tv CNN Newsroom CNN May 5, 2013 2:00pm-3:01pm PDT
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what we're hearing from authorities. in northern california, a celebratory night out has taken a fiery turn. a limousine carrying nine women burst into flames. most did not survive. details on that straight ahead. back to the boston bombing investigation. fbi agents investigating the bombings carried out a new search today. they went through the apartment where suspect tamerlan tsarnaev lived with his wife and child in cambridge, massachusetts. susan candiotti is live in boston. what more are officials willing to say about this search? >> reporter: well, not very much, fred. they're not telling us what prompted them to go back to that apartment to have another look. of course they've been using search warrants. they're saying that much obviously. as they go back there to look for potentially more evidence to use in their investigation in this bombing case. as you indicated earlier sources
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have told us they did find explosive bomb residue in at least three spots in that apartment. a kitchen table, a kitchen sink and a bathtub. what prompted them to go back there today we don't know nor do we know what they may have retrieved. fred? >> talk about the conversation you had with the father of one of the suspects who happens to be a friend of dzhokhar tsarnaev. what was said? >> reporter: this is very interesting because we spoke with the father and he speaks only russian so through an interpreter this is the first time he has gone into great detail about his visit with his son in jail on friday. the first time he's spoken about this in detail. he said that his son denied any role in the bombing. his son is azamat tazhayakov. he said that his son said that he was simply afraid that his
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friend dzhokhar might have something to do with the bombing after he saw his photograph on television and that's what prompted he and another friend to go over to the dorm room and take out things from his dorm room and then finally as you know the fbi raided his apartment and he said his son cooperated fully. i asked him why did he hide that evidence allegedly. >> translator: i asked my son did you want to help dzhokhar? he said, dad, if we wanted to help him, we would have thrown the laptop out too. we didn't want to throw anything out. it's just that kadyrbayev got scared and threw the bag out. when he brought the bag over from dzhokhar, he took the laptop out and put it on the table. they didn't want to help him. they said if we wanted to help him, we would have thrown out the laptop too and we would bury the bag in the ground somewhere.
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>> reporter: the father of tazhayakov said his son is a 19 year old who was simply afraid and did not intentionally, he said, do anything wrong, fred. >> all right. susan candiotti there in boston. thank you. a youth soccer referee was allegedly punched in the head by a player. the injury later put him in a coma and now the ref is dead. ricardo portillo passed away last night in utah. police say a 17-year-old player punched the ref at a game last weekend. portillo had just given the teen a yellow card, which is a warning for breaking the rules. police say portillo appeared okay at first but then got much worse. the player is in juvenile detention. authorities say he was charged with aggravated assault but he's expected to face even more charges this week. in california, a fun night out with friends turned into a nightmare for a group of women. a fire broke out in their stretch limo and many of them were trapped in the burning car. cnn is following the story.
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nick, what more can you tell us? you mentioned this may have been a wedding party. >> that's what local media out lets a outlets are reporting. girls night out turned fatal. we believe among the deceased was the bride to be. cnn cannot independently verify these reports. in a conversation with california highway patrol they read similar reports. earlier chp said the fire started outside of the passenger area of the limousine. they're looking at pictures that witnesses took last night. those flames flaming from the back of the limousine. they believe the fire started underneath the limousine or even in the trunk. about 10:00 p.m. last night as the car was crossing a bridge. the driver pulled over and was able to get out unharmed.
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those that were seated in the back were not able to get out as fast. the fire spread too quickly and corone coroner's office said they were so badly burned it could take days. >> those sitting closer to the front may have climbed into the driver's area and exited those doors opposed to the door in the rear. >> we also understand according to chp that there were good samaritans on hand pulling some from the vehicle. it's important to note we reached out to this limousine company. they have not answered our calls but they did release a statement to the media. i'll read part of that statement. they say that limostop will do everything possible to investigate and assist authorities in determining the cause of this fire in order to help bring forth answers and provide closure to victims and their families. such a tragic situation. a bachelorette party out for a good night of fun.
