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tv   CBS This Morning  CBS  August 9, 2016 7:00am-9:01am MDT

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? good morning. it is tuesday, august 9th, 2016. welcome to "cbs this morning." a restrained donald trump promises big tax cuts but he faces new opposition from senior republican senator and gop security experts. >> three girlsuffe three girls suffer serious injuries after being tossed from a ferris wheel. one said it was like watching water being poured from a glass. >> a worldwide computer outage. technology problems that plague the entire airline industry. >> we begin this morning with a look at today's eye-opener. your world in 90 seconds.
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unless we change policies, we will not change results, 100%. >> donald trump lays out his economic plan. >> it will present a night and day contrast to the job killing, tax raising, poverty inducing obama-clinton agenda. >> i have a very different approach. i intend to make the wealthy pay their fair share to build this economy. >> three young girls in serious ferris wheel at a county fair near knoxville, tennessee. >> zika may be spreading north. the florida health department investigating what could be the first case in palm beach county. >> it breaks my heart. >> in california residents in another 5,000 homes have been told they may want to evacuate. >> florida gulf coast, drenching rainstorms for a second day. >> the neighborhood is a frickin' river.
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slide in kansas city. rough day ahead for passengers flying on delta. >> come into a mad house. >> in orlando, the dolphin grabbed an ipad a visitor was using. a rocket into center field. heading to third. he makes it. >> a face on the bag. >> all that matters. >> muhammad jumps the assault and comes come on. >> ibtihaj muhammad the first american to compete while wearing a hijab. >> on "cbs this morning." >> on king's shoulders. she gets the lead. >> presented by toyota, let's go
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>> announcer: "cbs this morning" is sponsored by toyota, let's go is sponsored by toyota, let's go places. captioning funded by cbs welcome to "cbs this morning." norah o'donnell is off. donald trump is trying to pring his campaign back to the big issues. more republicans say they do not want to follow him. susan collins is the most senior gop senator to publicly split with donald trump. she wrote in this morning's "washington post" that, quote, his denigrating comments made him unworthy to be president. >> foreign policy experts, 50 from the republican side warn that donald trump, quote, would be the most reckless president in history. his tweet followed a major speech laying out a series of economic proposals. major garrett is in raleigh, north carolina, covering the trump campaign. major, good morning. >> good morning.
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trail. he read his economic speech and in the process handed over most of his house policy to republicans, a rare act of humility and unity. by day's end trump was dealing with more republican party unrest. >> i want to jump-start america, and it can be done. it won't even be that hard. >> in a scripted speech before the detroit economic club, trump scrapped his tax plan for one championed by speaker paul ryan. >> we will work with house republicans on this plan using the same brackets they have proposed, 12%, 25%, and 33%. for many american workers, their tax rate will be 0. >> almost all of trump's proposals mimic those of every republican president and nominee since ronald reagan, across the board tax cuts fewer
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fuels. trump also called for a spending spree on roads, bridges and airports and tax benefits to cover child care expenses. here promises were many, details were few. >> we will will be rolling out proposals to increase choice and reduce cost in child care, offering much needed relief to american families. >> reporter: trump also attacked hillary clinton on turf bernie sanders made familiar her trade deals like nafta. >> hillary clinton has supported the trade deals stripping this city and this country of its jobs and its wealth. >> clinton was quick to react at a campaign rally. >> i have a very different approach. i intend to make the wealthy pay their fair share to build this economy. >> protesters interrupted trump's detroit speech more than a dozen times. after that the trump campaign
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complimenting the nominee saying he stayed on message and delivered positive platform. dana here trump will have two rallies where he will try to do the same thing, stay on message. >> we will be watching, major, thank you. hillary clinton's campaign said trump manufactured his latest charge. he's alleging her state department e-mails may have tipped off iran that a missing scientist was cooperating with the u.s. the new nationwide poll leading trump 51 to 41%. nancy cordes in florida covering clinton campaign. nancy, good morning. >> reporter: good morning. trump went even further accusing clinton of contributing to this man's murder. it's an allegation for which there is no proof, the kind of charge normal election year would turn a race upside down and came on a day that trump's campaign insisted he was getting back on message.
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6:45 p.m. tweeting this. many people are saying that the iranians killed the scientist that helped the u.s. because of hillary clinton's hacked e-mails. it's unclear who trump meant by many people but a clinton spokesperson pounced tweeting that trump uses the phrase "many people are saying" when he really means "i made this up." it's something he has employed for other baseless claims like when he suggested there sympathized with terrorists or iran. >> some say -- >> referred to iranian nuclear scientist who iranian government announced sunday it has executed for spying for the u.s. amiri defected to the u.s. in 2009 but decided to return to iran the next year. trump linked the death to clinton because his name was mentioned twice in her e-mails
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could have been hacked. but clinton spoke publicly about him in 2010 and his complicated relationship with the u.s. was well-known in iran. >> mr. amiri has been in the united states of his own free will, and he is free to go. >> reporter: clinton's e-mails are also at the heart of a wrongful death suit brought against her by the parents of two benghazi victims. charles wood and patricia smith alleged attacks resulted from in handling confidential and classified information. she came down "the herd" on clinton at the republican convention. >> she deserves to be in stripes. >> reporter: the clinton campaign says the lawyer behind this lawsuit has been unsuccessfully attacking the clintons for decades, adding, quote, that there have been nine different investigations into this attack and none found any evidence whatsoever of any wrongdoing on the part of hillary clinton.
