a great one. elisa rafah, we appreciate it and we'll tune in and to a new episode of violent earth with liev schreiber that will air sunday at 9:00 p.m.

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eastern pacific we'll be right back the sirens are going off and the tornado here. i'm thinking language, die and i thought that was fine when earth with liev schreiber, sunday at nine on cnn camila tried the new sense of gain relax flings, and it changed everything hey, dave, don't knock it till you smell it again, relax flings so i hear some of you are concerned about the fact that i'm taking over the company will rest assured companies in gray here and marcy at the homes.com, we we've done on your homework now that is worth celebrating i love it. thank you.

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even a little blurry vision can distort things. and something serious, maybe behind those itchy eyes up to 50% of people with graves could develop a different condition called thyroid eye disease, which should be treated by a different doctor. see an expert, find a ted is specialist at is-it ted.com, luma phi. >> it's kind of amazing wow, my go-to is lima by eye eyedrops, lula phi dramatically reduces redness in one minute and look at the difference. my eyes look brighter and wider for up to eight hours. limma five really works see for yourself at morgan stanley old school hardware meets bold new thinking at 88-years-old. >> we still see the world with a wonder of new eyes helping you discover untapped possibilities and relentlessly working with you to make them

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real old-school grid, new world ideas. morgan stanley work play link relief work blake, really, the only three and one extended release formula for dry eyes like one second, you feel safe and then well he's still do from medium rare two well done so many ways to save life ruddy, while it happy, but 365 by whole foods market this situation with wolf blitzer didn't night at six point cnn

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