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tv   CBS This Morning  CBS  June 11, 2013 7:00am-9:01am PDT

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of coffee? >> thanks for watching kpix 5 news this morning. >> have a great day, everybody. good morning to our viewers in the west. it is tuesday, june 11 2013. welcome to "cbs this morning." the obama administration is going after the men who leaked spy secrets, but where is he? he may have more to reveal about secret surveillance of americans. new rules on emergency contraception. girls of any age will now be allowed to buy a morning after pill. a stolen baby case captured america's attention in 1964. now dna testing turns this story upside down. we begin this morning with a look at today's eye opener your world in 90 seconds. >> he knows where cia assets and operatives are around the world.
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if that's discloseded it will be a disaster. >> an international manhunt for the contractor who leaked america's surveillance secrets. >> edward snowden checked out of his hotel in hong kong and is in hiding. >> a reporter who worked with snowden said more significant revelations will be made. >> a substantial number of documents that will generate serious, important news storieses for weeks and probably months to come. >> the sky got really, really dark. it looked like the world was ending. >> seven tornado reports in virginia, north carolina and maryland. then the tornado in kentucky was serious business. >> wow. that's hit hard there. >> a morning of protests in turkey. police moved to retake the central square in istanbul. it's been held by protesters for more than a week now. >> south africa's legendary reformer nelson mandela is spending his fourth day in the hospital. he remains in intensive care with a lung infection. >> he's an icon of the world. he has shown us what true
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leadership is. >> the media circus is headed to foxboro. tebow is expected to sign with the patriots. >> do you want him to play quarterback. >> nope. >> hillary clinton joined twitter and described herself as a pantsuit aficianado and a hair icon. >> chad johnson was about to get out with a plea deal when he slapped his attorney on the tush. >> this isn't a joke. >> we have an idiot on the program today. >> you will not stop freedom. >> and all that matters. >> this evening in washington all members of the house are invited to a briefing by intelligence agency directors about any domestic program. >> an "cbs this morning." >> the government has been actively collecting information on a group of us who made phone calls or use the internet. i bet the amish feel pretty [ bleep ] smart right now. [ laughter ]
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welcome to "cbs this morning." good morning. >> good morning, charlie. we have new reporting on the spy scandal. >> the justice department preparing criminal charges against edward snowden, former cia employee who admits leaking secret document that is reveal government surveillance of phone records for millions of americans. >> whether the u.s. will be able to find snowden is another matter. he was last seen in hong kong. seth has the latest. good morning. >> good morning to you. edward snowden revealed his identity, but remains in hiding. those who have spoken with him over the last couple of days tell us we have not heard the last of edward snowden. the man believed to have leaked details about classified u.s. surveillance programs may have more government secrets to spill. >> it's a substantial number of documents that will generate serious news stories, important nows stories for weeks and probably months to come.
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>> reporter: glen greenwald is a reporter and columnist for britain's "the guardian" newspaper and one of the people who's been involved with snowden after his bombshell. >> i would say dozens. >> reporter: u.s. investigators are trying to find out as much as possible about snowdep and his role in what many already consider one of the most significant intelligence leaks in american history. fbi agents visited his father and step-mother's home monday. neighbors said the couple warned them about what was happening. >> he said things may get crazy here. he said my oldest son is the one who leaked the nsa. >> like any mother or father don't know if they will see their child again. they don't know. >> reporter: if investigators
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find snowden he'll likely face criminal charges in the states. hong kong may not be a safe haven for long. >> it would be wisest for him to leave hong kong. we have bilateral agreements with the u.s. we are bound to comply. >> reporter: snowden said he knew what he was getting into. >> you can't come forward against the world's most powerful intelligence agencies and be completely free from risk. if they want to get you, they will get you in time. >> reporter: now some other legal experts told us that hong kong might not be the worst place for edward snowden. there is a loophole now in the law for people seeking asylum. if he were to successfully seek asylum it could buy him time. >> seth, thank you. a new poll shows most americans don't object to the program he exposed. the poll finds 56% support phone
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surveillance if it's done for national security reasons. the poll found less support for surveillance of e-mail and online activity. >> john miller is here. he's a former deputy director of national intelligence. good morning. >> good morning. >> is the government preparing charges against snowden and can they find him? >> they are preparing charges. since this weekend a couple of things have been going on. the nsa has been going through computers with the fbi to say what is his account, what did he download, print. if he had never said anything can we prove his claims are true? on his word alone they won't take the confession. they need evidence behind that. he's sped up the process by making himself the prime suspect. the drawing up of charges part is complicated. u.s. attorneys, department of justice officials and fbi agents are trying to figure out what's the strongest charge we can put in a federal complaint now that we are confident we can prove
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because with the extradition treaty with hong kong what you extradite him on, that's what you try him on. part of the deal is you can't change the charges when he gets here. they do one charge put everything in later. they have to do it quickly and carefully. >> how is it possible that the u.s. intelligence apparatus all around the world doesn't know where this 29-year-old is who doesn't have a high school degree. >> nora what makes you think is they don't know exactly where he is. >> oh, good. that's why i asked that question. >> i asked the question too. >> you think we know where he is. >> i understand the capability and the tools. i worked there long enough to know if they want to find somebody they can usually do it. they have a big headstart on this guy. >> just a question. he said in the interview he did with glen greenwald that i had access to the full rosters of
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everyone at the nsa the entire intelligence community and entire undercover assets around the world. is that possible or is he exaggerating. >> this is a young man given to hyperbole. there are master directories by agencies. it's almost like a yellow pages if you will or a white pages of spies. you have to have top secret clearance to do it. people under cover generally don't showdirectory. if they do not as who they are. >> is it possible or likely the chinese is interrogating him? >> this is a jump ball. you have an american willing to give up secrets who understands the intelligence communities in some of the darkest corners. not just the americans want to talk to him, especially if he's looking for asylum. a number of hostile nations would say, come to us we'll take care of you. that could be a problem. >> want to update everyone on
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the story you first reported yesterday on the papers today. allegations of a cover-up in the state department. some of the department's own agents told cbs news investigations were manipulated to hide misconduct and criminal activity including the suspected use of prostitutes by a u.s. ambassador. a state department spokeswoman had this response. >> i'm not going to talk about specific cases. i can say broadly that the notion that we would not vigorously pursue criminal misconduct in a case -- in any case is preposterous. we have put individuals behind bars for criminal behavior. there is record of that. ambassadors would be no exception. >> john, let me ask you about that. according to your sources, was the ambassador in those cases fully investigated. >> according to the agent who spoke to the inspector general he was halfway through when he was told to stop. we learned the ambassador was
