Skip to main content

tv   CBS This Morning  CBS  December 1, 2015 7:00am-9:00am CST

7:00 am
popular toy maker exposes photos and private conversations between parents and their children. are you at risk? >> we begin this morning with a look at today's eye opener. your world in 90 seconds. it's way too snowy for us to continue on the highway. >> i can't believe we got this much snow. >> record snow hammers the mid-west. >> severe weather leaving behind an icy mess. some areas can expect to have a foot of snow on the ground before it's all over. donald trump is demanding millions to participate in the next gop debate. >> i won't do the debate unless they pay me $5 millionon allf which money goes to the wounded warriors or goes to vets. >> president obama is wrapping up his trip to paris today after attending the climate summit with 150 other world leaders. >> this is the moment we finally determined we would save our pack. => a traffic stop turned into a rsuit and a weapons battle
7:01 am
robert dear the man accused of shooting at a colorado springs planned parenthood is making his first court appearance.. an officer charged with the murder of laquan mcdonald out on bondn >> a kids' electronic toy maker vtech says it was hacked and it affects 5 million customers. concert-goers dance around it. >> super star is back. picked up. down the side lines, he's going to win on a blocked field goal t. ravens find a way. >> all that matters -- >> you want to be president. you have had a remarkable life. there it is over there. >> it is, right. well, i'm not doing it to move back if. >> he's a senior running back at
7:02 am
will probably be his last game. >> the best people in the world over there. mymyxperience here has been the best. >> when the camera lines out, you can see almost no one is there. there. >> this morning's eye opener is presented by toyota, let's go places! . >> welcome to "cbs this fall overnight. more winter weather is on the way. >> the deadly storm system is prompting winter storm warnings in several states. david bebeaud is in minneapolis where people there face harsh conditions. good morning. >> reporter: norah, good morning.
7:03 am
to hit the minneapolis area this yeararnd there iss snow allver the place. across minneapolis over the last 24 hours, they got four inches. but verne, minnesota saw 8. right now the system is churning over minnesota what we are told is wet and very heavy snow, making it a real chore to shovel and in some places drive through. it has been an uphill battle for drivers acroro the mid-west as a powerful blast of winter weather made a mess of the roads from nebraska to north dakota. in minnesota last night, a wave of snow barrelled its way through the twin cities, blanketing the streets during evening rush hour. nearly 400 accidents are reported state wide. at looeft one person was killed. dozens more were injured. >> way too snowy for us to continue on the highway. my eyes needed rest. >> it was a similar scene in iowa, where this car flipped over. parts of nebraska saw record
7:04 am
is video was taken from inside a plane landing in omaha. can you see the whiteout conditions. at the height of the storm, the city temporarily suspended police responses to minor accicints. in south dakota, they set records for snowfall. nearly 9 inches fell in sioux falls. iowa and wisconsin heads up, it will be a wet and snowy dayor you. north and south dakota, you could see nearly a foot of snow by this time tomorrow. gayle. >> all rightn winter is here. thank you very mueh, david. this morning, president obama a pressing world leaders gathered in paris to support a landmark climate change deal. this unprecedented summit is givingo tackle threats beyond global warming. market brennan is-- margaret brennan is in paris. gogo morning. >> reporter: good d rning. president obama is battling two
7:05 am
stability from climate change and the immediate danger of terrorism and the fight against isis. presididt obama tried to cool off a spiked intentions between allie turkey and russia's vladmir putin, following the recent shootdown of a russian warplane that crossed from syria into turkish territory. >> we all have a common enemy. >> that is isim. i want to make sure that we focus on that threat and i want to make sure that we remain focucud on the need to bring about some sort of political resolution in syria. >> reporter: yesterday, mr. obama had a similar message for presidt putin, who said the incident jeopardizes any cooperation with turkey and the u.s.-led coalition to fight terror. that's one of the pressing topics, competing for president obama'attention here in paris. where he hopes t get a aund 150 countries to limit global warming to 3.6 degrees fahrenheit.
7:06 am
would prevent natural disasters and floods. on monday the president pressed other top leaders, india and china to cut greenhouse gases. >> i've come here personally as the leader of thth world's largest economy and the second largest emitter to say that the united states of america not only recognizes our role if creating this problem, we embrace our responsibility to do something about it. >> reporter: mr. obama is offering to help poor, reluctant countries like india to convert to clean energy and urge business leaders like microsoft founder bill gates to also pick up the tab. now, there are two big impediments to a deal. the cost of converting to cleaner energy and convincing republicans to fund it. now, charlie, the white house argues they can overcome both and that other countries won't
7:07 am
america does so, first. >> thank you. hillary clinton talks about her plan to destroy isis in an terview only on "cbs this morning." it includes special forces, airstrikes and no-fly zone in syria. we spoke to the president candidate across from the white house. our convnvsation began with nato sending combat troops to the middle east. >> i agree with the president's point that we're not putting american combat troops back into syria or iraq. we are not goioi to do that. at this point -- >> understand u under no circumstances would you not do that? >> well, at this point i cannot conceive of any circumstances where i would agree to do that.t. we don't know yet how many special forces might be needed, how many trainers and under surveillance and enablers might be needed. but in terms of thoands of combat troops like some on the republican side are recommending, i think that should be a non-starter. it should be a non-starter both
7:08 am
smartest way to goo after isis. i think it gives isis a few recruitment tool if we get back into the fight. >> tell me how serious isis is and at what level we will do everything we need to do to stop them? >> i think we have to have our objective their defeat. you have to fight them on the air, you have to fight them on the ground and you have to fight them in cer space. now are you fightinina more barbaric enemy that has more money and controls territory. we need to get over the false choice between either going after assad or going after isis. >> i understandd thaha everybody is talking about that. >> yeah. >> how do you do both? >> well, i think you do both by making it cleared and bringing the russians in. the russians have now paid a big price bececse of the bomb and their jet from sharm el-sheikh. they've lost people to isis. i think you say, look, we need
7:09 am
your acquiescence in what we will do in going after isis. so that means will you have to pull back from this are while we go after their)leadership and their economic infrastructure. but if f u want to be a part of that, we would welcome you. you have a dog in this hunt now, you are worried at what's happening at caucuses. you are worried about isis sprereing its ideology. right now we won't see a military defeat of assad. that's not going to happen. it might have been possible a few years ago.@ it's not going to happen now. >> if there is a no-fly zone, whwhh you are advocateing, and the russians invade that no-fly zone, would president clinton say shoot it down if you give it warning? >> charlie that, will not happen. weill put up a no-fly zozo where the russians are clearly kept informed. i want them at the table. they don't have to participate in it. i want them to understand there has to be safe areas on the ground.