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the wall street bureau chief is with us. welcome. >> thank you. >> referring to nancy's piece, your paper has been covering the story of this iranian scientist. is anybody suggesting hrk's e-mails some. >> i don't think. he was cooperating with u.s. and offering money to do so. this is not a secret. you go back t well chronicled. it was out there. >> turning to economy, what do you think of the proposal. >> by trump standards a remarkable speech except for the part about trade. what he has said about trade separates him from other republicans. other than that almost any mainstream republican could have given that speech. pretty standard tax cut material, standard regulatory material and he stayed on message. >> what about two things, one,
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child care spending. >> that was interesting. there were two outreaches to liberals on those two front. i'm going to do a lot for child care and lot for infrastructure spending. that echos hrk. there was something for everyone in that speech, which was interesting. >> you wrote about trump verse trumpism, trump the message and trump the candidate, which one wins out and can he stick to the message that seems to be resonating. >> donald trump is such a bright, shiny object, people forget he didn't c attitudes, he tapped into them. there's an anger and a sense the economy failed us. he walked into that environment, he didn't create it. it's been a long time in the making. if he fails it will be there afterwards and i think both parties have to remember that as they move forward. >> the question is how large is it? >> i think it's larger than people thought. that's why we're having this conversation. otherwise jeb bush, scott walker, somebody else would be the nominee. it's larger than trump thought
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lifelong republican, doesn't do this lightly. i've been dismayed by constant stream of comments, inability to apologize. how significant is her decision not to endorse. >> i think it matters. susan collins doesn't strike you as a donald trump type person. not surprising in that regard. his problems in the party are well documented. we saw his problems with national security wing yesterday. this tells you moderates in revolt as well. the other thing that er maine as a place they might make a breakout. they might go to maine, a history of having fondness for independence and maverick streak. that might be a place donald trump could score in the electoral college. maybe not so much. >> they said he was different in the conference? did you think so. >> there were 14 times his speech was interrupted by protesters. not once did he take them on.
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the past where that was true. you could sort of sense when he watched it that he wanted to. something held him back. i kept thinking ivanka, his daughter in the audience, going don't go there. >> nothing can change campaign tactic like double digit -- >> it does brace your mind. >> makes you rek some things. thank you very much. good to have you. police in east tennessee want to know why a group of children fell out of a ferris wheel. the three girls dropped at leasf this happened in greene county 60 miles northeast of tennessee. vladimir duthiers is here. good morning. >> reporter: it stopped after people began screaming at the right operators. all three children taken to a local hospital with serious injuries. >> rescue command, we've had a major incident at the
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of the ferris while. >> emergency crews raced to the scene of the accident that left witnesses shaken. >> one is responsive. y'all need to get somebody start thad way and we'll get ems out. >> panic ensued as they tried to figure out what happened. >> my two little girls were about midway on the other side of the ferris while when it happened. they were very upset, crying. it's like a nightmare right now. >> reporter: the f car carrying the girls and to get stuck as the wheel was turning. the car turned over tossing them from the ride. one eyewitness said it was like watching water pour from a glass. investigators believe the girls fell 35 to 40 feet. they are still trying to determine what caused the ride to malfunction. >> we're treating it like a crime scene at this point where we can determine if there's any malfunction, make sure there was no foul play, that it was just
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investigation is assisting the greenville police department in the investigation. the town's police captain said the victims were alert and answering questions at the hospital. dana. >> vlad, thank you very much. delta air lines working to recover from it's crippling computer outage. delta canceling 250 more flights today. that's in addition to about 1,000 flights that were canceled yesterday when the outage hit. stranded passengers waited in long lines at airports as they ahead a look at what's behind decisions that keep grounding major airlines. florida's gulf coast facing another round of severe weather. flash flood watches along the coastline. parts of the tampa area could receive 6 to 8 inches of rain today. rising waters have already hit parts of taylor and pasco counties. the downpours expected to last until later this week. drenching rain from tropical
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cabo san lucas. showed vehicles driving through flooded streets. the storm is what remains of hurricane earl. triggered devastating mudslides in central mexico that killed 45 people over the weekend. the storm set to move up the baja peninsula over the next few days. the area received a month's worth of rain in just 24 hours. thousands of residents in southern california are under evacuation orders because of a massive wildfire. the so-called pilot fire broke out on sunday. it's lake arrowhead. it was helped by cooler temperatures and higher humidity. it's only about 60% contained. >> south florida reporting cases of zika. palm beach county has its first case of the virus. the health department said a patient traveled to the miami area. miami, dade and broward counties
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mosquito illness. they are sending flyers to schools. they are providing mosquito repellant to public schools and colleges. team usa expanding its lead in medal count thanks to hard fought performances by american swimmers and divers. several earned medals last night. team usa leads all countries with 19 overall medals. that includes five gold. china is in second with 13 total. japan and russia both have 10. ben tracy outside olympic park tense competitions this morning. ben, good morning. >> reporter: gayle, good morning, if you're looking for american dominance in rio, look no further than square building back there. that's where you'll find the swimming pool. day three of the competition american swimmers took home six individual medals including a very big win over russia.
