tv CBS This Morning CBS October 3, 2016 7:00am-9:00am CDT
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captioning funded by cbs good morning. it is monay, october 3rd, 2016. welcome to "cbs this morning.? donald trump campaign brags about his business skills after a leaked tax return shows he lost nearly a billion dollars. the records show he may have avoided paying federal income tax for 18 years. >> we are in jamaica where the strongest hurricane in years is tearing through the caribbean. matthew's path could threaten the u.s. more than 10 million dollars worth of jewels stolen from kim c
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concert in new york when he heard the news. there is no one shown more genius in their way to maneuver around the tax code. >> trump taxes under the microscope. >> the reality is he's a genius! >> reporter: both everybody in this country was a genius like mr. trump is, and not pay any taxes, we would not have a country. >> powerful hurricane matthew is moving closer to haiti. before making its way to cuba on tuesday. from this system. >> the stunning referendum in colombia. >> voters nearly rejected the peace agreement with the fark rebel. >> deadly shooting of an 18-year-old by los angeles police prompted overnight protests for the second night in a row. >> the ntsb giving an update on last week's train crash in new jersey. >> the operator says he doesn't
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>> kim kardashian helded up inside her hotel room. >> i'm sorry, family emergency. i have to stop the concert. >> a bus rolled on to its side and into a ditch. >> all that. >> taylor to the outside. mccoy. the touchdown! the bills shutout the patriots. >> the winner to the 2016 ryder cup is the team from the united states. >> usa! >> all that matters. >> "saturday night live" kicked off its new season with its own take on the fir debate. >> he says climate change is a hoax invented by china. >> it's pronounced china! >> on "cbs this morning." >> she just got over pneumonia and this is actually how they same out on the campaign trail. ? woo! i feel good ? >> she came out to james brown "i feel good." i just want to point out that
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announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by toyota. let's go places! welcome to "cbs this morning." norah o'donnell is off. so josh elliott of our streaming network cbsn is with us. welcome. >> great to be with you. new information about donald trump taxes is stirring up the presidential race. "the new york times" published leaked documents showing trump declared a 916 million dollar loss on his returns. that decision, quote, could have allowed him to legally avoid paying any federal income tax for up to 18 years. >> the trump campaign responded that the documents were, quote, illegally obtained and said mr. trump has paid hundreds of millions of dollars in taxes and boasted that trump knows the tax code far better than anyone who has ever run for president. major garrett is in washington with what the trump tax return reveals. major, good morning. >> reporter: good morning. lots of details here but the biggest headline might be that
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spectacular flop as a businessman. but was able to use the tax code to build wealth any way. now we still know less about trump's taxes than we have known about every major party nominee for decade but the slender three-page look into trump's mid 1990s finances reveals the use of legal mechanisms to enrich himself and starve uncle sam. >> the reality is he's a genius! >> no one shn tax code. >> absolutely genius. >> reporter: donald trump dispatched surrogates on sunday to sing the virtue to defend his decision to keep it a secret of his future waeltealth. >> the way you're releasing this is someone might not want to release their tax rurnss. >> reporter: three pages from trump's 1995 tax return were published over the weekend by "the new york times" showing
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in losses linked to underperforming atlantic city hotels and a private airline. such sizeable losses could have helped trump offset 50 million dollars a year in taxable income for nearly two decades. at last week's debate, hillary clinton accused trump of paying no federal taxes. >> he didn't pay any federal income tax. >> that makes me smart. >> reporter: trump has not hesitated to criticize other wealthy americans for dodging their tax liabilities. >> i know people that are makg paying virtually no taxes. i know wall street. they make money and pay very little tax and franklin you have to pay some tax. >> reporter: trump veered off script in pennsylvania on saturday addressing clinton's health. >> she can't make it 15 feet to her car. give me a break. give me a break. >> reporter: then he talked about the clinton sex scandals of the past leaving a vague
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democratic nominee. >> i don't even think she is loyal to bill, if you want to know the truth. and, really, folks, really. why should she be, right? >> reporter: "the new york times" claims the documents were mailed to the paper anonymously but the paper took a risk publishing them. the law against disclosing tax information says the publication of unauthorized tax documents can be fined by not $5,000 or imprisonment of not more than five years, or both. >> in our next hour, two of the reporters who broke the story of trump's tax return will be right here with us in studio 57. hillary clinton's campaign put out a statement calling their story a bombshell. clinton will talk about taxes later today in toledo, ohio. nancy cordes is covering the clinton campaign for us. good morning, nancy. >> reporter: good morning.