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i'm sure they could not have expected this to happen. >> this is so unusual. i don't think too many folks have heard about a limo fire to that degree. all right. thanks so much. appreciate it. firefighters now have the upper hand on the huge wildfire burning through the los angeles hills. calmer winds, cooler temperatures and rain in the forecast are all helping. the fire is now 60% contained and fire crews say they'll have it fully under control by monday but there's a threat of thunderstorms and with that often comes lightning which could spark more fires. 28,000 acres are burning and thousands of homes are still threatened. let's turn to meteorologist alexandra steele for precisely how the weather is working in the firefighters' favor. >> the one thing this area of low pressure, the catalyst for the big weather pattern change and thus the change in fighting this fire. almost 60% contained. tomorrow the expectation to be
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contained. there it is. it's changing it on so many fronts. we're seeing much calmer winds. temperatures dropping 20 to 30 degrees. a big cooldown and now to a return to this normal damp pattern off the pacific. this westerly wind we're seeing now bringing in all of the moisture. we have the clouds. temperatures out of the 90s down to the 60s. rain coming in today, tomorrow and even into tuesday. so a big-time pattern change is really affecting wildfires and containment. they needed rain in the west finally getting it. to the east, it's just a deluge. a slow, sluggish system bringing record rain to places like atlanta, georgia. almost 3.5 inches. back since 1917 topping records and with that today a flood threat from st. louis down to atlanta. there are records we've seen in terms of rain for the two-day event. three inches, two inches in some areas and even one inch breaking the record. tomorrow stubborn area of low
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pressure doesn't move much. the weather bringing it all of the way into washington and virginia. more rain coming there for you as we head toward the beginning of the week. fred? >> all right. alexandra steele, thank you so much. syrian officials are blaming israel for attacking the military's research facility. this report comes after israel allegedly carried out an air strike against syria last week. frederik pleitgen has details. >> gigantic explosions lit up the skies over damascus. it went on for more than an hour rocking a large military area in the suburbs of syria's capital and prompting terrified nearby residents to run for cover. this family lives a little over a mile away. daughter, anna, tells me what happened. >> after the first two bombs we kept hearing explosions. there was nine of them because everything kept exploding over and over again.
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you can hear gun shots. you can hear people screaming. basically we didn't know what to do and there was a problem with breathing because the smoke was too much. >> reporter: in the second alleged israeli air strike in three days, the latest target was a military research facility. the opposition says it was an ammunition depot. in an exclusive interview with cnn, syria's deputy foreign minister said syria would retaliate in its own time and way. >> this is an alliance between al qaeda and israel and syria and shows common interests and what israel and its allies have tried to hide for a long time is more clear. when they attack, this is a declaration of war. >> reporter: israel has neither confirmed nor denied the attack but as violent uprising against the regime of bashar al assad
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drags on, israel has become increasingly worried about syria's chemical weapon stockpiles and believes the regime is trying to ship conventional weapons to hezbollah. a group that other countries declared a terrorist organization. >> until now the information is not very clear on what happened. did they fire missiles or planes? it's not clear for me because i am not aware how it happened but of course it's worrying but israel will suffer. >> the family is still shaken by the event. >> very scary. there's nothing we can do. we are going to die right now. stay scared. sorry. >> reporter: they say they hope they never have to witness anything similar again. in madrid, spain, spectators watched in horror at an air show as a small plane finished what
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should have been a routine maneuver. no one knows exactly what happened or what caused that crash. the pilot died hours later at the hospital. more than a dozen people were injured on the ground. the pilot was a commander in the spanish air force and a trainer. back in this country, were lessons learned from the 9/11 attacks forgotten when it came to the boston marathon bombings? the chairman of the 9/11 commission weighs in next. [ male announcer ] can gravity be used to help overcome gravity? ♪ the chevrolet malibu eco with eassist captures downhill energy, unleashing it later to help propel you uphill. ♪ it adds up to an epa-estimated 37 mpg highway...
