tv The Early Show CBS May 3, 2011 7:00am-9:00am PDT
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tomorrow morning at 4:30. >> caption colorado, llc comments@captioncolorado.com good morning. as americans celebrate the death of osama bin laden, new details emerge from a daring raid of an elite navy s.e.a.l. unit that took them down. president obama had a successful he received a standing ovation. >> we're reminded again what pride in what this nation stands for and what we can achieve. >> while the president gets set to visit ground zero to meet with 9/11 families, congress is asking tough questions about whether pakistani officials knew bin laden was there all along. we take you inside the situation room courtesy of one of the president's closest advisors, we will hear from a navy
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s.e.a.l. about how this mission was executed. rudy giuliani talks about the possibility of a new terror attack early tuesday may 3 rrd, 2011. welcome to "the welcome to "the early show" live pictures of the twin towers. the twin tower footprints in the middle of your screen, the centerpiece of the 9/11 memorial. good morning, i'm chris wragge, erica hill, a few miles south at ground zero above the scene for us right now. good morning, erica. >> good morning, as you mentioned, we're right above the scene that you just set for us ten years after 9/11. we want to look closer at what happened over the weekend in the killing of osama bin laden. president obama has decided to come here on thursday to mark the death of osama bin laden. this is after a rare bipartisan standing ovation at an event last night.
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when he comes here thursday, he'll be meeting with families of the victims of 9/11. bill plante has more for us this morning. good morning. >> good morning. good morning, erica. the president wants to mark the death of bin laden ten years with the meeting of the families on thursday at ground zero. last night, there was a dinner for members of both parties of congress here at the white house. there was a mood seldon seen. the president remarked on this feeling of national unity. he said he hoped it would continue. >> i know that unity we felt on 9/11 has frayed a little bit over the years and i have no illusions about the difficulties of the debates that we will have to be engaged in in the weeks and months to come. but i know there have been several moments like this during the course of this year that have brought us together as an american family, whether it was the tragedy in tucson or most
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recently our unified response to the terrible storms that have taken place in the south. last night was one of those moments. >> and the mood last night here in the white house was one very seldom seen. the president did get a standing ovation from members of both parties of congress. erica? >> bill, we're also learning a little bit more about the mood and about what happened at the white house on sunday as all of this is unfolding. talk us through some of that if you would. >> take a look at these pictures. they're extraordinary. these pictures are from inside the white house situation room on sunday afternoon as the operation was going down. they showed the president and his national security team watching the attack as it unfolded. remember, this mission was in the planning stages for months and mr. obama's top counterterrorism advisor john brennan said yesterday it lasted 40 minutes. each one of the minutes felt more like a day. one of the people in the room heard a commander on the scene
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in pakistan utter the words, geronomo, ekia. geronomo was the name for bin laden, ekia means enemy killed in action. we are also told at one point that the president watching what was unfolding said quietly, we got him. erica? >> the pictures tell quite a tale. bill plante at the white house. we'll speak to john brennan a little more about that meeting. detail this is morning about the top-secret operation that killed osama bin laden. national correspondent david martin was at the pentagon with the latest on that angle. we're learning that it was in fact a courier that led the u.s. intelligence to this compound as far back as august. but how were they able to track it? >> well, they got his nickname from their interrogation of the al qaeda operatives. and some of these were operatives like khalid sheikh mohammed held in the cia prisons where they were subjected to water boarding.
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first they got the nickname. then they were able about four years ago to get the real name and sometime after that, they got his cell phone number. they started to track the cell phone. he would turn off the cell phone anytime he got anywhere near the compound. so for some years, they were listening for this cell phone. and it never showed up in any place that would correlate with the compound. and then last summer, he made a mistake. he left the phone on and all it took was one phone call to give away the location of the compound. >> lucky for many folks, he did do that. so they had the compound but there were actually -- it seems as if few humans on the ground because they couldn't be too con speckus here. how did they determine it was
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osama bin laden that was, in fact, in the compound. >> just from the fortress-type nature of the compound, they were pretty sure that some important terrorist figure was living there. so then they put it under surveillance by satellite and they would see this man go out of the house and go around the courtyard as if it was his daily exercise. he looked to be a tall man. you couldn't tell from the photos if he was the exact same height as bin laden. it was part of this circumstantial case they were building. they watched the compound day after day until they could find three families, the courier's family, the brother's family, and the third family looked to be the same size as the family they thought bin laden was living with -- another piece of circumstantial evidence. there never was a smoking gun. it all led up to concluding that that is most likely bin laden's
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hiding place. >> thanks. david martin at the pentagon, thanks. john brennan was in the room with the president and other officials watching that mission unfold in real time. he joins us this morning from the white house. sir, good morning. >> good morning, erica. >> there have been a number of requests for proof of osama bin laden's death. you talked about potentially releasing that. where does that stand this morning? will we see any of that? >> we're still evaluating what information we're going to put out -- additional information. we have put out the results of the dna testing, the facial recognition. details about the raid itself, what we're doing now as far as the exploitation of materials that we found. so any type of a photographic or a video material that we have, we're looking at it carefully to put it out, to make sure it's in the right condition.
