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tv   CBS This Morning  CBS  April 18, 2012 7:00am-9:00am PDT

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captioning funded by cbs good morning to our viewers in the west. it is wednesday, april 18th, 2012. welcome to studio 57 at the cbs broadcast center. i'm charlie rose. the pentagon scrambles to respond to new photos of american troops in afghanistan posing with insurgents' bodies. house speaker john boehner talks to us this morning about mitt romney's campaign. >> you'll see new things out of this campaign. >> like what? >> a real focus on what the election is going to be about. >> i'm-ga gayle king. we'll go to the developments on the secret service sex scandal.
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a businessman murdered in china. we'll take you inside that murder mystery grabbing headlines around the globe. >> first as we do every morning, we begin with a look at today's eye opener. your world in 90 seconds. >> "l.a. times" releasing new pictures showing soldiers posing with remains of suicide bombers. >> the pentagon braces for new outrage in afghanistan. >> statements from leon panetta that an investigation that could lead to disciplinary measures is under way. >> charlie, this election is going to be a referendum on the president's economic policy. >> the gop lines up behind mitt romney. >> the president doesn't understand what is unique and exceptional about america. >> as a new cbs news poll shows a dead heat for november. >> it might be more since mitt hides some points in the cayman islands. >> the secret service says the agents brought as many as 21 prostitutes back to their hotel. >> agents and military people went to a brothel.
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>> the president simply as he says wants it investigated. >> bill clinton says i am on it. >> in texas, a newborn there has been found alive after his mother was gunned down. >> everything was going fine until today. >> the woman plows her car into a supermarket full of shoppers. no one was killed. >> kim kardashian, mayor of glendale? the media celebrity says she's serious but can it really happen. >> there you have it. >> she says she's the ultimate cougar. >> i am. >> make love to betty white. >> and all that matters. >> jamie moyer made baseball history at 49. the oldest pitcher ever to win a major league ball game. >> i'm still able to live the dream. >> on "cbs this morning." >> in japan, a 76-year-old man has spent the last 20 years living naked on a remote island. now the man is famous for having the least successful match.com
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profile ever. welcome to "cbs this morning." the u.s. mission in afghanistan is facing another huge headache and the potential for anti-american violence. >> "the los angeles times" published a new set of photos apparently showing u.s. soldiers posing with the bodies of dead suicide attackers. u.s. commanders are already condemning those photos. >> david martin is at the pentagon this morning. david, what is the latest? >> reporter: the pentagon has launched another investigation into another set of photos showing u.s. troops posing with dead enemy bodies. this time the photos appeared in "the los angeles times" and show paratroopers from the 82nd airborne posing with dismembered remains of taliban suicide bombers. the photos, which were taken two years ago, were given to "the l.a. times" by a member of the
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unit who said they were indicative of poor discipline, which threatened the safety of the unit. the pentagon has issued a statement saying these images do by no means represent the values of professionalism that the vast majority of u.s. troops serving in afghanistan today and promising that anyone found responsible in those pictures will be held accountable by military justice. but the pentagon also said that defense secretary panetta was disappointed that "the los angeles times" had published the photos despite a request from the defense department not to put them in print because the pentagon says they would incite violence against u.s. troops in afghanistan. >> david martin, thank you. for the first time the two top republicans in congress are officially backing mitt romney's presidential campaign. speaker of the house john boehner and senate minority leader mitch mcconnell endorsed romney on tuesday, more than a year after the 2012 campaign
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began. >> after their announcements, speaker boehner sat down with us at the capitol for the first national interview since romney became the presumptive gop nominee. you endorsed mitt romney today. how much damage did the primary campaign do to the election that he faces? >> i don't think there was any real damage done. it got messy. just like the race four years ago between barack obama and hillary clinton. it went on until june of 2008. charlie, this election is a referendum on the president's economic policies. they have not helped the economy but made it worse. >> what's the debate going to be? what we have just been talking about? >> no. it's going to be over the president's economic policies. pure and simple. they have made matters worse. america should be doing a lot better today but when you look at his calls for higher taxes and refusal to deal with the
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debt, the regulatory regime here in washington out of control, they have scared every business person and investor in america. that's why you see record amounts of cash in these businesses in banks because they don't know what tomorrow is going to look like. >> no one doubts that you're not in touch not only with the constituents you have in ohio but generally you're that kind of guy. is mitt romney that kind of guy? he's had a very different lifestyle from you. >> we're all different. we have different personalities. >> can he be in touch? does he need to figure out a way to have the same kind of visceral appeal? >> he's done a good job in a republican primary under some very difficult circumstances. i think he's prepared for this general election and will appeal to more than half of america. after any primary there's always a little retooling. always adjustments in terms of now you have a different opponent. so i think you'll see some new things out of this campaign. >> like what?
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>> a real focus on what the election is going to be about. economics, economics, economics. >> he's pulled back from this the other day in a closed meeting. he talked about perhaps aboli abolishing hud and department of education and talked about eliminating the mortgage deduction for second homes. >> there was a lot of things said there, all right. we've got to make choices. we shouldn't criticize candidates because they're talking about the big choices that we have to make. when you have a $1.3 trillion budget deficit, you have to do something. >> the president would say to you, if you said that to him, and your friends, this is going to be a referendum on the ryan budget because the speaker has even said it's a vision of what we want to do. >> the president is going to try to make the election about anything other than his failed economic policies because he can't run on his record.
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and so they're going to pull out every boogie man they can. the fact is that we've got a serious problem. that's why republicans have a plan to put americans back to work. >> do you think the ryan plan is the way to do that because governor romney has made it at one with him. >> somebody in this town has to own up to the problems that we face and that budget doesn't. if the president doesn't like that budget, where's his budget? his budget failed on the floor of the house 0-414. not one democrat or one republican voted for the president's budget. why? because he wasn't serious about dealing with america's problems. >> the catholic bishops today said that the ryan budget fails to meet moral criteria and cuts programs that serve the poor and the vulnerable, which sounds like the president. >> i understand.