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called to washington and interviewed by a criminal investigator. it sounds like another investigator picked up the case. the people who started finished it. they felt cut off. the case may not be under review anymore. several others are. >> john miller thank you. the obama administration is doing an about-face on age limits for the morning after pill. the justice department said yesterday it will allow girls of any age to buy the emergency contraception known as plan b one step. jan crawford is in washington. good morning. >> good morning. this is really a surprising reversal. the administration has long fought to keep young girls from having easy access to this kind of emergency contraception. the president has framed it as a personal issue saying as the father of two young girls he opposed the drug sale without age restrictions. but the administration has lost a string of court decisions beginning earlier this year when a federal judge said those age
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restrictions were, quote, politically motivated and scientifically unjustified. he ruled the drug had to be made available to all ages over the counter without a prescription. last week a federal appeals court refused to block most of the decision. -- if it continues the legal fight. planned parenthood calls it a huge breakthrough for access and a historic moment for women's health and equity. opponents say the power of the abortion rights lobby. the family research council said what we see here is the government caving to political pressure instead of putting first the health and safety of girls and parental rights. >> jan thanks. in a few minutes president obama will hold a white house event on immigration. he's expected to praise the senate for making progress on a bill to reform immigration laws. the senate is taking an initial
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vote on the bill later today. the results could set the stage for weeks of discussion on capitol hill. nancy, good morning. >> the vote is set to take place in a few hours. it's to begin debate on the plan crafted by eight senators. four democrats and four republicans. their bill made it out of committee last month. it underwent a lot of changes there. this is really the next and crucial step. a debate on the senate floor that will almost certainly involve weeks of discussion and a number of amendments that could make the bill stronger or could sink the bill. this is exactly the point in this debate where immigration reform plans fell apart six years ago. people are watching this closely. the plan they are debating this time creates a pathway to citizenship for the nation's 11 million or so illegal immigrants but only after certain border security improvements are initiated. illegal immigrants without a criminal record who get a job
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would be granted legal status but would have to get on the back of the line for citizenship which could take ten years or so. the border security piece is really the biggest sticking point for republicans. they feel many of them that it's not strong enough or would never be implemented. it does appear charlie and nora, that there are 06 vote6 0 votes to begin today. then there is the approach for fixing the broken immigration system. >> interesting development on capitol hill. nancy, thank you. in turkey's largest city a violent show down this morning. riot police stormed a park in istanbul where demonstrators have been for nearly two weeks. holly williams is at the scene. i know you have a gas mask with you as well. >> reporter: good morning. the turkish authorities said they were going to tear down banners put up in istanbul.
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for hours we have seen hundreds of police fighting street battles with demonstrators using teargas and water cannons on trucks to force the protesters back. they are firing rubber bullets into the crowds and they have been tearing down barricades put up by protesters with bulldozers. thousands of people have been demonstrating here over the last 12 days. they have been joined by crowds in cities all over turkey. they are angry with the country's prime minister erdwho they say is acting like a dictator. most of the protesters here are peaceful. we have witnessed some this morning throwing stones and molotov cocktails. they have set fire to one police truck. the prime minister is planning to meet with some of the protesters tomorrow. today he called on them to withdraw and said the protests are a deliberate attempt to tarnish turkey's image. charlie, nora?
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in syria, two suicide bombers killed at least 14 people this morning in damascus. the obama administration. good morning. >> good morning, charlie and nora. we flew to moscow to talk about syria. will you ru shahssia provided the regime with supplies to ensure their survival. he accused the west and u.s. of having a double standard when it comes to their support of the syrian opposition. >> russia the people have stated we do not support anyone in syria. >> you have supplied them with weapons? >> we supply weapons to all those who contract it legally. this is the universal rule. >> even if the weapons may be used to perpetrate war crimes? >> i don't think you can
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perpetrate war crimes with air defense systems, defensive weapons. >> this is a request to a russian arms supplier from march of this year. 20,000 ak-47s 200,000 mortar rounds grenade launchers, millions of rounds of ammunition -- >> are we discussing syrian army requests or the substance of the contracts which we honor? i think those are different things. you have to make a difference. >> were these weapons supplied? >> i have not seen this request. this is not a contract to which we are committed. those are different things. as i said the international law does not prohibit legal, legitimate supplies of arms to any sovereign state without violating any international norms. >> he said he does believe an end to the war in syria can be negotiated at a peace conference that's due to take place next
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month. he said russia has done its job by ensuring the syrian government will attend and now it's up to secretary of state john kerry to uphold his end of the bargain and make sure the opposition is there, too. charlie and nora? >> thank you. there are growing concerns this morning in south africa about nelson mandela. the 94-year-old former president is in intensive care for a lung infection. mark phillips is outside the hospital in pretoria south africa. mark, good morning. >> reporter: good morning. there has been no further official advance on mandela's condition here. it remains, as they have said serious but stable. we have other information that his situation may have to do with more than just a lung infection he was brought in for. sources we consider reliable here say mr. mandela is now beginning to suffer from serious internal organ dysfunction. he has kidney and liver impairment. the function of those organs
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down to perhaps 50%. he's in intensive care here. he is being visited by members of the family. the nation's mood is expressed by headlines. remains grim as to the possible outcome of this. he is not unconscious, but is not responding or engaging with the people coming to see him as well. the security here at the hospital has been stepped up. no further news thus far today on any improvement or otherwise in nelson mandela's condition. >> time to show you some of the morning headlines from around the globe. the wall street journal says consumer financial protection bureau is criticizing banks for overdraft fees. banks made $32 million from the charges last year. the government agency says customers may be paying more than they should because of confusing rules. the kansas city star said the senate approved an $80 billion farm bill but could have trouble in the house where conservatives want big cuts to farm subsidies and food stamps.
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the l.a. times says much of america's oil and gas can be recovered. oil and gas reserves that can be developed using current technology are up 35% compared to two years ago. the growth is due in large part to increased fracking. >> the new york times says apple is overhauling the software system. it was unveiled at yesterday's conference in san francisco. tim cooke calls ios 7 the biggest change since the iphone. it includes a kill switch that can be used to disable stolen iphones. powerful storms are in the forecast today from the dakotas to indiana. yesterday another system hit much of the east. the tornado damaged several homes in logan county kentucky along the tennessee border. warnings were issued in maryland and delaware which were hit by strong winds and thunderstorms. thousands of utility customers lost power. no deaths were reported.
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good morning. low clouds and fog surging well on shore. drizzle out toward the coastline. by the afternoon squeeze a little more sunshine. looks gray out there. a little damp out toward the beaches. looks like the temperatures this amp are going to warmup after the system slides on through. another one off to the coastline throwing clouds. 70s and 80s inland. 60s and 70s. and 50 s and 60s toward the coast. warmer on thursday. >> announcer: this national weather report sponsored by choice hotels where you will always find a cozy room. book today.