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and also to understand what the implications are of such relief. one of the things we have the responsibility to do is to make sure we take measures to guard against any type of adverse reaction to the news of bin laden's death. we've done that in a prudent way overseas and in the homeland here. so in the coming days, we'll continue to look at releasing additional information. >> it does sound like one of the considerations in terms of that release is, in fact, retaliation? >> i think alokay do qaeda has demonstrated it is intent on carrying out murderous attacks against men, women, and children. they may try to use the occasion of bin laden's demise to justify these attacks. what they want to do is make sure we proceed thoughtfully and fully knowing what the potential reaction might be. and take those measures that we can before releasing additional information. >> cbs news correspondent pat milton is reporting that this
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raid yields a huge amount of material, things like computer hard drives which could, of course, contain important intelligence information. do you have any sense at this point of how active osama bin laden was leading up to his death? >> i think that the information was that he was in the compound for the past five or six years and he had virtually no interaction with others outside of that compound. but yet he seemed to be very active inside the compound. we know he released videos and audios. we know he was in contact with some senior al qaeda officials. so what we're trying to do now is understand what he had been involved in in the last several years, exploit the information we were able to get in the compound, and take that information and continue to efforts to destroy al qaeda. you are looking at the plan
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information but people as well. >> you watched all of this unfold. i believe at one point you said the minutes ticked by like days. what was it like to be in that room? >> well, i think everybody in that room who was involved in putting this operation together and supporting the president when he made his decision to go forward with it, they understood the different phases of the operation. they were looking to ensure that the phases were unfolding as planned. we were concerned about some type of reaction on the ground, if there was going to be extended fire fights or people were going to come from inside the compound. we were hoping to move forward and get people out. the president was concerned with the safety of those who took the compound. so it was a very tense time, a very intense period of time and we were holding our breaths. ultimately, it came out very well and the individuals who
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were involved in this performed flawlessly. >> john brennan, thank you for your time this morning. >> thank you. >> chris, back over to you. thank you. we want to go to abbottabad, pakistan where osama bin laden was found and killed. elizabeth palmer just came back from visiting the hideout there. she joins us with the very latest. elizabeth, good morning. >> hi, there. we've just come back from the house which is some distance behind me in a rural area, a suburb that's still almost farmland. and the house that is being described as not really. an enormous wall around it with barbed wire. the neighbors say they were discrete, hardly talked to anybody at all. now that the pakistani army has allowed access to the house, the alleys around it were filled with neighbors gauking. they can't believe they were
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living next to the world's most wanted man. we finally heard from president zardari. he underlined that pakistan had no part in the capture of bin laden. it's an embarrassment for him. because here in abbottabad, there are 140,000 people retired or on active duty. he was literally living under their noses. >> is there a concern that the situation on the ground could ignite at any point? >> reporter: well, it could. there are many sympathizers of osama bin laden. there was small demonstration yesterday by a radical is la mist group. all of the embassies are closed. the u.s. embassy is closed and the government is braced for attacks. but, so far, there hasn't been any extra violence. chris? >> elizabeth palmer in abbottabad, pakistan for us. thank you. even before the killing of osama bin laden, the u.s. and pakistan had a rocky relationship.
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what happens now with so many questions about which side pakistan is really on. let's get more from cbs chief foreign force upon dent, lar ra logan. good morning. billions of dollars flow to pakistan annually. as far as u.s. pakistani relations, is the u.s. taxpayer getting their money's worth? >> doesn't look like that way, does it? when the world's most wanted man is living in the arms of the military and the intelligence services, it certainly would look to american taxpayers, how can we be funding pakistan when people like osama bin laden are given shelter on their soil? what's interesting about this, chris, is that for years this has been a broadly accepted fact. and now that you see the reality that osama bin laden literally was in pakistani soil and not just in hardship living in a cave living on nuts and berries, he was living comfortably in what is known as the keenest
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city in pakistan after the capital. the americans are not getting a good return on their investment and the pakistanis have some explaining to do. >> i want to talk to you about this op-ed from the president of pakistan. elizabeth palmer made mention of it. in this op ed, he said he country has been helpful in counterterrorism, intelligence. is anyone buying that? >> this is an argument they made successfully for the last ten years. it is the reason the u.s. has allowed them to get away with so much. the truth of it is, yes, there are pakistanis civilians that have been killed, a large number and pakistani security forces. but that's going after the terrorist groups that have devoted themselves to getting rid of the pakistani government and changing the situation inside of pakistan. in other words, the group that threatens the pakistani government.
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the other groups that threaten the united states interest, like the afghan taliban, the taconi brothers from eastern afghanistan and the militant group formed by pakistan to fight against india over kashmir these groups that are responsible. if you walk in arlington cemetery past the fresh graves of american soldiers coming back from the field over there, pakistan has some of the blood on its hands. they need to answer for that. for too long, the u.s. has stood back saying we fear the breakup of pakistan. pakistan is doing everything they can. clearly they're not doing everything they can. and, more importantly, they're not doing the things that count. president zardari and others, of course, they are going to say this. they have been caught with their pants down. they are in hot water. know know it. as diplomatic as the u.s. has been publicly, you can bet it's been a different story behind the scenes. >> lara logan in washington for us. thank you.
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switching gears, marisol castro joins us with weather on this tuesday morning. good morning, chris, good morning to you at home. we want to show you some thunderstorms that folks can expect today as the storm system continues to move in an eastward direction from roanoke to baltimore. even portions of new york state expected to see some of the severe
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thanks so much. now over to chris and erica. >> mari, thanks. still ahead this morning, a closer look at the elite navy s.e.a.l.s who raided osama bin laden's hideout. what it takes to prepare for a mission. and al qaeda's shake-up. who becomes it most wanted terrorist. who to ask now and if osama bin laden's band still has a future. this is "the early show" on cbs.
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there you see a shot of ground zero what is rising up. this, of course, has been a place for so many people to come and pay their respects who lost their lives for 9/11. for many, they look for the future and for hope of what is still to come. we're here at ground zero this morning. we're learning more about the story of the 40-minute military raid that took the life of osama bin laden. it was carried out by elite navy s.e.a.l.s. they manage p managed to take out the world's most wanted man with breathtaking precision. that was the secret. >> the latest on that mission. plus, one navy s.e.a.l. talking about the highly specialized training it takes to pull off an operation like this. stay with us. >> this
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frank mallicoat... pg&e will replace 16- hundred smart- meters because of a rare good morning. it's 7257. time for headlines. i'm frank mallicoat. a defect that cause the pg&e wireless meters runs fast and inflate customer electric bills. customers with 1600 faulty meters will get refunds. teachers protesting in california. one group is on a richmond street corner this morning. teachers union has declared a state of emergency because of cuts that have already been made and further cuts expected when the governor comes out with a new budget plan in just two weeks. and another protest today could make it hard to catch a cab in san francisco. some taxi drivers plan to park their cabs to protest new fees for accepting credit cards. cabbies are now charged a 5% fee for processing each credit
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into the macarthur maze. up to 20 to 25 minutes to get you on the span. then it's sluggish from the incline out towards the tunnel. all right. 880 through oakland, this looks great. no issues at all past the coliseum. you will notice that as symbol. they play cleveland at 7:00. everything on time for bart, ace, muni metro and caltrain bart. that's your traffic. for your forecast, here's lawrence. >> elizabeth, we have a couple of patches of fog outside right now at least in parts of the bay area out toward the coastline and inside the bay. looking good, though, inland as you've got clear skies and that's what we are going to see around most of the bay area toward the afternoon. the temperatures going to be nice, lots of 70s inside the bay, 60s into san francisco and 60s at the coastline with a couple of patches of fog there. even some low 80s well inland. this is just the beginning of what looks like some much warmer weather toward tomorrow. offshore winds blow, some of the hottest temperatures so far this season 80s, maybe low 90s inland. cooling off as we head toward the weekend.