7:10 am
to learn and may be iplead to sya, you do not want chaos and the circumstance if libya, becaususwhat you have in libya now is an increasing force of isis? >> it's a totally fair question. gadhafi had amerin blood on his hands. gadhdhi was a thrhrt to the broader region. our european and arab friends certainly saw him as that and as you say, he was promising to track down his own people and kill themike cockroaches. i think one of the ways we need to approach this is continue the discussion about national unity but as a pre-condition say we need to join together right now befofo they get a stronghold and work to eliminate isis in cert. there are powers fighting in libya not in anyway identified with or allied with isis.
7:11 am
confederation to try to push isis litererly into the sea before they get a stronghold. >> the question is also how different is she from the president? a lot of it is is the same hype. she clearly says she wants t t tensify what we are doing, no special forces, but there is no strong distinction other than no-fly zone. the thing she kept emphasizing in every, whether the middle east or china iss leadership, leadership, leadership, to which my question is are we not getting that leadership now? which she didn't go to. >> very interesting. >> she was certainly very candid. >> and engagad. we'll have more of my interview with hillary clinton in the next hour. she addresses her relationship
7:12 am
why she want itself to be security at rick by using a private e-mail server as secretary of state. this morning the presidential front runner faces a new challenge from a former allie. candidate ted cruz now says that dlump not be the party's nominee. the texas senator is turning against trump as he picks up new support. amererans will start toote two months from tonight. february 1st is the date of the iowa caucuses. a recent poll there shows cruz is in close 2nd place. major garrett is in washington where donald trump is focusing on other major concerns. good morning. >> reporter: good morning, donald trump tried to make the most yesteay of black pastors that endorsed fewer endorsemenen anan a half filled arena in 5600 people late last night. after the first time as you said, gayle, a republican who stayed closest to trump now
7:13 am
>> all of these dumba -- politicians said, o, no, that's what theheare. >> reporter: he demanded million for charities or he would bug out of the cnn debate. >> should i do it or not? i don't know if i want to take the chance. >> reporter: trump pulled punches when he talked about tetes senator ted cruz now nearly tied with trump in iowa. >> he's be been so supportive, at some time he's going to have to hit me. it will be a sad day. we will hit back, i promise. >> reportete that days already here. >> i don't think donald trump will be our president. >> reporter: cruz has echoed trump's condemnation ought political class. he invited controversy of his own with this reaction to last week's shooting at a colororo planned parenthood clinic. >> here's the simple and undeniable fact. the overwhelming majority of violent criminals are democrats. >> reporter: earlier in new york, trump met with dozens of black pastors to address rarnlly sensitive comments he made in
7:14 am
>> they didn't ask me to change the tone. i think they want to cebictory. >> reporter: trump's message for some. >> i see leadership. i see strength. >> reporter: others were skeptical. >> it's very unfortunate the way he has talked to not just african-american community but things he said about mexicans, muslims. >> reporter: ted cruz is in a statistical tie in iowa, rising more than ten points in two weeks. cruz said yesterday conservatives are coalescing around his campaign. in that continues, cruz says, it's quoting game over. this morning the suspect in the deadly siege of a planned parenthood c cnic faces a possible death penalty, robert lewis dear made his first appearance before a colorado judge. he is accused of killing three people at the colorado springs clinic. barry petersen is at the el paso county center with new details. barry, good morning. >> reporter: good morning,` charlie. well, dear faces first degree
7:15 am
convicted, the minimum sentence is life without parole. for the moment, he's in this jail behind me without bond. >> the initial charge is murder in the first degree. >> reporter: shooting suspect robert lewis dear appeared before an el paso county judge monday afteron on individual living from jail. >> do you have any questions about any of these charges, sir? >> no questions. >> reporter: a law enforcement source says dear arrived at the lorado springs plannnn parenthood clinic last friday with duffle bags full of handguns and rifles, including ak-style rifles. dear is accused of fatally shooting jennifer markovsky, ke'arre stewart and ploys garrett swasey. and video appears to show swasey at the scene of the vioiont standoff before he was gunned down. the former arraignment will be held next week.
7:16 am
attorney's office has about two months to decide if it will seek the death penalty.y. and this friday will be the funeral for officer swasey. norah. >> all right. barry, thank you so mumpch. a deadly shootout caused chaos at a downtown atlanta area hotel. gunshots and sirens shattered the calm last night outside the hotel as police and a suspect exchanged fire. officers had stopped a van, but the people inside got out and then took off. one of them ran behind the hotel and started shooting. >> that man was shot and killed. police arresesd the other suspect. the chicago police officer charged with murder for killing 17-year-old laquan mcdonald is out of jail this morning. jason van dyke was released last night after meeting the terms off his $1.5 million bail t. largest police unit reportedly encouraged members to do nate money towards his nd and is
7:17 am
>> we believe that h h acted correctly and at the end of the day, if a judge and jury decides he didn't, well, i think he's prepared to accept the consequences. >> protesters claim police tried to cover up the shooting. they are also asking whyhy prosecutors took more than a year to charge van dyke. in an editorial this morning, the chicago sun "time's"s" calls for mccarthy to resign. mccarthy says he has no plans to shut down and he watched dash-cam video after the shooting. after
7:18 am
investigatoror are waiting on an a u.p.s.autopsy to determine how he died. 162 people on board died when airasia flight died last december. they showed the ruter control system sent repeated warnings to the pilots. an investigator says the pilot tried to reset the system in mid-flight. that made the plane stall and then crash. texas threatens legal action
7:19 am
ahead, how could your kids' toys expose you?
7:20 am
on "cbs this morning." . every new toyota comes with the toyotacare no-cost maintenance plan. what's toyotacare? engine oil changes tire rotations multi-point inspections roadside assistance ananso much more for two years or 25,000 miles whichever comes first right now at toyotathon, get 0% apr financing for 60 months the versatile 2015 rav4. offer ends january 4th. for great deals on other toyotas, visit toyota.com. toyota. let's go places. music the keurig k200 series brewer. one touch, and unlike life, no mess.
7:21 am
we give you relief from your cold & flu. you u ve them a case of the giggles. tylenol cold helps relieve your worst cold & flu symptoms... you can give them everything you've got. tylenol is it our insightful strategies that make edward jones one of the country's biggest financial services firms? or 13,000 financial advisors who say thank you? it's why edward jones is the big company that doesn't act that way. song: "that's life" song: "that's life" song: "that's life" song: "that's life" that's life. you diet. you exercise.