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listen, when you look at the budget choices that we have to make, it's time that congress and washington and the president quit kicking the can down the road and address our challenges. i don't believe that our budget will hurt the poor in any way. i don't think it will hurt the safety net in any way. but we can't continue to spend money that we do not have. >> why cannot two people who are friends come to some understanding on this grand bargain and make it happen because the american people want it to happen? >> i sat for months with the president. he wanted revenue. i said, mr. president, i'll put revenue on the table that we can achieve with fixing our tax code but i'll do that if you are willing to have fundamental reform of our entitlement programs and the fact is we had an agreement and then two days later the president decided he
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wanted $400 billion of more revenue, which was in effect $400 billion tax. >> at the same time the two of you came to an agreement in your mind that was acceptable. >> until he lost his courage. >> lost his courage? >> he lost his courage. >> he couldn't face what? >> why did he blow the deal up? >> what did he tell you? >> that he needed more revenue. needed more revenue. he lost his courage. >> will anything happen between now and the election? >> i would hope so. but i'm not optimistic. the president checked out last labor day. all he's done is campaign full time for the last six months. he's not been engaged in the legislative process at all. there has been no effort at trying to work with democrats and republicans to address this issue at all. it's shameful. >> he's able to change emphasis to the future or to the ryan plan or to governor romney -- >> the american people vote with
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their wallets. they have for the history of this country and it won't change. >> we'll have more of that interview in our next hour. speaker boehner talks about the rough relationship with the president only on "cbs this morning." the race between romney and president obama is now dead even according to a cbs news/"the new york times" poll released just this morning. 46% of registered voters say they will vote for the president. the same number say they'll vote for romney. meantime, more republican primary voters are now backing romney. 33% say they enthusiastically support him. that's up five points from january. with us from washington, our political director john dickerson. good morning. >> good morning, charlie. >> what's happening with these numbers? >> the republican party is slowly gathering behind mitt romney. still some reservations out there for people. that's to be expected after a bruising primary. in that primary was the hardcore of the conservative base that just couldn't get over mitt
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romney no matter -- they kept looking for other alternatives. there is a bit of that lingering out there. you do see the republican party coming behind mitt romney and he's basically reminding them we're all in this against president obama. >> so electability now becomes a big issue for the republicans and they're willing to support the guy that the primary process has chosen. will they be enthusiastic, these conservatives, who supported santorum and gingrich and others? >> right now they're not enthusiastic. that group of conservatives. they're not enthusiastic about mitt romney. they are very enthusiastic about beating the president and we saw last week in this flap about women and ann romney and her role and women's roles, that was a galvanizing moment for conservatives. so if there continue a number of those in which conservatives can see something they don't like about democrats or about this president, that will help mitt romney a great deal. >> what speaker boehner lays out is that this race, he hopes and republicans hope, will be a
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referendum on president obama. the president seems to insist that it will be a referendum on the ryan budget and what it would mean to the country. >> that's right. you were trying to say in your interview there with him, that's the choice. the president doesn't want this to be just a referendum. if you look at polls they have consistently shown that more people disapprove of the way the president has handled the economy. if it's a thumb's up or thumb's down on his handling of the economy, the president is in bad shape. what they hope to say is don't look at the past. look at the future, where things are headed. people are starting to think slightly that the economy is getting better. still lots of people think it's going in the wrong direction. the president hopes to say the future is brighter and it will be brighter with me than the other team. >> he'll spin to their advantage. john, speaker boehner was talking with charlie and said that president obama lost his courage when it came to the budget negotiations. how important will the budget and these negotiations or lack thereof be as we head into november?
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>> it depends how it is framed. if it's a conversation just about reducing the deficit, then republicans will do well. you have seen in polls that people trust governor romney on that question over president obama. so if it's about that, the president is in bad shape. if the conversation is about who is going to be more fair in the future in terms of dividing up the government and also if everybody has to sacrifice who will have the sort of fair distribution of sacrifice, then that's turf on which the president would like to fight the election and in which he's got a slightly better chance. the budget is a big conversation and they will both be fighting about what exactly it means to have a fight over the budget. >> one last question from me, john. this notion of the gender gap, how will the romney campaign go at trying to change those numbers, which are overwhelming? >> they will basically go right back to the economy. they'll say the president is trying to have all of these side fights about nonimportant issues but women, which is the group that mitt romney has difficulty
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with, you need to think about your economic conditions and think about the president and his handling of the economy. and they hope to just drive home that exact same message from the general election. what they'll need to do is make mitt romney more approachable. they are sort of redefining him now. that will also be part of it. >> john dickerson, thanks. u.s. investigators are in colombia asking witnesses exactly what happened. one u.s. senator says up to 20 women were involved with secret service agents and military aides in colombia to prepare for last weekend's presidential visit. norah o'donnell is sat the whit house with the latest. >> reporter: the secret service wants to polygraph a number of those agents and officers involved in this. part of the reason, a lot of those agents are telling different stories about exactly what happened but as one law enforcement official tells us, they're going to do this because "we want to get to use every possible tool to get to the
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bottom of this." this is the strip club. the play club where cbs news has learned president obama's security team was partying just 48 hours before the president arrived in colombia. the men 11 secret service and 10 military members met as many as 20 foreign women, some prostitutes and reportedly paid them $60 each to go to their hotel. the two highest ranking u.s. senators on the committee that oversee the secret service are receiving briefings on the investigation. they want to know whether national security was jeopardized. >> we don't know what kind of access these women had to highly classified information. >> connecticut senator joe lieberman said if the allegations are true, people should be punished. he's considering holding a hearing on the scandal. a top law enforcement official tells cbs news, no sensitive information was compromised, that these agents had not yet received a briefing on the
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president's trip and would not have had his schedule. the pentagon is also investigating. it is looking into the ten military members involved, which includes five members of the army's elite special forces. at the white house, the president spokesman would not answer questions on whether this is an isolated incident or a pattern of behave. is the president convinced this is not part of a broader cultural problem? >> again, there is an investigation ongoing that we should let take its course before we speculate about its conclusions. >> reporter: the investigation is growing too. there's that military investigation and investigators down in colombia. secret service has its own internal investigation and now the department of homeland security is launching their own investigation as well. >> norah o'donnell at the white house. thank you. yesterday we talked about the scandal with former secret service agent who is now running for the u.s. senate in maryland.