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welcome back to "the early show" at half past the hour. we are here this morning at ground zero. gives you an idea of what has happened here in the past ten years. you can see the footprints, of course, of the twin towers there. so much destruction happening here nearly a decade after those attacks as we come through live from ground zero. i'm here and chris wragge in our studios. >> great to see the tremendous progress of the workers there. tower one, up almost 60 stories, soon to be at 100 by christmastime. coming up, the death of osama bin laden means a big
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shake-up in al qaeda. what's the future of the organization and who is in charge now? that coming up in the next couple of minutes, but first, jeff glor has a look at our headlines. a lot going on. >> good morning to uh you, good morning to you at home. leon panetta briefed congressional leaders. bin laden's pakistan highlight was discovered when a phone call from his courier was monitored. that appears to be the main mistake that courier made. the navy s.e.a.l. team found bin lapden on the third floor shielding himself with a woman. he was shot once in the eye and once in the chest. there is video of bin laden's video at sea. bin laden's son, a woman, and a courier were killed. 22 others living in the compound, many women and children, survived and handed over to the pakistanis. president obama watched the raid from the white house situation
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room. we've seen these photos. a large collection of document and computer files were discovered in bin laden's hideout. one official called it the mother lode of information. the president got a bipartisan standing ovation alt the white house last night. >> mr. obama was hosting dinner for republican and democratic members of congress. we'll head back to that site right now where erica is, erica? >> thanks. the navy seals that killed osama bin laden are being hailed as heroes this morning. but who are the men who carried out the dangerous mission? rick jobs sjohnson joins uh fro washington this morning with that angle. good morning. >> good morning to you. the small group of highly trained navy s.e.a.l.s took out
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the world's most wanted man in 30 minutes. they were called upon to make history and we may never know their names. >> reporter: a 25-man platoon in two helicopters backed up by 25 additional commandos and two more choppers that finally killed thee luisive bin laden. this photo shows bin laden's compound. it's trained on a full scale replica of bagram air base in afghanistan. it was so initially secretive, they didn't know who the target was. it was just after 1:00 a.m. monday morning pakistan time, two black hawk helicopters descended on bin laden's compound, the second team close behind. as the s.e.a.l.s roped in, one stalled and made a hard landing. from halfway around the world, the national security team watched the mission in realtime. in silence, the president sat
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stone faced, joe biden fingering his rosary. killing two men, they moved to the main building where bin laden and his family lived. bin laden's son was killed. officials say a woman was used as a human shield. bin laden was one of the last to die. this was the scene from the aftermath inside bin laden's compound. he was killed with two shots, one above his left eye, and one in the chest. cia director leon panetta narrated the events, geronomo, ekia, he said, geronomo was code name, and ekia means killed in action. a navy s.e.a.l. took a photo of the lifeless terrorist and upload it to annualives who fed it to a facial recognition program. it all took less than five minutes. for the next 35 minutes, the team secured the body and loaded up tbin laden's computers and
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hard drives. his body was bury in the north arabian sea from the deck of the u.s.s. carl vincent. we're told there's video of that but it's unclear it will be released erica? >> thanks. >> joining me now is eric wright. he's the lieutenant commander. he's the author of "the heart and the fist." thank you for joining us. >> pleasure to be on here. >> your reaction when you hear about this raid, they were facing a significant number of challenges. >> i like all americans were proud to hear they were successful. i was proud to hear that it was the s.e.a.l. team. and for a lot of people on this raid, erica, this is not just hitting a target, this is a personal mission. these are men who have been involve in the fight, many of them for 9 1/2 years. their families have lost comrades on the battlefield.
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they've seen comrades come off of the battlefield wounded and disabled. it's more than just hitting a target. it was about justice. >> we had re-created the compound. there was significant practice going on here. is that difficult for a mission like this to have that much leadup. >> absolutely. th these are some of the best in the world and one of the thing that makes them good is relentless practice. they go through the hardest military training in the world. for an operation like this, relentless practice around three principles, surprise, speed, and violence of action. hit the enemy when they're not expecting it, hit them hard, and hit them fast. >> 40 minutes. to think about how this wept down, how much do you think they knew? how much do you think they knew in the runup with all of the practice, who the target was? >> they do their best job to gain as much intelligence about every physical detail about the
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compound and every detail of their targets as they can. they also recognize that once they engage, things are going to happen on target that they can't anticipate. >> do you think they knew it was osama bin laden. do you think talking amongst themselves they started to put clues together. >> they knew it was osama bin laden before they went out. the word is when they heard who the target was, there was a great cheer. all of the navy s.e.a.l.s wanted to get osama bin laden. >> they mentioned how proud you are and the country is. they wanted to hug whoever is responsible for this. but these are people who will never see a victory parade and never will know who was behind it. >> these are man who definitely are going to be honored and revered. their public identities may never be known. >> safety reasons, correct? >> absolutely. safety reasons. these are quiet professionals if you told them today there was another mission that they had to be on, they'd be right back in the helicopters right at it.
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these are warriors who wore dedicated to this mission. >> i wanted to talk about the mission. the main thing of osama bin laden, a treasure trove, potentially, of intel. and they seemed to really sweep the house and take as much of that with them as possible. would that be a separate team who knew that was going to be their goal? >> actually, all of the commandos who are on target understand that they're going
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up next, can osama bin laden be replaced? has it happen? we'll take a closer look at what's next for al qaeda. you're watching special coverage here of the killing of osama bin laden on "the early show" here on cbs. we didn't even realize just how much natural gas was trapped in rocks thousands of feet below us. technology has made it possible to safely unlock this cleanly burning natural gas.