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a a newborn is kidnapped from a chicago hospital. the 1964 crime captivated the country. >> a year and a half later it was solved or so everyone thought. >> nearly 50 years later tests reveal two great mysteries, not one. a missing baby and a man who doesn't know who he is. we have the details coming up. the news is back in the morning on "cbs this morning." stay tuned for your local news. "cbs this morning" sponsored by
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this is a kpix 5 news morning update. >> good morning, everyone. it's 7:26. i'm frank mallicoat. get you caught up with bay area headlines. neighbors help rescue an 87-year-old woman from her burning home. this morning the fire started in a vacant house next door. one firefighter suffered a leg injury. an indecent exposure suspect is wanted. police say he dropped his pants after a woman asked him to leave her alone. and the san jose city council set to vote on a budget later today. the proposal includes money for more police officers and other crime fighting efforts. traffic and your weather for a tuesday coming up right after the break. stay right there.
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good morning, first getting a check of the san mateo bridge, there is a crash blocking the middle lane. westbound 92 before the pay gates. you may start to fight delays getting out of hayward. once you get on to the bridge traffic is moving fine heading towards the high rise. to the south bay we go southbound 85. fire crews are blocking one lane . the rest of the south bay. that's traffic. here's lawrence. >> plenty of low clouds and fog spreading on shore. trying to break things up. see from our cam high level clouds. still looks like as we head throughout the day these skies are going to part. we'll see sunshine and temperatures warmer. 70s low 80s inland. 60s and 70s inside the bay . warmer on thursday. re happy birthday! it's a painting easel!
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♪ president obama's staff forgot to put his remarks on the podium before his speech in california. and the president was not too happy. take a look at this. >> good morning, everybody. it is wonderful to see all of you, and i want to thank everybody who's here i think there's only one problem and that is that my remarks are not sitting here. people! i'm going to have -- i'm going to answer a question at the end of the remarks but i want to make sure we get the remarks on. people! [ laughter ] >> uh uh -- on the bright side i think another job was just created. >> i don't think people worked in the white house anymore. >> people -- people. that's extraordinary.
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i can't ever remember seeing that happen. sure, it's probably happened but it's funny because the president had to wait for his remarks before he could give an address on obama care. joe biden recently joked the standing joke in the office is barack's learning to speak without a teleprompter i'm learning to speak with one. you get relying on your notes, we, too. >> just like he said. people. welcome back to "cbs this morning." coming up this half hour new concerns about your retirement even if you have $1 million in the bank. that might not be enough. we'll ask mellody hobson how this happened and what people should do it about it. plus a lot of fans were concerned about his future. not former jet and broncos quarterback is on his way to new england. some people are calling it tebow's last chance. that story is ahead. but first, a bizarre mystery, nearly 50 year it's in making. the story was first reported by
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our las vegas affiliate klax. in 1964 a newborn was stolen from a chicago hospital. but the family was reunited a year later. but it wasn't that simple. jeff glor has the case. >> a national headline of grief and then celebration. everyone thought it was solved until it wasn't. now because of recent revelations, one man is left with two unsolved mysteries. >> reporter: he grew up as paul joseph fronczak a happy, healthy child in suburban chicago. it appeared to be a picturesque american life. until at age 10 paul went snooping for christmas presents. >> i found this box in the craw space. and i opened the box and it wasn't presents it was actually newspaper clippings. and the stories were about me. about being kidnapped. >> reporter: the clippings told the story of a kidnapping from a
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chicago hospital on april 27th, 1964. a young child, only 30 hours old, was taken from a mother who had just given birth. it was a story that captivated the country. >> someone came in dressed like a nurse, and told my mom that a doctor needed to see the baby for some tests. so my mom looks and sees a nurse, hands the baby over. and the baby's gone. it's vanished. a little while later someone comes in and says the doctor needs to see your baby. and my mom says, you guys have my baby. and they're like, no, we don't. then that's when everything just fell apart. >> reporter: the fronczak parents held news conferences, while the fbi looked everywhere. examining 10,000 babies. nothing. then a year and a half later, an abandoned child was found outside a store in newark new jersey. based largely on the shape of the toddler's ears authorities said this was the missing boy.
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>> your mother was sure as soon as she saw the baby -- >> she said that's paul. you had the fbi telling you, this is your child. how could you say no? >> reporter: he was reunited with the family that had lost their child and raised in a happy home with a younger brother. over the years, he did question why he didn't look like his parents. but he says the family rarely discussed the kidnapping. >> my mom and dad pretty much said, you're our son, we love you, and that's really all you need to know. she was born in the hospital i didn't leave my side once. >> reporter: eventually he settled in henderson, nevada. five years ago, he was married. not long after that a daughter which caused him to think about his own childhood again. about those clippings and the way he looked. last year, he asked his parents for a dna sample. it was incredibly difficult decision with an even more than difficult answer. a dna result with clearly
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there's no way who you thought were your parents are your parents. >> o.oo probability. i actually got the phone call and said there's zero possibility that you're paul fronczak. at first i was like okay i finally know a relief. and then i started thinking about all these things everyone takes for granted like your birthday. how old you are. who your mom and dad is. i called my wife and i said i'm blank. i've got nothing. >> reporter: what was one great mystery solved nearly 50 years ago was now two. the missing fronczak boy, it turns out, was never found. the man who thought he was is not. >> what really made the news is that paul joseph fronczak is in the hospital for almost 30 hours, he was never foot-printed or blood-typed but he were able to take a picture.
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>> when you say paul joseph fronczak was in the hospital that's you but it's not you? >> yeah. >> reporter: today nearly 50 years after all of this began with the help of dna evidence and renewed national attention, the man in the middle of two bhift mysteries hopes both can be solved. >> in 1964 someone who didn't have a child all of a sudden did. in 1965 somebody who had a child all of a sudden didn't. someone's got to be alive that knows something. >> what do believe the end of this story will be? >> perfect ending? we find paul joseph fronczak. he's alive. he's happy. and he gets to meet my mom and dad. and on the same day, we find who i am. >> so he knows who he's not but not who he is? >> right. >> and the parents' reaction has been? >> you can imagine how difficult this was for the parents 50 years ago in the middle of a media firestorm. this went on for a year and a
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half. they answered questions back then. they now know what the tests say. they've talked about it with paul. they don't want to talk about it much more just too difficult for them. but they do support his mission for answers. >> so paul said somebody's got to know what happened. what do they do next? >> well, h the station set up a website, who is paul joseph fronczak sort of a clearinghouse, a facebook page for anyone who has information. if someone thinks they might have information that might be a place to go to look around. but it continues. i mean he doesn't have answers to either of these questions right now. >> wow. and the baby just disappeared, the real paul fronczak the baby, just disappeared from the hospital and was never footprinted. they didn't have dna back then. never just some strange details around that case. >> some very strange things. a footprint was never taken. but a picture was taken 30 hours later. >> okay. all right. and we just showed our website where people can go there if they have information to find out more about this case.
