0:13 Hello sunshine. Rise up and happy
0:15 Monday. Hope you had an awesome weekend.
0:16 If you're a sports fan, maybe you
0:18 watched a little NFL playoff action and
0:21 I hope your team won. I'm Ky Wire. This
0:23 is CNN 10 where we tell you the what,
0:25 letting you decide what to think. And
0:27 that motto of ours is particularly
0:30 important for our top story today. The
0:32 growing protests in major cities across
0:35 the US about the nation's immigration
0:37 enforcement policies. This already
0:39 divisive issue came to a boiling point
0:41 last week after the death of a US
0:44 citizen in Minneapolis, Minnesota. The
0:46 federal government has sent immigration
0:49 and custom enforcement or ICE agents
0:51 into many US cities in its continued
0:54 efforts to deport any people living in
0:57 the US illegally. And Minneapolis is the
1:00 site of the AY's latest operation. On
1:03 Wednesday, January 7th, 37year-old Renee
1:05 Good was shot and killed when she got
1:07 into a confrontation with ICE agents.
1:10 Good was shot by agent Jonathan Ross as
1:12 she was attempting to drive away during
1:14 a verbal altercation with ICE agents.
1:16 The incident was caught on video from
1:19 multiple angles, including Ross' own
1:21 cell phone. Officials in the White House
1:23 have defended the agents actions,
1:25 accusing Good of trying to harm ICE
1:27 agents with her car. Many other
1:29 officials, including the Minneapolis
1:31 mayor and Minnesota governor, have
1:33 disputed the federal government's
1:35 version of events, condemning the
1:37 incident, calling for accountability for
1:39 the agency, which has been conducting
1:42 controversial immigration operations in
1:44 cities across the United States.
1:46 Thousands of people have protested their
1:48 actions in Minnesota, marching in the
1:50 streets, also making their voices heard
1:52 in front of the White House. Vigils have
1:55 been held across Minneapolis as mourners
1:57 pay tribute to Renee Good, a mother of
1:59 three. The FBI is currently conducting
2:01 an investigation into the incident, and
2:03 we will bring you more details as this
2:06 story develops. Now, to a worrisome
2:08 winter weather trend in the western
2:10 United States that's putting the no in
2:13 snow. Huge stretches of the western US,
2:15 with the exception of California, are
2:18 seeing almost no so far this winter.
2:19 It's already threatening some of the
2:21 winter sports we love. The bigger
2:23 concern is what it might mean for the
2:26 ongoing dry spill in the region and some
2:28 important water reservoirs. Our Allison
2:30 Chinchar has more on what's fueling this
2:32 phenomenon and how big of an impact it
2:34 might have. Hi Allison.
2:35 >> That's right. Qu. Everybody loves a snow
2:37 day, especially when it results in
2:39 school being closed. But they haven't
2:42 really had many of those out in the
2:43 west. And a lot of that has to do with
2:45 the drought. You see all of the yellow,
2:47 orange, and red colors here on the map.
2:49 Those are areas where we've had severe
2:52 or even extreme drought over the last
2:54 several weeks and in some cases even
2:56 months. Now, another factor into this is
2:58 how warm it has been. So, the very few
3:00 storms that we've been getting into the
3:03 West have really produced more rain than
3:05 they have snow. Every single one of
3:07 these dots here that you see on the map,
3:10 the red ones, indicate the warmest
3:12 winter on record. So, from December 1st
3:14 until now, they have had their warmest
3:17 winter so far. And there's a lot of the
3:19 red dots on the map. Now, this doesn't
3:22 mean there's been no snow. We just don't
3:24 have as much as we would normally have
3:26 for this time of year. You can see we
3:28 have snow in the Rockies, the Sierras,
3:30 the Cascades, and the Olympics. It just
3:32 should be much higher totals than what
3:34 we're actually seeing. And
3:35 unfortunately, when we look forward into
3:37 the forecast, there's not really much
3:39 good news for more snow. In fact, really
3:41 over the next couple of weeks, much of
3:43 the West is expecting below average
3:46 precipitation to move into this area.