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solid gold performance in breaststroke beating rival efimova days after they let the russian body compete despite a previous ban for doping. her teammate katie meili joined her on the podium for the bronze. a new olympic record winning gold in 100 meter backstroke, an event the u.s. team has dominated since 1992. >> murphy gets it. plummer gets the bronze. >> u.s. teammate david plummer took third. >> look at -- >> during the semifinals of 200 meter butterfly michael phelps remained focused before entering the pool alongside his rival from south africa whose deliberate attempts to distract the olympic legend didn't seem to work. >> after a little bit of an angry swim just to say, i am
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>> reporter: american divers won silver in synchronized diving. when he saw the score board he burst into tears and hugged his teammate. >> america expects gold. you walk away with something other than that, you didn't get gold. but this is absolutely amazing. >> in the gym. >> tricky combination right here. >> tumbled off the high bar ending hopes of a medal for the men's team. so tonight michael phelps is back in the pool. this is being dubbed the rematch in rio. he's going to be swimming 200 meter butterfly against his south african rival. this is an event that michael phelps just barely lost at the london olympics and he has said it's a big reason why he came out of retirement for his fifth olympics. dana. >> ben tracy in rio, thank you. a tragedy at the world's
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inspections. ahead the worries about whether water parks across the whole ,, >> announcer: this national weather report sponsored by chick-fil-a. we didn't invent the chicken.
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americans swimmers center their frustration over the russian olympic athletes since the state sponsored doping. >> ahead the $50 bon about why some >> the news is back in the morning right here on "cbs this morning." >> announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by kohl's. get your active game on
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? ahead, the impressions about the reliabil tomorrow meryl streep returns to studio 57 along with hugh grant. a look at their new movie, "florence foster jenkins."
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good morning, everyone. 7:26 right now. i'm alan gionet. happening this morning, ex-illinois governor and colorado federal inmate rob blagojevich will try to persuade a judge to cut his prison sentence. the ex-governor was accused of trying to sell obama's seat. the panel found the sentence was appropriate. she's serving in littleton and he'll appear at a resentencing via closed circuit television. let's check with joel. >> look how slow it is at brighton boulevard in the eastbound direction. you're right into the sun as well this morning. taking a look at the
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area. southbound direction of i-25 as you get to i-225 and 285 and clarks town is downtown englewood. southbound at 25 at 23rd and that's backing things up. a lot of icons bunched together, alan, in a spot where frankly it's tough.
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so far, good looking cam. blue sunshine all over the place. temperature wise, 60s in the community. 63 in lewisville. 66 in greenwood village and jansey at 58 degrees. satellite and radar together, we've had a little rain down around telluride, durango and there's a dense fog advisory going on until 9:00 a.m. near ray north of
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92 tomorrow. late day storm,,,,
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? nba mvp steph curry is enjoying president obama's company on vacation. the pair played some golf yesterday on martha's vineyard. curry skipped the olympics, you might recall, fighting ankle and knee injury. that didn't keep the second day in a row the president played with an nba player who opted out of the games. yesterday he played with clippers chris paul. you golf? >> i do. >> you guys need your knees and ankles? >> you want to play well or not? >> i think it's scary. >> you could ride around in a golf cart. that would be fun. >> that would be a lot of fun.
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coming up in this half hour, doping sparks a heated debate at the olympics. several russian athletes initially banned from the games over illegal substances won an appeal to compete. how team usa is not hold back. plus passengers face more delays after a computer meltdown. it's the latest big carrier to face massive equipment il ahead, why the faa isn't doing anything at the computer estimates that might be anything but state of the art.
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. the boston globe reports on a jogger killed in princeton, massachusetts. 27-year-old vanessa marcotte worked for google and had been visiting her mother. her body found in the woods on sunday. police did not say a law enforcement official said there are indications her body was burned. google said it is deeply shocked and saddened. >> very sad story. "san francisco chronicle" said gummy candy laced with marijuana may have sickened 16 people at a girls birthday party. they were hospitalized with dizziness and nausea. some had thc in their blood.
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a water slide where a 10-year-old boy died sunday had not been inspected for two years. the boy died from a neck injury. his father, state lawmaker in kansas city, kansas, where investigators are trying to determine what happened. omar, good morning. omar, good morning. >> reporter: good morning, it may be hard to see but part of the ride's enclosure on that se investigators. there are no federal inspections for water parks in the u.s. according to a records requests investigators have not inspectored this schlitterbahn park until 2012. >> i heard a noise. that's when i turned around. >> reporter: jess and melanie went down the massive slide hours before caleb schwab. >> i saw a blood trail down the
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found the 10-year-old in a pool verrucht's base. two women were in the raft with schwab. they were taken to the hospital for minor facial injuries. >> it is taller then niagara falls. >> reporter: verrucht's plunge is 17 feet high. the second drop is 50 feet. two people can ride in one at the paul oberhouser said his came off while riding with a friend and 9-year-old son two weeks ago. >> as soon as i hit the bottom of the first curve, the shoulder strap kind of busted loose. >> reporter: he said he had to grip handles by the legs to hold on. and told park staff he had to hang on. >> they said, oh, no, that's not
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do something about it. >> reporter: in a statement, schlitterbahn said safety is a top priority and that the rides are inspected daily. >> all of the regulation, done on a state and local level with respect to amusement parks. it's really up to the manufacturers and the park to
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inside of russia but then she was quietly added back on to the roster here in rio just days ago after winning an appeal. she swam in lane 5 right next to her american rival lily king. and by the time they touched the wall, the russian who had served a 16-month suspension for doping won a silver medal, coming i american. the grudge match between the two began over the weekend when they engaged in a fierce finger shakoff. littly king said afterwards you're shaking your finger for number one and you've been caught for drug cheating. i'm just not a fan. >> she's justified. >> reporter: members of team usa are not holding back about having known dopers in the pool. >> during the games there will probably be people who missed
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deserve to be on the podium and that is wrong. >> reporter: russia initially submitted 389 athletes for the games only 271 have been approved to compete. in the past days 8 russians banned for doping have been allowed back in after winning appeals. most of them swimmers. the ioc claims there's nothing they can do. what do you say to the other swimmers who are now expressing conc pool with what they describe as known cheaters? >> i think people have served sanctions and are now clear. i would think that in the united states you'd appreciate the idea of give everyone the chance to prove their own innocence. >> reporter: thomas hobbiert is a doping expert.