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>> people want to know who they are, and therefore people who have been adopted search out for their birth parents. >> their biological parents. the parents that raised him did a wonderful job and they still get along great. that shouldn't be forgotten. >> jeff glor thank you. >> tim tebow's football career was put in jeopardy when he was cut by the jets. now the nfl's most talked about backup quarterback is ready to sign with the jets' biggest rival. as don dahler reports, tebow is expected to be at practice today with the new england patriots. >> reporter: in his one season with the new york jets tebow completed just six of eight passes for 39 yards. he joins a team led by one of the greatest passers in the history of the game tom brady. some patriots fans are skeptical. >> i did talk to an afc scout on monday night and i said you know, tell me just a couple of things about tebow. some positives about him as a quarterback and the answer i got was, his competitiveness.
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competitiveness really doesn't get you that far in the nfl. >> reporter: tebow was one of the most successful college football players in ncaa history. he led the florida gators to two national championships. but his style of play has yet to translate to the nfl. add to that a media circus has followed the sometimes controversial player throughout his career. the devoutly religious tebow is famous for tebowing on the field, and expressing his religious views off it. >> i call him my miracle baby. >> reporter: he and his mother appeared in a super bowl add for focus on the families promoting his pro-life beliefs. >> sorry about that mom. >> he has to realize that this probably is his last chance in the nfl. you know being a great teammate can only get you so far. you have to be able to produce on the field for an nfl team, otherwise you won't stick around. >> reporter: but if anyone can capitalize on tebow's talent it may be gridiron mastermind bill belichick. he has taken on talented reclamation projects before. and for patriots' fans the only thing that matters is whether
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tebow can help new england hoist the lombardi trophy in february. for "cbs this morning" don dahler, new york. >> you have got to believe that belichick and bob kraft have some idea of how they can use him in a smart way. >> no doubt. >> as a quarterback. >> but belichick is going to revitalize his career and has a place for him. >> yep. >> but there's some patriots fans who are not too happy. >> but it makes it very interesting. >> skeptical, i should say. skeptical. >> financial experts are sounding alarm on your retirement savings. even couples with a million dollars might be in trouble. we'll ask mellody hobson what you need for a comfortable retirement. that's next on "cbs this morning." ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ [ female announcer ]
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$1 million in retirement savings sounds like a lot of money, but financial experts warn that search a seven-figure nest egg may not be enough for the average couple. so how much is enough? and how can you get it? cbs news contributor and analyst mellody hobson is here. good morning. >> what do the numbers tell justice >> that we're not doing a good job saving. the bear minimum, the average person needs 7% 8% of their income as the bare minimum. a new number has come out that says only two-thirds of americans have saved anything. and the average american has saved less than $25,000 for retirement. that's in total. >> what? >> $25,000. >> but $1 million seems like a lot, no? >> it does. except that the cost of living has eroded the dollar. $1 million in 1950 for an example, is $9 million today.
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just to give you a sense of the difference. on top of that when it comes to retirement, we're living so much longer than we used to live. the average woman, 86 years old. life expectancy average man, 84. 1 in 10 of us is going to live past 95. so our money has to work for a long time >> so what's going to happen? >> so what's going to happen is we have to do a much better job now. everyone says social security is out there. i say for now, put those numbers in perspective. average social security check in this country $1230. understand $15,000 a year total, which is not a lavish lifestyle. and most people 70% of their income will be social security. >> and some pension plans are in jeopardy. >> well that's a whole other can of worms, that's a big deal when you look at the states muns walt. >> most americans are living or social security and very meager savings?
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>> that's right. again, 70% of income mostly for the average american, social security, for the average american. again, not enough. there's things that you can do about it. get really aggressive and save now. even small amounts make a difference. delay taking social security as long as possible. the full retirement benefit comes to most people at the age of 66. that's where you get 100% of your social security. for every year you wait you get 8% more up to the age of 70. the so the difference of what you get at 66 and 70 is huge. >> and you should also delay retirement if you can work it will be slow clearing as it looks like the fog and the clouds surged well on shore, even mid to high level clouds streaming over head. but once we get going, we'll see temperatures warming, 60s
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and 70s around the bay. temperatures warm up on thursday, then cool down for the weekends. it's an inside look at the north korean regime we haven't seen before. a personal chef for kim jong-il reveals some of the luxurious habits of the north former leader like going to france for cognac or iran for caviar. that's ahead on "cbs this morning." i spent 23 years as a deputy united states marshal. we'd get up early and and stay up late. there was a lot of running a lot of fighting. i've been pretty well banged up but the worst pain i've experienced was when i had shingles. i was going through some extremely difficult training and i couldn't do it. when we were going through pursuit driving, i couldn't put a seat belt on because the pain that would have been caused by the seat belt rubbing against the shingles would have been excruciating. when i went to the clinic, the nurse told me that it was the result of having had chickenpox.
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i had never heard of shingles prior to that point and i had always been relatively healthy. the rash, the itching, the burning that i experienced on the side of my neck and my shoulder, i wouldn't wish it on my worst enemy. i'm totally in love with the avocado on this sub. i love avocado so much i started a facebook page. oh, you should post a picture of my new earrings. those would go perfectly with this sweater i'm knitting. [ chainsaw revs ] i'm sorry. did you say something? i was just tending to my avocado tree. oops, i forgot to lock my avocar...do. [ beeping ] have you met my first-born son? avocado? [ coos ] [ male announcer ] everyone loves avocado season at subway. add creamy avocado to your favorite sub or try it on the turkey & bacon avocado. subway. eat fresh.
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♪ hey. here he comes. you never forget the one that got away. he hooked a halibut in alaska just as he was reeling it in look at that a killer whale wheeled on on the cache before the fisherman could grab the fish out of the water. >> you're watching "cbs this morning." your local news is next. [ woman ] i wanted to get up when i was ready not my joints. [ female announcer ] could your "i want" become "i can"? talk to your rheumatologist. orencia reduces many ra symptoms like pain, morning stiffness and the progression of joint damage. it's helped new ra patients and those not helped enough by other treatments. do not take orencia with another biologic medicine for ra due to an increased risk of serious infection. serious side effects can occur including fatal infections. cases of lymphoma and lung cancer have been reported.