3:47 This is a problem, especially if you
3:49 like skiing or snowboarding, but it's
3:51 also a bigger problem, especially as we
3:53 get later into the year, because in the
3:55 spring, all of that snowpack melts,
3:56 flowing down into places like the
3:58 Colorado River and a lot of those
4:01 basins, and it provides water for a lot
4:03 of the people out west, but we just
4:05 simply won't have as much because we
4:09 don't have all the snow to go in there.
4:10 Pop quiz hot shot. Which of the
4:12 following medical procedure is not
4:14 possible on the International Space
4:16 Station? Administering IV fluids,
4:18 conducting an ultrasound, performing
4:25 If you said surgery, you are a cut above
4:27 the rest. During each mission, one
4:29 astronaut is specifically trained to be
4:31 the crew medical officer and can seek
4:34 teleaalth guidance for almost all minor ailments.
4:36 ailments.
4:39 NASA is bringing four crew members home
4:40 from the International Space Station
4:42 more than a month early after one of
4:44 them experienced a medical issue. What
4:47 that issue was or is is still a mystery
4:49 as the agency isn't sharing any further
4:52 detail, citing privacy concerns. What
4:54 they are saying is the affected member
4:56 of the crew is stable and should not
4:58 need special care during the return. Our
5:00 Tom Foreman has more.
5:02 >> They're saying that whoever is sick out
5:04 of this crew that that person is stable.
5:08 We know that the crew 11 consisted of
5:11 four people. Two of them were Americans.
5:13 The commander of the flight, uh, Zena
5:15 Cardman, who you can see right there,
5:17 the woman just from the left there, and
5:20 then right next to her is Mike Frink,
5:22 who is the the pilot of the flight, much
5:24 more experienced in space. But they're
5:26 saying right now that this person is
5:28 stable, that it's not an issue, whatever
5:30 the issue is, that they're stable. But
5:32 you listen to the chief health officer
5:33 for NASA. They say, "You got to get them
5:35 back here because we just have much
5:38 better tools here to diagnose them."
5:39 Take a look.
5:41 >> We have a very robust suite of medical
5:43 hardware on board the International
5:46 Space Station, but we don't have the
5:47 complete amount of hardware that I would
5:48 have in the emergency department, for
5:50 example, to complete a workup of a
5:53 patient. And the best way to complete
5:55 that workup is on the ground.
5:57 >> We believe this is unprecedented. We
5:58 don't know it's that has ever happened
6:00 before, but they're always very playing
6:02 it close to the vest when they have
6:04 somebody who's sick in space. Typically,
6:05 even if somebody comes back, like in
6:07 2024, they took a whole crew to the
6:09 hospital when they got back and then
6:11 kept one a little bit longer. But we
6:13 didn't know who was being kept, and we
6:15 didn't know what it was all about. They
6:17 tend to treat this as more or less
6:18 scientific information for the future.
6:20 Let's figure out what happened, why it
6:22 happened. It doesn't matter who it
6:24 happened to, and and they're protective
6:25 of the the privacy of these folks here.
6:27 But there are, you know, everything that
6:30 can go wrong on ground can go wrong in
6:33 space. You can get a an impacted tooth.
6:35 You could have uh there was some threat
6:36 some years ago of somebody having a
6:39 blood clot. Uh plus there is the normal
6:42 transition to space where a lot of
6:45 astronauts struggle with uh upset
6:47 stomach, feeling really disoriented,
6:49 vertigo because floating around all the
6:50 time is very tough on people. Plus,
6:52 you're just studying the effects of
6:54 space on people the longer they're up
6:56 there. Nonetheless, to bring this back a
6:58 full month ahead of time, really
7:00 unusual. And now NASA says they're
7:02 trying to step up quickly the
7:04 replacement program because the space
7:05 station is now kind of on a skeleton
7:07 crew. They want to get some more people
7:09 up earlier. So, they'll be trying to
7:11 launch them earlier than expected.
