American Morning

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May 5th, 2010
05:58 AM ET

LIVE Blog: Chat with us during the show

Editor's Note: Welcome to American Morning's LIVE Blog where you can discuss the "most news in the morning" with us each and every day. Join the live chat during the program by adding your comments below. It's your chance to share your thoughts on the day's headlines. Keep in mind, you have a better chance of having your comment get past our moderators if you follow our rules: 1) Keep it brief 2) No writing in ALL CAPS 3) Use your real name (first name only is fine) 4) No links 5) Watch your language (that includes $#&*).

[cnn-photo-caption image= http://i2.cdn.turner.com/cnn/2010/images/05/05/shahzad.art.jpg caption=" Questions remained in the days after the arrest of the Times Square bombing suspect, who was captured only minutes before his plane was to take off for Dubai."]

Questions surface over Times Square investigation

(CNN) – Questions remained in the days following the dramatic arrest of the Times Square bombing suspect, who was captured only minutes before his plane was due to take off for Dubai in the United Arab Emirates.

Faisal Shahzad was able to board Emirates Flight 202 late Monday despite being put on a no-fly list earlier in the day, but at the time of his ticket purchase, the airline had not refreshed its information so his name did not raise any red flags, a senior counterterrorism official said.

Authorities had tailed Shahzad throughout the day, but lost him before he arrived at New York's John F. Kennedy International Airport, where he was ultimately arrested, the official said.

However, an FBI official responded that surveillance operations are designed with redundancies in place, and that agents had to avoid tipping off Shahzad that he was being followed. Read more

Children's medicine recall

If your kids have a cold or allergy right now, listen up. The Food and Drug Administration is slamming conditions at a factory that recalled Children's Tylenol, Motrin and Benadryl. So just how safe is the medicine in your cabinet? We'll talk to a retired FDA consumer safety officer this morning. Read more

Make everyone an organ donor?

Every year in New York, 500 people die waiting for an organ transplant. One of our guests this morning is lucky she wasn't one of them. She was saved not once, but twice by donors. And her father hopes to save more lives by proposing a bill in the state assembly that would switch the organ donor system from "opt-in" to "opt-out." And that's creating quite a controversy.

Sound off: We want to hear from you this morning. Add your comments to the LIVE blog below and we'll read some of them on the show.


Filed under: LIVE Blog • Top Stories
May 4th, 2010
08:17 PM ET

The Teaser

"The Teaser” is a preview of the guests we have lined up for the next day – so you know when to tune in (and when to set your alarm!). Guests and times are always subject to change.

6:40AM  Inside the Times Square investigation – David Kelly, fmr. WTC prosecutor, and Jack Rice, fmr. CIA Officer, on the arrest of Faisal Shahzad.

7:10AM  Links to Pakistan – we'll trace Shazad's path, and its significance, with fmr. CIA officer Peter Brookes and Nick Schmidle, Fellow at the New America Foundation.

7:40AM  A single Northern Gannet seabird  – the first wildlife casualty from the oil spill in the Gulf. What's being done to prevent more? We'll ask Randy Pausina from the Louisiana Dept. of Wildlife & Fisheries and Ken Rosenberg, Dir. of Conservation Science at Cornell.

8:40AM  Addressing the organ donor crisis – New York Assemblyman Richard Brodsky on his push for a controversial "presumed consent" law that asks people to "opt-out" of donating rather than "opt-in".

Got questions for any of our guests?
Tweet 'em at Twitter.com/amFIX or post them below and we'll try to use 'em! 

Got an idea for a story? Have more questions about something you saw or read on our amFIX blog, Facebook or Twitter?
E-mail us your story ideas and questions at am@CNN.com.


Filed under: American Morning • The Teaser
May 4th, 2010
03:30 PM ET

The legacy of Kent State: A mother's wisdom

By Ronni Berke and Carol Costello, CNN

(CNN) – May 4, 1970: a turning point in America's Vietnam legacy.

That day, Elaine Holstein's son, Jeff Miller, was one of four students killed when Ohio National Guardsmen opened fire during an anti-war demonstration at Kent State University. Holstein is still haunted. "The nightmare is 40-years-old," she says.

Tensions were high. President Richard Nixon had just announced the Vietnam War had expanded into Cambodia and every family with a young man like Jeff had to grapple with the possibility he might be drafted into combat.

Her son, who would have turned 60 this month, had called her before going to the demonstration. "He said 'don't worry about it. I might get arrested, but I won't get my head broken.'"

Later, when she heard about the shootings on the radio, she tried calling Jeff at his apartment. Another student answered. "He's dead," he told her.

That moment marked the end of Holstein's innocence, she says.

FULL POST


Filed under: Crime • U.S.
May 4th, 2010
10:00 AM ET

Times Square suspect caught

New York (CNN) – Authorities hunting for the suspect in the botched Times Square bombing dramatically beat the clock overnight, seizing a Pakistani-American citizen moments before he began a long trip to his strife-torn homeland.

Faisal Shahzad, 30, was arrested around 11:45 p.m. ET Monday at New York's John F. Kennedy International Airport, said Attorney General Eric Holder.

Shahzad will appear sometime after 2 p.m. ET Tuesday in federal court, the U.S. attorney's office in Manhattan said.

The suspect is set to go before Magistrate Judge Kevin Fox. Charges will be read against the defendant, and the judge will determine if a bail will be set.

Latest updates in Times Square bomb scare


Filed under: Terrorism • U.S.
May 4th, 2010
09:00 AM ET

Times Square suspect has Pakistani residency

Islamabad, Pakistan (CNN) – The Pakistani-American suspect in the Times Square bombing attempt has a Karachi identification card, a document that shows Pakistani residency, and the suspect's family is from northwestern Pakistan, Interior Minister Rehman Malik told CNN.

Malik was notified about the arrest of Faisal Shahzad on Tuesday morning by the U.S. ambassador to Pakistan and said his government will cooperate with the United States government in the investigation.

The northwestern Pakistan region is a stronghold of militants and jihadis who have been targeted by U.S. drone strikes.

Bomb plot suspect arrested at 'last second'


Filed under: Terrorism • U.S.
May 4th, 2010
08:00 AM ET
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