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we spoke with him because he had spoken to a number of the agents who were directly involved and we asked minimum what they had told him. after the interview, we learned that his brother was with the secret service detail in colombia. i spoke with him yesterday on the phone in the afternoon asking him about his brother's involvement. he said while he's helping the investigation, he is not a target of the investigation. in spring, texas, near houston, a nurse is now charged with murdering a mother whose 3-year-old baby was then kidnapped. the baby was found unharmed last night several hours after the shooting. his mother kala golden was killed after getting into an argument with a woman in a parked car. polic raided a nearby apartment complex before ultimately arresting the suspect. it is time to show you some of the morning's headlines from around the globe. "the new york times" reports that pay packages for top citigroup executives were rejected in a stock holder suit about 55% of stockholders voted against the payday including 15
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million to citigroup's ceo. the vote is not binding but officials s at the banking gian are taking it seriously. "usa today" reports that $390 million in back taxes owed by troops.
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the death of a british businessman in china leads a top communist party leader in disgrace and his wife in prison. we'll look at this murder mystery offering a rare peek at modern china's dark side. the justice department is investigating 17 police departments accused of breaking the law. >> from time to time in our police work we find departments that are frankly broken from top to bottom. >> jon miller has the story behind the unprecedenteded federal crackdown. you're watching "cbs this morning." >> announceror >> this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by trifexis. get money saving offers at
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i just wanted to say a few words. first of all, thank you for the lovely meal jane. mom. and let's hear it for sara's paper mache eiffel tower. it's the washington monument. and dad, i'll never forget what you said to me this morning. you said "brian, it's 11:15. get up."
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robert have one good morning 726 get you, a some of the bay area headlines on this wednesday blaring sirens in the very minute a devastating earthquake shook the bay area 106 years ago this morning 511 this morning a few survivors attend today's observances of the 1906 quake. santa clara county divers are checking out reservoirs' and ponds once again to find evidence in the case of the missing teenagers here lamar of morgan hill. san francisco's many directors meeting low- income children read the bus for free and help that raged metropolitan transportation metropolitan transportation commisthanks.ll foot the,,,,,,
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under president obama's watch -- >> that blame has to go right to the president. he's the guy in charge. he's the ceo. and his department heads are out there throwing our money away. you should put the responsibility where it lies. >> yes, the president is responsible for anything the government does while he's in office. i waited 17 minutes at the post office today and there was an empty window there the whole time. where was obama? >> welcome back to "cbs this morning." now, an update on a story we reported last week. the investigation into a british businessman's death in china. the leading suspect in this murder mystery is wife of former high-ranking chinese official. >> this morning chinese government says it's committed to finding the truth.
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as barry petersen reports, it's a political embarrassment for the chinese and led to headlines around the world. >> reporter: the british government ratcheted up the pressure on china, demanding better answers about last november's death of british businessman neil heywood in western china. william hague late tuesday raced the issue in parliament. >> a decided a few weeks ago to ask china to reopen an investigation into the death of neil heywood. >> reporter: haywood the enter of a murder investigation that has brought down bo xilai. i interviewed bo more than a decade ago when he was the mayor of a coastal city and already considered a fast rising political star. >> it's a hot job. >> reporter: bo xilai was destined to become one of china's top leaders. bo was party boss in chongqing, a fast-growing city of 30 million. last week a state tv
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announcement said he had been stripped from all his posts. his wife, gu kailai is under arrest as leading suspect in the heywood murder and reuters is reporting heywood may have been killed am a dispute over his cut in illicitly moving what was called a large sum of money out of gu. as if all of this isn't sorted enough, attention is shifting to the party, high living style of their son, educated at oxford and a master student at havb ard university. his facebook page details nights of women and alcohol, but doesn't answer how the son of a party official who makes a modest income can live like the child of royalty. all of this has become a political earthquake for the communist party. embarrassed by the spreading scandal and with other top leaders who have children being educated overseas. observers think the party is hoping swift action will make bo's case disappear fast before the people of china start
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wondering outloud if this kind of corruption reaches all the way to the top. for "cbs this morning," barry petersen. >> nicholas kristof of "new york times" has reported on china for more than 20 years. welcome. >> delighted to be here. >> tell me the two theories, if there are more than one, of this case, how he was the man on the rise to become perhaps one of the moss powerful people in china. his wife is now the leading suspect in the murder of a british businessman. >> yeah. for china watchers this is unbelievable, this scandal. there are not two theories, about you thousands of theories. they fall into two categories. one is bo's family's corruption caught up with him. his wife attempted to murder -- or did murder this businessman, neil heywood probably because he was trying to transfer -- he was transferring the family money out of the country, corruptly, and they were bickering --. >> and it would embarrass them
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for political purposes. >> he may have threatened to expose this if he diplomat get the price he was asking for. that's one theory. another theory by supporters of bo xilai is this is a frame-up. his opponents are trying to destroy a political rival precisely because he is quite popular. >> he was not a typical leader in china. he was more flamboyant, more interesting. >> and he was actually campaigning for the standing committee, which in china isn't done. people were nervous. it's striking in the year before his -- before this catastrophe for him, six of the nine members of the committee went to chongqing to, in a sense, pay a visit to him and now they're cutting him off at the knees. >> because he was doing a revival of mao. >> he was reviving maoist ideology and at the same time becoming a red capitalist. >> he was a huge capitalist at the same time, sort of showing the kind of smirt of mao as revitalized idea in china. >> yeah. maoist curtain on a very
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capitalist -- >> and then there was -- this is yesterday's "new york times." son's gate elite fall of chinese family. in recent years became another liability for his father. on, this is a whole family saga. >> and his son was at oxford, was photographed with these beautiful women, him with his shirt on and off. and then he was suspended there for a year. went to harvard to the kennedy school. now has disappeared. so, it's a whole episode, just this mystery. all we know is there's a dead body. we don't know exactly what happened. >> and the british government is upset about that. >> understandably because they want to get to the bottom of that. when we talk about his son, that's something we don't see in addition to the wealth the family had, the flamboyance, but the way he was so flamboyant about it, i mean, it almost has the make gdz of a soap opera here in the united states. put it in per peculiartive for
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us. we hear bo xilai was a powerful guy. equivalent of what, the speaker of the house here? >> yeah, the speaker of the house, a leading senator. he was a major national figure and a contender for top national power. his wooifls were really nervous about him. >> and the parents of somebody who had been part of the elite in the revolution. >> his father was a major figure. one of the immotorals of china. and how his salary is sending him to british public school, oxford and harvard school, spending a couple hundred thousand dollars on his education. >> what do you believe china wants to see happen here? >> i think most want to see -- >> the story go away? >> well-being chinese was telling me last night they want to see him crushed so that he will never rise again. they are, i think, scared of
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him, hugely embarrassed. this is the biggest and most open debate within leadership since tiananmen and they've been completely humiliated by this. and bo xilai's own deputy then tried to defect to the united states consulate. sneaked into the consulate, wearing a wiig, apparently handed over a secret to the u.s. -- >> and then the chinese came and got him. >> the consulate was surrounded. he was afraid if he left the consulate he would be murdered on the spot. he calls in reinforcement from beijing to escort him to safety. i mean -- >> you can't make it up. >> you can't make it up. >> thanks for being here. the federal government is releasing more police departments than ever before. what some cops are accused of and why the justice department is watching them so closely. [ bell tolls ] so, agents, why did i make you wear these costumes? because the new avengers movie is coming out. and what does that have to do with us? we're the superheroes of insurance.