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the trump organization into wells fargo or the maker of the epipen she and her campaign are playing by a different set of rules when it comes to doing business or paying taxes. >> he doesn't care about the people who lost millions of dollars and all of his bankruptcies. he cares about donald. >> reporter: clinton sup coloss nature of donald trump's past business failures. clinton, herself, didn't bring it up during a tri charlotte, north carolina. she met with a group of young african-american men and visited a black church, this after a police shooting there caused days of protests. >> like every grandmother, i worry about the safety and security of my grandchildren, but my worries are not the same as black grandmothers. >> reporter: 22% of voters in north carolina are black. it's one of a number of
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will need a large turnout of black voters to win. she will also need to energize young college educated voters, a block that supported bernie sander in the primary. >> children of the great recession and they are living in their parents' basement. >> reporter: over the weekend, a recording surfaced from a fund-raiser during the peak of her battle against sanders, where she said the struggle for millennials to find good jobs was part of what made his political revolution so appealing to them. >> we should try to do the best we can, not to be, you know, a wet blanket on idealism. >> reporter: and trump tweeted the following. sander said he disagrees with clinton on some things but no this. >> what she was saying there is absolutely correct. >> reporter: sanders says those young people are struggling. he is going to be campaigning for clinton in iowa and minnesota this week. the president and vice president
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fl battleground state news might be in ohio where cleveland cavaliers forward la lebron james, king james, the state's most famous athlete, has endorsed clinton. john heilemann is managing editor of bloomberg politics and co-host of "the circus" on cbs. >> quite a week. >> what impact does it have on this ra >> well, josh and i were discussing this just earlier. >> share it with us. >> i think if you fly -- you can get down in the weeds on this story and think about this way. donald trump is behind in this race and he's never been ahead and he needs to gain ground. he needs to gain votes. all of last week, he didn't advance his cause in that direction at all. and now this story is going to consume at least the next week where he is going to be defending himself and there are
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taxes and there is going to be new questions about his temperament how he is behaving at his rallies. he is going to be explaining and defending rather than pushing forward and advancing his cause until the next debate and we are down to 36, 37 news cycles until the debate. if you lose six or seven of them dr his surrogates are using the word genius to describe this. could it possibly work to his advantage? >> i get there are going to be a lot of people on wall street who are going to say he within the law and this is probably smart yoos the tax laws but hard for me to believe in battleground states with a lot of ordinary people he lost nearly $1 billion and then managed to use that to not pay taxes and how does that make him a genius? >> that is exactly right. the point that major was making. >> yeah. >> what kind of bad business decisions cause you to lose 916 million dollars? >> the mid 1990s the time of the greatest economic boom in our
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i just think one to say, look, he is not really a great businessman at all. look at the money he lost. and, two, he's a tax cheat. both of those are big claims. there are responses you can make if you're donald trump and his surge at-ba surrogates but they will plant that seed. >> he says i'm dealing with it but it never seemed as though crum donald trump, th tax code. >> if donald trump wants to make the argument he is a change agent and put his tax returns out and says this system stinks. here is the way i exploited the system and here are all of the things i would do to change it that would be bad for me. that's how much of a change agent i am and going into the details of how he did it. that could be a really powerful political thing to do. he has exhibited no interest in releasing his tax returns and resisted calls a better part of
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a huge turn-about if he would do that but this is all how it could have been to his advantage. i'm the one that knows the system and you have to be more -- >> that the argument he made in the primaries he talked about how much money he had given to politicians and how much influence he gained because of it. >> we still don't know so much because of the fact we don't have his tax returns. again, he could make this argument but he would have to really do it -- it would be a very bold move for him to the it at this juncture. >> he criticized his people who made a lot of money. >> i imagine hedge fund folks he has attacked not paying their taxes might be feeling a bit chagrinned this morning. >> thank you, john. >> thank you, guys. cbs news will bring you live coverage of the vice presidential debate tomorrow at 9:00 eastern/8:00 central. here is a look inside the debate hall at virginia's longwood university. elaine quijano of our streaming network cbsn will be the moderator. hurricane matthew could
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caribbean eyeliislands before threatening the u.s. it is flooding streets in jamaica. packing sustained winds 130 miles an hour and some areas could get 40 inches of rain. matthew stretches over hundreds of miles. mark strassmann is in kingston, jamaica, where residents are bracing for the category four hurricane. mark, good morning. >> good morning. >> reporter: right now we are between bands of rain as matthew churns between jamaica and haiti to the east, with millions of it started raining here in
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the ocean ahead of the storm. officials issued an evacuation order throughout the island. >> sure that jamaica will be within the 90% of the band of the storm. >> reporter: in haiti, the slow moving storm is expected to dump between 15 and 25 inches of rain. the government has opened roughly 1,300 emergency shelters matthew will make its way toward cuba with hurricane conditions by tomorrow. the u.s. has evacuated about 700 family members from the u.s. naval base in guantanamo bay. the state department has advised nonessential personnel in jamaica, but also in haiti and the bahamas, to evacuate if they can but, at the very least, to hunker down. the impact in the u.s. is still unclear forecasters say, but
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coast could start to feel it bye 2007. chief weather caster lonnie quinn of wcbs is tracking the threat to the u.s. >> good morning. i want to get right to the 5:00 a.m. numbers from the national hurricane center. with. yep. cat four winds 130 miles per hour. some may be weaker than where it was yesterday. right now, it is 230 miles to the southeast of kingston, jamaica. it's going to be moving to the north but check this out. it's going to be passing somewhere between jamaica and haiti. we think closer to haiti as a cat four over the eastern tip of cuba as a cat four. or three. into the bahamas a cat three. wednesday 2:00 a.m. what happens from this point forward is key to the u.s. because now we are getting some
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u.s. and that is because there is this big ridge of high pressure around bermuda push it closer to our shores. not calling for a landfall necessarily but some of the spaghetti models are doing just that. look at the same general bend but now three of them have a landfall around the outer banks of north carolina and keep an eye on that as far as the wind field goes, the hurricane force wind field is 50 miles wide by could feel it up to the carolinas before you get to wednesday or thursday, possible. >> lonnie, thanks. the engineer of the computer train that slammed into a busy new jersey station says he has no memory of the crash. new photos show the extent of the damage in the hoboken terminal. the engineer thomas gallagher told investigators he only remembers waking up on the floor after the collision. >> as he approached the end of the station platform, he said
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his watch and noticed the train was about six minutes later arrival at hoboken. he said when he checked the speedomet speedometer, err operating at 10 miles an hour. >> investigators say the first black box recovered from the train was not functioning. one woman in the station was killed in the crash. more than a hundred people were injured. police in paris this morning are searching for the gunman behind a daring robbery of more than $10 million in jewelry. the who was staying at a luxury apartment when armed gunmen police officers were in the building overnight. the reality tv star was not harmed. elaine is outside paris with more. >> reporter: good morning. it was shortly before 3:00 a.m. when five masked men were allowed into this building by the concierge. police say the robbers handcuffed the concierge and forced him to lead them to the
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the gaggle of photographers and cameramen that trail kardashian west wherever she slows are not covering the usually story that is usually associated with the 35-year-old super celebrity early in the morning. according to to investigators people made off with jewelry and a spokesman for kardashian west said she was badly shaken but physically unharmed after the robbery. husband kanye west was performing in new york at the time. >> i'm sorry. family emergency. i have to stop. >> reporter: and cancelled the show and performance. kardashian west had been in the french capital for fashion week and attended a show sunday evening where her sister jenner was on the catwalk.
