tv CBS This Morning CBS October 21, 2015 7:00am-9:00am CDT
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good morning. it is wednesday, october 21st, 2015. welcome tocbs this morning." congressman paul ryan says he's willing to serve as house speaker, but on his own terms. we are on capitol hill with his demand. three students are accused of hacking their high school's computers and changing schedules. we will take you "back to the future" how accurately the film sequel produced history. we begin this moing with look at today's "eye oper." your world in 90 seconds. the first 'aassad left syria after war broke out four years ago. >> i made a few requests. >> paul ryan willing to serve as
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the unruly factions in the house republican caucus. >> somebody has to have this job. joe biden tells a n role of h role in the bin laden rage. >> biden was against the raid and clinn was for. >> i told him to go by his own instincts. >> a police officer shot in the line of due toy. >> dangerous wet weather is swping across the southwest. >> arizona woman is rcued after waters swept her car off the road. >> wednesday, october 21st, 2015! >> back to the future day. showing some of the prediions were spot-on like video conferencing. >> bizarre scene in indiana. this man dancing on h girlfriend's burning home. armed with a butcher knife. >> an incident from denver's international airport. he missed his flight and intent on getting on the plane any way and ramp onto the ramp. >> strike three and the game is over.
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city royals up three games to one! >> daniel murphy has homered for the fifth straight postseason game. 5-2 the final, mets. >> martin o'malley breaks out in song on the campaign trail. we got bad blood hey! >> on "cbs this morning." >> wolf blitzer and lincoln chafee. >> why are you doing so poorly in all of the polls. >> you'r'ra loser! >> you don't have any frfrnds! announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsod by toyota. let's go places. welcoco to "cbs this morning." the republican deadlock over the next speaker of the house could bebout to break. house ways and means committee chairman paul ryan now ss he is willing to do the job his
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way. senior gop lders have ued thee former vice presidential candidate to run. >> now his decision comes nearly a month after sperg johnaker john boehner said he is resigning. ryan on sunday's "face the nation" said conditions have to be metefore h runs. ncy cordes is on capitol hill with his lisof demands. gaens >> reporter: first and foremost, ryan says the house must -- or he won't run. turns the line on hardline conservatives who were hopingo exchange distrtions for the speaker' support. >> what i told the members is if you can agree to these questions and i can truly be a unifying figure, then i will gladly serve. >> reporter: ryan laid out his requests first for house republicans and then for the press starting for a call for the gop to start focusing on sotions.
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>> we need to move from an opopsition party to being a proposition party. >> reporter: then he said the house rule book must be changed. >> it needs to include fixes to ensure we do not experience constant leadership challenges and kriscrises. i cannott andill notot give up my family time. i may not be on the road as often as previous speakers but he pledge to make up for it with more time communicating o pledges. >> aer begging theheather of three to take the job. >> therere was overwhelming applause. i didn't see aone booing. >> reporter: one candidate in the speaker's race promptly dropped out. >> i'm out and in with paul. >> reporter: ryan's unusual approach is a reflectionn o of his strong leverage as a conservative who has cut deals with democrats he is seen as one the only people who can unite s fractured party after
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john boehner and doom his replacement kevin mccarthy. >> my greatest worry is the consequence of not spping up. on sunday having my own kids ask me when the stakes were so high, why didn't'tou do allll you c cld do? why didn't you stand and fight for my future when you had a chance to do so? >> reporter: ryan says ifhe entire party doesn't get behind him by fridaye will happily stay in the job he has. it putshe hardliners in a situation where they will get blamededf he backs out.
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something tells us, major, this will come up. good morning to you. >> reporter: good morning. the joe biden presidential watch is a full-blown distraction for this white house which finds itselflf in a position to referee a public debate who is more important to the president? a vice president or a former secretary of state. the joe biden presidential tease was on disy. >> i have now traveled on a million miles as vice president. >> reporter: at a dinne honoring walter mondale, a demomoatic vice president who lost the run for president shi. the optics appear lost on biden generating a debate how important he was to the president. one example? travel overseas. >> john kerry is a great secretary of state.