7:22 am
loweweng your blood sugar.r. ...this is jardiance. along with diet and exercise, jardiance works around the clock to lower blood sugar in adults with type 2 diabetes. it works by helping your body to get rid of some of the sugar it doesn't need ththugh urination. this can help you lower blood sugar and a1c. and although it's not for weight loss or lowering systolic blood pressure, jardiance could help with both. jardiance can cause serious side effects including dehydration. this may cauau you to feel dizzy,y, faint or lightheaded, or weak upon standing. other side effects are genital yeast infections, urinary tract infecteons, changes in urination, kidney problems, and increased bad cholesterol. do not take jardiance if you are on dialysis or have severe kidney problems. stop taking jardiance and call your doctor right away if you have symptoms of an allergic reactio symptoms may include rash, swelling, and difficulty breathing or swallowing. taking jardiance with a sulfonylurea or insulin may cause low blood sugar. tell your doctor about all the medicines you take and if yououave any medical conditions. so talk to your doctor,
7:23 am
visit jardiance.com. don't miss kohl's cyber week spectacular! wiwi over 500 cyber weekekeals! take an extra 20% off! and get free shipping when you spend $25 or more! kohl's cyber week spectacular
7:24 am
ahead, why some of the strongest voices for women sing in a calendar known for its nude models. and tomorrow's monsanto's ceo is here with the need for
7:25 am
news is next. . we asked a person who know a lot of greatest things of all time. we asked what is the greatest christmas special of all time. what he said. >> what you are talking about is a lie. it's peanuts for me. the cost of the woror is peanuts. we're talking about peanuts. >> it's peanuts. >> it's peanuts. >> that's peanuts. that's peanuts. >> peanut, peanuts, peanuts. >>peanuts.
7:26 am
peanuts. it's peanuts. >> all right. >> thank you, donald trump. welcome back to "cbs this morning." this half hour, a car maker is hacked. it shares photos and private conversations involving children. plus a racy calendar takes a detour. this year's pirelli models are mous, but they don't fit the usual profile. we will talk to photographer annie leibovitz is focusing on the legendary pinups aheaea the usa today says the pentagon will consider sending more special op troops to syria to fight isis if there's progress. defense secretary ash carter set to testify today before the house e med services committee. last month, the pentagon announced 50 commandos would be sent to syria's advisers.
7:27 am
on an economic milestone for china the international monetary fund designated china as one of the world's elite currencies t.yuan joins the dollar the pound, the yen. it is meant to reform the world's number two economy. the "new york times" has a study out today, finds new cases of diabetes in the u.s. finally declined after exploding around 25 years ago t.cdc says last year the number of newly diagnosed adults was 1.4 million. >> that number fell by one-fifth between 2008 and 2014. now the experts don't know if efforts to prevent diabetes have finally started to work or it peats on its own. ohio is holding on billions of dollars waiting to be claimed. it has about $2.3 billion in abandoned money. only 34 million has been returned this year. >> i have some money. >> let me check my records.
7:28 am
or other forgotten money such as rent and utility deposits. let's hope they can do something great with that money. >> i'm tryingo think, was i er in ohoh? >> do you have any relatives? >> all those bank accounts around the world. >> ohio, here we come. new orleans says an exploding hoverboard destroyed a home. these hoverboards are one of the hottest gifts of the season this one apparently became so hot. look at that, while it was charging, it started this fire t. state fire marshall is investigating. the hoverboard's inner's mother told the tv station it was like fireworks. texas officis threaten this morning to take er, to take a fight over syrian refugeeseso court. 31 governors say they don't want to accept syrian refugees because of security concerns. but the governor of texas is now backing up his teat with popoible legal action. manuel bojorquez is at the texas state house.
7:29 am
>> reporter: good morning, it's all because unu one leading agency that resettles refugees here has not guaranteed it would abide by the governor's order to stop accepting syrian refugees. >> that agency now says it's caught in the middle of a state wide and national debate. this family is among the almost 2,300 syrians finding refugee in the u.s. since their country's civil w began four years ago. almomo 1200 syrian refugees resettled if texas last fiscal year. many with the help of organizations like the international rescue committee or irc, a non-profit. >> that group is now under the scrutiny of texas governor greg abbott. >> we will be working to ensure that syrian refugees are not going to be allowed into the state of texas and given refuge in the state of texas. >> reporter: there ungovernors,
7:30 am
oppose accepting syrian refugees, fefeing terrorists may sneak in with them and carry out attacks similar to those in paris two weeks ago. texas is threateningegal action, sending a letter to the irc saying failure to cooperate, violates federal law and your contract with the state. anne marie weiss-armush runs a service organization that works in texas with syryrn refugege. what about those security concerns, though? what would you tell people who say we should take a pause? >> prove to me that there has been o o act of terrorism by a refugee since 2001? there have been none. have to follow state orders and federal law t. obama organization sent a letter to reorganization settlements requiring them that federal law requires them to provide assistance and services to
7:31 am
race, religion, nationality, sex or political opinion. >> the organizations know very well they cannot exclude just rian refugees and if they do, they're opening themselves up too potential liability on that basis. >> reporter: the irc has issued a response to that letter from governor abbott's administration. it says it hopes texas will continue its commitment to thehe u.s. constitution and that it welcomes the opportunity to meet with the governor to discuss the resettlement of syrian refugees. norah. >> manuel, thank you. a popular toy maker admits this morning a data breach exposed examiner's personal information. vtech says the hack acts nearly 5 million people. profiles created for their children were compromised.d. isis online magazine motherboard says they talked to the hacker. the hacker says these photos of parents and kids were uncovered on vtech's server. dan ackerman is heree on what
7:32 am
>> it's kind of a double-edged sword. this company makes ties, a lot of companies getting into online space, smart refrigerators and dish washers,s, they may not have the security expertise needed to really 62 you are the databases. this was a fairly simple act t. database got compromised. it happens all the time. i feel like we hear about it on a daily basis. >> first, do you know who did it and why they did it? >> in this case, this appears to be a hacker that wanted to expose the shortcomeings of this company. he took this data and gave it to press outfits and said i will not do anything else with this. i want to expose this data about parents and kids is not being held securely. >> what should p pple do? williment the data to all these companies being hacked? >> that's something we do all the time who we trust to hold that data. secondly what do you do with data about your kids? it's difficult to collect information about children, especially under 13 legally.