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guards dealt with the. a serial celebrity prankstered lunged at her on a street in central paris last week and she was attacked by a fashion week show in paris in 2014 but was unharmed. it's also unclear whether kardashian west, 3-year-old daughter and 10-month-old son were with her when the robbery occurred. police say the france. >> a lot of questions there. thank you, elaine cobb. something tells me they will amp up the security even more. >> i would assume so! >> you hope. >> just thinking outloud here. >> that would be in the offing. when we come back, an exploding e-cigarette injures a trial on a "harry potter" ride in orlando. first, it's time to chec
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low 70s today. 57 tonight. tomorrow little warmer, too. 76 the high. showers late tomorrow night, and that sets the theme for some off-and-on showers for wednesday and thursday. storm system moves out, and we cool down to the upper 50s friday after morning announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by weight watchers. beyond the scale from weight
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we are gaining more insight this morning about donald trump's taxes. >> ahead, what three pages of a single tax return say and don't say about trump's business dealings. the news is back in the morning right here on "cbs this morning." announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by tatlz. does psoriasis ever get in the way of a touching moment? if you have moderate to severe psoriasis, you can embrace ance of completely clear skin with taltz. taltz is proven to give you a chance at completely clear skin. with taltz, up to 90% of patients had a significant improvement of their psoriasis plaques. in fact, 4 out of 10 even achieved completely clear skin. do not use if you are allergic to taltz. before starting you should be checked for tuberculosis. taltz may increase your risk of infections and lower your ability to fight them.
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so what do the trade deals really mean for iowa? blum's deals are just one of the ways the biggest corporations rig the system to make more money at the expense of iowa jobs. oh, and don't forget-- these corporations shipping our jobs overseas? congressman blum voted to give them tax breaks. these guys hope you're not paying attention... so maybe you should. the deals blum makes in washington are bad for iowa. house majority pac
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thinking to have better judgment this mr. trump? >> he makes bad decisions. he spent his life cheating middle class laborers. laborers like my own human father who made -- i guess drapes or printed drapes or kind of a drape and he was relatable and i am also relatable. >> how is your temperament? >> i have the best temperament. she is lying, her hair is crazy. >> secretary clinton, what do you think about that?
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>> "saturday night live," they were on fire on saturday night. >> welcome. >> alec baldwin. >> at one point hillary clinton's character said can the voters just vote today after the bit they did. it was very, very well done. welcome back to "cbs this morning.? coming up this half hour, a closer at what donald trump's tax returns reveal about his finances. experts say the enormous size of hi losses make this case very unusual and why they question plus, growing calls now for oversight of the sperm bank industry. lawsuits accuse some clinics of failing to do genetic testing and one talks about how one clinic lost her husband's sperm. time to show you some of the morning's headlines from around the globe. some children in the city of aleppo started a new school year
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a cease-fire collapsed last month. the new school year began over the weekend. meanwhile, air strikes hit one of aleppo's main hospitals forcing it out of service. the "miami herald" says colombia's president and the country's biggest rebel group are trying to rescue their historic peace plan. voters rejected the plan yesterday by less than 1%. shocking polsters in so doing. they say easing punishment amounted at least 220,000 people have died in more than 50 years of fighting. the greenville news of south carolina reports on the death of a 6-year-old shot at his school. jacob hall was finally remembered by town residents during a church service last night. he was wounded on wednesday along with a teacher and another student who were released from the hospital. the accused gunman is a 14-year-old boy. the "orlando sentinel" reports on two people hurt at
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a man and a 14-year-old girl were on the hogwarts express train ride on saturday when the e-cigarette or vaporizer pen malfunctioned and created a fireball. they were both treated. pope francis says catholics should study, pray, and vote their conscience when choosing the next president. he said he would never interfere into a campaign but he criticize donald trump earlier this year and says anybody who builds a border wall is not christian. they are asking for him to release new information. trump reported almost a billion dollars in business losses on his 1995 income taxes. jan crawford is looking closely at those filings to see what they reveal about trump's finances. jan, good morning. >> reporter: good morning. the times published three pages from donald trump's state tax
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prepared one of them said they app authentic. the filing shows staggering losses that trump could have used to avoid paying federal income taxes for up 18 years. donald trump has campaigned as a savvy businessman. tax returns leaked to "the new york times" suggest his companies were hemorrhaging huge amounts of money. in those 1995 filings, trump claimed about $6,000 in wages and more than 7 million in interest income. but he million from real estate losses and another 909 million in net operating losses from his other business. >> we call it the billion dollar dream and it is that. it's a dream of beauty and fantasy. >> reporter: at the time, trump's atlantic city casinos, swrls his airline, were struggling to make a profit. >> we are looking to make this into one of the really fine airlines anywhere in the world. >> reporter: tax experts told "cbs this morning" trump did
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losses in order to avoid paying taxes on his income that year and in subsequent years. >> nobody in the tax business would describe that as loophole. it's one of the things that makes the system fair. when you lose money, you never pay taxes. >> reporter: but the experts said the size of trump's losses nearly a billion dollars make this case very unusual. steve rosenthal is at the tax policy center. >> there is a real question as to whether those losses are economic to spectacular fails of mr. trump's business and tax avoidance, perhaps lawful or maybe something much worse. >> reporter: it's possible some of it wasn't even trump's own money. >> if he borrowed from a bank, it's their money that disappeared. it's almost inconceivable that he is actually out of pocket 900 million dollars. in essence he is deducting their losses. >> reporter: the leaked filings also don't reveal exactly how trump earned his income, whether any of it came from foreign sources or how much he gave to