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on the first day you take it. the shooting of trayvon martin in sanford, florida, has spaked a justice department investigation of that city's
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police force. >> authorities will be looking for possible civil rights violations in other cases. senior correspondent john miller reports, the investigation is actually part of a much wider pattern. >> reporter: this video allegedly showing latino residents being harassed by police in the small town of east haven, connecticut, is at the heart of a growing controversy. over civil rights violations at the hands of the law. >> the officer asked what i was doing. away. and i told them. and i was videotaping. >> reporter: father james manship shot this video and was immediately arrested. he says it's just another example of east haven police abusing their power against the latino community. >> we did have stories of people, you know, of physical violence against them, threats made against them and their families. >> reporter: after his arrest, father james filed a civil rights complaint with the u.s. department of justice on behalf
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of east haven's small latino community. the two east haven police officers in this video were indicted with two others on federal civil rights charges alleging they used their badges to assault, harass and falsely arrest latinos. some residents had come to fear those who were paid to protect them. >> everybody's afraid. they're running, right? that's what we do. >> reporter: according to the justice department report, the pattern or practice of discriminatory policing is deeply rooted in the department's culture. >> from time to time in our police work we find departments that are, frankly, broken from top to bottom. >> reporter: assistant attorney general tom perez, justice department's top civil rights official, says east haven isn't the only broken police department. >> we have more investigations under way than ever before. the problems are far reaching. in east haven the problems are far reaching in new orleans.
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the problems are far reaching in puerto rico. >> reporter: there are currently 17 major police and sheriff's departments under investigation allegedly for civil rights abuses across the country. including this fatal shooting of a homeless native american man on a street corner in seattle. the killing of james chassy, a 42-year-old schizophrenic from portland and this beating of an inmate in a south carolina jail. is it because this issue has broken out? is it cops gone wild? or is it an issue that was ignored? >> i think there was an old paradigm of how to deal with police issues. that is, you either reduce crime or you respect the constitution, but you can't do both. that approach will inevitably lead to the belief that, well, we shouldn't second guess police departments. i categorically reject that
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notion. in maricopa county, arizona, the flamboyant safsh, josee sheriff. >> i'm not a social worker. i'm a cop. >> american policing describes itself as a professional, but when you match it up against other professionals and the authorities knowledge and practices for which their practitioners have to adhere to, still have a long way to go. >> reporter: bill bratton has run three major police departments, los angeles, new york city and boston. he knows well the symptom of a broken system and how to fix them. >> its leadership is sending signals that anything goes. and it will be those in the organization that are going to take advantage of that. >> a front line police officer, his or her most important current is the confidence of the public. >> john miller is here.
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will we see more of this? this is a trend that will continue because of brutality and civil rights violations? >> well, i mean, to state the obvious, 99% of police officers, of course, 18,000 law enforcement agencies in the country go to work and do a great job every day. i think when you see 17 of these going, you might see more of them. that's the department department's posture on this which is we're going to get into these things. on the other hand, police departments, police chiefs may look at this trend and say, i need to clean up inside before they get here.
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no ordinary concert at carnegie hall last night. on stage, a duo who describes themselves as mozart meets monty python and we'll show you more coming up. it was like a red rash... very sore looking kinda blistery. like somebody had set a bag of hot charcoal on my neck. i was a firefighter for 24 years. but, i have never encountered such a burning sensation until i had the shingles. i remember it well. i was in the back yard doing yard work.
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i had this irritation going on in my lower neck. i changed shirts because i thought there was something in the collar of the shirt irritating my neck. and i couldn't figure out what was going on. i had no idea it came from chickenpox. i always thought shingles was associated with people... a lot older than myself. i can tell you from experience, it is bad. it's something you never want to encounter. for more of the inside story, visit shinglesinfo.com whoa! what is that? it burns! it's singeing me!