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the frontline plus killing force is there annihilating fleas and ticks. ♪ visit completekiller.com and get a coupon for frontline plus. so now that osama bin laden is dead, what's next for al qaeda. does his terror organization have a future without him? who becomes it most wanted terrorist. here to answer the question is ron zarate. good morning.
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>> good morning. >> how critical is it to breaking up the structure of al qaeda. >> you can't imagine it without the death of bin laden. he was the strategic head and core of the movement, its founder. unfortunately al qaeda is different in 2011 than the organization we saw after 9/11. it's metastasized, there are regional groups in yemen and north africa and other leaders who can step in. this will not end or fracture al qaeda but it's an important move. >> osama bin laden is dead. he's now out. who moves up to number one. >> you have the number two deputy. al zawahiri. the long-time ideologue of bin laden. he offered a statement in the wake of the arab spring revolutions. he assumed the mantle
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leadership. the problem is he's not as charismatic. he's not as well liked. he's seen as a divisive leader and others will contend. you have the al-awlaki the group in yemen who's been a major voice, a siren song for western recruits. a number of figures out there that can provide leadership to the al qaeda movement. >> talk about new threats and retaliati retaliation. is al qaeda fears that the u.s. was able to obtain a treasure trove of information at the bin laden compound. places, people, plans, all can be compromised. will they act now? >> absolutely. authorities are looking at the documents very quickly to see if they have information about attack planning plots, operatives in the west. one of the concerns is al qaeda
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will accelerate attack planning under way. authorities are worried about lone wolves inspired by bin laden, seeking restitution for his death. >> is there any reaction within the ranks. >> you're starting to see the jihad websites heat up with rhetoric. a lot of people eulogizing bin laden, speaking about the al qaeda movement not dying with his death. and certainly people talking about taking on the kaus. al qaeda is a metastasized movement. many people are on the internet. you see those channels heating up. >> u.s. security has been heightened since the announcerment of bin laden's death. are people in this country any safer with him gone now? >> absolutely. bin laden was a strategic center piece. with his removal, you have the
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opportunity to imagine al qaeda and to see the fracturing within the group at a time when they're under stress and their relevance is underquestion in the wake of the arab revolution throughout the region. >> all right, juan zarate good to talk to you. >> thank you, chris. >> we'll be right back. where liz kiem can find answers to nagging questions like... "is this a cold or allergies?" and, "when should i switch out my toothbrush?" where she can get calcium for her bones and protection for her skin. at walgreens, you can find the answers to live a little healthier too. walgreens. there's a way to stay well. don't let allergies slow you down. this week, save $5 on non-drowsy claritin. choose a texas toast half-sandwich, like our classic turkey, piled high and tasty. pair with a delicious soup or house salad. served with seasoned fries, it's big flavor
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coming up, inside osama bin laden's hideout. as details are emerging, it's fascinating how this mystery went down. but also, what they found and what was there on the ground. cbs news went behind the walls of the remote compound where bin bin spent the last few years of his life. >> what they're saying about the mysterious neighborhood. this is "the early show" on cbs. not just of your joints, but of the things you love to do. and the longer you live with the aching, swelling, and stiffness, the closer you may be
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b-s five... i'm sydnie kohara. teachers are staging protest good morning. 7:55 your time. let's look at some of the headlines here at cbs 5. teachers are staging protest rallies against education cuts across california this week. one group is demonstrating in richmond this morning. california teachers association has declared state of the emergency because of budget cuts already made and further cuts expected when governor brown comes out with a new budget plan in a couple of weeks. a number of city workers in san jose could reach the lowest level in a quarter century, part of a budget proposal unveiled yesterday by the city manager. the police and fire departments would be among the hardest hit. the city is dealing with a massive deficit now estimated at $115 million. and google is number one when it comes to corporate reputation. the mountain view-based search
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giant tops the latest poll. it found that people admire google's financial performance and the way it treats its employees. the poll measures the reputation of 60 leading companies. other silicon valley firmsapple five, intel number 6. traffic and weather coming right up. stay with us. ♪ ♪ express yourself ♪ ♪ express yourself ♪ ♪ oh, do it ♪ oh, do it [ female announcer ] coffee is like life. it's better when you add your flavor. like rich caramel macchiato, part of coffee-mate's new café collection. from nestle. i am a sneeze whisperer. new café collection. i am an allergy analyst.
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we are going to start off in san jose. northbound two two at bascomb we have one -- northbound 280 at bascomb we have one lane blocked traffic backing up from san jose. word of a new accident in hercules westbound 80 just before willow. traffic sluggish through there, likely at least one lane blocked. at the bay bridge we had an earlier accident past the metering lights and a stall on the upper deck a couple of different issues and unfortunately we are left with this. sluggish from the incline to the tunnel. that's your traffic. here's lawrence with the forecast. >> elizabeth, we have a couple of patches of fog out there and some of that continuing over coit tower where we can see breaks. not a thick marine layer. so it's going to break up across the bay area. here comes the sun with 70s and 80s inland, 60s at the coast. as we look toward the next couple of days, the fog goes away. temperatures heating up.
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welcome back to "the early show" at the top of the hour on a tuesday morning. you're looking at a live shot now at ground zero. you're at ground zero this morning down in lower manhattan as we continue the coverage of the killing of osama bin laden. i'm erica hill. just ahead, we'll take a look at the compound in pakistan. cbs news had an opportunity to go inside. we'll bring that to you in a bit. fear and chaos gripped new york on september 11, 2001, then mayor rudy giuliani. lead the city's heroic response. he responds. and he's going to talk about the possible threat of retaliation
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and what should be done to keep americans safe. we've got that coming up in a couple of minutes. erica, back to you in ground zero. >> looking forward to him, thanks. we want to get you to the latest at this hour. we doe doe know that later today leon panetta will brief on the leaders on the operation that killed ohs's. u.s. officials have considered releasing the photos of his body and burial at sea to prove he's dead. pakistan's president zardari rejects that his country knew where osama bin laden was. and in afghanistan, cheering the death of the leader who live there had for years. we're in kabul this morning. >> we're cheering but not getting overly excited. there's no illusion here that the killing of osama bin laden and any way shortens this war. and there's little finger waving going on as well. president karzai said what pakistan is saying all along
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that the strategy ought to be adjusted left by the villages and the houses of afghanistan and more attacking in what he calls the safe haven of pakistan. and, in fact, both the taliban and the afghanistan government here acknowledge that many fighters and weapons and funds come across that very porous border. in fact, the afghans have said they intercepted and killed and wounded another 25 taliban fighters just last night. the taliban, for its sake, says it's prepared to continue the battle here, that the death of osama bin laden in their words will heighten emotions and not diminish them. cheering here at the base of osama bin laden and saying it's time to go home -- but not so fast. erica? >> in kabul, thanks. chief foreign affairs correspondent lara logan.