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>> there are plenty of things we could figure out if we could see more of his taxes but all we see for now is one narrow glimpse. >> reporter: it's unclear how many years trump claimed those losses on his income taxes. trump's accountant said 900 million dollar figure had too many digits for his tax preparation software so, as a result, he had to enter part of the number manually, using a typewriter. gayle? >> typewriter? i remember those! california nightmare. >> anna werner has that story coming up. if you're heading out the door,
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? infertility is a growing problem in the united states and in vitro treatments have increased 65% with the same-sex couples wanting to have children, they will earn 88 million dollars. anna werner show us why some have big concerns about the lack of federal oversight. >> reporter: good morning. you might think that sperm banks are regulated like your doctor's office. but, actually, there is limited oversight, which some consumers say has led to unpleasant surprises and heartache. >> reporter: we were best friend. >> reporter: high school
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her husband erin had planned to have children but at the age of 24, aaron suffered a fatal stroke. >> he was the best husband that any woman could ever want. >> reporter: as he lay dying in the hospital, robertson made the decision to harvest some of his sperm. what were you thinking on that day when you made that decision? >> i was thinking there is a very good chance that my husband is going to die, but i'll have this and i can will have his likeness or his laugh to bring with me, and that gave us all so much comfort and hope. >> reporter: she selected a clinic in the los angeles area to freeze six viles of aaron's sperm but when she was finally ready to have a baby in 2014, she got a shock. she says the clinic, which had changed hands and was now known as reproductive fertility center, couldn't find the frozen sperm. all six viles were gone and with
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>> it was like a nightmare. like how could this be happening? >> reporter: robertson has filed a lawsuit, hers joins legal action taken against other sperm banks. several families have sued a georgia-based company over its sales of sperms from a donor is claimed was a neuroscientist but court papers says was a schizophrenic and didn't have a college degree. >> when you have a multibillion dollar industry with no wrong. >> reporter: wendy kramer runs a group that connects donors and their genetic family members. >> what we have come to realize is that these sperm banks are really -- they are sperm sellers. first and foremost a money making business. >> reporter: fda regulations only require testing for eight diseases. no one regulates how sperm banks keep track of biological materials or do genetic testing or other vetting of donors. >> without regulation, without
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banks can basically say they test for whatever they want to say. >> reporter: some sperm banks disagree. california cryo bank, one of the country's largest, says it performs expensive genetic tests and rejects many potential donors and told us to accuse the industry of not caring about the well-being of the individuals we are servicing is simply illogical. even this new jersey sperm bank operator told us. >> buyer b the time. >> reporter: ability runs this genetic corporation. he says for his sperm donors he verifies college toronto raptors and does health tests and nearly all of them voluntary. there is no requirement for other sperm banks to do what you do? >> you're right. you're right. >> reporter: he says there is a need for more regulation. >> you can achieve that. it will take monumental task on a national level. >> reporter: why? >> because you have to invite a
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time in creating proper legislation. >> reporter: do you think they want legislation? do they want regulation? >> i don't know that. i may be the only one that welcomes that type of oversight. >> reporter: robertson says it's needed because she has another worry, that the clinic may have given her husband's sperm to someone else who may not know a piece of critical medical information, that the stroke that killed him was related to an inherited suffered from, something they had planned to test for before she got pregnant. >> i lost my whole future. for me, everything that i had planned and my children that i was going to have, but almost worse than that is living and knowing that there may be children out there that have this horrible disease and they don't know. >> reporter: the clinic she is suing had no comment. its attorney told us the facts
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proceedings. the attorneys for the sperm bank sued in georgia told us donors histories are provided by the donor and cannot be verified for accuracy but she said in addition they test for genetic conditions. sperm banks the word to consumers is as this guy said, buyer beware. you really have to make a lot of checks on a sperm bank to find out what they do and what procedures -- >> i'm amazing. just simply take the donor's word for it? their accuracy. if they are tag an oral history from a donor and not doing further checks and not looking at their records, then essentially, they would be taking their word for it. >> anna, thank you so much. still ahead, bill murray shows off his enthusiasm at golf's most raucous international tournament. ahead, how the actor and comedian's patriotic streams were just tonic that team usa required. first, it's time to check
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a mainly sunny sky day. low 70s today. 57 tonight. tomorrow little warmer, too. 76 the high. showers late tomorrow night, and that sets the theme for some off-and-on showers for wednesday and thursday. storm system moves out, and we cool down to the upper 50s friday after morning announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by toyota. let's go places. ? ?you don't own me? ?don't try to change me in any way? ?oh? ?don't tell me what to do? ?just let me be myself? ?that's all i ask of you?
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or go to garlocknotice.com america! america! america! america! >> that is actor, comedian and golf super fan bill murray leading the america's cheering succession minnesota. they brought the europeans for the first time since 2008. patrick reed celebrated with unusual enthusiasm on the course. >> in the hole! >> the u.s. team will defend the ryder cup in two years in paris. i got to tell you, i've never
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? it is monday, october 3rd, 2016. welcome back to "cbs this morning.? there is more real news ahead including donald trump's 900 million dollar tax loss. about the tax return that just showed up in the mail. first, here's a look at today's "eye opener" at 8:00. the headline might be that donald trump was a flop as a businessman but able to use the tax code to built wealth any way. >> clump the trump organization in with companies she and her campaign arguing are playing by a different set of rules. >> at times if i was donald trump's state tax returns and the cant who prepared one of them showed "cbs this morning" they appear authentic.