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tell your doctor if you are prone to or have any infection like an open sore or the flu or a history of copd a chronic lung disease. orencia may worsen your copd. [ woman ] here's information you need to know. orencia is available in two forms, infusion and also self-injection. talk to your doctor to see if orencia is right for you. and see if you can change "i want" to "oh, yes i can!" capella university understands businesses are trying to come back from rough economic times. employees are being forced to do more with less. and the need for capable leaders is greater than ever. when you see these problems do you take a step back, or do you want to dive right in? with a degree in business from capella university, you'll have the knowledge to go further in your career than you ever thought possible. let's get started at capella.edu
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we went out and asked people a simple question: how old is the oldest person you've known? we gave people a sticker and had them show us. we learned a lot of us have known someone who's lived well into their 90s. and that's a great thing. but even though we're living longer, one thing that hasn't changed much is the official retirement age. ♪ ♪ the question is how do you make sure you have the money you need to enjoy all of these years. ♪ ♪ if you're seeing spots before your eyes... it's time... for aveeno® positively radiant® face moisturizer. [ female
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attorney jeff rosen has a news conference scheduled thi good morning, it's 7:56, i'm michelle agree ago o's. jeff rosen has a news conference kuld? morning to announce a major grand jury indictment. it's expected to involve four dozen alleged members of the of familia gang. a woman was rescued from her home that was on fire this morning. neighbors managed to get the woman out. her children and grandchildren also escaped safely. a firefighter is being treated for a leg injury. stay with us, traffic and weather in just a moment.
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good morning, we're watching a crash still blocking multiple lanes amotorcycle crash, westbound 92 at the claw witter and you can see traffic is beginning to stack up on 880, southbound 880 ride is slow. once you get on to the san mateo bridge, things slow nicely up toward the high rise. just before the toll plaza, things are quickly backing up. that's traffic, here's lauren we have plenty of fog and low clouds around the bay area. looking at the san jose airport, cloudy skies there as well of the clouds will break and we'll see some sunshine as we head toward the afternoon, temperatures 70s and low 80s, inland, 60s and 70s inside the bay. a little bit warmer on thursday, then cooling down for the weekend.
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good morning charlie, good morning, gayle. good morning, everybody. it is 8:00 a.m. in the west. welcome back. prosecutors get ready to charge a former cia employee with leaking classified information. he still has more secrets to reveal. senator rand paul wants to put the government on trial. we'll find out if he thinks edward snowden is a hero or a traitor a rare look inside north korea's dictatorship. the amazing story of a sushi chef that became kim jong-il's buddy. >> a look at the eye opener. >> reporter: we have spoken with him over the last couple of days and have not heard the last of
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edward snowden the justice department is preparing criminal charges against edward snowden. >> he is the former cia employee that is leaking documents. >> how is it possible the u.s. doesn't know where this 29-year-old is? >> nora what makes you think they don't know exactly where he is. >> some of the department's own agents told cbs news that investigations were manipulated to hide misconduct and criminal activities. all mentioned in the court were thoroughly investigated. >> this is a surprising reversal. the administration has long fought to keep young girls from having easy access to this emergency contraception dna tests reveal there are two great mysteries, not just one, a missing baby and a man that doesn't know who he is. >> he has to realize this probably is his last chance in the nfl. being a great teammate can only get you so far. >> the average person needs 70% to 80% of their annual income post retirement. that's the bear minimum.
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>> whether the u.s. will be able to find snowden is another matter. >> he is hiding out in hong kong. >> marking the first time a person says i want to be away from the government. i want to go to china. gayle king and norah o'donnell. >> edward snowden has more secrets to tell the world, the former cia that leaked information. >> the justice department is close to filing the charges against snowden but his current whereabouts are unknown. his most recent employer says he has been fired private contractors with security clearance like snowden have become very common. their numbers have been on the rise since 9/11. >> reporter: edward snowden exposed some of the national security agency's most highly
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classified programs and confirmed one of washington's dirty little secrets. >> the entire government has become dependant on people like edward snowden. >> dana priest of "the washington post" was the first to write about the government's increasing reliance on private contractors after 9/11. officials in office say hiring contractors was the if i cannest, most effective way to expand operations in the war against terror. they had amitt they had admit it got out of hand. 483,000 private contractors held top secret clearances last year. >> when you get so many people involved, the chances of leakages are going to be greater. >> reporter: even a top secret clearance can't explain how a low-level contractor assigned to this nsa facility in hawaii could gain access to the documents he leaked documents describing a number of different intelligence programs all of them tightly held. >> in 25 years of covering
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national security i have never seen a top secret document laid out for the public like that. >> reporter: snowden was an i.t. guy whose job was to trouble shoot nsa's computer networks a job which apparently allowed him to browse at will. for cbs this morning, this is david martin at the pentagon. new speculation about hillary clinton and the 2016 campaign. the former secretary of state sent out her very first tweet yesterday she thanked the creators of text for hillarys. she wrote, i'll take it from here. her official twitter listed pant suit owe suit expert. she listed it as tbd, to be determined. she has more than 300,000 followers. she is keeping us guessing already. she listed as secretary of state, first lady of arkansas
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hair icon. warren buffett tweeted back hello at hillary.clinton, happy to welcome one of my favorite women to twitter. he said number 45. >> 45th president of the united states. is >> i get it. >> the daley"the daily show" has a new look. john oliver is sitting in the anchor chair. >> this is weird. >> on his first night as interim anchor, john oliver was quick to break the ice. >> if you hadn't heard, jon stewart is going to be away fort summer. >> reporter: the seven-year daily show veteran popped up during stewart's sendoff last week. >> i don't care what they say. it is my show now and i want it in pink. will you hold on a second? what? >> reporter: with stewart gone for the summer it was oliver's turn to tackle the headlines.
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>> no big news stories ever break out over the summer. >> u.s. officials acknowledge that intelligence agencies are secretly collecting millions of american's phone records -- >> are you -- kidding me. jon has been gone one day. >> reporter: oliver's fellow daily show reporters welcomed him with less than open arms. >>. i'm sorry, what? >> you don't need to speak in a british accent. >> don't i, jon, don't i? ten years, i've been here talking american only to be leap frogged by a god-forsaken foreigner. >> reporter: even oliver poked fun at his new role. role. >> seth roegan is here. i look forward to explaining to him exactly who the -- i am. >> reporter: nerves aside, the then favorite had a smooth
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transition. >> that's our show. >> i think he will do okay. >> isn't he good? >> fantastic. the show is in good hands. >> samantha it was an undercover sting to catch a thief. going after high-end art. then, the case gets more complicated. preview of tonight's brooklyn d.a., ahead on cbs this morning.