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but there are times when only the vice president, if it's known of his relationship with the president, can speak for the united states when the president can't be there. >> repepter: biden attempt to diminish kerry and clinton surprised some in the white house as did his revisionist history on privately advocating that president obama boofapprove to capture orl osama bin laden. >> i told him my opinion but to follow his own instincts. mr. president, my suggestion is dodot gogo we have to do two more things-to-to see if he is there. he walked out and said i'll give you my decision. >> reporter: it appears that hillarclinton hillary clinton appeared indecisive though portrayed herself lly on board in "hard choices." and than this recent appearance in south carolina. >> i was the one who recommended
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ahead and his advisers were split. >> reporter: the wte house refused to play fact checker. >> this is not the first time that a significant political event has proroted different recollections of people who participated in it. >> reporter: at that same briefing, earnest described candidate as a candidate but backtracked and said those who mir biden's servivi but are becomeing tongue-tied' a bit fatigued over the vice presidens decision making process. >> john heilemann of bloomberg politics is joining us. >> tongue-tied andnd just feat of fatigue, that describes me. on the subject of the new york mets which i could talk pretty much all day long. >> we will get to that later. >> okay, good. >> biden. does this controversy play into the decision making process or could itit >> west look. doubt that joe biden and hillary clinton ha spent now the last week basically, shadow
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debate and starting to talk about president obama, how close she was to him and yesterday she rolled out 50 african-american endorsements and a lot of them in south carolina and basically saying you stay out of this race and biden says if i want in this race i'll be in the race. i think the argument is making now is deeply personal and it's not about her or about the debate or anything or the benghazi committee tomorrow. it's gut-check time. >> i'm wondering if he is looking for a reason to go or not to go. >> i tnk he is looking for reasons to go anan not to go. peopop told m m the last few days he changes his mind on a daily basis about what hwants to do. i have given up the prediction game when it comes to joe biden. i think if he is in in we will see him at iowa this weekend with the rt of the democratic candidates at a dinner. >> he says one thing publicly and when he is speaking to the
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could they both be true? >> i know -- on the basisf the reporting that i'v done, contemporaneously with this but a couple of years ago people around biden said he would, often in meetings, adopt stances that were not his stance in order to try to tease out disagreements in the room and in order to try to serve as the -- doing a service to the president so that he didn't seem as though -- he was not clear about what he would do. he would go off privately later and express his view. what none of us know is wha he said to barack obama in private after that meeting. that is a matter that will never bebenown except byy those two guys. >> any indation at paul ryan won't get the entire backing of the party by friday? >> paul ryan is playing this so smart, the idea of best negotiation you ever get into e one you are willing to walk away. he does not want thisob which
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i'm looking at the drijudge report. there are is somicicion that the pepele on the right don'n'want him. >> cbs will host a democratic presidenal debate on november 14th, 9:00 p.m., 8:00 central on cbs. embattled syrian president assad made a brief visit in russia and met with president putin. mark phillips is in london with more. >> reporte good moing. well, it was bashar al assad's 23irs knono triri out of syria since the war broke out four years ago and kept secret and not announced until iwas over and a sign of who is running the show on the government'side of the syrian conflict.t. thth was more than a courtesy call. was a thanks for everything and i mean everything call. with vladimir putin's jets effectively becoming assad's air
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leader smiled le he hasn't smiled in years. the russian air campaign's announced intent is to attack isis. but the attacks have largely been outside isis-controlled territories and against other anti-assad forces. soso of them support by the u.s. and the west. the attacks have served to shore up the crumbling syrian regigi. they held e syrians for standing up to the military almost on eir own. they never have been on their own, assad has been supported by the iranians an allies from leban and the introduction o of russian n t bombers with dubious intent may prolong t war, rather than bring it cser to an end. of course, it brings russian planes into air space the u.s. has been ung in its anti-isis
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campaign. a new u.s./russisi memandum september secret on the demand of the russians have been agreed to certain protocols to keep the russian and u.s. plan apart but washington does not constitute u.s. cooperation or suppororfor ssian's military activities in syria. >> our reporters reached out to e white house to see if the united states had any intelligence about assad's trip to moscow but officials declined to comment on whether it was a surpriser whether its strategic importance might be. the vatican is denying a report that pope francis has a small brain tumor. a sry today in a italian newspaper said t pope saw a ain specialist. the report trying to determine if a dark spot on francis' brain could be performed without surgery. the vatican calls it totally unfounded and seriously
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mourning one of its own killed in the line of duty. randolph holder was shot tuesday night in pursuing a suspect in east harlem neighbor. e suspect was caught several blocks away with gunshot wounds to his leg. holder was a third generation police officer and his father comforted officers at the hospital. the commissioner says holder is the urth officer murdered in the city the l lt 11 nths. >> our condolences to his family. police say a black man shot and killed by an officer was hit. the gun was found at the scene of sunday's shooting and say the gun was purchased legly by the well-known music circumstances. >> reporter: good morning. policeere say notnly did jones own that handgun but recos show he bought it three e
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days before he was killed. what t same police have not said is how many times the officer fired atones or whether jones fired at the officer at all. palm beach gardens police officer on duty in plain clothes and unmarkedolice car told investigators he was confronted by an armed corey jones. >> the handgun was found on the ground outside the vehle. mr. jones purchased the handgun three days before the offffer involved shooting. >> reporter: jones played drums at the bible church of god in boynton beach which banks sd his grandson had no criminal history. >> he just going to -- he was a lovely gra child. the thing that happened to him, i can't explain it or cannot understand. >> reporter: the officer had a clean record after six months at the palm beach gardens police department. he also served on the atlanta's
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in 2013 he received a written reprimand for repeatedly mishandling evidence and paper work and was called derelict in his duty for carelessandling of the documented cases. jones a well-known musician in the boynton area was driving home from a job early sunday when his car broke down on a i-95 exitramp. he called huntsburger who went to the scene and he called roadside assistance r jones and went ho. >> hsaid thank you for helping me out. >> reporter: maurice played with him in the regggg band. >> he taught me about understanding and patience and he was a teacher of those virtues. >> reporter: okay, so the debate here again now is over a body camera. the officer involved was not wearing one. the debate is whether he shou and the unrked polol car that he w w driving also had no dashboard camera.