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>> between bands of rain as matthew churns from haiti and millions of people in its projected path. >> it will bend closer to the u.s. because a big ridge of high pressure. >> police say robbers handcuff ed the concierge and forced them to lead them to her apartment. >> it's amazing. you simply take the donor's words. >> drops back. looks. load up. fires long for the end zone. pass is going to be caught by tennessee. >> tennessee wins! >> jennings makes the catch in the end zone on the hail mary! i don't believe i saw that. announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by
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i'm charlie rose with gayle king and josh elliott of our streaming network cbsn. norah is off. donald trump's taxes are fronts and center again as a campaign issue. "the new york times" published three pages from the candidate's 1995 tax return. they show trump declared nearly 916 million dollar loss. the times says that loss from several lost bad business deals could have allowed him to legally him to avoid paying any income tax for up to 18 years. >> t documents were illegal obtained. a cam train -- campaign statement said, quote, mr. trum% knows the tax code far better than anyone who has ever run, and he knows better than anyone how to fix it. >> two "the new york times" journalists who broke this story about donald trump's tax return are with us put nope reporter susanne craig discovered copies
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senior writer david barstow found the tax attorney. >> the two join us at the table. so much to discuss. welcome to you both. take us there, susanne. you go to your mailbox and see this document and you think what? >> i looked at it and it said -- had a return address from the trump tower. i got, you know, like what is this? i opened it and it looked what appeared to be three pages of donald trump'sax and i'm just sort of staring at it going this can't be true. i was on a phone call. i hung up from the person i was talking to and i walked over to david's desk who was on the phone and i showed it to him. he just hung up the phone. we just went into a room and just sort of looking at them. it was both like we couldn't believe it. and also we need to figure out if we can verify this at the same time. there was like this and can we verify this all at the same time.
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and make sure we can go ahead with this? >> i think we as reporters felt that way. we had to just start to figure it out and see if, a, get somebody to verify it and start going through the numbers. >> do you have any sense of why they were sent to you? >> i've been covering donald trump's finances and i covered wall street, but i really don't know. i don't know why they selected me out of any reporter in the country. i was thinking maybe a lot of other reporters got it and don't check their mailboxes. >> who send something re mail these days? david, you talked to the accountant. did you have a difficult time getting him to talk to you? did you call him up on the phone and say look what we have here? >> this is one i wanted to go and sit down face-to-face with him. i wanted to show the documents to him. >> did you call him ahead of time or just show up? >> the bain of every reporter's existence is a gated community. so having to navigate the
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persuade the accountant to sit down with me at a bagel shop. i then had the opportunity to really stress-test the documents with him. there are all kind of things about these documents that we were concerned about. we all remember the kind of the dan rather episode and, you know, this is a really important matter. it's a critical time in the campaign. through all of the things that made us doubt or be skeptical of these documents, sort of one-by-one with him and he, of course was -- he's a very careful man. obviously, deeply aware of his ethical requirements not to divulge information directly connected to mr. trump's finances, but what he was
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thing that we really needed him to do was to authenticate the documents. the critical moment for me and for us was we were terribly bothered by the way numbers appeared on the tax return. >> the first two digits actually that were drawn? >> yes. a huge number. 916 million dollar loss. but the 9 and the 1 were slightly different font and they were slightly misaligned. >> what did that say to you? perhaps somebody just added these digits and then sent us the documents. >> speculation that maybe other documents coming and more information coming? is that a reasonable speculation? >> we are doing everything we can to help that happen. 620 eighth avenue, 0018. >> is it possible that he simply -- did so well after that that he could have used up those -- that carry forward over
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>> we looked carefully at that. we, obviously, have been studying his finances and i think -- and i think we, at least as of yet, don't see a way for him to have gobbled up that 916 million dollar -- >> 18 years to do it? >> would have taken him a long time. what that equates to is 50 million dollars a year in taxable income that gets wiped off that over 18 years. >> it assumes no more losses on that could have continued to have losses. >> in the documents that we published, he is looking at somewhere between 10 and 15 million -- >> he is not denying it but not confirming your story either? >> correct. >> what does this say about him as a businessman, that he lost $916 million? did he declare bankruptcy for the airline, the hotel, the -- >> his companies have been in bankruptcy multiple times.
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bankruptcy but does, i think -- >> can i ask one quick question? is it possible that this is money that belonged to the bank? that he is getting tax -- from the bank that loaned him the money? >> i'm not sure. that's a good question. i'm trying to think of how that could pass through and end up on his personal income tax form. the tax experts who we consulted on t is that there are these wonderful provisions and tax codes that for folks, like mr. trump, who put their wealth into partnerships, s-corporations and llcs, it gives this sort of mechanism for showing, for allowing the losses, depreciation, et cetera, to flow from those entities right on to his personal income tax.
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they are not happy you released all of his tax returns. are you concerned about legal action from him against you for releasing? >> i think it's -- i think it's a very well understood principle in our journalistic tradition in this country that if we didn't entice someone to break the law, if someone mails documents to us and we think they are in the public interest, that we have every right, under the first amendment, to publish that information. >> certainly be a question. >> our lawyers -- >> something tells me this story is not over. thank you. >> we will see you both again. thank you for joining us. we reported last week a lack of oversight allows police officers with questionable backgrounds to find work in new departments. ahead and only on "cbs this morning," demarco morgan asked attorney general loretta lynch
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low 70s today. 57 tonight. tomorrow little warmer, too. 76 the high. showers late tomorrow night, and that sets the theme for some off-and-on showers for wednesday and thursday. storm system moves out, and we cool down to the upper 50s friday after morning announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by liberty mutual insurance.