7:14 >> A newly discovered object in space could
7:15 shed light on the invisible and
7:18 mysterious substance called dark matter.
7:20 Cloud9, as it's called, was found using
7:22 the Hubble Space Telescope. Never
7:25 directly observed, dark matter is
7:27 theoretically believed to make up most
7:28 of the universe and provide its
7:31 structure. New research finds cloud 9
7:34 could be a remnant of a galaxy formed in
7:36 the early days of the universe.
7:37 Astronomers believe dark matter came
7:39 from the big bang that created the
7:42 universe nearly 14 billion years ago.
7:44 All right. What do you call a deer with
7:46 no eyes? No idea. What do you call a
7:48 deer with no eyes that doesn't move?
7:50 Still no idea. What do you call a deer
7:52 that decides to go antler to horn with a
7:55 rhino? Bold. This next story is wild.
7:57 The Vont Swaf Zoo in Poland just
8:00 released this video showing a teeny tiny
8:03 deer squaring up with a rhino. A Chinese
8:05 munchjack deer. One of the smallest deer
8:08 species in the world. Caught on camera
8:09 trying to lower the boom on that big
8:12 boy. Was it trying to play? Was it
8:14 provoking a fight? Either way, that's
8:16 one fearless deer. showing that no
8:18 matter how small you are, big confidence
8:26 Today's story getting a 10 out of 10. A
8:28 group of school bus passengers becoming
8:30 instant heroes with quick thinking and
8:33 kindness. It started as a routine ride
8:36 home in Ashlin, Ohio until suddenly the
8:38 bus driver began to have trouble
8:40 breathing. School bus surveillance video
8:42 shows the driver signaling for help,
8:45 pointing to her throat as the bus rolled
8:47 downhill. That's when the students
8:48 noticed something was wrong.
8:51 >> I ran up there and said, "What is
8:53 wrong?" And she pointed at her throat
8:56 and then I ran back there and got the
8:57 older kids.
8:59 >> Inside the bus, students took charge.
9:01 One grabbed the radio, called the school
9:03 knowing it was the fastest way to get
9:06 help. Trying to keep all the kids calm
9:08 and make sure they don't get freaked out
9:10 and try to get them back to the back of
9:11 the bus.
9:13 >> Parents say the moment showed just how
9:15 prepared their kids really were.
9:18 >> Very proud. Overwhelmed feeling of joy.
9:21 Like I was joyful that my kids were
9:23 knowledgeable enough and knew enough to
9:26 know what to do to actually help
9:28 somebody legitimately save somebody's
9:31 life. The bus driver is now home safe
9:33 and recovering thanks to quick thinking
9:35 and teamwork from the students she was
9:38 driving that day. From spotting trouble
9:39 to staying calm under pressure, this
9:42 school bus crew earns a 10 out of 10 for
9:44 courage, teamwork, and stepping up when
9:46 it mattered most. How's that for some
9:48 Monday motivation? Our first shout out
9:50 of the day goes to my old stomping
9:54 grounds in the 717. Mr. Jeppy at Capitol
9:55 Academy High School in Harrisburg,
9:57 Pennsylvania. I see you. I'm an old
9:59 Cedar Cliff Coat and I hope I make
10:01 Central PA proud. Thank you for
10:03 subscribing to our CNN 10 YouTube
10:06 channel. And this shout out goes to Mr.
10:08 Jackson and all my Blazers at the Bush
10:10 School in Seattle, Washington. Cameron,
10:12 Ingred, and crew. They wanted to make
10:14 sure you know how much they appreciate
10:16 you. And we do, too. Rise up everyone.
10:18 Make it an awesome day. Make someone
10:20 smile today. I'll see you tomorrow. I'm