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vladimir putin spent $50 billion on the sochi olympics, an all-time record. >> i do not see an end to this in sight. i think the incentive to dope was built into the system a long time ago. >> reporter: which could be why michael phelps now in his fifth olympics is frustrated by his doping asked whether or not they should be here competing, swimmer lilly king says no. gayle. >> haven't ever competed in a clean event. >> yeah. >> there are a lot of olympic swimmers who really feel the
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>> not a level playing field. >> that mean mugster that lilly king gave the russian is very, very true. >> i'm going to beat you. >> a look says everything. we know what you meant. ben tracy, we thank you in rio. as well as good to see you there. critics call the delta airlines meltdown years after 9/11. you'll want to hear what he has to say.
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? we're following the latest fallout from the delta computer meltdown which has led to the cancellation of nearly 250 more
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cancelled yesterday. at one point, only six delta flights were in the air over the u.s. a snapshot from august 1st shows how their normally hundreds. and how an outage knocked out computers for dozens stranded. chris, good morning. >> reporter: good morning, delta says its computer systems are working again. but check out the line here for people trying to check in and check their bags. now, the airline is investigat the outage disabled delta's flight status alerts. >> we found out that we're four hours delayed. and by the time we get to our connection flight in laguardia, we're going to be an hour late. >> reporter: an airport monitor incorrectly listed flights as on time. the delays and cancellations prompted an apology from delta's
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effort. we lost power about 2:30 this morning which caused us to implement the ground stop we hut put in place. >> it's unacceptable to the traveling public and unacceptable to delta and its employees. >> reporter: dealt's network raises questions about the reliability of computers used by airlines not regulated by the faa. last year united and american both suffered southwest to round flight. a disruption that lasted days. >> they're running on a reservation system that is more than 35 years old. in fact, it once belonged to an airline that went out of business in 1982. >> reporter: george hobbic founded watchdog air.com. >> they haven't fixed the technology over the years this
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>> reporter: airlines pretty much regulate every from fuel and how much snacks to implement on a plane. the airline industry generally has reliable systems but portions can be decades old. >> airlines are technology companies that fly airplanes. their technology systems have to be as reliable as their aircraft. >> reporter: the department of transportation tells "cbs this morning" it is i issues and continues to monitor the situation. delta is offering compensation in the form of $200 flight vouchers for people whose flights were cancelled or who suffered a three hour or longer delay. dana. >> chris, thank you. ahead, an extraordinary breach of security as an airline passenger jumps off a jet bridge with his carry-on luggage. >> oh, my gosh. >> he chases the plane.
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lanc?me. receive a free 7-piece gift. only at macy's, your skincare destination. ? a tardy passenger who was late for a flight took extraordinary measures to try to get on board. a man seen here in a blue shirt breached security. he jumped off the jet bridge on to the tarmac, stopped an airport worker, hurled the bag over his shoulder and took the run for the plane. he was eventually stopped by two ground crew members. he had to get somewhere really bad. i've never seen anything like that. >> it's dangerous. >> it's very dangerous. you know when the doors close and you're right there, you say, i can see the plane, they still
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>> i wonder if he faces any charges. that would have been even later. the summer olympics are putting an ancient healing art back in the public eye. ahead, how athletes are hoping the spots you see there, right on the back, are going to help them leave their mark on the
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good morning, everyone. 7:56 right now. i'm alan gionet. delta airlines trying to get back on track after a computer glitch. we're not seeing issues right now at dia. delta cancelled 700 flights today telling people to check their flight status. employees are handing out refunds and travel vouchers. morning commute. we have a lot of trouble out there today. here's joel. >> there's accidents on i-25. here's a look from the cbs4 tech center cam. it's a crawl through the bridges especially northbound along i-25 and we've
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there's an accident in the santa fe direction along i-225. there's an accident at mississippi. a trio of accidents one at alameda and another one at 23rd and then in the southbound direction of 23rd. most have been cleared out. we have an earlier accident at 10th and federal. it looks like the investigation on that continues and there's a
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well, good morning, there. got the look out cam for you. you can see golden through the trees in mesa. just outside of the shot there. a little breezy from time to time. nothing too bad. mostly sunny this morning, and we'll see thunderstorms fire up this afternoon. most likely after 3:00 it could move through the denver-metro area. we'll watch for that. a fewer storms than yesterday, but it's going to be hot today. 94 degrees. isolated storms and 92 tomorrow. but generally a cooling trend by friday, we'll be 80 degrees with
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? it is tuesday, august 9th, 2016. welcome back to "cbs this morning." there is more real news ahead, including donald trump's newest attack on hillary clinton, and cia insider michael morell tells charlie why hin president. but first here's today's eye opener at 8:00. >> he read his economic speech and handed over most of his tax policy to house republican, a rare act of humility. >> an allegation for which there is no proof, the kind of charge that in a normal election would turn a race upside down. >> he said he was different at the news conference yesterday, did you think so in terms of temperament and demeanor? >> 12, 14 by various counts of times his speech was interrupted