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? attorney general loretta lynch is in dallas this morning to promote better relations between police and the communities that they serve. her visit comes off recent protests in charlotte and elsewhere over deadly policeed attorney general to respond to that. good morning. >> reporter: good morning. the so-called one police department and despite questionable records are hired by another. i asked the attorney general loretta lynch why a new national database to prevent these kinds of transfers. >> the department has supported one particular organization that is working on such a national database and we hope it will be of use to police departments, as something they can look at in their recruitment and retention of officers, as well as providing information, helping
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incidents in general. so we support making sure that every police department has the information they need to make the best hiring choices possible. >> reporter: do you find that disturbing that there is no oversight? >> we are talking about 18,000 police departments across the country. with a welter of different jurisdictions over that. that is challenging. what i find encouraging, however, is within the debate, within policing itself is the desire for consistency and a desire for standards to which every department can adhere. >> when policing, what do you mean? >> well, community policing is policing based on a connection between law enforcement and the community, the specific community that it is serving at that time. rebuilding the bond of trust between law enforcement and the communities that we serve is one of my top priorities as attorney general. >> reporter: when you look at those pictures coming out of charlotte, milwaukee sometime ago, tulsa, the number of cities, baltimore, some say justice takes too long.
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and i think that justice is not just what happens in court. justice happens on the streets. when people express themselves in peaceful protests and hold up a mirror to society and they say to all of us, you know, who are working as hard as we can, they say, look. we know you're doing a lot but we need you to hear that there is more work to be done. >> reporter: for those who feel that the law enforcement system is broken, what do you say to those people? >> i say i understand your frustration and i understand how you would feel that way and process that the way working through a case can take time, the way of working through issues can take time. and that we are building on the work of people that have gone before us. we look back to the arc of history and see the progress that we have made in this country and that should give people hope, that even though they may be at a difficult moment now, maybe a dark period now, we have always pushed forward. we have always pushed for progress. and we have always, always fought for justice.
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police clashing have been painful to watch, they have also allowed the rest of the country to see and understand an issue that the minority community has been facing for decade. josh? >> demarco, thank you for that. dodgers broadcaster icon vin scully is enjoying his first day of retirement today after signing off for a final time. ahead, how his remarkable talents are now being compared to frank sinatra and albert einstein, to maim a couple. you're watching "cbs this morning." you're watching "cbs this morning." amaim a couple. you're watching "cbs this morning." maim a couple. you're watching "cbs this morning." emaim a couple. you're watching "cbs this morni a with the surface book, you can do all this stuff. . so crisp. i love it.
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who would ever think that little red-headed kid with a tear in his pants, shirttail hanging out and playing stick ball in the streets of new york with a tennis ball and a broom handle would wind up sitting here 67 years of broadcasting? >> that is dodgers legend vin scully at his final game yesterday. the 88-year-old presided over 9,000 games and 67 years to the day after he became a fan of the sport. later, it shaped his career. >> reporter: that phrase invoked by that voice has been a part of the american sports landscape for nearly seven dick aids. >> we are in san francisco. >> reporter: on sunday, dodgers announcer vincent edward scully
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the end of a broadcasting career, unlike any other. >> and the giants are dancing in the streets. >> vin is a story teller. he is a poet. he simply is the best of all time. he is the beatles, he is frank sinatra, he is albert einstein. he is anybody at the top of his game. >> reporter: from his first day of work with the then brooklyn dodgers in 1950, scully grew from a still the youngest to ever call a world series game, into the sports unrivalled poet laurie@. he was there in 1967 when sandy koufax pitched1974 when hank aaron shattered babe ruth's home run record. >> a black man is getting a stand he ovation in the deep south. >> reporter: but it was his call
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stunning home run during the 1988 world series that just might be the most vintage vin of all. >> in a year that has been so improbable, the impossible has happened! >> reporter: as scully's singular career wound down to a final few outs on sunday. >> you can't say that it's over. smile, because it happened. >> reporter: that red-headed kid from the bronx who gave his heart to the game so many year for so many watching, the impossible had happened all over again. >> i have said enough for a lifetime, and for the last time, i wish you all a very pleasant good afternoon. >> i was a mess on my couch yesterday! >> watching him? >> i watched the kirk gibson
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hours.right now, authorities don't know what the man was doing walking along the highway.at this point, no names have been released - and it's still under investigation. a marion man is dead this morning after being hit by a train in alburnett. alburnett.the linn county sheriff says the 44-year-old man was driving a pickup truck towing a flatbred trailer when he drove in front of a freight train sunday.officials say the truck caught fire and the driver was pronounced dead at the scene.he was the only name is not being released until his family has been notified. after a long week here in cedar rapids - things are starting to head back to normal - and that means kids in cedar rapids are back in school this morning. morning.students in the cedar rapids community school district are back in the classroom this morning for the first time in more than a week. the whole district was shut down last week while the city rising flood waters from the cedar river.the district's website says busses will try to run as close to the normal
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multiple bridges are back open again after flood waters went down.days ago -- every bridge in cedar rapids except for inter-state 380 and highway 30 was shutdown causing major delays.this morning -- the first -- second -- third -- eighth and 12-th avenue bridges are all open this morning. businesses who used sand-bags can drop them off at one of four sites today. today.they will be open from 7- to 7 at least through friday.one of the main locations is the old alliant energy power plant - between cargill and quaker oats.you can find drop off sites in newbo - the czech village and kingston village - on our website -cbs 2 iowa dot com. that's a quick look at your monday morning news.get more news anytime online - at cbs 2
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? welcome back to "cbs this morning.? coming up in this half hour, understanding that melting ice in the arctic, lesley stahl showed us last night on minutes" how it is the harsh on earth. she is in our toyota green room. it was cold last night to show us how many see as melting ice an a military and economic opportunity. >> speaking of said green room. we pull wide. actress diane lane is also along and making a return to the broadway stage in a revival of checkoff of cherry orchard.