7:33 am
have the parents make the account and provide in fill about the children. that's what happened in this case. >> that's scary. we had these data approachs in the past. it involves adult financial information. now we're talking about ildren's information. their age, where they live, i mean, vulnerable members of our society. >> and their pictures. they have pictures, too, right? >> how they link them together. they can say we're only collecting the first name a a date of birth. in a database, it's linked to the parents' account. it has the e-mail address, now you have a full pro time of these kids, which is something you defifitely don't wantt out there. >> so what steps is vtech going to take? >> they say they're going to take it seriously. as soon everybody gets hacked, they take cyber sececity seriously. i'm sure they brought in outside consult ants and covered up that particular hack. will you see this continue especially as more and more devices like toys, and household
7:34 am
online go online with user accounts and tuesdayer data. >> we need more information about how to protect our security and our children's security online. >> another wake-up call for a lot of people. thank you, dan. alwaysysood to see you. it is a sign of the times for provocative calendar, up next, how some of the most famous women in society are giving pirelli a new kind of pin-up model. and if you are heading off to work or out the door, maybe you are going to the gym, because you ate so much over thanksgiving, set your dvr.
7:35 am
. call your doctor right away. and attack the flu virus at its source with prescription tamiflu. tamiflu is fda approved to treat the flu in people 2 weeks and older whose flu symptoms started within the last t o days. before taking tamiflu tell your doctor if you're pregnant, nursing have serious health conditions, or take other medicines. if you develop an allergic reaction, a severe rash, signs of unusual behavior, stop taking tamiflu and call your doctor immediately. children and adolescents in particular may be at an
7:36 am
the most common side effects are mildldo moderate nausea anan vomiting. call your doctor right away. don't lose another moment to the flu. when there's flu, tamiflu. i was not aware of how muchacidity was in my diet... that it was damaging the enamel. i wanted to fix it right away. my dentist recommended pronamel. he said pronamel can make my teeth stronger. pronamel is helping me lead the life that i want to live.. but grandma, mommy says we don't have to wad to get clean. cause we use charmin ultra soft. charmin ultra soft gets you clean without the wasteful wadding. it has comfort cushions you can see that are softeteand more absorbent, and you can use up to 4 times less.
7:37 am
americans. we try to live healthy. but many of us don't know there are nutrients that can help support r metabolism. take new one a day healthy metabolism support multivitamin with chromium to help use carbs from food and b-vitamins to helpconvert food to fuel.
7:38 am
>> right a-listers shot in sededtive poses and published by a premium tire company, where tires are anything but the focus.
7:39 am
isausing a stir forhat itt doesn't contain, nudity. >> turn your head slightly. >> in a dramatic shift, distinguished wimg of all ages, sizes ancolors are showcased photographs taken by photographer annie leibovitz. >> i thought the women should look good and strong and it should be simple. >> reporter: artist yoko-ono, fill philanthropisting aness dunn. cbs contributor mellody hobson is miss june. >> i thought, well, here's an opportunity to perhaps showcase career and a story that is not common. i think that's what women like me have been dreaming of. >> reporter: only two women kept with the calendar's typical
7:40 am
serena pumps is pictured topless with her back to the mera. seam schumer had the back. she thought it would be fun that i didn't get the photo. great, let'so it. nudity. >> nudity has been a constance since pirelli did the problem in the 1954. it was legitimized by fashion's elite. but times are of a backlash if things do go back to the way they were and i think would risk a lot of people saying, thisis wasn't sincere. >> well, pirelli supports this year's change in direction t. company emphasizes it was annie leibovitz's supervision.
7:41 am
i love the amy schumer in it. somebody said they wanted to focus on brains not boobs. you can have both. >> this is the hero, the she-hero. more on tv. >> shero. you are our shero this morning. >> just for today. >> miss june. yeah. we have to tease her the next time we see her. miss june. check this out, a late night legend as far ass on a college campus.
7:42 am
letterman brought to his alma i don't want to live with the uncertainties of hep c. or wonder... ...whether i should seek treatment. i am ready. because today there's harvoni. a revolutionary treatment for the most common type of chronic hepatitis c. harvoni is proven to cure up to 99% of patients... ...who've had no prior treatment. it's the one and only cure that's... ...one pill, once a day for 12 weeks. certain patients... ...can be cured with just 8 weeks of harvoni. with harvoni, there's no interferon and there are no complex regimens. tell your doctor if you have other liver or kidney problems, or other medical conditions. and about all the medicines you take including herbal supplements. harvoni should not be taken with any medicines containing amiodarone, rifampin, or st. john's wort. it also should not be taken with any other medicine that contains sovaldi.
7:43 am
i am ready to put hep c behind me. i am ready to be cured. are you ready? ask your hep c specialist if harvoni is right for you. >> you sort of recognize me. finally, none of them came up to
7:44 am
i said, oh, really? who do you think i am? and the kid says, charles darwin? >> yes, america, that is david letterman. >> involving mself. >> looks a little like santa. >> that is old school. he came last night bearing gifts. letterman is donating much of his honors and memorabiliaiao ball university. >> that you includes all of his awards and letterman state. he graduated from ball state in 1969. >> clearar, he looks very happy. whatever he is doing. >> coming up, hillary clinton
7:45 am
. and no artificial flavors or preservatives. real country fresh taste from real ingredients.
7:46 am
look, the wolf was hfing and puffing. like you do sometimes, grandpa? well, when you have copd, it can be hard to breathe. it can be hard to get air out, which can make it hard toet air in. so i talaed to my doctor. she said... symbicort coululhelp you brbrthe better, starting within 5 minutes. symbicort doesn't replace a rescue inhaler for sudden symptoms. symbicort helps provide gnificant improvement of your lung function. symbicort is for copd, including chronic bronchitis and emphysema. it should not be taken more than twice a day. symbicort contains formoterol.
7:47 am
increase the risk of death from asthma problems. symbicort may increase ur risk of lung infefeions, osteoporosis, and some eye problems. you should tell your doctor if you have a heart condition or high blood pressure before taking it. symbicort could mean a day with better breathing. watch out, piggies! (children giggle) mbicort. breathe better starting within 5 minutes. call or go online to learn more about a free trial offer. if you can't afford
7:48 am
it is tuesday, december 1st, 2015. welcome back to "cbs this morning." more real news ahead, including more of our conversation with hillary clinton. on "cbs this morning" she defends her ties to wall street. but first here is today's "eye ener" at 8:00. >> the first major snowstorm to hit the minneapolis area this
7:49 am
the place. >> are two big impediments to a deal, the cost and convincing republicans to fund it. >> tell me how serious the threat of isis is. >> i think you have to fight them in the air, fight them on the ground and fight them in cyberspace. >> donald trump tried to make the most with a meeting of black pastors that yielded less endorsements than promised. >> it went longer only because of the love. >> dear faces first-degree murder charges. if convicted, the minimum sentence is life without parole. >> one leading agency has not guaranteed that it would abide by the order to stop accepting syrian refugees. >> now we're talking about children's information. >> in the database that's linked to the parents' account which has the first name, the last name, the street address. now you have aull profile of these kids. >> donald trump's popular make america great again hats are actually made, it turns out, at a california factory that
7:50 am
his hair is made by syrian refugees. >> i'm charlie rose withh gayle ng and norah o'donnell. dangerous severe weather is moving across the center of the country. several states are under winter storm warnings. parts of the midwest are battling record amounts of snow. thth first majoror snowfall of the season is creating a mess on the roads. drivers face slick conditions from nebraska to north dakota. >> police in minnesota have reported nearly 400 accidents ththe, at least one person was killed and dozens more were hurt. nebraska saw record amounts of snow. this video taken from inside a plane landing in omaha, you can see the whiteout conontions there. south dakota also set a snowfall record. sioux falls received close to 9 inches. president obama is speaking now at the paris climate change summit. the president says he is optimistic world leaders will come to an agreement to tackle global warming.