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that's what i'm going to live within. ♪ ♪ ♪ sing us the song, you're the piano man ♪ >> the bbc is one of the most respected news organizations in the world but on this day in 1930 it did something almost unbelievable on one of its newscast. the newscaster said, there's no news and just played piano news. that comes from our friends at mental floss. can you imagine? there's no news. >> no, i cannot imagine that. i cannot. gayle king can't imagine that either and she has a look at what's coming up in our next hour. >> i was going to say that. hey, i cannot imagine a day with no news here at cbs. much like woody allen or robert altman had a style of their own, when you see a judd apatow movie
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like "40-year-old virgin," it's hilarious. >> announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by levemir flex pen. ask your doctor about the benefits of levemir flex pen today. me... thinking my only option was the vial and syringe dad used. and me... discovering once-daily levemir flexpen. flexpen is prefilled. doesn't need refrigeration for up to 42 days. no drawing from a vial. dial the exact dose. inject by pushing a button. flexpen is insulin delivery my way. levemir is long acting insulin used to control high blood sugar in adults and children with diabetes. do not take if your blood sugar is too low. tell your health care provider about all medicines you take and all of your medical conditions, including if you are pregnant or breastfeeding. the most common side effect is low blood sugar. other possible side effects include reactions at the injection site. get medical help right away if you experience
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♪ president obama has ordered president obama has ordered an investigation into the secret sex scandal. and before president obama finished issuing the order bill clinton said, i am on it. >> start all over again. >> does bill clinton ever say enough already. >> i think the statute of limitations at some point kicks in. >> he might be but they are not saying that. >> it's 8:00. welcome back to cbs this morning. >> we'll have more with house
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speaker john boehner. we discussed mitt romney's race to the white house and then talked to the speaker about his working relationship with president obama as well as his own journey to the current position of power. >> it is often said when ronald reagan was president that they could get together and they could have a drink or have dinner. do you have dinner with the president? >> we don't have dinner. we have had drinks together before. >> it is not a problem of relationship. >> we get along fine. it's just that we disagree. even though we disagree on some major issues the american people expect us to find enough common ground to move the ball down the field to address america's challenges. i told the president anytime that i think that there is an idea whether his idea or my idea that would be good for our country i would be there to
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support it. >> what probe -- >> no mulligans. >> he is one of the presidentess that wants to take a mulligan. >> no. he and i are partners and we play by the rules. >> how about biden? >> they play by the rules, too. >> any president that doesn't play by the rules? >> maybe. >> tell me about you finally. we have seen a man who came to politics who was a colleague of newt gingrich and achieved something that his father and mother probably never dreamed of their son. what does it mean for you to do this? to have a chance to play a role? >> it's an opportunity. i never thought i would have this opportunity. i thought if i could have a small business and grow my small business i thought that could be my entire career. never in my wildest dreams did i think i would be in congress
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much less the speaker. i have no doubts that i'm doing exactly what god has in mind for me to do. >> what god has in mind for you. >> oh, yes. >> how do you know that? >> the preparation i got growing up is all the tools i need to do the job. growing up in a big family, getting things done as a family. growing up around a bar, mopping floors, doing dishes, waiting tables, tending bar and learning to deal with every character that walks in. all the skills i learned growing up. >> he seems to like his job very much. >> and he should. he has had a tough time because he has tea party members of congress who are not in a compromising mood. he clearly seems to believe that he did everything he could to find some way out of the debt
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ceiling crisis. the interesting thing is that all of these problems with a new president or reelected president all the problems come into bear in january they call a fiscal cliff. so this country faces really monumental questions and choices come january 2013. >> really the thinking is because of the election and the impact over the past years and that literally probably nothing will get done until then. it will be hanging over the cliff when decisions need to be made. >> there seems to be conversation between the speaker and the president. >> it struck me interesting. when he said we get along fine when you asked him because on the surface when you look at it it seems to be very acrimonious. >> they have a different view of the role of government for example and the ryan plan versus
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obama plan is very different. what is interesting about them is that the speaker thinks the president made a decision that there was nothing to be gained from talking to the congress and went out and started campaigning for reelection. the president believes that he
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we are about to meet an opera singer who needed a new pair of lungs. an opera singer with lungs. after coming close to death she survived transplant surgery not once but twice. we'll have her story when cbs this morning continues. . can't believe i bought a 6" subway breakfast sub
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inhis morning's in this morning's a new life after transplant surgery. many americans will not live long enough to get new organs. >> one new patient is raising her voice hoping to raise attention to the need for organ donors. good morning. >> it is remarkable. she described the wait for a transplant as excruciating after charity was told that what she loved doing most might kill her. to an opera singer there is a little more precious than a good set of lungs. so just imagine these are not the lungs charity tillman was
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born with. in fact, before this performance one doctor told her she would never sing again. here she was last fall debuting at lincoln center after her first double lung transplant. >> when i sing it makes me so happy because i'm sharing one of the thing yz value most. >> in february we scrubbed in to meet her just a month after her second double lung transplant. >> how are you? >> i'm aalive. >> the 28-year-old opera singer invited us to ohio's cleveland clinic. >> it's called the vest and it shakes me. so it loosens secretions. >> charity's strength on stage
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seemed dwarfed by her spirit in this hospital room. >> it makes me sound like an opera singer on crack. >> since she was a little girl she has been determined to sing. but the precious lungs featured on stage began to fail her by age 20. she developed something called idiopathic pulmonary hypertension which is when oxygen isn't properly absorbed by the body and forces the heart to work overtime. >> i call it the reverse grinch effect because my heart was three and a half sizes too big. in 2009 she needed an emergency transplant and got one. it worked until her body started to reject the first transplant. >> i go to bed at night not sure whether i was going to wake up in the morning. >> her doctors knew she needed another set of lungs soon but
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couldn't find ones that were the right size and blood type. >> how is the wait for a transplant? >> every time the phone rings you hope that maybe, maybe they have found a match. >> she was placed on advanced life support and finally in late january they did find a match. >> every patient will tell you that first breath that they take after their transplant when the breathing tube comes out it's the breath they never forget. >> the medical director of the transplant program here. >> will she sing again? >> she will sing again and she'll sing louder. this will be the first person singing with the second set of lungs that aren't her own. that will be ground breaking. >> with eight sib lbinlings cha has been surrounded by family. >> we step back one step and look at the sky and think
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charity has her lungs. she is talking and moving. she is and i know nothing else would make me so happy. >> brings us closer to immor tality. literally a part of us goes on living after we're gone. >> if you hadn't had this second organ transplant could you be talking to me now? >> no. i think i would not be here. >> she flat lined while in a five week coma and faced death several times but says she is no longer looking in that direction. >> we are all born and we will die. it's what we do in between that defines us, not when we die. it's how we live. >> beautiful voice. she has a great personality. she has that humor that comes
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across. >> i love when you walked in and she said i'm alive. it seemed like you were in a private setting. why was she so eager to talk to you? >> she wanted to get out the word of organ transplant. she said every time the phone rings you don't know if they have found a match, whether it will work. she describes the process of getting the transplant as being hit by a truck. it is quite an emotional roller coaster. >> i can only imagine. >> she wanted us to get out the word about the importance of organ transplantation. >> it makes you think don't take your breathing for granted, something we do all the time. >> i asked if the lungs feel different, she said the second set feels more like her original set of lungs. >> that's fascinating. great piece. thanks. >> not the first to combine
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classical music in comedy but may be the first to get two million hits on youtube. carnegie hall. you're watching "cbs this morning." >> announcer: cbs healthwatch sponsored by v8, 100% vegetable juice. could have had had v8. hmmm. for half the calories plus veggie nutrition. could've had a v8. that could adapt to changing road conditions. one that continually monitors and corrects for wheel slip. we imagined a vehicle that can increase emergency braking power when you need it most.