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experience was absolutely hair raising. time to show you some of the morning's headlines from around the globe. former first daughter barbara bush spotted at a fund-raising event for hillary clinton in paris. the photo included huma abedin. the #has been edited out. >> that is quite the picture. "the washington post" reports on the williams opening up about the brain disease that killed the comedian. williams committed suicide just over two years ago. susan snyder williams blames louie body dimension which damages brain cells over time. essay titled terrorist inside my husband's brain, she wrote i will never know the true depth of his suffering or just how hard he was fighting. but from where i stood, i saw the bravest man in the world playing the hardest role of his life. >> heart breaking.
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ford is introducing new police cars today that are harder to detect. the emergency lights in the rear are built into the spoiler. red and blue emergency lights are already inside the front visors of unmarked police cards. ford wanted to create a system for police cars that doesn't block officers' visibility. honolulu star advertiser reports that hawaii's only native bees are on the endangered seven yellow-faced bee species will have federal protection. >> the hill covers a kiss cam appearance by former president jimmy carter, after turning 92 on saturday, you can see here, he kissing his wife yesterday during the braves game in atlanta. that was not just a peck. >> it was not.
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meanwhile, the braves if you'll forgive me, kissed turner field good-bye as they have a new stadium next year. the opening of an ocean, last night "60 minutes" explored what this evolving landscape could mean for mankind. lesley stahl spent time with researchers. >> reporter: in the command post at the ice ca >> reporter: they were tracking one of those subs that was preparing for a risky maneuver. bunching upward through thick ice. we helicoptered to the site where they plan to surface, which was about seven miles from the base camp. a small force of men was preparing for the arrival of the sub. they drilled a hole in the three-foot thick slab of ice so they could lower an underwater
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device into the ocean to make contact with the sub. >> balboa, this is marvin gardens. >> reporter: they were trying to direct the sub, conamed balboa, to a specific spot where the ice is flat and thin enough for it to surface without getting damaged. >> so the submarine is humming in on this pinger device. it's a beacon. and as it hones in, they can talk to us via the telephone. >> reporter: when a sub surfaces in the arctic, they use to carve a visual landmark in the ice that the sub can see. x-literally marks the spot. but that x-is a moving target because the ice is constantly drifting, which makes maneuvering a windowless steel cylinder the size of a football field to such a pinpoint location seem impossible. but in this case, the skipper and his crew nailed it on their first try.
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emerge. >> there they are. >> reporter: it is one of man's most sophisticated war ships. the nuclear powered "uss hampton." they used a simple chain saw, a couple of pick axes to open the hatch. all the while, navy divers stood by just in case the ice under our feet cracked. >> lesley stahl is with us now. good morning. >> good morning. >> was this scary? it was too beautiful to be scary. >> the video is amazing. >> i was surrounded by the u.s. navy. they weren't nervous. they weren't afraid. you just got the message. >> reporter: you seem to be spried for a moment when there was a break? >> oh, you know what? they had already kicked us out. so the cracks formed in the camp where we were living and they did an emergency evacuation. >> right. >> after i left. but our cameraman had stayed and got pictures. >> so they got those pictures? >> emergency evacuation sounds
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but you saw that. >> i didn't say i shouldn't have been -- >> but the main story here is that the russians are claiming the arctic? >> well, the russians are building up a military presence there. they planted their flag under the north pole but they haven't crossed the line to actual declare. so as the general i interviewed said, they are just keeping that line right like a simmer on your stove without actually having a flame going. >> what are we doing in response? >> is it a competition between us and th >> well, some people think it should be. we are not own we are not overtly building up our military. we are doing a lot of exercises and doing a lot of science to figure out how you can live up there. >> interestingly at the beginning of the piece you also said, look, this is not a story about global warming. i was struck by the lack of interest in what it means for this ocean to be opening in the first place. >> well, it's a given.
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the u.s. military is doing what they are doing with that as an assumption. that is just a fact. so it's melting. it's one reason the ice is moving. nine miles a day while we were up there. can you imagine? in all directions. not nine miles in one. it's swirling, really. because the ice is melting so quickly and this ocean, they say that in the summer, there will be totally free access by 2030. >> som ice is not a good thing in terms of the climate. others say that it's an economic and military opportunity. what are the people living there saying? >> well, nobody lives there. >> no, but the people you were working with, what did they say? >> it is a two-edge sword. there are all kind of minerals hidden under the ice that could help the world but in the united states, for instance, the sea level is going to rise and we are already seeing some of that. great floods. >> very scary.