7:51 am
said he expects russia to agree that syria's president must step down but that it will take time. >> 147 woror leaders in paris are trying to cut carbon emissions enough to keep the earth from warming 3.6 degrees. some scientists say temperatures higher than that would trigger natural disasters like droughts and floods. president obama admits the u.s. is partly to blame and he says not acting is a financial and security threat. >> ife l the world keep warming as fast as it is andnd sea levels rising as fast as they are and weather patterns keep shifting in more unexpected ways, before long we are going to have to devote more and more and more of our economic and military resources not to growing opportunity for our people, but to adapting to the various consequences of a changing planet. this is an economic and security imperative that we have to tackle now.
7:52 am
confident whoever succeeds s m in thehehite house will uphold climate change commitments. we're going to talk to president obama about climate change and defeating isis when interview him tomorrow at the white house. you can see our conversation thursday morning right here on "c"c this morning." republican white house hopefuls are lining up against the president's stance. front-runner donald trump rejected the president's statement that climate change is the greatest threat t the future.. >> one of the dumbest statements i've ever heard in politics, in the history of politics as i know it, which is pretty good, was obama's statement that our number one problem is global warming. >> donald trump says iran and north korea pose a bigger threat. candidate marco rubio says no reasonable person could say climate change is the top threat. the florida senator says we can't predict the climate 25 or 30 years from now. >> there's never been a time when the climate hasn't been changing. what percentage of that is due
7:53 am
something there's a consensus on. >> what do you think? >> well, again, i'm a a policy maker. my job is to go through the different solutions that they present to us. i can tell you that all the changes they're presenting to us would do nothing. even according to the scientists would do nothihi to changeur climate, especially in the united states. but would have a dramatic impact on our economies. >> environmental challenges are all too real this morning for china's capital. beijing is struggling with extremely dirty air for the fifth day in a row. schools are keeping students indoors, parents are crowding into hospitals along with children having trouble breathing. pollution is up to 35 times ababe what's considered a safe level. officials mostly blame coal burning, which is a major source of power there in china. weave more from our conversation with hillary clinton. wewealked with the democratic presidential candidate only on "cbs this morning." clinton addressed criticism of her ties to wall street.
7:54 am
th dozens of corporate executives and long-time political donors. >> the fact is i saw a lot of people when i was secretary of state and i worked really hard to increase exports from american businesses. i saw a lot of business people,, i saw a lot of union leaders. i saw as many people as i could fit in the day who needed somethinfrom their government. you know, somebody would call me up from fex and say, you know, the chinese government is taking away our permits. we've been in china for decades doing federal express or corning, a company that i knew wellrom m time in the senate. you know, they're trying to put a tariff on us that is going to drive us out of business. you know, i worked really hard to get more jobs for americans, and that m mnt representing big bubuness and small business and everybody in between. >> have you suffered from the fact that they say you're too close to wall street? has that hurt your image in your judgment, running for president?
7:55 am
i have stood for a lot of regulation on big banks and on the financial services sector. i also represented new york and represented d erybody from the dairy farmers, you know, to the fishermen. everybody. and so yes, do i know people and did i, you know, help rebuild after 9/11? yes, i d. >> and did you take money from them they would say. >> yeah, but that has nothing to do with my positions. anything who thinks they can influence me on that ground doesn't know me very well. >> why do you want to be esident? i mean you've had a remarkable life. >> yeah, i have. >> there it is. >> there it is. >> well, i'm not doing it to move back in, although it's a woerful place. >> so why are you doing it? is it about histsty? is it abououthe first woman? >> no, no. that would all be an extra added part of it, but for me i really love this country and i think this w wl bee one of those watershed elections where we're either going to get the economy
7:56 am
going to see increasing inequality and unfairness in a way thth we haven't seen since the 1920s. we're eier going to figure out how to live together despite all of our differences, show respect for people and for human rights, civil rights, women's rights, gay rights, workers rights or have the balance shift dramatically against the kindd of democracy that i believe in and that i think works best for america. we're either going to lead around the world or take a back seat and pay a price for it. >> you know a lot of people think the biggest problem for america is washington and that's reflected in some of the politics that we see. >> yes, that's true. but look at the way our founders set it up. they set up this separation of powers a they made it really difficult to get things done, and some years it's really hard. and we're in one of these periods where we have a minority
7:57 am
doesn't believe in compromise, doesn't believe in reaching consensus. >> but there you go attacking them. that's not the way to do it. >> no, because part of what you have to do is make it clear to everyone else who is in that party that there is room for negotiation. >> you can see the whole interview with her tonight on my pbs program. >> what do you think her biggest challenge is? what did she talk a aut in t tms of where you see her biggest challenge? >> well, i think she has to make the case for her presidency. she makes it with policy, but she has toake the case that in the 21st century she is the right person too lead. she talks about leadership all the time and what the country needs to do and what we need to do, as i mentioned in the early hours, so that's the challenge for her. i think the challenge also, as i talk to her about, iss reaching out to the constituencies of the future. there's a direct difference between the support of young people, independts, and latinos for barack obama than it is for hillary clintonon at this
7:58 am
>> and she so wants the job no matter who is in the office, somebody is always going to be mad at you. no matter what you do, no matter what you say, somebody is going to be mad. she knows all the ins and outs and she still wants the job. >> she's smart. the other thing you get is she's smart. moving on, are you getting fleeced at the pharmacy? consumer reports investigates how you could be paying ten times too much for prescription drugs. that's coming up. and first on "cbs this morning, "-- that's what's coming up first on "cbs this morning." i want to read thatt over. are you getting fleeced at the pharmacy? consumer reports investigates on how you could be paying ten times too much for prescription drugs, that's ahead first on "cbs this morning."
7:59 am
>> did ahead, jamie wax is in philadelphia. >> reporter: a mistake on craigslist could save a woman in need of a kidney.