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>> riot stopped after people began screaming at the ride operators. all three children were taken to a local hospital. >> people trying to check their bags. the airline is investigating what happened and the big question, why their backup systems didn't kick in. >> american swimmers took home six individual medals including a very big win over russia. >> if you're wondering why we show pictures from the olympics instead we're not allowed to. the international olympics committee won't allow us to show the olympic rings so for the rest of our coverage we'll show this logo that our graphics department made from onion rings. hey, man. that's how we do it. >> this morning's eye opener at 8:00 is presented by liberty mutual insurance. >> i'm charlie rose with gayle
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new poll numbers bolster hillary clinton's lead. finds her ahead 51% to 41%. >> donald trump is still losing support from other top republicans. maine senator susan collins writes in "the washington post" this, "i am a lifelong republican but donald trump does not reflect historical republican values." she is the most senior gop senator to say she will not vote for donald trump. >> donald trump may be reaching out to other officials in his scrapped a tax plan that he announced last september. he replaced it with a less expensive one. it was drafted by house republicans. it would use three tax brackets of 12%, 25%, and 33%. during that economic speech in detroit, trump also attacked the policies of hillary clinton and president obama. clinton hit back during a campaign swing in florida, but some of their plans did sound a lot alike. >> the rich will pay their fair
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>> we will eliminate the carried interest deduction, well-known deduction, and other special interest loopholes that have been so good for wall street investors and for people like me. >> he wants to roll back regulations on wall street. i want to tighten them. >> upon taking office, i will issue a temporary moratorium on new agency regulations. >> we've got to work together t a chance to cut through the red tape, they get the help that they need. >> we will built next generation of roads, bridges, railways, tunnels, seaports, and airports. >> our roads, our bridges, our tunnels, our ports, our airports, our water systems, our sewer systems, they are in desperate need of being either repaired and maintained or
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>> donald trump shifted focus dramatically last night appearing to blame hillary clinton for iran's execution of a nuclear scientist. trump did not provide any evidence. he tweeted "many people are saying that the iranians killed a scientist who helped the u.s. because of hillary clinton's hacked emails." iran's government announced sunday that sh sharam amiri was executed after spying for the u.s. amiri defected to america in 2009 but decided to retu iran the next year. spokesman said trump is lying saying many people are saying they are equals. i made this up. dozens of national security and foreign policy experts warn donald trump could be "the most reckless president in american history." the group of 50 republicans signed an open letter yesterday vowing not to vote for trump. they include former directors of the cia and national intelligence, plus two former homeland security secretaries. in a statement, trump called the group "nothing more than the
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>> deputy director michael morell endorsed hillary clinton in friday's "new york times." the former cbs news contributor called trump "a threat to our national security." i spoke with morell last night on my pbs program. so tell me about why you felt compelled to change where you were, contributor to cbs, on public boar director and deputy director of the cia, a man who gained increasing respect for his voice, because of the access to media, to say i'm going in a different direction? >> two things, i think, brought me to the decision to write the op-ed. one was a growing belief that donald trump, mr. trump, i don't
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to our national security as commander in chief. he has said things on the campaign trail that have assisted our adversaries, that have assisted vladimir putin, that have assisted isis, and then the second was, i've known hillary clinton a long time, and i felt that some of the perceptions that are out there about her are just not true, and so putting both of those reasons together, i decided to speak out. and one of the things, through this, and i was actually writing the op-ed and talking to people about my views is that there were many people who share my views. there are many people who share what i wrote, in that op-ed, but they're afraid to speak out. they're afraid of being attacked. they're afraid of the republican party not being with them down the road, right? i felt afraid of not speaking
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consequences of not speaking out, and i think that serious republicans of which there are many need to think about the consequences of not speaking out. >> he also criticized trump's relationship with russia's president. >> here's what i would like to see him do. i would like to see him stand up tomorrow and denounce putin's military incursion into ukraine. i'd like to see him denounce putin's annexation of crimea. i'd like to see him denounce putin's assistance to the rebels in eastern ukraine that resulted in the shootdown of the malaysian airliner. i'd like to see him renounce what putin is doing in syria, supporting a butcher and a dictator. i'd like to see him just stand up and denounce putin, and i'll tell you that, at the end of the day, putin would have more respect for him than he does
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russian federation. >> unwitting agent of the russian federation, recruited by putin. that's why he's taken the positions he's taken. >> morell talked about what he'd personally like to see on it do syria to end the civil war there. >> when we were in iraq, the iranians were giving weapons to the shia militia, who were killing american soldiers. the iranians were making us pay a a price in syria. we need to make the russians pay a price. the other thing i want to do, i want to go after those things that assad sees as his personal power base. i want to scare assad. i want to destroy his presidential aircraft on the ground. i want to destroy his presidential helicopters. i want to make him think we're coming after him, right >> i'm not advocating assassinating him. i'm not advocating that.