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as we looked around the web this morning, we found a few reasons to make a long story short. they say fashion designer doesn't care if women are in pain. he told the magazine, quote f you can't walk in them, don't wear them. >> looking for a restaurant with great food, britain's daily mail has tips from an economist who wrote in "at the lat lantic" you should avoid places with beautiful women. why? professor cohen says those restaurants attract a lot of men and eastries cut back on quality because men just want to look at
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hot women. >> according to the gallup, allergy season in the u.s. is worse than usual thanks to the warm winter, which also arrived earlier this year. more than 22% of americans reported being sick with allergies this month. beating last year's peak period in may. that's the long story short. i'm still thinking about mrmr. mr. loubiton, he should be more sensitive. not traditional performers, current show called "a little nightmare music." elaine quijano has their story. >> reporter: at new york's legendary carnegie hall, a venue with the rich tradition of boasting classical performances, two virtuosos put on a show that can only be described as nontraditional.
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♪ >> reporter: has anyone's phone ever gone off during a performance? >> oh -- >> all the time. >> practically every -- >> every single time. ♪ >> reporter: ee-goodsman and his childhood friend, joo, are two classic alley trained musicians who make classical contemporary. their youtube channel has more than 28 million hits and their fans now include musical greats like the piano man himself, billy joel, who joined them on stage. ♪ she's the only one who can >> reporter: ee-goodsman and joo both fell in love with classical music as kids and as adults their show is aimed at making
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others fall in love with it, too. >> because you know what some people say about classical music, that it is stuffy. >> the music itself is not stuffy at all. it's exciting, fun, crazy most of the time. >> reporter: but their on-stage antics can't hide their undeniable musical talents and commitment to their craft. ee-goodsman plays an antique violin made in the 18th century. >> we always say we don't make fun of the music. we make fun with the music. >> reporter: a passion that seems to have spread. for "cbs this morning," elaine quijano, new york. >> very cool stuff. >> i was going to say, have fun with the music. it never hurts when you're wearing deer antlers and sunglasses. >> adds a little extra pizazz. >> i like your deer antlers in your office. they look good on you. we'll find out whapsz after you die and why it is so
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important to know now. you're watching "cbs this morning." your local news is up next. [ female announcer ],,,, this is the story of sam, who made an unexpected arrival. [ woman ] he was 4 months early, weighing 1 pound, 12 ounces. [ female announcer ] fortunately, sam was born at sutter health's alta bates summit medical center. [ woman ] the staff was remarkable. they made me feel safe, trusting, cared for. [ giggles ] they saved his life. i owe all of them my son. [ female announcer ] alta bates summit medical center
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>> let's get you caught up with some bay area headlines. survivors and city leaders up before dawn to mark the 106th anniversary of the devastating earthquake that hit san francisco. the gilded a fire hydrant. the earthquake leveled hundreds of city blocks and left half the population homeless. in less than three hours a major medical marijuana dispensary will announce its future plans. federal agents raided it last month. richard li is stepping down citing concerns of potential changes there. menlo park approved a new expansion plan for facebook headquarters. plan calls for thousands of employees being added to its
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campus. ,,,,,, [ banker ] mike and brenda found a house that they really wanted. it was in my sister's neighborhood. i told you it was perfect for you guys. literally across the street from her sister. [ banker ] but someone else bought it before they could get their offer together. we really missed a great opportunity --
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dodged a bullet there. [ banker ] so we talked to them about the wells fargo priority buyer preapproval. it lets people know that you are a serious buyer because you've been credit-approved. we got everything in order so that we can move on the next place we found. which was clear on the other side of town. [ male announcer ] wells fargo. with you when you're ready to move. >> good morning, very slow conditions along 880 as you work your way northbound. no accidents but extra busy. we had an earlier accident that has cleared out of lanes but it is still slow as you work your way out of the word. a new crash at stone ridge
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drive on south 680 but traffic is improving overall in the area. to 37, the 80, loaded up is you had to milpitas. also as you work your way along the dumbarton bridge there is a broken-down vehicles at the flat section. san mateo bridge is a much better choice. >> we are seeing some low clouds but we still see some more sunshine out there as well. upper forties to low 50s and 51 in oakland. 52 degrees in vallejo. by later this afternoon we will warm things up to the mid '60s in san francisco to the low 70's. we will,,,,,,,,
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the hills very close call in palm coast, florida. take a look at the security video just released. it shows a car plowing, we do mean plowing into shoppers at a supermarket. injuring about ten people. police say luckily nobody was killed. hard to believe looking at that video. yesterday the 76-year-old driver was charged with careless driving. welcome back to "cbs this morning."
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is it wrong to say, charlie, maybe we should take that license away from that -- >> i think that would be an appropriate -- >> game over. >> -- time to consider. $1.5 billion sounds like nothing to laugh at but that's just about how much judd apatow's funny comedies have taken in at the box office. >> hey, everyone. come and see how good i look! >> cannonball! >> oh! >> i pray to god, i just want to live! >> he's airborne. >> yep, i'm flying through the air. this is not good. >> okay. here's the deal. let me make it real simple. i'm -- >> oh. >> stop slapping yourself. i'm your life. i'm your -- oh! >> sorry. nice hit. ♪
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>> oh! come on, it's so nice. do it! >> oh! >> what? >> my hip! my hip! >> oh a fire hydrant. >> that last clip is from the new movie "five year engagement" which opens at tribeca film festival tonight in new york. welcome. >> it's shocking to see that montage. when you put it all together, i was at another event and they had like a spielberg montage. it was very different from that. >> common denominator of your montage? >> seems like there's a lot of bad sex happening. a lot of people getting hit in different parts of their anatomy. >> so you know something america doesn't know or the rest of film makers don't know about billion dollar -- >> maybe spielberg doesn't have the courage to have people get hit in that area that many times. >> you know what i think it is?