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going to get to lara in a minute. but first i want to give you an inside look at the compounds there. where osama bin laden was found and killed. liz got a look for us this morning. take a look, liz? >> you can see the upper story of the house where osama bin laden had been hiding and where he was killed. we're in the outskirts of abbottabad here right now. so quiet that there is an orphanage over there. there's a tall concrete wall all the way around and barbed wire all the way around the top. inside the compound, it was quite large, there's room for both american helicopters to land, that's where the fire fight took place and all of the bodies were collected and removed by the americans.
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the house has been sealed bid the pakistani army. but we have talked to some of the neighbors and asked them who the people are who were living there as far as they were concerned. they said they were people from a little bit west of here, very quiet, very discrete, that explained the high security by saying they had enemies in the tribal areas and they needed this to keep them safe. since the army has allowed people to come and look at the house, the streets are full. people are gawking. they can't believe that the world's most wanted man was living in their midst. there's no talk of it because it doesn't become a shrine to osama bin laden. elizabeth palmer, cbs news, abbottabad. with us is chief correspondent lara logan. good morning. >> good morning. >> we know they didn't inform the pakistanis before they went in into this compound here is there a concern that the pakistani government knew it could foil this operation? >> there must have been some concern like that. given the fact where this compound was right in the arms of pakistani military establishments.
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and there has been growing mistrust between the united states and pakistan. given the fact it's been in america and afghanistan for so many years now. and high sensitivity, they weren't going to do anything to breach and prevent this from going down. >> what would the pakistanis gain, though? they knew osama bin laden was there from hiding that information. >> it wouldn't be the first nation to play both sides. the iranians are experts at doing this. and, of course, the afghans have said for years that osama bin laden is pakistan's money card. but most significantly, this elevated the status of pakistan. it's able to sit at the table with the united states and other western power and this is a tiny country with a massive illiterate population. most of the women in pakistan can't read or write and it's given them an elevated status
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and allowed them to dictate the national security country of the united states and lead the u.s. around by the nose. there's a lot from pakistan to gain from this. but the arabs have a saying when you allow a snake to live in your garden, eventually it's going come into your house. pakistan has dealt with some of that as the terrorist threat a few years ago suddenly began to threaten them as well. that wasn't on the cards when they started to support militant groupings. >> you mentioned both sides. members on capitol hill were suggesting that. at the end of the day, the relationship between the u.s. and pakistan is very important to both countries. so how do you keep that going moving forward? >> this is at the lowest point in years. the u.s. is mindful of this. you can hear it in the president's statement, all of
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them making forward for the pakistanis when they talk about intelligence. there are other significant terrorist leaders still inside pakistan. the afghan taliban really shadow government operates from pakistan as well. that's where the afghan war is run from. and this is a critical time in afghanistan where there is little political will in the united states. and few americans believe it can be won. so now is the time for the u.s. to leverage this and say to the pakistanis, okay, this has gotten -- this era of shelter and harboring our enemies comes to an end. if you are our ally, now you have to prove it. >> lara logan in washington for us. thanks. head back to the studio. mari looks at the weather. good morning. >> good morning, everyone at home. flooding rain has been an issue and the army corps of engineers blew up a levee to try to save
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this weather report sponsored by dodge. dodge, never neutral. thanks so much. that's your latest weather. now here's chris. marisol, thank you. up next on "the early show," people call rudy giuliani america's mayor for his steady leadership after 9/11. we'll talk to the mayor about the killing of osama bin laden when we come back. this is "the early show" on cbs. osama bin laden when we come back. this is the "early show" here on cbs. [ nurse ] i'm a hospice nurse.
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center was attacked on bin laden's order almost ten years ago, rudy giuliani was the mayor. he talks about what it means. good morning. >> good morning. >> you led the city through its darkest days. what was your reaction when you found out the news? oh. >> my reaction is one of deep satisfaction. relief. that we had gotten him. certain amount of revenge that you don't want to admit to. it's there. the guy deserved what he got. after reflecting on it, realizing there's short term danger for us because of the kind of emotional hold that he had on the people that followed him. long term, this is an all positive development for us. meaning they can help us be safer. but short term, we're going to go through a period where we have to be careful. >> i think you said there's no such thing as closure. and something like this doesn't
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bring back the 3,000 lives lost on that day. but from the emotional standpoint and personal standpoint, did it take time to sink in when you first heard the news? >> yes. no such thing as closure because when you lose somebody you love for the rest of your life, the gap is there. but there are things that helped. and this helps. i mean, there's no question that bringing to justice a person who's primarily responsible for it satisfied a basic need that goes on. this is a big step, it's not a small step. a big step in the war against terror too. >> the people in new york yesterday, i'm sure you saw the response. here in new york and around the nation. but specifically here in new york. they were with the iron workers. they said, you know, for the first time all around, it's smiles all around. almost felt like a new day. >> something positive is now happened. this is very, very negative. the defense has been terrific.