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he thinks is his power base, right, and what he needs to survive. i want him to think about this is not going to end well for me. >> what he is saying there is that he would like to see this done on the ground by our allies, the people who are in opposition to the assad government, that they ought to be doing more to make the russians fear, the iranians fear and assad fear. >> i remember after reading michael the time bad ass because he has the credentials to back up all the things he said. >> it shows you someone involved with the cia the mind-think, the sense of how he sees the world and as he said, there are many others like him. >> you wonder how much that resonates with people out there when they hear from him. >> i think so, too. team usa begins day four of the rio games, after winning several more medals, go usa. the united states leads all countries with 19 overall
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lead all countries with 19 overall medals, including five gold. china has 13 medals. japan and russia both have ten. ben tracy outside the olympic park in rio with a roundup of yesterday's big u.s. victories. good morning to you again. >> good morning, gayle. you guys just can't get rid of me this morning. before we get to the utter dominance in the pool here in rio, let's talk about what happened on the sand last night, or more accurately earlier this morning because these volleyball matchesav around midnight. the u.s. team took action, jennings and ross beach china. walsh jennings in all four olympics only dropped one set. in swimming the u.s. took home six individual medal, one of those went to 19-year-old lily king and the 100 meter breast stroke when she beat her russian rival whose doping ban was overturned just days before she was allowed to get in the pool. michael phelps came in second
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semifinals. tonight he will go for his 24th medal in that same event in the finals. it's being called the rematch in rio, because he's try igto redeem himself from the london olympics. american divers won silver in synchronized diving. johnson burst into tears when he saw the scoreboard and saw they had that medal. today back to women's gymnastic, the fierce five is looking to repeat as olympic champions. team usa heavilyav that event, because they just crushed the competition in the qualifying round so it should be another good night, watching the olympics, and seeing some americans take home a lot more hardware. gayle? >> another good night, another late night. thank you very much. it is fun to watch. 15 years after 9/11, are we any safer? we'll talk with an author who
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this morning's eye ope is sponsored by liberty mutual insurance, liberty stands with
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olympic swimming star michael phelps is sporting more than a gold medal. >> those are cup marks, guys. i got cupped the other day. i'm going to get cupped today. >> so what is cupping? we're going to show you what it is, how it works and the questions surrounding its health benefits. that is next on "cbs this morning." every day my challenge is to be in sync with my body, with myself, with my life. it all starts with a healthy routine. that's why i'm taking the activia two week probiotic challenge by enjoying activia yogurt with billions of probiotics every day. because when my routine is in sync, i can face any challenge. so take the activia probiotic challenge! visit activia.com to learn more.
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this is humira at work. when i decided to write a ton of world famous music after i lost my hearing people thought i was crazy. just like the other day when i wanted chicken for breakfast. people thought i was crazy again. how'd everything play out? perfectly. i went to chick-fil-a for their new egg white grill. it's amazing. and as for the music stuff. ? i'll bet you ten bucks that you have heard the tune i'm singing now. ?
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? in our "morning rounds" an ancient healing is leaving its mark on the rio marks, michael phelps with team body, you saw it was covered with bruises from cupping. it spiked more than 3,000% after phelps appeared at the swim meet. fellow team members like dana vollmer tried cupping. >> i think it worked great. not a lot of us have quite as many cup marks. >> good to see you, doctor. >> good to see you.
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gwyneth paltrow and jennifer aniston. i thought what a bad case of chickenpox but it looks like it works. but what is it? >> cupping is a technique that's been around for thousands of years. it's documented in egypt. ancient egypt and greece and other civilization. it's now being used around the world. we're seeing it more in our western culture. basically it's taking cups that action like suction cups. placing them in the body, usually the back or stomach. it takes five to 20 minutes. either using heat or a pump. you create a suction and that pulls up the capillaries, the small blood vessels which dilate and even break and that's what causes the bruises that we see. the goal is to alleviate pain and treat a lot of other disorders. and in addition in chinese medicine it's to improve the
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your life force. >> but does it work, help you to perform betsy. >> okay, well we don't have a lot of high-quality scientific evidence to prove it at all. in many cases it could be a placebo effect. first of all, you're creating localized inflammation. that can be the immune system. you're also system that could release pain or endorphins. and release toxins and help cell repair and emphatic flow. >> any other way to do this? >> well, if you like it, it's like a sensation on your skin. >> it's mostly considered --
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>> they're unsightly. >> it's mostly safe. although there are cases, of course, of skin blistering, infections. >> how long does that last and how often should you do it? >> about five to seven days. it's recommended you do it every couple months. not every day. >> and it's legal. ahead, a dolphin flips over one of the most popular gadgets on the market. that is coming up next on "cbs this morning." >> announcer: cbs morning rounds sponsored by the makers of nondrowsy claritin. join claritin nonblue skies
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? a dolphin at sea world, and grab. that's an ipad. you can see it floating in the water there. i guess the dolphin wanted the woman to be more in the moment. the dolphin even seems to celebrate splashing around for the fans. it was so deliberate, too. >> yeah. >> in real life, stop videotaping me.
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good morning, everyone. it's 8:25. i'm britt moreno. and right now members of a broomfield church hope this pretty clear surveillance video will help them catch a thief. now the woman you see here is holding a wine glass and from the faith baptist church off emerald street. video shows her taking the computer out of front door there. new video this morning to show you about what officials are doing about mosquitos in larimer county. they were out late last night spraying in hopes of reducing the spread of west nile virus and they plan on spraying tomorrow. there's 8 cases in
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bent and weld counties report 2 and there's one in douglas county. the state reported more than 100 cases of west nile last year including 3 deaths. joel hillan is here to track the drive for us. hi, joel. >> we're spotting the accidents. this is a look from our mile high camera. east colfax, there's an accident on the left side. we had a couple of lanes blocked off as crews were there. c-470, there's an accident northbound along 925 -- northbound along i-225 passed mississippi. an accident in the southbound direction. this is the one we saw from the cbs4-mile high camera. and i-76
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? ? ee-e-e-oh-mum-oh-weh ? ? hush my darling... ? ? don't fear my darling... ? ? the lion sleeps tonight. ? [snoring.] ? hush my darling... ? [snoring.] ? don't fear my darling... ? ? the lion sleeps tonight. ? [snoring.] take the roar out of snore.