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never seen anything so beautiful in my entire life. ice is alive. ice melts. it actually makes noise. it changes shapes. and it is breath takingly beautiful and there is such emotion that comes to a human being when they see breath taking -- >> the cold didn't bother you? >> yeah, it did, but not so much that i couldn't -- >> you could feel it through the screen. >> the sun off the ice? >> everything was beautiful. er difficult and the worst was my toes and everybody else's toes. >> you were bundled up. >> no running water. just think about that. >> i saw that toilet. >> no way to wash your face! >> i saw that. >> remember, your book is on sale now. becoming grandma. a great read. >> actress diane lane made her broadway debut sometime ago as a child and now back with a
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she was just 13 years old, look at you, diane lane! still got a lot of hair. now lane is starring in the revival of "the cherry orchard" on broadway. her character poses some ideas to save their property, including getting rid of its cherry orchard. >> chop it down! my dear, forgive me, but you don't seem to understand a thing in this part of the country. if there if anything noteworthy or even of interest, it's our cherry owner chart. >> our cherry orchard. diane joins us now. good morning. >> good morning. >> i was here saturday row h seat 115. did you see me? i was going, go, diane! congratulations. because you were first in this play as a little girl. >> that's right. >> now you're back and you get to speak. >> i get to speak in the play. i'm grateful and it's an amazing experience. a lot of adrenaline, a lot of
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back then, merle streep. >> she was a fantastic back then. today suzanna flood is amazing in this production. every character is a classic in this show because it's a wonderful opportunity for actors to show comedy that you don't realize is there. it blooms in the care of wonderful directors and this adaptation by steven carom is bringing it more to the people and access ability. d easier or harder? >> smart question. both, because there's so much truth in the words and it's not quite shakespearean but you have to time your inhales to make your point. >> the idea of shakespeare, this play is over a hundred years off. why do you think it resonates still? >> i think it's been on broadway
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years and the reason is because it deals so much with our human foibles and we get to laugh at ourselves and see ourselves in these various characters, and just have some kind of -- we despise human nature, as well as we adore human nature. we feel compassion and distain at the same time, at the same time. we see that history does repeat and we are trapped in a beautiful play all the time. >> you say despite all of your experience, you say being on the stage still terrifies you. how is that possible? >> well, how is that possible? >> with all that you do. >> it's a high-wire act. they say the theater people are the same as people that jump out of airplanes. i would never do that.
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there is connectivity with the live audience and it is a two-way street and interactive. >> do you wish you had done more theater? >> i've done my share and good stuff. >> you continue to make films? >> yes. i love it. it's a very different medium, as you know. the weird thing about film, which i don't really care for is that i'm always surprised when i see the film. one way or another i a >> you were there when they were making it. >> isn't that weird? >> but not in that editing room, that's true. a lot can change in editing room. >> i joke and say i have an editor on my altar. >> the energy expended and anything but average but the average week of your schedule. >> it shows. >> what is it to constantly get back up for that moment? >> interesting you say that, because as a cast, we hold hands
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and we are back stage and, you know, this beautiful group of people that i am a humble part of and i get to be the poster girl and, yes, it is very much of the story, she is the one whose family this cherry orchard belongs to, but we, as a group, go through this as a team sport, we hold hands and i swear lightning bolts are going through our hands. as we approach it together and we are cne umbilical cord between us because you have to be ready for anything. props. now with the changes that are happening in previews, that is hair-raising and probably where you got the quote about me being scared, because changes is happening to props and costumes and lighting and words and actions and so many things in the process of rehearsal during the day and we employ it and try it out at night in front of 750 people! >> the people go nuts the minute
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it's instant applause for you. bravo. >> that doesn't happen at home. >> applause? >> my cat can't applaud. >> we pulled covers of you when you were a young girl and could we show those? look at you, diane lane. a walk back in memory lane for you. i remember that "time" magazine cover. >> 1979 was good to me. >> you look at a picture of yourself earlier, you said look at all of that hair. what do you think when you look at this girl? >> she is so beautiful and she is a model and she is journalist graduate from nyu so her whole life is in front of her. i just can't help but see a little bit of her in me and a little bit of me in her. so i'm very tickled pink to be a mom. it's done a lot of giving me -- >> you remain a whiz kid, diane. >> oh, thank you! >> diane layne, have a great da. >> thank you. love your show.
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? the duke and duchess of cambridge, prince george and princess charlotte wrapped up eight-day tour over canada. the 3-year-old prince gave an enthusiastic wave good-bye. his 17-month-old sister pointed to crowd that gathered to see them off. george put his face up to the plane's window for one final look before the royal family flew back to england. i can't get enough of little george and his shorts and his shoes and his socks. charlotte looks cute too. >> both do. that does it for us. tune into the "cbs evening news"
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i'm chuck grassley, and i approve this message. in twenty-three years, chuck grassley hasn't missed a single vote. in just six years, senator patty judge missed a hundred and eighty-two votes. state fair board member judge missed seventy-six percent of their meetings. iowa economic development commission member judge, missed sixty-nine of seventy-two meetings. the register called patty judge a ?habitual no show.?
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there are still no suspes charges in a fatal friday morning stabbing in cedar rapidsover the weekend - police identified the victim as 18-year-old christopher arteberry junior. police found him in the 67- hundered block of college park court south-west.he died at the hospital about an hour later.police questioned several people, but are still looking for those responsible. a 32-year-old waterloo man is now arrested in connection to the death of his girlfriends 4-year-old daughter last year. year.chad little is facing
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charges.his girlfriend kristi buss - was arrested last week - for child endangerment. prosecutors say little abused buss' two kids, and she didn't try to stop the abuse which utlimately killed her daughter gracie. an iowa state football great was arrested over the weekend -- just hours after he was honored during the cyclones football game against baylor. baylor.former running back troy davis was arrested for public intoxication early sunday morning.the 41-year-old is scheduled to be inducted into the college football hall of fame later a finalist for the heisman trophy back in 1996. 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 monday morning news.get more news anytime online - at cbs 2
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wayne: hey, baby! - momma got some money! - oh! (laughing) jonathan: it's a trip to miami! tiffany: come on, guys! wayne: you won a car! (cheering) jonathan: oh-oh! wayne: whoo! - let's get that big deal, baby! whoo! jonathan: it's time for ?let's make a deal.? wayne: hey, america, welcome to ?let's make a deal.? it's oktoberfest! it's oktoberfest, what more can i say about that? who wants to celebrate oktoberfest by making a deal? you, come here. good to see you, jenna. - hi. wayne: you have brat in a glass. - yes, i do. wayne: look at you, looking incredibly inappropriate for daytime tv
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