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in all of your movies you have a what the hell moment. even he if you're not going through that particular scene in a movie, we've all had the what the hell moment, which is universal for everybody. is that what you try to do? >> i just think life is hard. >> life is hard. >> it's fun to show it at its worst. so, you know, sometimes people say, oh, these people are so immature and making such mistakes but who wants to hang out with someone that's mature in there's no humor in like a person doing things normally. >> i hang out with a lot of people that are not mature. so, when you set out to make a movie, what are you saying to yourself, i mean, how do i create laughs or just give expression of how funny i am? >> we usually just try to have some passionate idea and then we do the jokes later. so, with "the five year engagement" they really wanted to talk about how their friends have incredibly long engagements where they break up, get back together, everything goes wrong, they doubt whether they should do it. we usually kick around a story
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and then we go, well, how do we make it funny? >> story first? >> yes. when you start with jokes, you get in trouble because you're jamming story in and that never plays. >> let's talk about jason segel. i went to the screening last night. hilarious "the five year engagement" and yea son wrote it. after the movie was over, do you know the first question people had? could i just get a hug from you, jason? jason segel was here. he is one of the nicest guys i've ever met. you seem to like him in your movies, too. >> no one ever says can i get a hug? they're like, can you please stand over here? you're creeping me out. some people have a charisma. he's just a very sweet -- he's honestly that nice of a guy and a great writer. i've known him since he was 18 years old. i always thought he would be able to do something like this. and he's worked really hard and deserves it. he's just hilarious. >> what did you see? >> that's a very good question. i don't know. i kind of thought -- he's
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hilarious and good looking but maybe a little too tall, which is -- looks like he might fall over there is -- he's handsome and a frankenstein quality. >> always good in a man. >> exactly. >> leslie mann, your lovely wife. >> we just finished a movie called "this is 40" about paul rudd and leslie and their family having a midlife meltdown. and ail better brooks, melissa mccarthy, john lithgow and that's coming out christmas. >> you're called one of the most southafter comedy minds. >> that means i'm working. >> i think that's a good thing. >> when did you know you were funny or when you did know you wanted to make people laugh in were you a funny kid? >> you know, i -- i don't know how funny i was. you know, i have these little books of jokes i was trying to write when i was like in fifth grade. and i thought, well, was i funny as a kid?
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no. i was so unfunny. it's just like hundreds of pages of how come on gilligan's island they knew to bring so much clothes? that's as deep as it got. >> when you and will come together to do sequel to "anchorman," what's the conversation? >> we say is the charlie around? will he tell a story about his life? could we all -- >> i would go see that. i would go see that. >> i don't know. will ferrell and adam go in a room for a couple months and write something just -- >> and come out in a couple months -- >> they show it to me, luckily i get to be one of the first people to read it and we try to figure out how to have it make sense. >> i'm really interested in when comedians come together, is it all business or fun and games? >> there's definitely pressure. you always feel like, if this is bad, it's going to be really embarrassing, so you do want to make it good. but, yeah, we do have to get loose. we try to think of -- you know,
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if they're sitting down to outline anchorman they'll come up with hundreds of insane ideas. then on another day they'll sit with those ideas and go, okay, now, let's pick the ones we like. >> comedy is hard. >> it is. it is hard. it's not as hard as this, what you're doing. i can't say it's harder than this. but i have to say, i watch your show on pbs every night because i love it but also it puts my 8-year-old to sleep. >> is that a compliment? >> well, now she's 9. now she's 9. so, like, we watch you -- >> i'm like a nanny. >> yeah. we watch "american idol" and then i'm so excited to watch you and she's like, daddy, put it on boring show now and here's what happens -- >> judd, you better look around -- >> but now she's 9 and now, like -- >> now she's not interested. >> now she is doesn't go to sleep. she's like why does romney want to give the reach people so much money? i'm like go to sleep. >> give her a couple more years and i'll tell you. >> i hadn't thought of charlie
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rose as the nanny. you're coming back to tv. i heard you said after "freaks and geeks" you were done with television but you're coming back. >> yes. i didn't want to do television just because it hurt me so badly because all my shows get canceled immediately. >> lena star of "the girls" and writer/director, and i thought, this will be easy because she's talented. the more talented my collaborative, the less have i to do. >> she'll be here tomorrow. >> thank you for watching and tell your daughter to start staying up. >> she's like, daddy tonight the ambassador of afghanistan is on. i'm like, great. >> so, your daughter is smarter because she's watching charlie rose. >> the smartest kid -- >> i want her to be. i'm going to train her with you. >> thanks. "the five year engagement" opens in theaters next friday. >> was that a compliment? >> it was the best compliment. >> he watches every night? i'll take that in a moment.
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>> i'll take it as a compliment. many wonder what happens after death? we don't have all the answers. if you wonder what happens after death, we'll show you what happens to your ,, when i take a picture of this check, it goes straight to the bank. oh. oh look the lion is out! no mommy no! don't worry honey, it only works on checks.
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deposit checks from your smartphone with chase quickdeposit. just snap a picture, hit send and done. take a step forward and chase what matters.
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it is very important to decide who will inherit everything you leave behind but who inherits your debt after you're long gone? >> sometimes that can lead to a very nasty surprise. rebecca jarvis is here with important information for all of us. welcome. when someone passes away, who does inherit the debt? >> generally speaking the debt dies with the borrower and the estate goes towards covering whatever it can. so, let's assume, for example, and i want to put this in real teams -- let me say before we go into this, this is very important but it's important to discuss and there are a lot of
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scam artists looking to take advantage of people in these grieving moments. but i want to put it into context. let's assume you pass with $10,000 of debt. that $10,000 of debt, you also - have $2,000 of savings and $2,000 in addition of assets, so that could be stocks, antiques, property. ultimately what goes towards paying off the lenders, then, is that $4,000. however, there's this remaining $6,000 that people are saying, well, what happens there? that is eaten up by the lenders. so, family is not in a position to pay it. the spouse, if there's remaining spouse, is generally speaking not in a position to pay it. so, that goes towards paying off lenders, $4,000 and whatever is remaining the family never owes it. >> is there ever a case where you are responsible for someone else's debt? i always thought you were responsible for your spouse's debt. >> there are certain cases and certain states, by the way. we should mention, there are certain states. i'll get to those in one second.