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meaning our military and president bush and president obama had done a good job of defending us. but we haven't had this kind of positive thing for quite sometime. so i think it's a sense of real relief from that. the only thing i should caution is we shouldn't celebrate too much. this is just a step, a big one. but the war is still going on. we shouldn't fool ourselves into thinking this is like ve day or vj day. we haven't won this war yet. i don't like this thought of pulling out of afghanistan or iraq, people make mistakes like this a lot. you win part of it and you walk away and it reseeds. >> a long way to go in pakistan and afghanistan to clean it up. we should for our safety in the long term. >> how troubling that he seemed to be hiding in plain sight. >> very? >> very troubling. not shocking. i've been to that part of the world. so i have a sense of how it operates. karzai a few years ago and
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discussed the problems in pakist pakistan. so these are the things we've known about in four or five years. the cooperation of the afghanis and the americans there complain about. >> with the money we sent to pakistan, is there -- >> it's outrageous that you would live not quite in plain sight, but hard not to figure out that this was something having to do with -- with osama bin laden and that part of the world. this big compound, multimillion dollar estate, cars going in and out all of the time. strange-looking people going in and out all of the time. this is a country that keeps track through the secret service and secret police. it keeps track of what the heck is going on. i have real, real problem with this. >> close a small chapter for you? >> closes a big chapter. doesn't close it. but it closes a big chapter. the anger and the desire to get revenge. and the desire to show the united states is deceptive.
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americans are proud of the president's decision, the work that president bush did to lead up to this. the intelligence services working. the s.e.a.l.s that went in and did this. this is an all plus for everybody in this situation. this is the kind of thing that makes americans feel this is the greatest country on earth. no one else could have done this. >> thank you. good to see you this morning. coming up next, the man in charge of protecting millions of americans from a possible terror attack here in new york city. police commissioner ray kelly. you're watching "the early show" on cbs. flexpen comes pre-filled with the insulin i take and i can dial the exact dose of insulin i need. i live my life on the go and need an on-the-go insulin. i don't need to carry a cooler with flexpen. novolog is a fast-acting, man-made insulin used to control high blood sugar in adults and children with diabetes. do not inject novolog if you do not plan to eat within 5 to 10 minutes after injection to avoid low blood sugar. tell your healthcare provider about all medicines you take
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i think it can. one of the challenges for kayla being gluten-free is actually finding choices the whole family will love. then we discovered chex cereals. five flavors of chex are gluten-free, including the honey nut flavor, and that's amazing to a mom like me. as a parent you don't want to have to tell your kids "no" all the time. it's nice for me to be able to say "yes" to something that they want to eat. [ male announcer ] chex cereal. five flavors. gluten free. new york city mayor michael bloomberg said monday that the assumption that bin laden's followers would like nothing better than to avenge his death by another attack here in new york. now with the man charged to protect the millions of americans who live and work here, ray kelly. good morning. >> good morning. >> the moment you heard of the deaths at the hands of the u.s. forces, did you feel, we finally got them, or, b, my tough job
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just got a lot tough er? >> not a lot tougher but good news with complications. we knew there would simply be a possibility of the retaliatory effort here in new york. we had to do some additional things. we put a lot of things in place here. we have to do more. >> how do you protect a city like this. you get 3/4 of a million people passing through grand central. millions of tourists and how -- how is it possible? >> big police department. big technology as never used before. our citizens' help, of course, we asked them to be vigilant and watchful. we had 12 plots against this city since september 11, 2001. they've all been stopped in one way or the other. it's not as if they're not trying. so far, so good here in new york.
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>> i heard that luck is a big part of it. this big the one-year anniversary of the times square bomber, luck does play a significant role in thwarting some of these efforts. >> absolutely. we'll take it every time. >> you talk about this city now being a different level of preparedness than it was in 2001. how is this city prepared as it wasn't in 2001. >> we prepare thousands of police officers. we have heavily armed officers going to sensitive locations throughout the city. we have additional programs in our subway system. we have 5 million people a day travel on the -- on the subway system. we have radiological detectors that we have well over 1,000 deployed every day. we have them on our boats, we have them in our helicopters. so the city has come, you know, a long way since 2001.
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but the job is never done. we continue to hope and refine our skills. >> you talked ant deficiencies too. you said a 16-year-old with a cell phone has better communications skills than some of our first responders. there's a big room for improvement. >> we're trying to get d-block, additional broad band space for law enforcement, not just in new york but throughout the country. congress is looking at that now. i made that as a statement in the congressional testimony. >> as far as the heightened level of security in the city right now, how much longer do you think the people will see the increased police presence? or do you think it's something here for the long term? >> good question. we have to judge it day-by-day. we have the listening posts out across the world. we have ne hyork city police officers in 11 cities overseas. we have the make the judgments on a daily basis. and we won't be able to keep this level indefinitely.
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for the first time, p-g-and-e s with it is 8:25. time for news headlines from cbs 5. i'm sydnie kohara. for the first time, pg&e admits technical problems with some smartmeters. the utility will replace 1600 of them because of a defect that causes them to run fast and inflate customer electric bills. pg&e says customers with faulty meters will get refunds. in san francisco, some taxi drivers today plan to protest new fees for accepting credit cards. those cabbies are now charged a 5% fee for processing each credit card transaction. today's protest set for noon at city hall. and the president of a bay area university called a sham by federal investigators is now under arrest. susan hsu accused of using tri- valley university in flow help foreigners obtain visa illegally. hsu was arrested yesterday.
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drive time sluggish. just seeing the usual congestion southbound 101 from novato to 580 in san rafael. and 880 through oakland just starting to get backed up here, as well. 35-minute commute from 238 to the macarthur maze. no accidents, just a lot of commuters heading towards downtown oakland. that's your traffic. here's lawrence with a check of your forecast. >> elizabeth, we're talking sunshine again today. the fog, yeah, it's breaking up now. over the bay you have a couple of patches there and more towards the coastline but we are going to see a lot of sunshine toward the afternoon. the temperatures are going to warm up nicely, 70s and low 80s by the afternoon, many spots inland. inside the bay plenty of 70s. 60s at the coast. a little breezy here and still maybe a lingering patch of fog at the beaches. but after today, i think the offshore wind sweeps in and that means the fog is going to be long gone and we're talking about some heat. 80s maybe low 90s tomorrow and into thursday looking good. cooling off, the fog should return the weekend. ,,,,,,,,
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welcome back to "the early show," bottom of the hour here on a tuesday morning. chris wragge here in new york along with jeff glor. erica hill down in ground zero making her way back here to the studio as we speak. university of virginia lacrosse player was found beaten to death at the hands of her boyfriend putting a spotlight on relationship abuse which is blamed for the killing of four women every day in the u.s. "glamour" magazine is going to start an awareness program. we'll talk to the survivor. much indeed.