8:00 am
transplant is under way thiss morning. see how love and loss brought strangers together. that's next on "cbs this
8:01 am
don't start enbrel if you have an infection like the flu. joint pain and damage... can go side by side. ask how enbrel can help relieve joint pain and help stop joint damage. enbrel, the number one rheumatologist-prescribed biologic. can't afford to let heartburn get in the way? try nexium 24hr, now the #1 selling brand for frequent heartburn. get complete protection with the new leader in frequent heartburn. that's nexium level protection. i'm lucky to get through a shift without a disaster. my bargain detergent couldn't keep up. so i switched to tide pods. they're super concentrated
8:02 am
15% cleaning ingredients or 90%. don't pay for water, pay for clean. that's my tide. i've smoked a lot and quit a lot, but ended up nowhere. now i use this. the nicoderm cq patch, with unique extended release technology, helps prevent the urge to smoke all day. i want this time to be my last time. that's why i choose nicoderm cq. if you're doing everything right but find it harder and harder to get by, you're not alone.
8:03 am
almost all new income goes to the top 1%. my plan n make wall street banks and the ultrararh pay their fair share of taxes, provide living wages for working people, ensure equal pay for women. i'm bernie sanders. i approve this message because totother, we can make a political rerelution and create an economy and democracy that works for all
8:04 am
in our morning rounds, new developments in a story we first brought you last week. the morning a new jersey man is donating one of h h kidneys to a woman he met months ago. jamie wax is at the hospital of the university of pennsylvania in philadelphia, where the surgery is under way. jamie, good morning. >> goooomorning. it was an ad on craigslist that connected the two strangers, setting off a series of incredible coincidences that helped a woman find a kidney donor who was a perfect match. we got a chance to spend time with the two and their spouses who now consider each other to be family. >> i wanted to be able to see my child go grow and see him in the future. i didn't want to die. >> reporter: in july, 201431-year-old ni na faced an autoimmune disease that caused
8:05 am
she needed dialysis t. painful process meant hours in the clinic each week. it made it hard for her to be there with her young son nicholas. >> my son comes to me and tells me to read the book. my answer is i can't do it. i have dialysis. i have to go. it's very difficult. >> reporter: ni na added her namemeo a waiting list for a kidney transplant. after a year of watching his wife suffer. her husband took a different approach. he placed an ad on craigslist. >> i ran out of "options action." i didn't know what to do. i just wanted a kidney for my wife to help her and make her life normal again. >> reporter: the ad, titled looking for a brave person, mistakenly ended up in the buildings material section and caught the eye of contractor glen calderbank who lived 4 minutes away. 4:00 in the morning, you'r'r on craigslist looking for marble
8:06 am
for a brave person. what makes you click on that ad? >> curiosity at first. here i am in between marble and pavers and, oh, i'm brave? when i read the ad asking for a kidney to save somebody's life, it stared at me. and i knew, i knew i was a match from the second i saw that. >> you felttike it was there for u? >> it was there for me. and i'm going to have to blame jessica for that. >> jessica is glen's first wife, who shared a remarkably similar story n. 200404 she alslso suffered kidney failure and went on dialysis while raising her young son. after more than a year waiting for a transplant, glen, too, looked for alternatives. >> i got fedp and i put an ad in the local newspaper.
8:07 am
that hospital balked at taking a donation from a stranger. eventually,, jessica received a kidney from a donor who had died. but her body rejected the organ. >> the years of dialysis, transplant, more dialysis, she wasn't viable for another transplant.. in 2011, she passed away. sorry. >> reporter: glen says it was jessica, his angel no who led him to the family. >> i remember once when she was in the hospital saying, if i could be there instead of you i would. she's probably a laughing saying, here's your chance. >> there is no way. there is no words for me to express how thankful i am. the only thing i can say is god says it all. i will never be able repay him back. but i think i will. >> reporter: ni na says she wants to honor glen and his gift
8:08 am
can. she already has plans to pay it forward. if everything goes well with today's surgery, ni na intends to head back to school in january to become a dialysis nurse. gayle. >> that's a big story of the week. >> layer upon layer of goodness. that's an amazing story. >> and coincidence. >> we are certainly pulling for them right now. thanks a lot, jamie. great story.
8:09 am
morning". lisa julie? we've already given more than 175 millionn free fico credit scores to our cardmembers.
8:10 am
. >> olympic championship swimmer amy van dykeen posted this video with her walking without an upper body brace for the first time in nearly a year-andnd-half. we have been following her battle after a accident, after an atv accident left her paralyzed from the waist down t.
8:11 am
calling this a huge step. >> great news indeed. she is very, very strong. coming up, after a lifetime in show business, rita moreno returns to her old bronx neighborhood. all that and more after our local news. . i'm _______it's eight-25 on this tuesday morning. your top stories are coming up in just a moment...but right now -- let's take a look at what's
8:12 am
today eastern iowa voters will decidede pair of elections that were not settled back in november.a pair of runoff elections will be held in black hawk county. county.waterloo voters will go to the polls to elect a new mayor today.city councilman quentin hartrtand formerermayor tim hurley will go head to head.they finished first and second on november 3rd's election but didn't get the majority needed to win -- forcing a runoff. another runoff willlltte place in cedar falls..voters will see jim brown and incumbent mayor jon crews' names on the ballot. brown got the most votes during the election -- but didn't pick up enough to win outright.crews dropped out ththrunoff and endorsed brown for mayor.dave halterman finished third and is running as a write-in campaign. at t university of iowa, school offials tell cbs 2 news they are investigating a racist remararfound etchch in a bathroom at spence laboratories. laboratories.university president bruce harreld sent a message to students and faculty just last night.in his
8:13 am
offensive to our community and will not be tolerated."harreld says the remark was immediately sanded down. down.the university's public safety director says it was a racial slur that didn't have any threatening language.he says the specififs are not being released due to an investigation. more than 120-million people are expected to shop this week to take advantage of extended cyber monday deals. deals.that means great savingng online and lots of free shipping -- but police are asking shoppers to be careful. every year -- people end up with stolen credit card numbers and personal information being taken by fake or unreliable websites. crime prevention officers say shop at the sites you know you can trust and beware oforder forms that ask for social security numbers. don't forget -- cbs 2 connects with you - call cbs 2 if you see news happepe800 222 kgan. you can also email tips, pictures, and even video --to ne -- at cbs iowa dot com. that's a quick look at your tuesdadamorning news.get more news anytime online - at cbs 2
tv-commercial
8:14 am
day. good morning, dad: i'm on it. culligan man: dude. don't do it yourself. dad: no? culligan man: no. anncr: leave it to the experts. with a culligan whole-house water softening system, you get better water, and service you can actually count on. dad: hey, culligan man. culligan man: hey! dad: this is great! it's been her fight for twenty years. something is wrong with our healthcare system and it needs to be fixed. then, was about health reform and getting eight million kids covered. now, it's about stopping republicans from repealing obamacare, and taking on insurance companies to bring down drug prices. i'm not going to let any family be deprived of healthcare. i'm not going to let the republicans rip up obamacare and throw it away.