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i'm busy, busy, busy, busy. thank goodness for angie's list. from roofers to plumbers to dentists and more, angie's list -- reviews you can trust. oh, angie? i have her on speed dial. thursday congress will hold hearings on the boston bombings and a big question will be was there an intelligence failure in tom is in new york and lee is in indiana. good to see both of you. both chairing the 9/11 commission which looked into the events leading up to the 9/11 attacks and what was broken in our intelligence and law enforcement agencies at the time. gentlemen, thank you for being with us. >> thank you. >> thank you. >> a major revelation from your report to the country about 9/11 was that our federal agencies, the cia, fbi, atf, were not
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talking to each other. governor, do we have a similar failure of communication between agencies prior to this boston bombing? >> i don't think we know yet. it looks on the surface like there may have been some problems. communication is better now we know between the agencies than it was after 9/11. was it sufficient? was there still things that one agency knew and didn't pass onto another? my hope is we'll find out in congressional hearings and we'll go on to correct whatever the problem is. >> congressman hamilton, what does your gut say? >> i don't think it's clear there was a failure of intelligence or intelligence sharing at least not at this point. obviously a very, very serious failure to prevent the attack in the boston marathon and therefore as tom suggests we have to sharpen our inquiry and
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learn all we possibly can about the event and make corrections. i have been impressed, however, so far. i was impressed by the way the event was handled, the emergency response in boston. i was impressed by the investigation. i was kind of surprised that the two brothers didn't get out of town and get out of the area very quickly. but from the standpoint of intelligence and intelligence sharing, i don't think it's been shown at this point that there is a failure and no one has come forward with a suggestion of major restructuring or additions to the infrastructure of our counterterrorism organizations. >> governor, are you surprise d at all that post-your commission report that even with the russian government saying we're
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suspicion of this individual, tamerlan tsarnaev, you should look into him, he's been to make a trip to chechnya and russia and you should keep an eye on him and there was no follow-up upon his return, does it seem as though protocol or even recommendations from the commission's report were followed? >> you have to remember first there are millions of bits of information that they are getting every day like that report from the russians and every one of them has to be followed through. this is a new threat, this idea of people who are native born americans who can travel around and do whatever they want to under our laws of freedom and yet who are terrorists and have been learned over the internet to be terrorists. this is a threat that we wrote a report on about a year ago and then another report in december in which we said this is what the government ought to be doing about this. i don't think the government is
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doing what we recommend as of yet but my hope is the learning we get from this particular incident is going to make us more alert. >> what is not happening you wish was happening per your report? >> as far as i'm concerned, first of all, we suggested that the white house itself get involved and that we monitor what's going on over the internet. these people were radicalized by radical islamic websites. and chat rooms and that. we should train our agents to get on that business and listen to what's going on to try to intervene where possible and teach in the schools what to be aware of and what to watch out for. we think there ought to be people tracking these things all of the time and we think there should be people involved in some of these groups that are listening and maybe trying to intervene at some point between somebody becoming just a radical and someone who wants to blow up somebody. there's a period where you can
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intervene in that period and we have to intervene better than we did in this case. >> congressman, what do you hope may come from the hearings this week? >> look, i think the big lesson that emerges from boston is c e complacency. our record has been pretty good. we've had no bombings since 9/11 until the boston marathon. and that's a good record. but it's also apparent if you look back over our recent political debates that homeland security dropped off the board. i cannot remember frankly homeland security being discussed in the 2012 presidential campaign. i can't remember politicians talking about it. i have been saying for years that you must not become complacent. you must not relax. you have to strengthen all of your defenses and you have to maintain them and by that i mean
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being prepared for emergency response where you are fortunate in boston because many of the first responders were already on the scene. you have to make sure your surveillance is as good as it can be within the laws of the states which obviously put restraints on law enforcement. you have to be sure that law enforcement officers are not constrained within the bounds of the constitution and privacy. you have to do all you can to have effective community policing. this maybe is the most important defense against the kind of radicalization that tom was talking about a moment ago. they have to keep sources open in every community so there are all kinds of things that have to be done but the key thing is you must not become complacent as i think we have until the boston marathon attack on homeland security. it takes an ongoing ever
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vigilant effort. >> congressmstay with me. we'll take a short commercial break but we'll talk about whether you think washington given that it is so polarized whether this issue in and of itself will become politicized as well. plus, to the question for everybody out there. do you know where your clothes are made and how and by whom? find out why what you buy may put some workers in deadly situations. there's a reason no one says
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hamilton, you said before the break that the u.s. has become complacent and that's among one of the worst things that can happen. is it realistic to even think that every planned attack can be prevented especially when homegrown? >> no. i don't think we should have the expectation that we can be perfect in our safety. these events probably will continue to happen. we have increased our capacity to prevent them very sharply. we've improved a lot. we're a lot better than we were a few years ago even. but these kind of lone wolf attacks self-radicalized people are probably the most difficult and serious threat that we have. the threat has obviously evolved since 9/11. big attacks to small attacks to maybe oversimplified a bit. the way forward now is to make a
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very careful inquiry about what happened at boston and analyze what we did right and what we did wrong. put aside the political shots and the pandering and learn from what happened and try to correct the weaknesses and the strengthen our defenses but we must not have exaggerated expectations about what we can achieve. we cannot achieve perfection. >> so governor, if the focus during the 9/11 commission was what to do and how to prevent and how to respond to organized group attacks, might this week's hearing that will unfold beginning this week in washington, might that focus be more on the lone wolf attacks, the homegrown terrorism and the tactics and strategies on trying to prevent and identify them? >> that is exactly what i hope it will be about and what it should be about.