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♪ former nfl star chad johnson t in former nfl star chad johnson got in trouble for slapping his lawyer on the butt.
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he was in a florida courtroom ready to accept community service in a do i messmestic charge case. the judge wasn't too happy so she revoked the deal and sentenced him to 30 days in jail. >> when i first heard the story, i thought it was a woman. when i saw it was a guy, that's what guys do charlie, they go, hey. you no he that move. >> zero tolerance. new york city prosecutors tried to catch a suspected art thief in the act. they set a trap in a house rigged with an elaborate surveillance system. this is how things go down on "brooklyn d.a." ♪ today is the day of the operation in the art theft case. i'm lawrence o. i'm an assistant d.a. in keith county. there is a lot of personal pressure on me. this was my idea. we have 15 16. >> we have two detectives inside the house. >> 17 18. >> we were in the house early.
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>> around 5:15. >> we installed cameras for our sting operation. we have identified our target a house painter by the name of danny vega. the most important thing is the positioning of the cameras. >> we made adjustments to one of the cameras. >> i wanted them to be recessed a bit. there was concern it was too far out. >> we just pushed it back slightly in one of the vents. >> he is right there. right out in front. >> mike? he is at the house now. he is not in yet but he is here. >> sean just called me. he said the guy just pulled up in front of the house. the next group of detectives are the apprehension team. >> we want to try to get him before he gets to kings point road. >> he showed up, brought all the equipment upstairs they needed. >> he is inside. the boss is setting him up. >> holy -- wow! >> he is going to do this. he is definitely going to do
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this. holy -- that's minutes into this. wow! >> i felt a bolt of lightning charge through me. there was a picasso in that box upstairs. >> let's go up by the house. i don't want to wait any longer. >> that house is right up the road here. >> is that supposed to be -- wow. >> we are quite concerned he is about to find our camera. >> this is not good. >> this is not looking good. >> we have one problem. >> i get a phone call from mike saying that we have a situation. >> if he finds this camera in the next two minutes, we're done. >> you can watch "brooklyn d.a." tonight at 10:00, 9:00 central. up next an inside view of north korea through the eyes of a chef who cooked for the dictator. you are watching "cbs this morning."
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for 11 years a sushi chef from japan was the permanent cook and close companion to north korea's leader kim jong il. kenji fujimoto does extraordinary things for the leader. his interview appears in the "gq" magazine. it was written by adam johnson and pulitzer prize winning author. welcome. >> thank you. >> how did you get this story? >> well i had written a book about north korea. it was a novel that i researched five or six years. kenji fujimoto's story was very rare. he was in the leadership of pyongyang, and "gq" allowed me to interview him.
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>> how did he get out? >> well he escaped in a daring way. he went to north korea of his own free will. they have many workers there on contracts bought they have difficulty doing things like cell phone operators or elevators. they didn't know how to make sushi. so they brought him over to each other people how to make sushi. kim jong il fell in love with him. his partying and drinking. he was a party guy that made great food. kim jong il said you're not going home. >> they started out as a rocky start. he defied kim jong il. he threw the envelope and he refused to pick it up. >> well he was an outsider in society, and he didn't know very basic rules that insulting the dear leader could get you killed. >> killeds right. >> there was a moment that the dear leader threw him a tip that the envelope fell to the floor and fujimoto wouldn't stoop to
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pick it up. someone scrambled over to him and said pick that up you'll be shot or i'll be shot. and he wouldn't do it. kim jong il respected his independent thought. >> the north korea is a state that faces extreme problems. the leader living in an extraordinary lavish deep life with sushi and expensive cognac. describe some of his tastes. >> well, there are two north koreas, there's the majority that live in the countryside who doo plead peasant lives. and then there's the life of the area of kim jong il. they highest circle they have everything you can imagine. kim jong il especially loved lavish parties. and fujimoto is the man he sent on errands to buy $700,000 of cognac.
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>> do you have any reason to doubt his story? >> well hennessey confirmed how much they spent on cognac. it's unconfirmable, he's the only source. i have seen other people who have crossed paths with him in pyongyang. the number of people who make it the to inner circle that make out out of that story. >> here's what happens, kim jong il, the current leader of north korea, another leader that the u.s. administration wants to know so much about fujimoto claims had was with him a great deal. taught him his love of basketball. >> he there tame a kay when kim jong il fired all the nannies. and he became the main chef. for 11 years, kenji fujimoto daly took care of the kids. one of the first things he did
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was teach them basketball. >> and the relationship with the present leader of north korea today? i mean he went back in 2012? >> that's right. after kim jong il died, kim jong-un invited him back. kenji fujimoto promised never to leave north korea, but yet he did a daring escape that caused kim jong il to want to assassinate him in japan. fujimoto had betrayed the father, not the son is the way it turned out. he was a boy. here's the man who taught him jet skiing and roller skating and kite flying and basketball. he wanted to see what happened to his man who had been stolen for him by escaping his life and he brought him back. >> i applaud you for keeping the names straight. kim jong il kim
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this is a kpix 5 morning update. good morning everyone. it's 8:25, i'm frank time for news headlines. santa clara police are on the scene of 49ers stadium construction site. they are investigating a report of a death there. no further details available at this point. we'll have the latest on kpix news at noon and updates throughout the morning. a grandmother was rescued this morning from her burning san francisco home. it spread next door and neighbors got the 87-year-old out safely. police at san jose state university said a man exposed
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himself to a student studying. the girl asked him to leave the man pulled down his pants. got your traffic and weather for this tuesday morning coming up right after the break. developing smaller portion sizes and more.. low and no-calorie beverages... adding clear calorie labels so you know... exactly what you're choosing... and in schools, replacing full-calorie soft drinks... with lower-calorie options. with more choices and fewer calories... america's beverage companies are delivering. goodnight. thanks, olivia. thank you. so you can make a payment from your cell to almost anyone's phone or email. (speaking french)
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so you can express your gratitude... in the moment. chase quickpay. so you can. good morning our drive time has improved somewhat but it's still stacked up toward the
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livermore valley. a crash was just reported in san francisco eastbound 80 before forest. it's stop and go before the 101 interchange. great traffic here at the plaza. no delays getting into san francisco. that's traffic for your kind of gray forecast. >> that's the kind of traffic i like, the no traffic stuff. we did find some sunshine for you looking good, giving you a taste of things to come today. plenty ovolo plenty -- of low clouds and fog have come in. we'll tee about 69 in oakland and 64 in san francisco. warmer the next couple of days and we'll cool down. more clouds coming our way over the weekend.