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l-l cool j is here in the studio. he writes bestselling books, designs fashions. why not start a hit tv show as well. >> unbelievable. >> we'll look at the season ending drama. >> hey, l. >> whats up? >> the ncis los angeles. ll will be with chris in a few minutes here. >> don't call him "l" again, it's "ll". >> beat me down. >> all right. first up, time to kick off the road to the tony awards, broadway's biggest and brightest nights. go to the library for performance arts. matthew broderick announces this year's nominations. >> welcome to the nomination for the tony awards for the lewis b. coleman center at lincoln
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center. now for the fom knnominees. best performance by an actor in the leading role, brian bedford, "the importance of being earnest. "the mother with the hat. joe mantelo, "the normal heart." mark reliance, "jerusalem." the nominees by best performance by an actress in a leading role is nina ariana, "born yesterday." francis mcdoor man, "good people. vanessa wed grave, "driving miss daisy." and "brief encounter". >> the best performance by a leading role in a musical are "catch me if you can." josh gad, "the book of mormon." joshua henry, "the scots borrow boys." andrew renault, "the book of mormon." and tony shelton.
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the nominees for best performance by an actress in a leading role in a musical are foster, "anything goes." "baby it's you." "sister act." donna murphy, "the people in the picture". >> "good people," "jerusalem," "the mother with the hat" and "war horse." the nominees for best news moouz call are "the book of mormon," "catch me if you can," "the scots borrow boys" and "sister act". >> "arcadia," "the importance of being earnest." and "the normal heart." anything goes, and how to succeed in business without. special thanks to matthew broderick and anika noni rose.
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congratulations to all of the nominees. "the book of mormon" leads with 14 nominations. you can see the tony awards on sunday, june 12, 8:00 p.m., 7:00 central here on cbs. here's castro with a look at the weather. mari. a look at the national picture for you. a huge area of high pressure that stays like that for the next 24 hours. unusual precipitation in the pacific northwest and the thunderstorms continue to move in an easterly direction all along the coast. it's going to be pretty sunny. further north you get, you're going to see some more rain charlotte, new york, even
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>> good effort. thanks again. one year ago today, yardley love was found beaten to death in her college apartment. her boyfriend george hugely faces murder charges. "glamour" magazine is launching "tell somebody," a campaign to tell somebody about relationship abuse. we have a survivor of relationship abuse. why did your magazine choose to take on relationship abuse? >> we covered the death of yardley love last year. and it was a horrifying case. but what we saw was it kept happening again and again. so here in new york. the headlines kept coming. why is this happening now? why in 2011 when women are more empowered than ever before. >> how wide spread is my question. >> we did a survey that found it's very wide spread. not only are 1400 women killed every year, but 29% of women in our survey reported relationship
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abuse. then we went on to ask about behaviors that they experienced and another 30% reported that they had been physically abused, emotionally abused. that means nearly 60% of women are experiencing relationship abuse. >> what is the difference between relationship abuse and domestic abuse, which is something people are more familiar with. >> people are familiar with domestic violence. that's usually defined as couples who are married. and that's kind of a misnomer because this is common in dating women and women who are living together. so we need to broaden our definitions. >> you were in an abusive dating relationship for a period of time. i think the question people have as well, if it's bad, why not remove yourself from the situation. what was your situation like? >> i think it's very common everyone ask why didn't you just leave. but when you're in that type of situation, you're so brainwa brainwashed. i really thought i had nowhere to go. my family tried to intervene,
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but he would always listen to every phone conversation and twist what they said meaning they didn't love me or they hated me. he would control every aspect of my life. >> how bad did the abuse go? >> the final night he tried to kill me and told me he was killing me. i had to go to work the following day and the co-worker, one of the managers intervened. but the overall relationship, it was only -- nearly five months, not even five months, and there's emotional abuse, verbal abuse, physical and sexual. >> talk about the campaign in exactly what all it's about. >> tell somebody is designed for cases like alexandria where she said it was a co-worker who intervened. someone reached out to her and said you're not alone, there is help. tell somebody about it. if you see it happening to somebody else, tell somebody. reach out. help them. we set out a mobile giving campaign to make sure every woman has a place to turn.
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the national domestic violence hot line has 80,000 calls last year went unanswered because of lack of funding. so we hope that everyone will text "tell now" to 85944 and that will give a $10 donation to the hot line. for every donation, avon foundation is going to match it up to $200,000. >> for people who are watching right now that are experiencing something similar, what advice would you have for them. what signs would you tell them to be most alert for. >> definitely to listen to your gut. i know that sounds silly but it's true. i told myself, don't see this guy again. but he convinced me otherwise. any aspect of controlling. if he's reading all of your text messages, listening to your phone calls. wanting to know where you are every second. and then definitely tell someone and get out. it's not easy. it can be very dangerous to tell someone. and you just know that there are people there for you and there's a way to get out. and i got out and it's been six
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years. >> you owe a lot to that co-worker? >> i do. she was my angel. >> she was the best. best of luck with the campaign. good to talk to both of you. windy naugle and alexandria briggs. go to our website, earlyshow.cbsnews.com. now here's jeff. do you know what's in your favorite over-the-counter pain reliever? turns out 41% of people read the label according to a new study. so dr. travis stork is here to tell us how to stay safe. you see travis as co-host of "the doctors," which we watch in our offices after the "early show" is over. good morning, welcome. >> thanks for having me. i appreciate it. >> the numbers are interesting. 41% of people don't read. it leads you to the conclusion if they're not reading it, they may overdose because they don't know how much is in it. that's a big danger? >> back before i went to medical school and i went to the over-the-counter shelves and
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grabbed a few things here and there. i asked you to close your eyes and gave you a bunch of pills and said, jeff, take these, would you? >> of course. >> i'm a doctor. >> i get what you're saying. >> we're going to supermarkets, pharmacies, taking the medicines. we don't know what's in them. tylenol, half of the folks didn't know what the ingredients were. but further more, motrin, the active ingredients, they're the same thing. taking more of the same medication as they should. down the road could lead to liver failure, that sort of thing. >> acetaminophen delivers danger. >> it's the number one cause of acute liver failure here in this country. unfortunately it's due to many times accidental overdoses.