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a major shift this morning in screening for breast cancer. for the first time in more than a decade the american cancer sosoety is recommending that most people wait untilwomen wait until 45 to get an annual mammogram and. >> good morning. >> good morning. >> reporter: so o ad you're here. i think >> reporter: i'm 41 and not had a mammram. should i still get one? >> absolutely you should. the guidelines are very clear that we should start screening mammograms at age 40 because there is an absolutely clear-cut reduced risk of dying from breast cancer beginningt that age and those recommendations should not change. >> reporter: what is the american cancer society doing? >> it's a fair amount of eaking out of both sides of the mouth. on the one hand, they want t reduce what they call harms related biopsies, which are unnecessary biopsies, fearing anxiety. on the other hand, they say that
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they stick with their mission to save lives and is there only one way to do thatnd thais to continue withearlymammograms. >> i read every line of this. theylso recommend against manual exams by your doctor. >> exactly. >> which i've always had in every single one of my visits. >> agreed. my question is how -- if they e saying going to mammograms every two years and not examining yourself, how are the cancers goinggo be found? we will find them at the size of golf balls which is a huge step backrom where we have have been. >> why is screening less a good thing? >> it's not a good thing, gayle. it's done with two goals. number one, cutting costs. i think they should be focusing their efforts elsewhere. mammograms are a tt to clearly show the reduce of dying from breast cancer. thiss not ononplace wshould be cutting back. >> to bebe clear,nsurance does cover all mammograms ery cost starting at age 40? >> it does but, of course, these
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this mning, a colorado man is apologizing for his movie-like scene trying to catch a flight by sprinting down the tarmac in denver. in august, mark raymar pushed en a security door and bolted for the united jet and destined to get to hisigh school reunion. instead he got a night in jail and probation and community service. the judge said he seemed like a good guy but screwed up to save one glorious incident. happened to mark? he really wanted to be here. >> i think maybe an old girlfriend he really wanted to see! >> good for him. >> be careful! >> be careful. >> high school reunions, they are fun! coming up in this half hour, he survived one scandal but could louisville coach rick pitino see his career come to an end? claims of striers and escorts
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hired for parties. three accused of hacking school computers. is time to show you this morning's headlines. seattle time reports on amazon boosting holiday hiring. the move reflects americans changing shopping habits. the online retailer plans to add 100,000 workers. that is a 25% increase from last year. amazon will hire those jobs that it hoped will be fulfillment and sorting centers. holiday jobs are shifting to warehouse as more people shop online. the "los angeles times" reports on tesla stock pulling after "consumer reports" pulled its recommendation for the s car. the news sent tesla motors stock down 6.5% yesterday. "wall street journal" says the u.s. prosecutor in southern neyork is investigating the fantasy sports business.
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shut down the u.s. online poker industry four years ago. now he is investigating whether the daily sports fantasy firms are violating federal gambling statutes. fandual and ds fanduel and draftkings declined to report on this incident. a 4-year-old was shot in a car driving on interstate 40 and her parents were also inside the vehicle but not hurt. police say a car pulled along the family's car and someone started shooting. it is still not clear why. the highway was closed for several hours. the st. louis post dispatch says police stepped up patrols after a wave of possible arson attacks on churches. they happened in african-american neighborhoods. six fires were set over the last two weeks. all of the churches are within five miles of each other and
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adrienne diaz is inside one of thot churches those churches in st. louis. >> reporter: this church is one of the hardest hit. flames tore through this entire entrance. the pastor here told us the arsonist likely squirted chemicals through this mail slot so the fire would spread faster. >> we are called today t address what is possibly the most dangerous onslaught that we have experience in many years which is an attk on god's house. >> reporter: with a suspected arsonist still at large, church leaders in and around st. louis urged community members to remain vigilant. >> call the authorities if you see anything that doesn't look right. >> reporter: since october 8th, six churches in predomintly black neighborhoods have been set on fire. the new life baptist church was so badly damaged, it held services outside on sunday. authorities don't know who
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they believe the crimes are connected. in each case, an accelerant was used to light the churches on fire. the buildings were all unoccupied at the time of the attacks. >> there is a very alarming pattern to these fires and we don't t nt them to getet out of hand. >> reporter: the churches are not far from ferguson, missouri. an area sll reeling from riots that erupted following the shooting death of 18-year-old michael brown by a white police officer. authorities believe whoever i behind the fires may bsomeone struggling with stress and trying to send a message. but community leaders he their own response. >> this is not over. it's just the beginning. and we want the city to know that the churches, the pastorsrs thth christians are coming together to stand as one. if you burn one, you are burning all of us. >> reporter: to make matters worse, this building has no insurance. bubualrey several organizations have offered to rebuild. later today at another church,
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community membersill gather to show strength in the face of these attacks. >> thanks. louisville basketball coach rick pitino this morning faces ugh questions. a former staff member is accused of proroding strippers and escorts for players and recruits and this may have been happened at -campus party and more over four years. >> reporter: good morning. in a recently published boooo self-describ escort katina powell says she was paid 10,000 from010 to 2013 to bring women to the party. recruits have confirmed attending these parties. the university is conducting its own review to find out what went on and who knew about it. on the basketball court, the university of louisvivie cardinals are a a offensive powerhouse, reaching the final
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four three times under legendary head coach rick pitino, but new allegations over wild player recruitment parties have the coachi staff playing defenen. in a new book, katina powell describes parties in the student athlete dorm on campus. she says former director of basketball operationses andre mcgee paid her to provide strippers whoould also have x with players and recruitits for money. she sat down with espn's "outside the lines." >> andre would come to me and tell me what recruit the girl wanted. i would tell the girl and she had set his price and i would tell her and he said okay a a he and the recruit would do what they do behind closed doors. >> reporter: pitin denies any knowledge of the misconduct and asking mcgee to set the record straight. >> i can't say what is true and not what is not true. to s s i'm his heartened and disappointed would be probably the biggest understatement i've
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made since i've been a xoch. >> reporr: mcgee who also played for pitino no longer works for the school. his southern scott cox cases he is fully cooperating with the investigation. >> i can tell you all of the evidence we have looked at supports his version of events which is that he never paid her or anyone else to have sex with a player or a recruit. >> reporter: but powell says she s text messages, journal entries, phonene recocos, andire transfer receipts to back up her claims. she says she asked mcgee if piti was aware. i said, does pitino know about this? he said, he is rick. he knows about everything. >> reporter: this is the second sex scandal pitino has faced during his time as head coach. six years ago, he admitted to having an affair and later paying for the woman's abortion. >> you can't survive what he surviviv in coaching and hope to survive another scandal. you can't do it. >> reporter: in a statement to
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"cbs this morning," the university of louisville say it is withholding comment on any details until the reviews concluded. katina powell's attorney said he met with the university general council yesterday and said it's clear the schchl is cooperating. >> you get an impressive-- >>obody is escaping the excrete knee not even pitino. >> the university is doing an investigation itself? >> yes. the university of michigan punter who costt h team a game says he'll do better next time. blake o'neill fumbled the snap in the final seconds on saturday leading to michigan state's game winning touchdown. he spoke to porters yesterday for the first time since the game. >> i just went into as any other kick and throw it as quickly as i can. obviously, that wasn't but in
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football you make errors and you move on. obvivisly, i'd like toake it back, if i could, but that's football. you live and die by your actions on the field. >> o'neill received death threats after the loss but he says michigan fans have given him a loloof support. ii say bravo he is talking. i made a mistake and i will do better next time. they are accused of changing grades and schedules for classmates. three teens face psible prison time for bold perspirecyberattacks. if you're heading out, set your dvr so you can watch "cbs this morning" any time. abcasy as 1-2-3 >> first lady michelle obama had buying stars.