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♪ welcome back to "cbs this morning." coming up in this half hour a singer whose heart still beats for rock 'n' roll. huey lewis continues to make new music with the news. they're also releasing a breakthrough album on its 30th anniversary. >> teddy bears and ninjas pokemon and "star wars," how a mother is taking her children's favorite characters into a work of art. these are napkins, everybody. incredible. >> i have no skills in that department. right now, time to share this morning's headlines from around the globe.
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britain's independence says prince philip is in good spirits after an exploratory operation on his abdomen. queen elizabeth visited him in a london hospital where he's recovering. yesterday was phillips' 92nd birthday. the vancouver sun said the ceo of lululemon is retiring after five years. christine day led the close maker to higher profits but lululemon is struggling to recover from an embarrassing production of see-through yoga pants. researchers say it takes 1 hour, 46 minutes and 36 seconds for the average woman's feet to feel pain after putting on heels. for 20% of women, the pain starts to kick in after ten minutes. nearly half the women in the study say they're willing to suffer for fashion. gayle, what say you? >> i say that's true. i'm willing to suffer. fashion, true. >> charlie says, i like tennis shoes.
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exactly. "the wall street journal" says having too much caffeine is now considered a mental disorder, that's because it -- >> well that explains everything, doesn't it? >> it sure does explain a lot. >> that's because it can hurt a person's ability to function the same is true of caffeine withdrawal. because you sump symptoms while trying to quit. doctors say the best way to break the caffeine habit is to taper off gradually over two to four weeks. >> that's true with all disorders. try and taper off. >> moderation is good. >> isn't moderation -- where did you learn that? >> "usa today" says doughnuts have gone wild this summer. over the weekend, someone at the san diego county fair came up with, listen to this a krispy kreme sloppy joe. we told you how mcdonald has a glazed breakfast sandwich with eggs. and ihop.
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and i say your doctor will say are you crazy? what's wrong with you. >> exactly. not everything's good for you, is it? >> no it is not. and we reported earlier that the justice department is preparing charges against edward snowden.former cia employee said he leaked the existence of a massive secret surveillance program. >> republican senator rand paul of kentucky is also ready to go to court. he wants to stop the obama administration from monitoring telephone and internet data. in today's "wall street journal" he writes that big brother really is watching us. senator paul isle with us from capitol hill. senator, good morning. >> good morning. glad to be with. >> pleasure to have you here. let's talk about mr. snowden, do you think he's a hero or a traitor? >> i think he's sort of a side point. i think the real point is that the bill of rights are being violated. our privacy is being violated. really, no government should do this, and we need to obey the rules. we're going to try to hold the president accountable and say, look, we don't want the
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government followinging us around every day. >> a title to what he did or not do you agree did he do the right thing, do you support him? >> you know i think it's a complicated issue i think when people choose civil disowe disobedience. i personally work within the law and i think that's what my job is. we can challenge the president on this i'm reserving judgment on mr. snowden. but i think he felt like this was something so wrong, billions of phone records being looked through. you have to realize by looking at your phone records they can actually track your movements all day long. i've been jokingly saying i'm leaving my phone at home when i go to republican leadership meetings because the president doesn't need know where i am all day long. >> senator paul, the poll shows that a lot of americans seem to be okay with what the government
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is doing to monitor terrorist threats even if it invades on privacy. to monitor terrorist threats. what do you say? >> i don't think it's true. if people knew the extent of what could happen. for example, i purchase most of my daily needs on my visa charge. my whole life is digitalized. you can tell whether i go to a psychiatrist. whether i gamble. whether i read conservative magazines. whether i drink, whether i smoke. the government has no right to this knowledge unless you're accused of a crime or probable cause. >> there's no proof that the government is monitoring that and using that information. they need a warrant to find out where you're shopping and where you're using your credit card? >> actually you're wrong. there's no proof that they're actually doing it but we do know that third-party records for the last 30 or 40 years have not been sufficiently protected by the fourth amendment. we have an exclusion we say when you give up your records to a bank that you're actually giving up your rights to privacy.
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i disagree with those court cases. some of the court cases need to be reversed. it's not just president obama. it's president bush. but i think the american people are fed up with it more that more of our lives are online and digitalized. we don't need the federal government looking at our entire lives. >> all three branches of the government are approved this surveillance. obviously carried out by the executive branch. congress has approved it. courts have approved it. congress was briefed 23 times between october 2011 and december 2012. did you attend any of those briefings? >> most of these are for the intelligence committee so i wouldn't have been invited. but i would say just because congress approved it doesn't make it right. congress has about a 10% approval rating so i think we're often doing things that the public doesn't approve of. last year, we approved of indefinite detention where an american stipulate can be detained without charge or trial for the rest of their life and
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sent to guantanamo bay. i think that's wrong whether the president signed it or not. it's also hypocritical that the president when he was a senator as much more in that. >> for all lawmakers to view the classified report in what was going on you could ask for a briefing. did you go to that. why now raise these concerns? >> i've been raising these for over a year. you can look back at a speech i gave in las vegas last year. i have attended briefings on this. so i was aware of it. the interesting thing is i was unable to talk about it so was senator wyden. they put a gag rule on us. they put a gag rule on those of us who were investigated. the most ridiculous thing i hear politics saying oh well nobody is complaining. you can't complain because they put you in jail if you complain or don't tell you if they're
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investigating you. nobody knows you're being investigated. i think americans don't want this surveillance. >> beyond that you mentioned civil disobedience when you think of mahatma gandhi and should mr. snowden step forward and present himself to be tried and judged by the judicial system? >> you know, i can't make that decision for him. he's chosen exile which is a pretty significant thing to have to leave your family and your country. but what i would say is that the issue really is about privacy, right to privacy, and whether the president's a hypocrite for wanting to look at all of our phone records all of the time. and i think he really is. >> senator paul we thank you. i can't help but notice you seem to have a new look with your hair. are you trying something
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different? >> just hot out of a shower. that's all. jeannette walls turned her dysfunctional childhood into
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♪ jeannette walls' childhood memoir "the glass castle" became a "the new york times" best-seller back in 2005. now, she's written her first novel called "the silver star" it's about sisters who have to take care of themselves after their mother leaves. it's published by a cbs company. jeannette walls joins us. it's a heartbreaking book. it talks about your dysfunction as a little kid. you were molested.