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well, it looks like it's shaping up to be a nice day. this is our tech camera and you can see into downtown. it's hazy and there's moisture in the atmosphere that will be available for thunderstorms this afternoon. but for the most part, we're a chop full of sunshine this morning. as we get into the afternoon here on the future cast computer model, you can see thunderstorms by 2: eastern plains in the afternoon and early in the evening. we have a chance of isolated thunderstorms and a 10% chance today. and our high today, it's going to be hot. 94 for the afternoon high. normal high is 89. isolated storms this afternoon and again tomorrow
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? welcome back to "cbs this morning." coming up in this half hour, u.s. has spent an estimated trillion dollars on agencies since 9/11. joining us steven brill for the first time on the set, shows us how billions of taxpayer money has been wasted, he says. his new article in "the atlantic" shows why it may be time to rethink the terror fight. and a chef powerhouse see how a new recipe is winning over meat lovers. >> right now, it's time to show
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the globe. . said donald trump's daughter ivanka is being criticized by her clothing company. a diner in charge of ivanka's fashion line said the company only offers unpaid maternity leave. other workers made the same claim. ivanka trump declined to comment for the story. bloomberg said apple is planning to unveil a new ipad as early as next month. sources tell bloomburg will will not be a headphone jack, it will have an updated home button that vibrates instead of clicks. and there will be a dual camera system on the larger iphone. new york post reports on
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the previous seller was a game clash royale. fans of pokemon go usually play for about 26 minutes a day. "time" magazine said swimmer michael phelps has become an internet sensation, he was caught on camera in an intense stare as he geared up for the 200 meter butterfly. he was shadow boxin in front of him. his stare has become a social media look. britain's guardian reports on the beaches. officials are cracking down on vacationers who stake out with towels and gears out on umbrellas. those who leave gear out overnight can be fined $200. >> you have to make sure you get a good space.
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and "the new york times" said the way to ease pedestrian traffic on the brooklyn britain. they've turned to times square in the sky. more than 13,000 pedestrians and cycles cross it on a typical day. building the old one is now being considered. we're approaching the 15th anniversary of the september 11th attacks. there has not been another one like that but the remaining. a poll taken in orlando found that two-thirds of americans feel a terror attack is very or somewhat likely in the next few months. author steven brill with an estimated trillion-dollar state built since 9/11 in a magazine of the atlantic entitled are we any safer. we'd like to welcome back steven brill back to studio 57.
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well, we're not safer, we've done a lot of things to make us safer. there are tens of thousands of men and women who make up every morning in the last 15 years doing yeoman's work to try to keep us safer. but the kinds of threats that we faced on 9/11 have expanded and have multiplied. in part because we went into iraq and -- you know -- >> let's talk about the threat and what we can do to make us safer. >> well, the kind of orchestrated threat that i write about the bio terror threat. the threat of a dirty bomb where someone can go into a hospital and fuel some radiological material very easily and mix it with a stand explosive, and create a bomb that causes radiation contamination that will scare people. and scare the country so much that we may evacuate -- have to
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something like that. that's the kind of orchestrated threat. lone wolf who can go into a gun store, uniquely, in this country, and buy an assault rival and then shoot up a shopping mall or theater. and if he yells out an impression, in arabic, we assume that's a terror attack. and itca than what has sadly become the attack that happens in this country with assault weapons. >> that's what will be borne out that more people will be killed by assault weapons than they will by terrorism? >> but terrorism is about fear. >> right. >> and that's what makes it such a force in this country. and such a force to contend with. and it makes the politics of terror dangerous for anybody.
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number one, it's 20,000 words, you did a lot of work on this piece. but what's pass mafascinating t me is how you compared september 10th 2001 and after that. you said john ashcroft had -- >> the attorney general had rejected a request from the fbi to increase their antiterror branches. and the fbi officials testified in congrth biggest terrorism threat in the united states was from animal life activists. >> that's peta? >> right. >> and on september 11th, you'll remember, the president was reading to school children in an elementary children in florida. and ashcroft was on his way reading to school children in milwaukee. so that was a different time. this is now 15 years of what i call the september 12th era. and it's been a difficult time.
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hats off to the people who wake up every day. the department of homeland security. and the tsa who, you know, we love to ridicule and make fun of who have been obsessed with keeping us safe. and the only time we notice them is if there's an attack or if they do something stupid. >> you're very complimentary about job. the bush administration and obama administration did a good job, from that day, september 10th when we were all asleep. >> you've all written this idea of never again which makes people feel safe is not realistic? >> right. it's a promise that donald trump is making. it's a promise that president bush made after 9/11.
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the president would want to reassure the country of that but it's totally unrealistic. but the idea that somebody can say i'm running for president and i'm going to declare war on islam. and the day i take office all of this is going to stop, it's just ridiculous. it's exactly what a terrorist want us to say. >> we assume efforts have been made and they've been thwarted >> and the second question comes up in terms of the future. what is it that we need to do, or not do? >> we need to deal with bio terrorist threats. dirty bomb threats. >> how do we get to it is my question? >> to deal with a dirty bomb is actually easy. it doesn't cost anything. what that entails the president of the united states getting on
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bomb is scarier than it is. >> you're saying the reaction? >> yeah, the reaction. the other thing we have to do, is we have to accept the fact that never again is a fallacy. we seem to be okay with accepting the fact that people can be mentally ill do these things but we don't accept it for terrorists. >> in a political year, you talk about an o >> right. i think that is a real possibility in part because, i don't want to engage on the price of politics, but it doesn't take a genius to figure out that the terrorists would love to have someone like a donald trump be the president of the united states because he is willing to declare war on all muslims. and that's the way they have framed the issue since september 11.