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>> for taylor swift. >> taylor is my girl.. because babab now we got bad blood you know it used to be bad blood so tak a look at what you've done maybe we got bad blood hey >> martin oalaly covering taylor swift and they say martin o'malley is not that interesting. look that. >> i think it shows he has a sense of humor. politicians are just like us and he likes taylor swift clearly. >> and you do too. >> i do. you do too, n nah a charlie. >> i do. we turn to three new york teenagers who face criminal charges over an alleged cyberattack on their school. the students are accused of hacking into schl district computeses on a long island hig school east of new york city. annanaerner is here with the alleged plot to change grades and students schedules. anna, good morning. >> reporter: good morning, charlie. the initial attack was three months ago and it led investigators to the house of the teen they call the
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it's a story that seems fitor a hollywood screen play but it's no joke that three 17-year-old students are facing seriously time in prison. walking out of a long island courtroom tuesday, 17-year-old daniel sores. police say he was the ringleader behind the brazen cyber attack. his alleged accomplices cered their faces as they were released on their own recognizance. the threteens are accusese of hacking into their school's computers and changing students' grades and schedules. >> at this point, we believe daniel changed at least four of his own grades and one of eric's grade. on his own grade i belie changed from 94o a perfefe score of a hundred. >> reporter: police say soars bre into school after hours and installed a device known as a key log to a school computer. enabled him to collect log-ins and password credentials while operating remotely from his own.
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can put on a computer and interfaces with the keyboardnd it records every strokef the keyboard. >> reporter: school officials call police in july after realizing the class schedules of about00 studedes had been changed without authorization and their investigation led them to soars. >> we are waitinging for a null investigation to be done and he is maintaining his incidence. >> what are you doing? >> dialing into the school's eminiscent of "war games." but this case has serious repercussions repercussions. the three are facing up to four years in prison and, if convicted, soarsrsould see upo 11 years. all three students are facing computer tampering charges. soars is also facing counts of burglary and identoty theft. now in a statement, the comack hool district is reviewing its network security protocolses to prevent something like this happening again.
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do you see him? >> i can't tell what is happening but i'm sure he is okay. check your calendar. today is the day. "back to the future i1 ii saw it coming or did itit including g e cubslaying in the world series. you're watching "cbs this morning."can be like to have shingles. oh, man. a painful, blistering rash. if you had chickenpox, the shingles virus is alrea inside you. 1 in 3 people will get ingles in their lifetime. after almost 3 weeks, i just really wanted toive it a shot. you know, i'm not feeling it today. talk to your doctor or pharmacist today about a vaccine that can help prevent shingles. hi, tom. hey, how's the college visit? you remembered. it's good. does it make the short list? you remembered that too. yea, i'm afraid so. knowing our clients personally is what we do. it's okay.