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first of all, if you happen to co-sign on a loan, when you co-sign on a spouse's loan, let's say, for a home, you still owe that debt because you co-signed on it. also, if you happen to be named on a credit card, if both of your names are on a credit card and your spouse remains or if it happens to be a family credit card and the other family member remains after death, they are -- they must pay that debt off. also, there are community property states and a big one in this country is california. california is one of those places where any property acquired under the marriage becomes community. it's owned by both spouses in the marriage. it also is the case with debt that both individuals are assigned to that debt. even if you're not named on that debt. so, in those places, and you see them on the screen right now where you can inherit debt, states where even if your name isn't on the debt, will you have to pay it off if your spouse passes. >> what about something like medical costs, which for so many people, especially if this
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person has passed after a long illness, those bills can be high? >> these can be particularly debilitating. what i want to make clear is the family is not legally responsible to pay the bills. let's say your mother or father, heaven forbid, passes away after a long illness, the family is not responsible for paying that off. there are some cases, however, where the spouse is responsible for paying it off. and there are cases if the spouse were to say, i will cover the costs, if you're in a hospital and your spouse is in a hospital and this can be common and the hospital bill comes to you and say, can you sign on the dotted line, to say if your dear wife or husband passes, will you cover it? if you sign on that dot the line, you must pay for it. in community states, again, under the same assumption that debt incurred during the marriage goes to both spouses, then you will be eligible or must pay for that, rather. >> you have to sign or is that -- do i throw that question to a doctor or -- >> you should talk to a doctor
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and lawyer if you are faced with that question. because if it becomes a question of care and whether or not you can obtain care for your spouse, nobody wants to leave their spouse hanging. but before you sign, i would recommend -- and in all of these cases, recommend talking to an attorney because they can walk you through this and make sure scam artists who are out there in large numbers, the better business bureau gets threats and hears about this stuff all the time. they will help you sort through it. >> and after listening to you, i think i do need an attorney to sort it out. >> you should. >> thank you, rebecca. come miic book artist david devries says he gets some of his best ideas from the kids. [ girl ] my mom always tells me: if you want something done right, then do it yourself. that's the idea behind our children, our future -- the ballot initiative to fix our schools. we've waited years for the politicians to do it.
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now, we can do it ourselves. our children, our future sends every k through 12 dollar straight to our schools... not to sacramento. it benefits every kid in every school, with local control of the money. that's why the p-t-a supports it.
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almost every kid goes through that phrase where they're afraid of the monsters under the bed or in the closet? what if the monster is hanging on the wall? >> dave devries paints monsters. lots of creepy, crawly monsters and he does it by tapping into his inner child and the creativity of children. >> reporter: you could call dave devries the piped piper of paint because when he puts on a clinic, kids go crazy. and it's not just that he's produced some of the world's most famous super heroes for marvel and dc comics, it's because he makes children's art come alive. so, you're basically taking a child's idea and you're just kind of popping into their mind for a second and then transforming it into something else. >> their minds are so much
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different than ours. they don't have kind of the critical judgment that we do. like, we'll sit down and start doing a project and we're like, oh, that's not going to work. that's not going to work. they just do it. and there's something really powerful about that. >> reporter: he calls his project the monster engine and the concept is simple. a kid draws a monster. devries takes that drawing and paints it with ghoulish realism. the results, stunning. the idea first came to him by accident when he brought his sketch book on a family beach vacation. >> when i came out of the ocean i saw my 6-year-old niece jessica drawing in the sketch book. you've got to understand about kids, they don't draw. they carve. >> reporter: of course. >> i mean, just -- and i was just like, no, no, no! and that's where the idea started. >> reporter: that was 14 years ago. since then the monster engine has become a book, a website, a growing collection of drawings and paintings. what is it about these drawings
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that fascinate people? >> people tell me that it's about going back to their childhood. they're looking at something that they used to do and they're seeing it the way that an adult illustrator could render it. it's a connection between those two worlds, adult and child. >> reporter: you're into the weird and dark? >> since the time i was a little kid. i like things that are odd, weird, absurd. i've always been like that. up here there's a lot of stuff -- >> reporter: as you you might expect, his studio is homage to childhood, go his wife michelle, an interior designer takes in stride. >> this is so not strange to me. that i sometimes forget like average people, this would be really weird, but i -- i'm comforted. i actually like it. >> reporter: not everyone likes the monster engine.
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some critics say it sends a terrible message to kids, that their work alone isn't good enough. >> what i found is the complete opposite. the drawing themselves are the basis for the painting and they realize that. the kids know that i could do the painting without their drawing, so they're an important part of the process. you can pick any color you want. >> reporter: he believes he's inspiring children. >> one kid walked up to me and he said, i wish you were my father!o cf1 o >> reporter: as proof he showed me the pile of thank you letters and monster drawing he received after visiting a school in march. the kids inspire him, too, and help him to continue to see the world through young eyes. >> you can't erase being an adult up. just can't. and i think that there is something lost when you get to, say, about 12, 13 years old. that perception. it's really hard -- i've worked hard to try to maintain it but you'll never see it like that again.
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>> gang, here's my question. my question is, so what is it about -- what would a child psychologist say about what it is that makes kids so fascinated by this? what's the appeal? >> well, just take a look at their minds. their imagination. i mean, every child thinks they've seen a monster in the closet or under the bed or something like that. i mean, their imagination runs wild. these paintings, he's building on that. but i have a surprise. i'm going to change the subject for a second. >> that's my son's name on that picture. >> yeah, your son weston, he did that. in fact, our man dave -- >> you're kidding! >> -- put this together for you. your son is 5 years old -- >> oh, you're so great. thank you, thank you, thank you. >> you can't thank me. this was our producer, conspiracy with your husband. >> you guys are -- >> and the artist dave together. i don't know how much weston knew what was going on, but look, he has go to hang on his
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wall in the bedroom. there you go. >> it could be in your house soon. >> i don't want
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>> good morning. santa clara county sheriff's divers are revisiting some of the reservoir is in search for that missing morgan hill teenager's sierra lamar. she has not been seen for more than one month. a new movie will focus on oscar grant last moments before a bart police officer shot and killed him in 2009. octavia's spencer is in talks to play his mother. the film may go into production in july. a $2 fee increase for ferry service to alcatraz goes into effect today. it will only affect newly purchased tickets. this is the first increase in more than three years. here is elizabeth with the
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weather forecast >> we have a few low clouds and areas of fog but by this afternoon we are expecting partly sunny skies. this is a live look over pleasanton. high pressure is building in the rain is staying north of the bay area. it will remain warm throughout the rest of the work week. mid-60's in san francisco, low seventies in park and his pay. it looks like friday and saturday will be the warmest day with highs reaching into the upper 80s. here's a look at a time saver traffic with
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>> let's start off with mass- transit delays. we're getting word of capitol corridor delays about one-and-a- half hours to get to great america recovering from an earlier problem. train no. 524, that is the delay this morning. the rest of mass transit is not doing too bad. headed over to the bay bridge toll plaza, an accident westbound at the incline is blocking lanes. is he coming off the east shore freeway. once you get past the accident at the incline your seeing traffic across the after deck into san francisco. lower deck, no problems. as you held through the altamont pass, 32 minutes from the altamont pass to 680 along the west downside of 580.
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