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this threat is evolving all the time. we didn't have anything called cybersecurity as a problem when we did the report. now cybersecurity is a big problem. the lone wolf terrorists that we're talking about like these two brothers. that wasn't a problem on 9/11. now it is a problem. so the government has to keep ahead and not behind. it can't look at what happened yesterday and preparing for the last event. it has to look at what might the next event be. we have to continue to do that. my hope is this hearing is a good step. congress has been very good in this particular area in a sense it has not been partisan. republicans and democrats have been together. >> you think that will continue? >> i think it's got to. national security is the most important responsibility government has to keep us safe and to do that that's not a republican or democratic priority. that's something everybody has to work together on and hopefully they will. >> congressman, do you worry about that whether partisanship will interfere with progress here? >> you have to worry about it just because of the general polarization in washington
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today. but at the end of the day, look, we've had a pretty good record here despite the politics over a period of time and i think we have to build on that and tom is absolutely right. we have to have absolute effort to get bipartisanship. we still have gaps. i read the other day that we are still in the planning stages on inoperable communications at the site of the disaster. that is so frustrating to us because one of our major recommendations is that the first responders have to be able to seamlessly communicate with one another. so there are still some gaps here that we have to work on to close and that's one of them. there are several others. there is a lot of work to do. partisanship has to be put aside. >> thanks so much to both of you, gentlemen, for being with us. >> thank you.
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colbert and you have a congressional race that captured national attention. voters head to the polls to fill a vacant house seat. their choice is republican mark sanford seeking political redemption with his bid for the office he once held. >> i'm tremendously humbled to find ourselves in this spot. >> and elizabeth colbert busch. >> my only pledge and special interest are to the people of south carolina district one. >> reporter: republicans held the district for three decades but thanks to sanford's political baggage, colbert busch has a good shot at winning. later this week, presidential politics. two who may want to run for the white house kick off the calendar. rand paul heads to iowa to keynote a gop dinner and bobby jindal headlights an event for republicans in new hampshire. it's only may 2013 but in some ways it feels like 2016.
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fred? >> thanks, paul. witness says hundreds of garment workers killed in a building collapse last monday were underpaid and forced to work in deplorable conditions. we'll show you how you can help change things. see life in the best light. outdoors, or in. automatically filter amount of light. way it's meant to be seen. maybe even a little better. vision source locations today new transitions vantage xtractive lenses experience life well lit. adaptive lens is best for you.
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bangladesh two weeks ago. the vibration of heavy machinery led to the collapse. we take a look at the garment export industry in bangladesh. >> reporter: the garment industry found a natural home in poor nations. way to provide an abundance of cheap ready made clothing is finding a huge labor pool that's paid little. bangladesh is now the second largest apparel exporter after china. how? unlike some of the competitors, bangladeshi manufacturing remains dirt cheap and unions have limited power. the country corners the bottom of the value chain. >> what's happened to bangladesh is they have been too successful at the low road model of development where they offer low wage labor and underinvested in their own infrastructure.