8:15 am
you get better water, and service you can actually count on. dad: hey, culligan man. culligan man: hey! dad: this is great! culligan man: i know. anncr: leave it to the experts. with a culligan whole-house water softening system, you gegebetter water, and service you can actually >> get your dancing shoes on, charlie. he's back with a few alb t. first single is called "daddy."
8:16 am
si almost broke the internet with that gangum video years ago. >> you don't have a potbelly. not that i've seen it. i just know. that's true. look over here. >> what are you doing, norah? >> showing off. showing off. >> welcome back to "cbs news" this morning. >> you know what she says, you think you got it? >> i don't know what is in the water today, guys. >> welcome back to "cbs this morning." we're glad to be here. coming up, this half hour, sticker shock. we have sticker shock. which stores charge the most plus how soaring costs can help you even if are you insured. plus, rita more rena, honoes, how liz taylor inspired her that's ahead. right now it's time to show you the headlines, raleigh's news and observer says a north
8:17 am
animal cruelty, she posted a photo on facebook of her dog with its mouth taped shut. outrage spread on social media, as you might exct. which led police to investigate t. dog will stay with heror now, it seems the dog was well cared for. she was trying to stop the dog from barking too much. there has to be a better way to do that. the new york daily news says salt warnings, a salt shaker icon will appear next to any food item that contains at least 2300 millidrams of sodium. that's about one teaeaoon of salt. >> that applies to 14 franchises nationwide. the birmingham news says 60 years ago today, rosa parks refused to give up her seat on a city bus to a whitete man. parks a role at that time was to desegregate the because system through a boycott and a lawsuit.
8:18 am
martin luther king, jr., helped launched the civil rights movement. >> it's important to talk to your kids about rosa parks. a couple dropped a half a million dollars in a salvation army kettle. they do nated the big check on saturday it is the biggest single donation the salvation army in the twin cities ever received t. couple wishes to remain anonymous, very nice on this giving tuesday. >> that's so nice. they don't want anybody to know who they are. very nice. a story you see first on "cbs this morning." americans spent $374 billion on prescription drugs last year. only 17% of us shop around for a lower price. consumer reports found some people spend up to ten times more than they need to for common medications. the magazine's description drug editor is lisa gil. lisa gil is here to reveal the results wf a national survey. >> hi, good morning, guys. >> you say a big mistake not to shop around. for most people who knew you
8:19 am
>> we had secret shoppers make hundreds of phone calls and discscer eformous price variations also within the same zip code n. raleigh, generic cynbalta. $220 at walgreens with a discount. $220 at costco, most people will not think, hey,ly pick up the phone and calm around. can you save a bundle of money. >> you found a generic blood version costs $1,600 a month at costco, $150 at vcs. >> right. >> we asked costco, w w are you so much less expensive? they said we don't have drive-throughs. we close on sundays. we close early on the evenings, 7:00, 8:00. they offer rock bottom prices. >> do have you to be a member?
8:20 am
find that, too. in every state, can you fill up a prescription andndot be a member and get a good deal. >> is the question costco is doing is reasonable prices and everybody else is doing highly inflated questions? >> cvs will tell you 2 or 3% of our business is cash business. that's a lot of people f. your insurance doesn't cover your drug very well, we discovered a third of americans who tak drugs told us they experience spikes at the pharmrmy counter. they spent up to $100 or more. these prices can matter. not using insurance can save you a bundle. >> that itself the thing that was incredible for us. >> lisa, listen, we talked to rite aid, walgreens and csrv, they said the drug price provoded by one pharmacy in response to a survey may be the cost under a cash discount program while a different pharmacy pay provide the full retail price for the same drug. >> that's a great point. so we trained our secret
8:21 am
how much is the drug? after they got a price, then they asked, what is the best deal can you offer, that's where we saw discounts, in lots of cases, you saw huge discscnts. one offered the drug att $75. we said what's the lowest possible deal you can give us, we're not using insurance, $21 instead. if you are not using insurance, that's a big thing. >> so here's the question, i understand, it would be very hard certainly for someone in need of their medication to be shopping around and calming the cvs, feway, rite aid, wawamart, which onene makak the cheapest drug? why aren't the insurance agencies imposing some regulation or standards here? >> that's a good question. i agree. i think shopping for medications should not be like shopping for a car. you shouldn't have to haggle, you soon have to make comparisons, they turn out to be so incredible in the price difference if you don't have insurance or the insurance isn't working very well, have you no choice.
8:22 am
>> do you see these price comparesons online? >> you can go to consumer reports.org. you can. >> go where? >> consumerreports.org. >> lisa gil, very interesting information this morning. thanks a lot. can you find more consumer reports information. learn how to get the lowest prescription drug prices and where to shop online. rita moreno is 83 and still heating up the stage. >> rita! wow!
8:23 am
now a kennedy center it's called a rigged economy, and this is how it works. most new wealth flows to the top 1%. it's a system held in place by corrupt politics where walllltreet banks and billionaires buy elections. my campaign is powered by over a million small contributions,
8:24 am
who want to fight back. the truth is you can't change a corrupt system by taking its money. i'm bernie sanders. i approve this message.
8:25 am
>> watching them celebrate entertainment legends this sunday as a part of the 388th annual kennedy center honors over the next few weeks. we'll introduce you to each of this year's honorees identified for a lifetime of artistic achiefment. >> we start which are that moreno -- rita morenono s s won
8:26 am
oscar and tony. moreno,took michelle miller on a journey back. good morning. >> good morning. she is certainly best known for "west side story," but rita moreno, this legacy makes her most proud. da da da da. >> reporter: to fully appreciatee the breaking career of rita moreno, you only need to spend a few minutes with her in the bronx neighborhood she first called home. >> oh my god, i need to get out of here and give you a -- >> oh my goodness, what an honor. >> here the puerto rican transplant turned hollywood starlet is still thrilling fans. >> oh my god, are you so beautiful. >> did you live around here? >> yeah. >> i lived down the block.
8:27 am
>> reporter: she moved here at ththage of 5 is, traveveng from puerto rico to new york on a ship with her newly divorced mother. >> he's got g gse bumps. >> reporter: though revered now, moreno's earliest memories in america weren't so positive. her journey not so welcoming. >> i r rnto racist s sff quickly even when i didn't understand what the word "speckic" meant, but i could see the hatred in these young kids, white kid, i grew up feeling very, very inferior to just about everybody in the world. >> reporter: dance lessons provided an escape whenhe was just 6. a n nural performer, she was entertaining in nightclubs by the age of 9 and at 13, she earned her first part on broadway.