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it is it is wednesday, october 21st, 2015. welcome back to "cbs this morning." more real news ahead, including the riplan for open enrollment. jill schlesinger is in studio 57 to help you prepare for medical costs and retirement. first, here's a look at today's "eye opener" at 8:00. >> ryan says that all the different wings of the house republican conference must endorse him or he won't run. >> this white house finds itself in the aggravating position of having to referee a public debate over who was more important to president obama. >> there's no doubt that joe biden and hillary clinton have spent the last week shadow boxing. she's basically saying you stay out of this race. >> it was bashar al assad's first known trip out of syria since war broke out four years ago. it's alsonother sign of who's running th show on the government side of the syrian conflict. >> the police have not said how
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jones or whether jones fired at the officer at all. >> the pastor he told us the arsonist likely squirted chemicals rough this mail slot so that the f fe would spreaea faster. >> a colorado manried t catch a flight by sprinting down the tarmac in denver,esperate to get to his high school reunion. hey, did you hear what happened to mark? >> i heard you were supposed to be on jimmy mmel tonight. >> i t td him i have this event, i can't skip it. >> he did want me to relay the message to you that if he had been here, he would have been great. this morning's "eye opener" at 8:00 is presented by liberty tual insurance. i'm charlie rose with gayle king and norah o'donnell. four weeks of house republican turmoil may be close to an end. gop leaders wanted paul ryan to take over as speaker of thee house. the former vice presidential candidate resisted at first, but
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but only if h conditions are met. all the republican factis unite behind him. >> that includes conservatives who helped push out john boehner and derailed kevin mccarthy's bid for speaker. after meeting with members last night ryan said the country is on the wrong path and it's time to work together. >> the peoe we serve, they do not feel thatt we are delivering on the job that they hired us to do. we have become the problem. if my colleagues entrust me to be the speaker, i want us to become the solution. >> ryan also said he would not give up time with his family if hehe becomes speaker. >> i think that's important to hear him say that. >> that says a lot. that's a very good statement. >> totally agree with that. vice president joe biden is promoting himselis morning as he decides whether to ask voters for a whiteouse promotion. biden said that hillary clinton and john kerry were great secretaries of state but sometimes only the vice president can speak for the president. he also told a different story
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of how he supported the raid on osama bin laden's deout. biden said three years ago that he suggested waiting for more confirmation. but he said on tuesday that he told president obama to go forward with the raid. >> even republican candidates want to know if joe biden will run for president. we spoke with new jersey governor chris christie and his wife, mary pat, at their home this week. christie and biden are friends. wesked the governor if he expects joe biden to get in. >> we've known the vice president for a long time. he's been at our tailgates at football games. we have pictures of him holding 2-year-old sara who's now 19 years old. that's how long we've known the vice president, so i know he's always wanted to be president. he's spoken about it, he's run twice before. so in one sense for a guy that's always wanted to be president, now that he's one step away from it, it's hard for me to imagine him not doing it. on the other hand, as a father,
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and i know that beau was where all his hopes and dreams for the future resided. and i just don't know as a father having lost that son that he is ready emotionally to do it. >> that's what everybody seems to say. he says as someone who knows the bidens very well, their kids know each other, the families have worked together before. he said i honestly don't know. >> looks like a good interview. >> yeah. there's more to come. there's more to come. we turnow to foreign affairs. syrian president bashar al assad is back home after a surprise visit to moscow. he met with russian president vladimir putin. he thanked putin for the military help in the civil war. this was his fir known trip outside syria since 2011. e united states accuses russia of propping up the syrian regime. russia says it is going after isis and other terrorists but many targets are outside isis territory.
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some of the groups are supported by the united states. prince william and dutchess kate appeared tuesday at her first british state banquet. the dinneronored chinese president xi jinping. the dutchess sat next to the president in the most prominent place after the queen. there was a lot of speculation that kate would wear this spencer tiara that the late princess diana wore at her dding. instead she wore the lotus flower tiara. >> i think it's only the third time he's worn a tiara. >> he's very good in her role, is she not? >> i think so too and she looks great in everything she does. another home run for kate. the rising cost of health care is just one reason why it's crucial to take advantage of
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another day, and i'm still struggling with my diabetes. i do my best to manage. but it's hard to keep up with it. your body and your diabetes change over time. your treatment plan may too. know your options. once-daily toujeo is a long-acting insulin from the makers of lantus . iteleases slowly to provide consistent insulin levels for a full 24 hours. toujeo also provides proven full 24-hour blood sugar control and significant a1c reduction. toujeo is a long-acting, man-made insulin used to control high blood sugar in adults with diabetes. it contains 3 times as much insulin in 1 milliliter as standard insulin. don't use toujeo to treat diabetic ketoacidosis, during episodes of low blood sugar, or if you're allergic to insulin.
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don't reuse needs or share insulin pens, even if the needle has been changed. the most common side effect is low blood sugar, which can be serious and life threaning. it may cause shaking, sweati, fast heartbeatat and blurred visisi. check your blolo sugar levels daily while using toujeo . injection site reactions may occur. don't change your dose or type of insulin without talking to your doctor. tell your doctor if yo take other medicines and about all your medical conditions. insulins, including toujeo , inombinatiti wh tzds (thiazolidinediones) may cause serious side effects like heart failure that can lead to death, even if you've never had heart failure before. don't dilute or mix toujeo with other insulins or solutions as it may not work as intended and you may lose blood sugar control, whiciccould be serious.
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health care costs are rising, with the average family of four spendingore than10,000 on dical exexnses. plus, nearly 40 million american families are saving virtually nothing for retirement. in this morning's "eye on money" ji schlesinger looks at how to take charge of that. jill, good morning. >> good morning. >> we're in enrollment time. how does someone decide if they should keep his or her health plan. >> it requires a little work. you want tlook back and see what you spent last year on health care and project what's going to happen this year. soou ask yourself some questions. wawai diagnoseded with somomhing that's different? do i need to go to a new doctor? would that change whether i should be in an hmo, a health maintenance ornization or a ppo. with an hmo you have one doctor that controls where you go next. ppo gives you more flexibility but it's usually more expensive. but again, these costs are rising.
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look at your life and what's best for you. >> i always just check, check, chchk, chchk, whahaver i did the year before. that's not very smart. >> a that's usually what most people do. >> tt's what most people do. >> and it's the path of least resistance, right? what's really important here is that there ways to s se se monene we'v'vgot a lot of large employers that are introduceing new plans, high deductible plans. you've got a big deductible but you pay less in premiums. they pair that with a health savings account that allows y to p p money pretax away. this can be a great option if you're young, healthy and want to limit the amount of money you're paying. but we've also got flexible spending accounts where you can put $2500 away pretax. people are not using thesese w ws to save money. >> i think you just go see oprah and do what she does. >> it seems to have worked with her. that flex spending is totally confusing to me.