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you moved 27 times in five years. your mom and dad had a lot of issues, shall we say. so you survived a childhood that would have broken most people jeannette. >> i think what's significant, i also had great gifts. my parents gave me a sense of self-esteem. ideally, you get food and clothing as well. but if they give you a dream and a hope for the future i think you can make it through a lot of things. >> but it didn't feel like that at that time? >> no, it was pretty wicked. it was pretty tough. it was first a shame for me. it's so ironic to having finally told it. from my past when i was finally able to confront it i found it was the best i had going for me. >> so here you are a gossip columnist vealing other people's secrets while keeping a secrets of your own. hypocritical, maybe? >> beyond hypocritical. shame on me. confronting the truth, the truth will set you free. but the truth is complicated.
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and it can't be condensed into a snark can photograph like i was trying to do. sometimes, you can look deeper. >> how is your relationship with your mom >> my mom's a hoot. now lives with me. she lives out back. >> out back? >> in a cottage. >> out back. >> you know she lived differently. she thinks differently than most people. and she will never be the mom who wants to take care of me. if i can accept that i think she has great gifts to offer. >> this is your first book? >> it came from my mom. >> you acted out dialogues with your husband john taylor? >> it was very important to me that it felt real. i'm drawn to stories that teaches lessons. and i wanted it to feel like you know the characters. every now and then dialogue fell flat. so my husband would play one character and i'd play another. he'd say, that's your character,
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put that in. >> what is this about? >> two girls who have a backy mom that get in above their head. even though it's fiction, you write what you know? >> what does your mom think about it you've written very candidly about it? >> well you have to write the truth as you see. all that i said about her, i think it's pretty incredible. she's an artist. "the silver star" her favorite books of all i've written, of course, it doesn't involve her. she's able to read it the way she wasn't able to read the other ones. >> i wonder if jeannette's writing about herself being very feisty? she means well, she's a bit of a knucklehead. sometimes, she acts without thinking and gets herself into trouble. >> jeannette walls, thank you so much. good to see you. >> thank you. >> and "the silver star" now on sale.
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huey lewis and the news became the biggest name in the news. john blackstone caught up on "cbs news sunday morning." >> while the music industry has gone through changes for 30 bought the same songs more than once. they bought it on vinyl, they bought it on tape they bought it on tv now they're downloading it. >> you're right. the timing was very good for us. ♪ the heart of rock 'n' roll ♪ >> reporter: not only has the music lived on since the '80s but so has the wardrobe. >> this is the cover made famous through mtv. i could probably get something on ebay for that. >> reporter: when lewis had his first top ten hit "do you believe in love" in 1982 music videos were --
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>> i thought it was the worst thing i'd ever seen. it was cringe-worthy. so silly and stupid. at the end, everybody stood up and applauded. i thought, well anybody can do this. let's make videos of ourselves, that's was the inspiration. >> reporter: from then on, they produced their own music videos apparently not takes themselves too seriously. ♪ >> we weren't really concerned with our image that way. ♪ one that makes me feel like i feel when i'm with you ♪ >> i mean i don't even have a tattoo, you know? >> reporter: and his hobbies, golf and flyfishing don't necessarily match the usual image of a rock star. >> it's okay isn't it? i mean where would you rather be? >> reporter: now 62 he spends as much time as he can on his ranch in montana. >> in the early '80s when we finally had, you know a little bit of success, and i had a couple nickels to rub together the first thing i wanted to do
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is buy a place up here. you know, that's what we did. >> i was a fan. >> i was, too. but i'd say, he's got good hobbies. flyfishing and golf. >> i get golf -- no i don't get golf actually. you know what charlie, i don't get flyfishing either. i like basketball. >> and music. >> and music. >> and those, every song i remember. >> and we like "cbs sunday morning." >> very much. some people look at a napkin and see something to crumble up or wipe their mouth with. one mom sees it as a canvas. that's a napkin everybody. it's a great story. coming up next on "cbs this morning." >> wow. ♪ ♪ i want a new drug ♪
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notice. but perhaps it's the worknapkins. so you've been doing this seven years. >> i guess it's going on seven
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years, yes. >> reporter: levy draws a picture every night and sends it in the lunch box every day. it began when her son archer was 3 now it's ansel who gets a work of heart. the boys get to choose the artwork before they head for bed. >> often bedtime is apocalyptic around here. >> so this is really like documenting your children's lives. >> certainly documenting their interests. and then we had a good, you know, year of pokemon, maybe a year and a half or so of "star wars." >> reporter: it's hours of work each night, but levy says it's really no different than what other parents do. >> some people make their children's clothes or take him flyfishing, and that sounds -- it's their thing. >> reporter: a thing that gets her kids a little extra attention at school.
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>> my friends think it's exciting. >> your friends think it's exciting? yeah. >> reporter: though levy admits her kids can be physical skatesophisticated critics. >> some things are less plausible than others. >> what do you say when you get comments like that? >> reporter: sometimes levy draws a moment that defines a family. >> us riding to school. and the conversation here is mom, my eyeballs are cold. why can't we live in a house made entirely of jell-o. i think this is sort of like the important conversations you have with your children when you're spending quality time with them. for "cbs this morning," elaine quijano, brooklyn, new york. >> what do you think of that? >> we love nina levy. >> i mean, that's incredible. she's a beautiful artist. what a nice tribute to do that. her sons very lucky. >> indeed. that does it for us. up next your local news we'll
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see you tomorrow on "cbs this morning." ♪
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which is a kpix 5 morning update. state lawmakers have struck a tentative budget plan, especially for the low income districts. on oregon man set to be arraigned this morning on carjacking and kidnapping and other charges he showed up after being connected to a murder in oregon. the owner of a limo company is blaming a fire in one of its vehicles on the electrical
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system. a group of women in their 80s got in the limo for a birthday party. all got out well thanks to the driver and two caretakers as well. >> the clouds are backing off in spots. you can see plenty of clouds over the bay bridge but by the afternoon those skies are going to be killed -- filled with blue instead of gray. toward the afternoon we're planning on 70s and a few low 80s inland so a little bit lower. the next couple of days a little bit warmer through thursday and then we'll cool down, more clouds over the weekend. your time saver traffic is couple up next. next -- coming up next.
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good morning, we still have a couple of hot spots out there southbound 101 approaching highway 92. it's backed up into millbrand. north 680, a crash there blocking a lane heading into danville. better news f you're headed toward the bay bridge toll plaza the light is on but there's no delays. have a good day.
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wayne: yeah! open curtain number one. you won a car! you've got $20,000! (screaming) you've got the big deal of the day! it is fabulous! jonathan: it's time for "let's make a deal." now here's tv's big dealer wayne brady! wayne: hey, everybody, welcome to "let's make a deal." (speaking spanish) i'm wayne brady. it's time to make deals i need three people. who wants to make a deal? let's go! rollers, right over there. mark twain, right on the stage. and last but not least, someone from over here, gangster girl, come with me. (cheers and applause) the three of you stand right ther

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