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>> reporter: while contracts poured in from walmart, gap and disney, buildings went up fast filled with workers sometimes housed on illegally built floors but wages remained low. >> you have an ecosystem that they rise to double or triple from $40 a month to $120 a month you still have a garment industry in bangladesh. >> they benefit from the country giving extra help because it's so poor europe allows bangladesh to support garments duty free. a sweetener it may now suspend. a penalty for the country not cleaning up its garment industry. on the other hand, the united states still imposes duties an
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clothes from bangladesh. it costs as much as 32 cents on the dollar of each garment. the workers would benefit. >> if this were not an impediment, it's possible for us to offer the american middle class a lower price. it's possible for us to have a bigger margin. it's possible for us to transfer the biggest chunk of this space to better employment. >> reporter: the big brands may not wait for trade sanctions. disney pulled out before the latest building collapse after a fire late last year. that and political disruptions have made some western firms look toward higher costs. >> they benefited from the profit margin and now is not the time to walk away. >> a couple more of these incidents and foreign brands will be gone because they cannot
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afford to take the kind of beating that they are taking right now. >> reporter: who would force bangladesh to change and keep scenes like this from happening. >> executive director of the national labor rights forum who you just saw in that report is joining me now live. all right. so how do we know whether the clothes that you or i are wearing come from a factory under deplorable working conditions. >> there is no good way to tell right now and there's no silver bullet. what we need to be doing right now is look to push global brands to take concrete steps right now we're pushing all of the global brands to sign onto bangladesh fire and building safety agreement that is making
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them take a contractual commitment to welfare of workers making their products. there are a handful of brands that are really trying to produce in a way that is absolutely ethical throughout their supply chain. they include brands like union wear. but really getting this to go mainstream will take consumers getting involved and communicating directly to mainstream brands but they need to make a big change in their apparel supply chain. >> it's incumbent upon consumers and u.s. companies who perhaps can do a better job of vetting or regulating suppliers in countries like bangladesh? >> absolutely. what we're asking brands to do is to make a commitment beyond the previous voluntary commitment. up until now they've had voluntary codes of conduct. they are confidential mechanisms so what we end up having a brands will inspect a factory
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and potentially walk away from that factory if they find problems that are too hard to address and because of the confidential mechanisms, they're not required to tell anybody about the problems they found. this system combined with the fact that it's sidelining the roles of workers in their organizations has made the brand monitoring system just fatally flawed frankly. >> anything that socially conscious consumers can do to feel good about the clothes that they buy or learn something about the origin of these clothes, anything? >> it takes getting involved and it takes looking for those brands. we're putting -- we have a page on our website called shop with a conscious. we're also organizing collective action globally why we are communicating with the brands
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about the need to make sure that the workers are safe. the global supply chains having gone abroad the way they have over the past 20 years, we as consumers need to communicate to brands that it's not okay to go abroad and not ensure worker welfare. getting involved as consumers, as individuals, and communicating with store managers of your favorite brands, taking action online, follow us at laborrights.org and you will be able to find a lot of different ways to get involved and find those brands that are really taking the next step. >> judy, thank you for joining us from washington. >> thank you. all right. the dow cracked 15,000 this week. that's a big number. should it change what you're doing with your 401(k)? great advice from our investment guy next. first, this week anthony bourdain takes us to canada to show us how to enjoy the food and survive the cold.
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>> there's no place like montreal. it's uniquely wonderful in its own way. they insist on speaking french. it does get cold here. any visiting chef here crawls out of town bloated and begging for mercy but they do things differently here. millions of people come to visit this place all the time but it feels strangely unspoiled and unexploited. it's always a surprise. if anything truly original is happening right now in north america, a food culture doing things in a completely unique and original way that nobody else is doing, the chefs in montreal are really, really making a mark. i suggest before you come here that you train for the experience and cut yourself some downtime for recovery afterwards. so come prepared. >> all right. you can see anthony's entire
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trip to canada here on cnn at 9:00 p.m. eastern and pacific time. i'm telling you right now, the girl back at home would absolutely not have taken a zip line in the jungle. i'm really glad that girl stayed at home. vo: expedia helps 30 million travelers a month find what they're looking for. one traveler at a time. expedia. find yours. it's easy to follow the progress you're making toward all your financial goals. a quick glance, and you can see if you're on track. when the conversation turns to knowing where you stand, turn to us. wells fargo advisors.