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much should we be putting in that? i pay atteteion to that. most people say i put up upon whatever my company matche but interesting trend now in corporate america. many companies are saying we're aumatically enrolling our employees at a 10% te. and in order to aually get less than n 10%, you have to opt out. this is a great thing, if you can afford it. many people can't afford it, but the premise here is if we get you doing it and it's automatic, then you won't opt out, you'll just keep doing it. we love 10%. remember, $18,8,0 is the limimi this year. if you're over 50, you can make a catch- contribution of $6,000. i know that's hard for many people but let's try to get as much into your retirement plan as possible. >> really good information. >> asalways, jill schlesesger. working with the voya team again. first on "cbs this morning," how a genetic testing pioneer is trying to put two years of
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she is in studio 57 with a b b announcement. dna do-over next on "cbs this morning" with ann. hello, ann! she said hi. announcer: this portion of "cbs this mng" sp this morng's "eye on money" sponsored by ya, changing the way you think aut retirement. we love, love, chocolaty, creamy, with a little something extra. mmm deliciousness. cookiess
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two years ago, the company and me was used to personalized personalized personalized genetic medicine. to help you reduce your risks om heaeart disease a a breast cancerer the fda sent a letteter haltltg the sales and stotop giving custstomers a health analyst. the fed said this. they said 23 and me wone. the agency was concerned about the consequences of inaccurate results. first onment "cbs this morning" the ceo and cofounder is back. good morning, ann. >> good morning. >> good to have you here. >> thanks for having me. >> you were smiling but the fda was very tough on the company. >> yeah. yoknow, we got a warning letter. we were on the market for about seven years and we have been
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but it was part of what, i think, we have learned is there a way of communicating a a we werereobviously, communicating incorrectly. we are super excited we have gone the whole process and now we are the only company back on th marke with a dirt to the consumer genetices product. they can learn about the health and now actually without a physician, without a genetic counser and saliva test at home. >> what is different this time than the last time? >> the entire experiencee is different. what we did is take the last seven years what we learned from all of our customers and completely redesigned the process and incorporating more features about family andot moreeatures for ancestry and more l lited at this moment t th healththare information so we are returning back all of the carrier information, things like cystic fibrosis reports and other things you can potentially
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pass down to children, as well as traits and wellness. >> you previously were restricted from these new tests thgs like cancer or heart disease. what are other things you can't test for now because oth fda restrictions? >> some of the genetic risk factors, breastcancer, differentypes of diseases you might get and drug sponse. but those are all thingsshat we are working with the fda to see can we eventually bring that back to the consumer. >> their concern was what? people wouldn't know how to read the information? if you got back previously and you did this yououelf you have 60% likelihood of getting breast cancer ty were worried people couldn't process that information themselves? >> they want u.s. to do the standard testi and comprehensive wo. we have seen with our new signed reports we haha over 90% user comprehension. any education level, whether they got this as a gift or
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and we are seeing over 90% comprehension of this relatively complicated information. >> why is the cutting edge we might expect to be the next five years? >> my hope is e day you walk into your doctor and they say, charlie, based on all of the data we have from your fitbit, all of the other information you have based on your genome and family history, this is what you're at risk for and they have a high confidence of that risk. that you could potentiallyo ings to really actually have a better outcome. >> i don't understand why you can't do that now. >> well, parar of itt there is not a lot of data and that is one of the missions of 23 and me is that we are enabling the consumers to all come tother on this research mission. we have over a million people have done 23 and me. we asked our customers toill out information about themselves so might be left-handed, right-handed right-handed, prostate cancer, heart disease. >> lifelifestyle?
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>> lifestyle. >> so the information is based on building a database is the critical factor? >> right. >> we know sharing information, all of this stuff is good. the more we have the more we can protect our health. >> but on the flip side are the privacy concerns. recent reports that law enforcrcent could requesthese dna information from 23 and me. what are you saying about how to protect peop's privacy on this information? >> one of the reasons why we set this up as a direct to consumer company instead of going through your insurance company we believe this iss sensitive information and you should own it. if you're paying for it you own it and you control who you're sharing witht, who you're sharing your genetic information with. we enable you to share but it's entirely within your control. there is protections in place like the geneticicnformation nondiscrimination act where your information, your genetic information cannot be used to discriminate against you by employers or insurance companies. 23 and me as a company we do
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your privacy. and we said under subpoenas we would dohatever we can to fight those and you have to imply with basic law enforcement. >> have u received request from law enforcement for people's dna? >> we have never hand the defendant over. in our privacy policy we say for some reason we had to we would notify the individual, assuming it doesn't interfere with -- >> 23 and me is owned by ogle. what about thearger concern that google will controlol the dna of tenen of thousands, millions of people? >> google is a shareholder. they are a very small shareholder compared to everybody else we have there. what they have been helpful with you can think about things lik big data and how you analyze. to charlie's question how do we give predictions? i'm kevin barryit's eight-25 on this tuesday morning. your top stories are coming up in just a moment...but rig now - - marissa has a look at what's happening outside --
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one person is dead a aer officers exchahaed gunfire with a suspect in cedar rapids.the police department says it was all apart of an ongoing drug investigation. investigation.police officers pulled over three suspects along the 3200 hundred block of ravenwood terrace northwest. when the hicle stopopd -- one suspect got out and ran -- two officiers and a k-9 unit chased him.policeay the suspect sh at officers when they were trying to arrest him. they shot back -- hitting and killing the suspect.right now -- e identities of the officers and the man n ey killed are not being released. just yesterday -- city leaders