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more than half are due to accidental overdoses. prescription and nonprescription have acetaminophen in it. if you're not reading the label, you could take two, three different medicines with acetaminophen and cause liver damage and not know it. >> the problem is not taking one medication but three different medcations that you think are different but have same ingredie ingredients. you have to watch out for yourself first of all. but one of the big concerns we talked about here for my wife and i, we're giving my son something. 18 months old. people give their kids doses. how to make sure you're giving the right dose. this is something you're more worried about. you have an example to show what people can get and how people can give out the wrong doses. >> a lot of times it wrong doses and if a medicine says fever producer, parents need to know what is that fever producer. four different teaspoons.
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it says give a teaspoon to your child, it gives a drastically different amount of medicine. over three or four days your child is sick and you're giving them a quote/unquote fever reducer. if you give them a teaspoon that's not actually a teaspoon, you can give them a toxic dose. >> they're spoons, they're not just all teaspoons. >> don't use spoons to measure. infant drops may be more concentrated than the syrup. you can't mix those up either. this is a call to parents out there. pay attention to the labels. and we as an industry need to do a better job of labeling our medications as well so people know, hey, this is exact ingredient. for kids, dosing is based on weight. a lot of the bottles base it on age. if you have a very small 2-year-old, you don't want to give a standard 2-year-old dose. >> universal symbol for things like acetaminophen.
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i want to talk about being the ceo of not just your house hold but your medicine cabinet. being the ceo. >> be the ceo of your own house. you need to know the ingredients. you need to know the proper dosage to make sure you're not getting a toxic dose. and know the side effects. if you have a history of kidney problems, you don't want to take ibuprofen. talk about acetaminophen with the doctor. these things do have side effects. we want to make sure you know with your physician what the best medicine is for you. >> no yugz spoons a it a all. >> just got engaged. congratulations. >> thank you. >> i appreciate it. >> well done. >> can see him on "the doctors." daily. for more, go to our partner in health web, md.com and search otc drugs. 44 minutes past the hour. now back over to christie. thanks. maybe l-l can sing at the
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wedding. >> rapper, author, fashion dedesigner. not much l-l cool j cannot do. he's having a lot of fun on "ncis los angeles." take a look. >> i was in character. >> character? smoky or the bandit. when i drive? >> no, i drive, you shoot. >> no. we agreed to take turns. >> i don't remember having that conversation. >> we can make a compromise. >> you ride in the back. >> never going to happen. maybe we can get you a side car. >> cute. >> ever road on a side car. they're fun. >> bringing up a tougher time for your partner. guoed to see you here this morning. >> good morning. >> we said, dedesigner, author, rapper, fashion dedesigner. not much you can't do. if there is, far be it from me that you you can't do it. sh this show has taken off.
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>> very grateful. >> two more episodes. anything that the fans can expect? want to give something away? >> it's going to be a shocker. i mean, you know, that's for sure. but just -- i think the coolest thing about the show is the fact that i can play this character, you know? playing a navy seal, a former navy s.e.a.l. who's now a member of ncis, if you think of everything that's going on, it shows you how, you know, amazing it is for me to be able to bring a character like this to life and play a hero when there's so many real life heroes out there, you know? >> you sit back and you see what's going on. you're from queens. like any of us in this area with what happened on 9/11, you take it personally. >> you take it very personally. at the own it was day, we have to stick together. and we have to protect our country. these are good times for america. it was the best of times, it was the worst of times, right? >> when you first heard that the u.s. had got them. you saw the celebrations in the street here in new york.
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what did you -- i mean, is there a party that wants to get out there and join in on the fun? i mean, it's, you know, a good time for people for once there's been so much tragedy. >> yeah, the first thing that popped in my mind was check mate, you know, reset, let's -- new game on. but different game, different players. i think this is an important time. and i'm just happy that, you know, our guy over there in the white house was able to make this thing happen. >> do you -- have you had a chance to meet with a number of s.e.a.l.s and marines and a lot of guys because of this job. it inspired you to write a song. there was a quote i saw, it represented the collective energy in the room. >> i went down to camp pendleton and met with marines, navy guys, special ops guys. i sat there and listened to their stories and see how dedicated they are in preserving and dedicated to protecting democracy and risk their lives for you and me is a big thing.
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>> it's nothing like what they go through. >> yeah. they don't say cut when a guy is running at you with a bomb strapped to his chest. cut! >> do that again. >> hug you anyway, boom, you know what i mean! can't say cut. >> it's an interesting way of putting it in to perspective. talk about your career. i want to bring this back to you now. >> okay. >> what else is there left for you to conquer? >> dreams don't have deadlines and i'm thinking of doing bigger and better things and having more fun with it. recently i became ambassador to this cologne called jean dam. you're a man of style. i brought you a bottle i heard you're a man of style. you might have to smell that. >> it's one of the -- one of my dreams. to smell like l-l cool j. >> get close to your vibe. >> get close to your vibe. >> oh, that's nice.
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>> it smells good. >> music. >> you're thinking about getting back in the studio. >> not thinking of getting back in the studio right now. but live dates, like june 10. i'm going to be in atlantic city. i'm going to do, you know, house of blues down there. on the 25th, i'll be in detroit, the amphitheater out there. >> you do. >> i'm not sure that i want to put a record out right now. i have lots of albums. you may go ahead and smell it. get your real reaction. you're going to feel it. watch his face. >> that is sexy. >> i'm eve been gendarmed.
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>> see, see? >> come one the fragrance. >> i've been wearing it for 15 years. i embraced it. it's not something i created. it was created 25 years ago. i'm just embracing it. >> it's giving it a new life. >> it is sexy. >> it is. >> see, you don't have to worry -- i wasn't creating a cologne. >> yeah. >> i can't live without my radio. now -- >> cracks me up. rappers are running around with ascots on making colognes. yo, wasn't you rapping? >> yeah. yeah. great to see you, see a new episode of ncis: los ,,
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i'm a curious seeker. i am a chemistry aficionado. diphenhydramine. magnesium hydroxide. atheletes foot. yes. i'm a people pleaser. if elected, i promise flu shots for all. i am a walking medical dictionary. congratulations virginia. inflamed uvula. i'm virginia. i'm a target pharmacist and i'm here to answer your questions.
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