8:28 am
i wanand to be elizabeth taylor. >> reporter: moreno styled herself to look like the popular film actress in large part because taylor's dark hair resell"selma"bled her -- resembled her own. >> there was nobody in the movi that resembled me in anyway. >> reporter: after a talent agent spotted her in a dance recital, she landed a contract with mgm studios and moved to hollywood. t it didn't take long before moreno found hersese being type cast. >> i played indian americans, polynesian. >> the american girl gets the fashion. >> every one of them without exception were ususuly characters with absolutely no education, who could comparely speak english, who had thick accents.s. >> i a aeady speak english. >> it was limiting and
tv-commercial
8:29 am
>> reporter: was it a excise? >> of course it was. absolutely. but i always felt that somehow some day someone would see me and say, that girl has talent and i'm going to do something for her. [ music playing ] >> reporter: her some day came at the age of 26 when she was karst to play anita in "west side story." i like to be in america >> they finally found a role model. >> why would you want to go back to puerto rico? >> oh, it's so good here. >> it's so good there. we had nothing. >> the first time i had ever played a young hispanic woman who had a sense of dignitary, who had a sense of self-respect. >> reporter: she won ans a core for that pepeormance, visiting the playgrounds where many of the movie scenes were shot. moreno remembered the significance of heroin.
8:30 am
>> oh, it's hard to findords for it, because as everybody who wins an oscar will tell you, it takes almost a month or so to really believe it. my winning the oscar had a h he effect on the hispanic community. >> reporter: ironically, winning to roles. she shifted to the stage andnd the small screen. >> hey you guys. they call me broadway >> she won an emmy singing on the television show"the electric company." earned two emmys for appearances on the "muppet show" and the "rockford files." >> boy, you had me scared. here. everything keeps coming up >> and she won a tony f her perforornce at goofy gomez in
8:31 am
role she reprised in the film version. >> i'm a person that perseveres, you fall down, you get up, you dust yourself off and keep move income that direction. >> reporter: now 83 with more than 40 films and just as many them le vision shows under her bell, she is not only getting respect, she is in demand. she recently guest starred in the peabody award winning tv show "jane the virgin." >> you know, inhail, exhale. >> i am now called the pioneer. which i think is kind of charmingng >> reporter: it's been nearly eight decades since that 5-year-old girl lives i lived in an overcrowded tenement on this block, in that titi, rita moreno has become the role model she never had. what is most rewarding for you?
8:32 am
just being here. now. and having all these wonderful things happening to me. particularly since i am one of the honorees for the kennedy center honors. and what's important about that kind of honor andnd recognition is that it's for a lifetime of work. >> are you pinching yourself? >> all the time. all the time. i just feel so fortunate and privileged and more thanver i feel very latinas. >> almost 84-years-old and no signs of slowing down, in addition to acting, she just recorded her first spanish language album with grammy winning producer emilio estefan, it contains in spanish the song with the somewhere" from "west side story." she serenaded me. i was goose bumps. she isis so busy, just getting an
8:33 am
her, it's an act of god. >> what a career, though, "west side sty" and i love the words,s,he bomb the role modem she never had. >> and in demand today. >> certainly is. >> like her. >> looking forward to her honors. can you see rita and automatic winners at the 38th kennedy center honors, tuesday at 6:00, 8:00 central right here on cbs. coming up next, how baby names are becoming more noble.
8:34 am
morning." when they told me that i was diagnosed with cancer, all i could think of was my kids and that i didn't want to leave them. i beat cancer, but it is still scary. now i have a pre-existing condidion. so, if republicans take away obamacare, breast cancer survivors like me could be denied coverage. if hillary's in the white house, she's going to contitie obamacare, so t tt i don't have to worry anymore. i trust her, and i know she's going to fight for all of us. i'm hillary clinton,
8:35 am
some parents are giving
8:36 am
a new report on the most popular baby names sparks the genderr neutral name royalty, up nearly 90% this year, duchess is 75% more popular than last year and reign is up more than 50%. the most popular n nes that
8:37 am
girls and jackson for i'm _______it's eight-55 on this tuesday morning. your top stories are coming up in just a moment...but right now -- let's take a look at what's
8:38 am
a man accused of killing his mother three years ago will stand trial this week. week.investigators say 44-year-old edward cusic used a crowbar to murder his 68-
tv-commercial
8:39 am
on old marion road.court documents show cusic is the one who called 9-1-1 -- telling the operator he killed his mother because *she threatened *him with a knife. an autopsy shows she died of blunt force trauma.if he's convicted of first degree murder -- cusic will spend the rest of his life in prison. a johnson county sheriff's deputy is now being blamed or using an accident.the iowa city-press citizen reports it happened over the weekend at the intersection of highway six and highway 109 near oxford.the sheriff's office said the deputy pulled out in front of another vehihie -- using the crash h at sent one person to the hospital -- they're expected to be okay. in fayette county, a west union man has bonded out of jail after authorities say he attacked a sheriff's s deputy. deputytyerry mork faces several charges including assault on a peace officer, interference and trespassing. investigators say mork caused a disturbance on another person's property the night before thanksgiving.officers claim mork resisted arrest and assaulted a deputy who later was treated for a minor injury. don't forget -- cbs 2 connects
8:40 am
see news happen.800 222 kgan. you cacaalso email tips, pictures, and even video --to news -- at cbs 2 iowa dot com. that's a quick look at your tuesday morning news.get more
8:41 am
iowa if you're doing everything right but find it harder and harder to get by, you're not alone. while our people work longer hours for lower wages, almost all new income goes to the top 1%. my plan -- make wall street banks and the ultrarich pay their fair share of taxes, provide living wages for working people, ensure equal pay for women. i'm bernie sanders. i approve this message because together, we can make a political revolution and create an economy and democracy that works for all
8:42 am
wayne: ah! you got the big deal of the day! jonathan: yeye, girl! it's a trip to bermuda! - bigger isn't always better. wayne: you won a car! - zonks are no fun! - big deal, baby! jonathan: it's time for "let's make a deal!" now here's tv's big dealer, wayne brady! wayne: hello, welcome to "let's make a deal." i'm wayne brady, thank you so much for tuning in. who wants to make a deal? purple hair, purple hair rock star.
8:43 am
8:44 am
8:45 am
8:46 am
8:47 am
8:48 am
8:49 am
8:51 am
8:52 am
8:53 am
8:54 am
8:55 am
8:56 am
8:57 am
8:58 am

147 Views

info Stream Only

Uploaded by TV Archive on