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served on a panel at jefferson high school -- meeting with students on how they can take action to make the community safer. safer.cedar rapids police chief wayne jerman was there along with mayor ron corbett and and an f-i special agent. they answered questions from 180 freshman students about guns and gun violence.students were told to speak up if they see anything -- panelists and school officials hope the discussion continues even online -- with the hastag gun- pledge c-r. a number of people in center point are aremissing items th left in their cars.the linn coty sheriff's office tells cbs 2 news items were stolen from nine unlocked vehicles.in one case -- a rifle and ammo were stolen.most cars were ststen. most cars were just missing change or small items. police believe they quick solved case of arson in cedar rapids.the department tells cbs 2 news, a witness saw 52-year-old richard alatato brbrking into a vacant house on 'j' street southwest
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monday afternoon.that witness called police who then arrested alatalo when he came out the back door. investigators say they later discovered a small fire inside a bedroom in the home.the suspect faces arson and burglary charges. in waterloo, authorities are trying to figure out what sparked a fire on linden avenue at about 4-15 yesterday morning. morning.while investigating they found the body of 64- year-old rebecca lavenz.crews s say ththfire was minor, but ere was heavy smoke damage. an autsy is scheduled, but investigators say her death does not appear to be suspicious. don't forget -- cbs 2 connects with you - call cbs 2 if y see news happen.800 222 kgan. you can also email tips, ctures, and even video --to
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has to break bad. that is ahead. "wall strtrt journal" reports on the gender pay gap wideng. they increased more than 2% from a year ago. women earne 721 up only 0.8 of a percent t d marks the third straight corner that male earnings doubled t rate for women. boo-hoo. >> yes. double hits. >> triple. > charlie, you're quick! at was good! "the dallas morning news" has an update on the texas teenager arrested after bringin a homemade clock to school that a teacher thought was bomb. ahmed mohamed and his family are moving to qatar. he willeoining a prestigious
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young innovator's program in qatar. >> business insider reports on 23-year-old google e eineer who lives in a truck inn the compans parking lot and saves 90% of his income. he says 128 square-foot truck is better than an expensive apartment that he would hardly ever see. all he really needed was a place to sleep. company perks provide all of the other essentials. i wonder how his dating life is? want to come see me in my truck? it's in a parking lot. >> he said, look, i can save up. >> it's by the shore. >> he can save up for an apartment rather than sort of spending it on rent. >> you couldldee that?
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>> he is300 million copies. nine game movovs starring hollywood's biggest names. >> i went with a firm across the river and met ts democrat. >> memphis? >> hey ray, wouldn't it be funny if i wento hararrd and youou went to jail and we were surrounded by crooks? >> why do yowant a lawyer? >> i don't want a lawyer. i hate lawys! every lawyer i had disgusted me and my mom. i said i need a lawyer! >> wt to talk about the brief? >> everyone i've told about the brief is dead. >> i'll take my chances. >> i set out for my client t receive a fair trial in the soutthatate are all equal in the eyes of the law. that not the truth. >> i believe a lawyer should fight for hi client and refrain from stealing money and try not to lie. you know, the basics! >> whoever they vote for will be
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following me. just likeen cincinnati and oakland and pittsburgh. gentlemen, trials are t important to be left up to juries. >> john grisham is analyzing juries again with "rogue lawyer." an interview you're seeing first on "cbs this morning." good morning. >> good morning. nice to be here. >> tell us who this rogue lawyer is. sebastian? >> his name is sebastian rudd. a radical rogue lawyer who does not have an office, does not ha a secretary, he carries a gun. his office is a bullet-proof van driven by his only friend and bodyguard and palegal and confidant a guy he got off the murder rap. that is he how practices law. >> takes cases nobody else will take? >> yeah. he's at war with the police and the prosecutors and the government and big corporations and politicians and he's just a
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lone gunman. >> a lot of people are out to get him. they said that the title of the book "rogue lawyer." you said at one point youanted to be a rogue lawyer. i didn't believe that about you. i practiced law ten years and i admired the police headquarters who were afraid to take unpopular cases and i didn't have the guts to do that. i was trying to make a living. i never volunteered for a really tough case and some i should have taken and i admire the lawyers who did. >> you say our prisons are with drugs. who is winning the war? we have lost our minds. that's not just fiction. >> it's true. it touches on another issue i'd like to explore in another book and that is theass incarceration, the harsh sentences that we hand out. front page of "the new york times" today, you know, police and prosecutors are questioning the sentences we have passing out and the drive to put everybody in jail. >> koch brothers and white
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house. >> as our prison population ages we realize how expensive this stuff is and people in there 20 to 30 years for nonviolent evens offenses and shouldn't be in there. a conversation for a different time. it's an epidemic. >> number one, i could see the book as a movie. we should talk about your books and movies. sebastian rudd takes the cases he knows are not good and you think those people deserve representation. >> it's tough to take that position, gayle. in our system, i don't care what the crime is. we all pay lip service to the idea that everybody is entitled to a fair trial and that means a good lawyer. the good lawyers have to come from somewhere. it's up to people like sebastian to represent those people. >> what are his values? >> i was going to say, not very likeable. >> he is not worried about morals or values.
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his job so well if he thinks the cops and prosecutors are cheating he is going to cheat. if they legit mize cheating that makes the book fun. >> i can't think of any other author i've read with incredible books. >> who is the other one? >> british author >> female. >> but in the movies we just showed, all of the movies that you haveade with these books are all -- they are blockbusters. fabulous movies. great iconic mies but there hasn't been a movie with one of your books in ten years. why? >> why is a great question. studio system is so broken and different than it used to be. used i would write a book and sell it to hollywood, they will start the movie before the book came out. everybody made money. they were b movies a still talking about them. >> netflix we have now and hbo and a lot of places you can get od stuff. >> it's all good stuff.