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and president obama refused to take that bait. he campaigns on that. >> an article that's very frightening, i think there are a lot of lessons to be learned there. you say we've spent billions of dollars and it's always money well spent. >> we're on a beanbag, we kind of got that as business as usual. >> very usual, steven brill. thank you. we're going to take a turn to a lighter topic. take a glance in our toyota green room if you this may attest like meat, may
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because cvs pharmacy... is now at target. ? veggie burgers are making a comeback after decades in the shadows. they were once considered to be a sad alternative to their cow-based counterpart. the veggie burger has been reimagined by award winning chefs and silicon valley. vanita nair. good morning. >> reporter: good morning, we're here at the vegan restaurant where veggie burgers are so popular they've created one for
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sausage. in the past few years they've been reinvented. everyday, customers jam-pack here in new york and every day they leave saying the same thing. >> really good burger. >> it's kind of crispy and soft inside. >> reporter: the patty is handmade and the toppings can be customized but this burger has no meat in it. the owner and chef. do you st a sort of fearfulness of what they might be eating? >> that happens sometimes. a lot of our favorite regulars came here almost as a gag. >> reporter: no. >> all right. let's try this. we've been able to win them over. >> reporter: the burger made with chickpeas, quinoa, farrow and lots of tomatoes can be
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the editor for "the new york times" cooking said heavenly helped paved way for other veggie burgers. >> veggie burger had a rough history in the united states, right. we think of as a patty filled with saw dust and dirt. well, that's changed. >> there a difference in how the purveyors of it? >> yeah, a burger should not be about making a burger out of hamburger. it's about making a burger. >> reporter: last year burger joint white castle tested out a veggie slider. customers liked it so much, they put it on a permit ewe in every city. >> i'm a carnivore but a veggie burger will always be good. >> reporter: but what if there's
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tasted like red meat. that was the idea behind the flavor burger. dr. pat brown a former researcher at stanford university is the ceo of impossible foods. how many years of thought does this burger represent? >> well, let's see. we've been around for five years. we have about 80 scientists and engineers, all of whom have been thinking about this. so, i guess that would be 400 person years of >> reporter: investors such as google ventures and bill gaelts have shelled out $182 million for plant-based meet alternative. >> there's millions of people around the world for whom meat is an essential part of the pleasure of life. but making it the way we're making it today takes an enormous to on natural resources and the environment. we can find a better way to make meat that meat lovers will still get all of that pleasure and
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environmental damage. >> it definitely has the right texture. it definitely has the right flavor. i wouldn't know it's fake meat. >> reporter: so far the impossible burger is only on the menu in new york. working to develop it for nationwide distribution. he thinks the other goals are less possible. do you think the veggie burger ever stands to replace the traditional burger? >> it's not going to replay the tradna the veggie burger has moved from something that is essentially tasteless to something that is awesome. >> reporter: impossible foods tells us they are already working on other alternatives for the chicken and the egg. before they can get it into grocery stores, they want to get it into more restaurants like this. as for the one new york city restaurant that already sells us, they tell us every day it's on the menu, it's sold out. dana, luckily for you guys, i
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make us hungry. before i saw that piece i had no desire anything that goes from tasteless to awesome and doesn't cost like dirt, i'm going to try it. >> thank you. police officers face many tough challenges but what about a stuck deer? how one officer's determination
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? sure are stuck, aren't you? >> this deer got stuck in a fence but a michigan police officer came to its rescue, as you can see on the body camera. gave it a strong push. and the animal took off. >> oh. >> all in a day's work. >> i love the cop saying, you
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>> that does it for us.,,,,
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good morning, everyone. it is 8:55. i'm britt moreno. thanks for joining us. we have breaking news out of denver. 1 person is dead after an industrial accident. that's what officials are calling it right now. the accident ha avenue. this is an aluminum plant called kbk coil coaters. police right now, they're on the scene investigating. we will continue to follow this story and have the very latest on cbs4 news at noon. we're tracking breaking news out of boulder county. copter 4 was over an accident not too long ago involving an rtd bus and a car. this happened at highway 52 and highway 287 and there, in the
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load that black car that's crushed there onto a tow truck. no one has been seriously injured. that's the good news. authorities tells us people invy have minor injuries. happening this morning, ex-illinois governor and current colorado federal prisoner inmate rod blagojevich will try to persuade a judge to cut her prison sentence. he was convicted for trying to sell obama's old senate seat and old corruption. the court vacated appeal's court panel found the 14-year sentence is appropriate. he's serving his sentence in littleton and will appear at the resentencing hearing by a closed circuit tv. we'll have more on cbs news at noon. today, the tuesday morning drive. let's see how it's shaping up. here's joel. >> it's getting better. we're watching from the cbs4-mile high
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looks like it's going to happen now. that's the icon. the other accident at i-225 in the northbound direction of arapahoe road -- as you get to t hey gary, what'd you got here? this bad boy is a mobile trading desk so that i can take my trading platform wherever i go. you know that thinkorswim seamlessly syncs across all your devices, right? oh, so my custom studies will go with me? anywhere you want to go! the market's hot! sync your platform on any device with thinkorswim.
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well, i got the mountain cam fired up for you. we're seeing a little cumulus cloud building over that area. that's where our thunderstorms will first come from today. so we have thunderstorms in the forecast. isolated storms only a 10% chance and it will be hot today. 94 degrees today. but a cool down by the time
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[cheers and applause] >> today on rachael ray. now saying yes, saying yes to the dress. the burger nut. >> rachael: good thing i'm over here and on drooling on the dresses. andb killed. announcer: now are you ready for rachael. >> rachael: okay. welcome this is britney. we have bubbly in our glasses. she is our bride to be. should this is day two of wedding in a week. cheers. so, we were just chatting her

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