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the summer driving season is just a couple weeks away. will it cost you more to fill up your car for that road trip? and what about how much you'll pay to heat your home once fall arrives? one of the best ways to predict that is to look at how much oil that we've got on hand right now. we have managing partner of land coat capital joining me from new york. good to see you. >> likewise. thanks for having me. >> we're getting an oil inventory report this week. what do we think about what it
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will say about where the price of oil is headed? >> wednesday the oil inventory number comes out. what it should say or what wall street is expecting it to say is that we're going to have a very big jump in inventories. what that means is to your viewers is that we have a lot of oil around but demand is not there. you don't have a lot of people driving. you're talking about gas prices. right now the average price at the pump is $3.50 down from $3.80. aaa just last week announced that they expect this summer the average price to be $3.40. despite what this wednesday number is going to be, we at least have some good news coming our way in the next couple months. >> we like that in time for those road trips. the dow jumped past 15,000 on friday. is this the point where we need to look at our 401(k) for encouragement or what? >> well, you should always be looking at that 401(k). you want to keep a close eye on it. however, with that said, yes, we
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did clip 15,000 on friday. that's not the last stop. i think there's a lot of wall street economists and strategists. i'm one of them. i'm predicting that we'll see dow i'm one of them. i'm predicting we'll see dow 16,000 by year end. that's excellent news for people with a 401(k) saving for retirement. one thing you wanted to keep in mind, if you're close to retirement, you definitely want to start trimming back and then if you're looking at something five years out that you're retiring, you can assume that more risk and really start thinking stronger about the stock market. >> todd, always good to e see you. thanks so much. >> thank you. a lot of us shop online. one great perk, avoiding sales tax sometimes. you may have to open the wallet a little wider soon. i'll explain why.
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more much of the newsroom coming up in seven o or so minutes from now. he has a lot on tap. >> we'll be talking about homicide, violence. homicides are on the decline, but not in chicago. as you know, over 500 people were murdered there just last year. so what needs to be done? what needs to be done? what's the solution. at 7:00 eastern, we'll talk to two guests who had very different ideas about what needs to be done. one of those guests is the
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daughter of boxing legend mohammed ali. she has roots in chicago and has a personal story about the violence there. it's going to be an interesting discussion. but first, in our next hour, jason collins is the talk of the sports world for coming out. it's triggered a lot of reaction to his announcement. a lot of people are say iing th right things, but are we getting the full picture? we're going to talk about that. >> the full picture about? the way he came out? >> yeah. about the reaction, what happens. i was asked what you think about it. you never know what's happening in offices. by the way, had a nice conversation with him on friday. he's in good spirits. he's working out and going to the movies with his family. that's all i'll share with you. but he's looking to get a job right now. he wants to play and he's continuing to exercise. he's in pretty good spirits.
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laughing promotes joy in your inner self-. there's a medical benefit as well. it it reduces stress and improves the immune system. who doesn't like to laugh? there's a problem if you don't like to laugh. perhaps you're ready for the week ahead. if you're not, here's your cheat shoot for what you need to know. >> tomorrow the u.s. senate is scheduled to vote on a bill to impose sales tax for online purchases. monday budweiser introduces its new bow tie cans to hold slightly less beer than traditional cans. on tuesday in washington president obama meets with the new president of south korea. on thursday the house of representatives homeland security committee holds hearings on what intelligence federal agencies had before the boston marathon bombings. prince harry arrives in the u.s.
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he's on a six-day tour to meet with hurricane sandy victims. and on friday rand paul will headline the iowa gop's lincoln day dinner in cedar rapids. that's coming up this week. more just weeks away. don le mop, have a great week. thank you. underway right now a new search of the apartment belonging to tamerlan tsarnaev. syria calls an air strike a declaration of war. are the two countries on the brink of war? if you shop on the internet, do it quick. congress is looking to tax your purchases. a shocking story out of utah. a
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