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i think rogue would be a better tv series. >> because it's an interesting character? >> i hope it's the first of a series of stories, books about this guy. a lot of stories he has to tell and i want to tell through him and explore other issues, things we have talked about, in books to come. but there is a lot of adventures and a lot of episodes with this guy. and i think he's very colorful. >> is he any way like the lawyer from "breaking bad." ." and a television series? >> i started writing this series when i watched "breaking bad." >> better call sal. >> i said better call sal, i told m wife, why didn't i think of that? >> do you think crlie could call les moonves? >> we talk to less all the time. >> you already know les? >> i know les. cbs did a series years ago so we know les. >> thank you, john. >>y pleasure. >> great to have you here.
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to be. if you work hard, and you do your part, you shou be able to get ahead and stay ahead. but the republicans... they want to gooback to letting the super wealthy call the shots. they don't stand up for equal pay for women. they don't support paid family leave. they don't even really support refinancing student debt. we've got to get this economy working for the vast majority of americans, not just for those atathe top. that's what i intend to do as president.
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today is a very important day in cinematic history. if you're a ban of "back to the future" movies you know why. 30 years o, the trilg tha gave us marty cfly and doc brn and the delorean time mache began. today, vladimi duthiers is here's with a time sense of exploration of dreams and reality. vlvl, good morning to you. >> good morning. >> reporter: in the original "back to the future" marty doc leave 1985 and travel three decades back to 1955. in the sequel they go 30 years in future to october 21st, 2015. that is today. so what did they get right and what predictions didn't materialize? we dided to take a look. >> hi. what is goin on? >> where are we? >> when are we? >> we are heading toward hill valley, california, at 4:29 p.m. on wednesday, october 21st,
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2015! >> 2015? you mean we're in the future? >> when marty mcfly arrived in 2015 aboard doc brown's delorean titi machine, he had no idea what to expect. later today, the past prediction for the future will finally become the present. >> reporter: here in cinematic 2015 where flying cars are clogging up e skyways. in the real 2015, it's about self-driving cars. screen writer bob gale hadad a clclr vision for the future. inside this clock talkerower, he wanted 2015 to be recognizle. >> we knew going in, nobody ever successfully predicts the future accurately. can't be done. weweant the future to be optimistic future. we want people to say, hey, i want that future and i'd like to
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>> hey, hey, hey! doc! lile girl, little girl. doc, look! i need building. >> hover board. >> a long skateboard. each fing their own personalized board. >> welcome to the cafes where it's always morningn america. >eporter: visual effectsrt director john bell designed many of the movie's futuristic elements, including hoverboards and nostalgic cafe 80. >> i'll take something 85% familiar. could be a shape, could be a color, could be a pattern. if i'm projecting the future, throw something a little 15% twist. [ screaming ] >> reporter: today, companies are still testing how to make a reliable working hover board for the general public. on the real streets of 2015, though, toy like this swagway
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are the closest we have gotten to glidi around. >> there is a lot of predictions we made. maybe that will come true. that has a good chance. hover boards, no. we never thought. the fact theyay life imitates art. kids likee youaw back to the future part 2 in the day and say if i can't have a hover board, i'm going to make one. >> let's talk drones what ithis thing? >> they are being used by everybody. >> they are all er the place. we started out thinking this is kind of le this gag technology. just a joke. little did we know 30 years later, people are using them all over the world. >> we are not thinking about we are making anmportant statatent about the futurur here. no, no, no. we are having a good time. >> read my lips! >> reporter: why nobody uses a
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communication, in the movivi fingerprint scananrs unlock the front door and pay for things like taxis. today, we use biometric technology to en doors and unlock smartphones and authorize digital payments. the mcfcf'ssed a giant flatscen tv thatespondso audio commands and makes video calls. flatscreens around for a while but video recognition. as foror face time. there is face time and skype. christake is west coast editor of "vanity fair." do you think the movie can still influence young people today? >> i think it stitl holds you up, solutely. the stuff that they were talking about in '85 to '90 iss s sff that is actually our reality now. >> mcfly! i thought i told you to stay in here! >> reporter: as a teenager, it's still very relevant because you're still going through t same thinin.
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it doesn'tatter if you havav an iphone or you can fly around the world. 15-year-olds are feeling the same thing that 15-year-olds were in the '50s. >> wait a minute. cubs win world series! i against miami. >> reporter: the cubs are still trying to advance to this year's world series. and so we wait just a bit longe to see if the movie's ultimate prediction comes true. >> you won't believe this! weweave to goack to 1955! >> i don't believe it! >> reporter: why do you think "back to the future" remains so popular? >> it's the humanity of "back to the future." the momoe says you have meme control over your own defendant me -- destiny. the things you do today can have
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one person is one person is dead after officers exchanged gunfire with a suspect t cedar rapidsds e police department says it was all apart of an ongoing drug investigation. investigation.poce officers pulled over three suspects along the 3200 hundred block of ravenwood terrace northst. when the vehicle stopped -- one suspect got out and ran -- two officieraa a k-9 unit chased him.police say the suspect shot at officers when they were trying to arrest him. they shot back -- hitting and killing the suspect.right now -- the identities of the officers and the man they killed are not being released. former coe college footbtbl player frejackson wasn't hurt in a car crash in seattle. officials say jackson lost control of his car as he was
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seahawks facility tuesday evening.police say earlier reports that he may have been racing a teammate are alse. happening right now, the innovation expo is underway in coralville.the event started at 7 this morning and runs until 7 tonight.it's designed for entrepreneurs and business leaders in the state to connect -- create jobs and to celebrate entrepreneurs.tune in to our evening newscasts for continued coverage of this event. don't forget -- cbs 2 connects with you - call cbs 2 if you see news happen.800 222 kgan. you can also email tips, pictures, and even video --to news -- at cbs 2 iowa dot com. that's a quick look at your wednesday y rning news.get more news anytime online - at
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